This is a copy of a review of A Fall of Moondust by Arthur C. Clarke that I contributed to the audible.com website.
Clarke clearly did a lot of research before writing this novel, and his writing is intelligent and well-organized. As usual with Clarke’s novels, the emphasis is on technology, not people, and the characters are cardboard cutouts with no real personalities.
Much of the novel is out of date. We know now that there are not seas of dust on the Moon. Sexism is overt, and the purpose of women in the book is seemingly only to serve men. All scientists and engineers in the book are men. This reflects the cultural attitudes of the early 1960s (as reflected in the “Mad Men” television series).
As another reviewer commented, Clarke completely missed the development of computers and other electronic devices. I was amused by one scene in which the passengers of the stranded vessel gather together their reading materials, which include a couple of paperback novels and a newspaper. No one is carrying a Kindle-like or iPod-like device for reading or listening to books.
Despite these flaws, the story is still entertaining as Clarke moves logically through the consequences of the sinking of a boat-like vessel under several meters of dust and the difficulties of finding the vessel and rescuing the passengers.