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| 1.
Before we get on to the meat of the plot, here's a mundane question to start us off. Much of this book (the first three of six chapters) was published in serial form in a magazine. What magazine was it? |
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| 2.
Now, let's begin the plot. As the book opens, our protagonist (a fellow by the name of Fisk Centers) receives an interplanetary call from Mars. This call is from a company looking to offer Fisk an investment oppertunity; they say they're planning to build geodesic domes on Mars, and they're selling real estate to gain capital. What is the name of this dubious company? |
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| 3.
After his experiences in the last chapter, Fisk is compelled to get into the black market adoption racket. The first client he meets is a Venus spacer, who says he plans to retire and cultivate a rare type of plant. What is the name of this plant? |
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| 4.
Poor Mr. Centers! This daughter he's landed himself with is destined to make his life rather interesting; as the old Chinese curse goes, "May you live in interesting times." What's her name? |
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| 5.
Those interesting times I mentioned start up right away. What is the first scrape his adopted daughter gets Fisc into? |
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| 6.
By this point, Fisk has held two wildly differing, yet tangentially related, jobs. What does he try his hand at selling next? |
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| 7.
Everything would have gone just fine for Fisk, for once, if his daughter hadn't managed to upset everyone after whose death? |
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| 8.
After that last mishap, Fisk once again finds himself looking for a new profession. This one, however, is still somewhat related to his old one. What is it? |
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| 9.
The next job isn't even for Fisk; this time, it's for his daughter. What is it? |
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| 10.
In this last adventure, it's not Yola who causes the trouble; this time, it's Fisk. Why? |
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