
The Sands of Mars: Volume 2
Robert E. Hampson(Author)
Baen Books (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 4. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
432 pages
978-1-6680-7337-7 (ISBN)
Description
Sequel to THE MOON AND THE DESERT!
Saving the Marsbase One mission made Glenn A. "Shep" Shepard a hero. Commanding Marsbase itself might get him killed.
Colonel Shepard-Earth's first fully bionic augmentee and the man who once crossed interplanetary space to pull off an impossible rescue (The Moon and the Desert)-finally reaches Mars. His new command sits under the Eumenides Dorsum ridge on Amazonis Planitia, a city hewn into caverns where life is math and margin: closed-loop ecosystems, strictly rationed propellant, and minutes-long lightspeed comms lag.
While Shepard grapples with distance from his wife and newborn daughter on Earth, whispers of sabotage, industrial espionage, and anti-bionics prejudice begin to erode trust inside the base. Then a rival coalition's colony ship goes off course and slams into the canyons of Noctis Labyrinthus, far across the Tharsis highlands.
There's no shuttle landing, no cavalry-only engineering, endurance, and a commander whose augmented body can go where others can't. To pull survivors out of the crash before Mars itself finishes them, Shepard must design a rescue that physics barely permits and politics would rather avoid.
Scientifically rigorous yet deeply human, The Sands of Mars is the high-stakes sequel to The Moon and the Desert-a novel about leadership under pressure, and the price of keeping a frontier alive.
Saving the Marsbase One mission made Glenn A. "Shep" Shepard a hero. Commanding Marsbase itself might get him killed.
Colonel Shepard-Earth's first fully bionic augmentee and the man who once crossed interplanetary space to pull off an impossible rescue (The Moon and the Desert)-finally reaches Mars. His new command sits under the Eumenides Dorsum ridge on Amazonis Planitia, a city hewn into caverns where life is math and margin: closed-loop ecosystems, strictly rationed propellant, and minutes-long lightspeed comms lag.
While Shepard grapples with distance from his wife and newborn daughter on Earth, whispers of sabotage, industrial espionage, and anti-bionics prejudice begin to erode trust inside the base. Then a rival coalition's colony ship goes off course and slams into the canyons of Noctis Labyrinthus, far across the Tharsis highlands.
There's no shuttle landing, no cavalry-only engineering, endurance, and a commander whose augmented body can go where others can't. To pull survivors out of the crash before Mars itself finishes them, Shepard must design a rescue that physics barely permits and politics would rather avoid.
Scientifically rigorous yet deeply human, The Sands of Mars is the high-stakes sequel to The Moon and the Desert-a novel about leadership under pressure, and the price of keeping a frontier alive.
Reviews / Votes
Praise for The Moon and the Desert:"Highly recommended for fans of classic hard sf and space drama." -Amazing Stories
"This is hard science fiction with a vengeance." -Publishers Weekly Praise for Stellaris: People of the Stars, co-edited by Robert E. Hampson:
"[A] thought-provoking look at a selection of real-world challenges and speculative fiction solutions. . . . Readers will enjoy this collection that is as educational as it is entertaining." -Booklist
"This was an enjoyable collection of science fiction dealing with colonizing the stars. In the collection were several gems and the overall quality was high." -Tangent
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Riverdale
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
327 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-6680-7337-7 (9781668073377)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Robert E. Hampson writes character-driven hard SF where space is messy, unforgiving, and achingly human. His fiction blends medical problem-solving, nuts-and-bolts engineering, and the logistics of living off-Earth-from underground Martian habitats to orbital shipyards-with an eye on plausible technology and the true costs of rescue. By day, he's a professor of regenerative medicine, neuroscience, neurology, and biomedical engineering. By night, he digs into Mars geography, mission architecture, and bionics research so the science on the page feels lived-in and true. He is the author of The Moon and the Desert and Across an Ocean of Stars.