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Sky Horizon (Colony High) [Hardcover]

David Brin (Author), Scott Hampton (Illustrator)
2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Colony High August 20, 2007
"Some of the Math Club nerds have got a real live alien! They're hiding it in a basement rec room." High School junior Mark Bamford didn't believe the silly rumor. For one thing, California homes don't have basements. Besides. A stranded alien? Such a cliche. A movie rip-off. Couldn't the math geeks think up a better hoax? Only... was it a hoax? What about all those black vans from the super-secret Cirrocco Corp cruising all over town, as if searching for something? Time to do some investigating of his own. Only, who could he turn to for help? The skateboarding "X" crowd? The varsity climbing team? When it it came right down to it, should he turn to the least likely ally of them all? Sky Horizon explores a possibility that has always fascinated, since the days of Homer -- that of strangers from beyond -- and gives it new shape under the deft hand of one of science fiction's modern masters.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Hugo- and Nebula-winner Brin paves the way for his new YA series Colony High (co-written with Jeff Carlson) with a somewhat clumsy story of teen adventure. Except for the nearby air base and top secret Cirocco Labs, Twenty-Nine Palms High isn't much different from most high schools—until the Math Club geeks make first contact with a stranded alien. Teenage military brat Mark Bam Bamford and his friends rescue the E.T., Na-bistaka, from an ugly life as a sideshow and turn it over to Cirocco, but it turns out that Na-bistaka's race, the Garubis, are far from grateful. They repay humanity in a backwards and insulting fashion, leaving the Twenty-Nine Palms students struggling to survive the new dangers that confront them. While it's not much of a stand-alone story, this wispy tale does successfully outline Colony High characters and backstory. Brin completists will be willing to pony up despite the slimness of the volume; others should wait for the first real novel in the series. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Mark Bamford doesn't believe the rumors that the math club at Twenty-Nine Palms High School has an alien hidden in one of the members' homes—until he sees it himself. Mark knows that the alien needs government resources to survive and communicate, so he sacrifices his social life to inform government agents and the press, opening the big dialogue about first contact to the world. Fellow aliens, when they arrive to collect their stray, are hilariously rude and, to redress the debt they reluctantly acknowledge, transplant the high school to another planet to form a colony. They fail to explain this "gift," though, so those back on Earth believe the students have been disintegrated. Brin's punchy, fast-paced narrative, hampered slightly by asides on human nature and some lapses in the aliens' credibility, sets up the premise of a prospective series and leaves readers at a critical juncture. Scott Hampton's crisp black-and-white illustrations, printed at high contrast, pop from the page. In the afterword, Brin promises further Colony High adventures, to be coauthored by Jeff Carlson. Hutley, Krista
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 13 and up
  • Hardcover: 120 pages
  • Publisher: Subterranean Press; Dlx Sgd edition (August 20, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159606109X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1596061095
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,166,267 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Brin is a scientist, public speaker and world-known author. His novels have been New York Times Bestsellers, winning multiple Hugo, Nebula and other awards. At least a dozen have been translated into more than twenty languages.

His 1989 ecological thriller, Earth, foreshadowed global warming, cyberwarfare and near-future trends such as the World Wide Web. A 1998 movie, directed by Kevin Costner, was loosely based on his post-apocalyptic novel, The Postman. David's novel Kiln People has been called a book of ideas disguised as a fast-moving and fun noir detective story, set in a future when new technology enables people to physically be in more than two places at once. A hardcover graphic novel The Life Eaters explored alternate outcomes to WWII, winning nominations and high praise.

David's science fictional Uplift Universe explores a future when humans genetically engineer higher animals like dolphins to become equal members of our civilization. These include the award-winning Startide Rising, The Uplift War, Brightness Reef, Infinity's Shore and Heaven's Reach. He also recently tied up the loose ends left behind by the late Isaac Asimov: Foundation's Triumph brings to a grand finale Asimov's famed Foundation Universe.

Brin serves on advisory committees dealing with subjects as diverse as national defense and homeland security, astronomy and space exploration, SETI and nanotechnology, future/prediction and philanthropy. His non-fiction book -- The Transparent Society: Will Technology Force Us to Choose Between Freedom and Privacy? -- deals with secrecy in the modern world. It won the Freedom of Speech Prize from the American Library Association.

As a public speaker, Brin shares unique insights -- serious and humorous -- about ways that changing technology may affect our future lives. He appears frequently on TV, including several episodes of "The Universe" and History Channel's "Life After People." He also was a regular cast member on "The ArciTECHS."

Brin's scientific work covers an eclectic range of topics, from astronautics, astronomy, and optics to alternative dispute resolution and the role of neoteny in human evolution. His Ph.D in Physics from UCSD - the University of California at San Diego (the lab of nobelist Hannes Alfven) - followed a masters in optics and an undergraduate degree in astrophysics from Caltech. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the California Space Institute. His technical patents directly confront some of the faults of old-fashioned screen-based interaction, aiming to improve the way human beings converse online.

Brin lives in San Diego County with his wife and three children.

You can follow David Brin:
Website: http://www.davidbrin.com/
Blog: http://davidbrin.blogspot.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/DavidBrin1
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/cab801

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars It's a juvie, and it ends in the middle, August 4, 2008
This review is from: Sky Horizon (Colony High) (Hardcover)
... and the title has nothing to do with the book. It's not labelled YA in libraries, nor being sold as a teenagers' book, but it should be - there's no way that these characters or this plot would hold an adult novel together. The plot is a standard high school coming-of-age thing, with a teenager new to his town and school trying to fit in. High school rivalry between the jocks and the nerds. The teenagers are all way smarter than the adults, as is so often the case in young adult novels. Except for one wise history teacher, from whom we get all kinds of philosophical discussions of the sort that high schoolers and college freshbeings think are novel and deep.

The long and short of the story is pretty short: first contact with aliens, who turn out to be snobby toward humans and behave stupidly. As a "reward" for rescuing the stranded alien, an entire high school is beamed to another planet. End of story. Yes, that really is the whole story. All the rest is teenage bickering and high school angst.

Obviously there are intended sequels. Equally obvious to me is that very few people would need to bother with this volume of it as a stand-alone book, all 120 pages of it at the price of a full-size novel; if you're buying it, you're buying it as a collector's item, since it's a limited edition. And as such, I can see where it would be an OK gift for a teenager who's just getting into science fiction. It could be the start of a collection of hardcover science fiction. For someone who's not a collector, however, I'd suggest waiting until after all the volumes, however many that may be, are published and then reprinted as one paperback collection, and then read the whole thing at once.

In short: possibly a good gift for a teenager who wants to collect science fiction books; otherwise, only worth a paperback.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars If it hadn't been Brin it would not have been published!, February 1, 2008
By 
Angela Boyter (Ellicott City, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sky Horizon (Colony High) (Hardcover)
David Brin is one of my favorite writers, one of the few I buy in hardback. So even though this is a Young Adult book, I decided to read it, remembering fondly a lot of Heinlein juveniles and similar classics that turned me on both to SF and to many science concepts. This book will do neither.
There are no interesting ideas in the book. The teen-aged characters have some appeal as they struggle with the typical problems of growing up, but they are too cliched, and the main character has had too many "adventures" as a military brat to be credible. The story is thin.
The cleverest part of the story (which I would not spoil the book by revealing if the professional reviews had not already done it) is the fact that the aliens turn out to be neither menacing nor benevolent but rude.
Brin's afterword says this story has been circulating as a draft since the 1980s. The fact that there seemed to be no great clamor to publish it sooner should have been a warning to him....
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hackneyed, paternalistic, and just plan wrong-headed, October 7, 2007
This review is from: Sky Horizon (Colony High) (Hardcover)
Dave Brin's SKY HORIZON clocks in at a mere one hundred and twenty-one pages, but from page one, you realize it's going to be a long haul.

Brin's prose is stiff, not bad so much as mechanically good: he seems to be trying desperately to earn an A from his English teacher. He inserts his efforts at high style into the text so overtly that they break the Fourth Wall. And then he helpfully educates his ignorant, young readers with a jackhammer onslaught of moralisms.

Look, I appreciate books with ethical perspective, but the characters' actions should speak for them. Brin's sermons are condescending rather than inspiring. Since when do teenagers sit around pontificating about ethical abstracts?

Brin's portrayal of teenagers is utterly patronizing. Either they're uptight do-gooders who pointedly admonish the reading audience to Be More Responsible, or they're fantastical idiots who are nevertheless provoked into thoughtful debates through the noble ministrations of their history teacher, Mr. Clements. (Young readers, can you say "authorial substitute"?)

Admittedly, Brin manages to make some valid philosophical points (fear of propaganda constitutes its own propaganda). And he blessedly avoids the frothing-at-the-mouth politics which dominate contemporary sci-fi.

But SKY HORIZON is one of those Humanistic books which exalt the human spirit without ever saying anything truly insightful about it. Mr. Brin clearly believes himself intellectually and ethically superior to his colleagues. The book is fraught with so many smug dismissals of "dumb sci-fi movie clichés" that you want to scream in the author's face, "Yes, we admit it, already! Lowbrow Hollywood directors are stealing your well-deserved fame! NOW MOVE ON!"

Paradoxically, Brin becomes more predictable the harder he strains to avoid cliché. He promises that his aliens are "nothing like the movies", and then he gives us...little grey men with glowing eyes.

You want to talk about clichés? Let's talk about children's lit clichés: our protagonist is a good-hearted military brat who is forced to move from school to school without ever forming any worthwhile friendships (but, conveniently, his Air Force dad sticks in California long enough for the plot to unfold). He's infatuated with an older girl whose dewy-eyed attentions he cannot possibly attract. Of course, she's dating the rich jock whom the protagonist despises. The narrative hints overwhelmingly that he should pay more attention to a younger female friend, who is not conventionally attractive but is more suited to his emotional temperament. The readymade characters alone engender déjà vu from about fifteen different children's series. They all struggle with pressing emotional concerns - not because Brin has any passion for these people, but because he's intentionally attempting to craft well-rounded characters.

Or perhaps I should say well-rounded straw men: most amount to convenient targets for Brin's ongoing ethical crusade. Coming from the pen of a self-proclaimed intellectual, many are surprisingly stereotypical - not to mention surprisingly functional. Several stock characters (the Rastafarian skater dude, the wimpy computer nerd) exist solely to further exactly one plot point and thereafter vanish. When one character falls from a school building, a passing circus performer catches her, then walks away without a word. He never reappears. Let me repeat that plot point for emphasis: /randomly passing circus performer./ This is not a joke.

The kids' dialogue is reasonably good, although they become entirely too articulate when Brin is trying to insinuate philosophical truth. But even the better lines are corrupted with that uncomfortable sense of an old guy trying to imitate teen lingo. Yo, give me a break, dude!

As a side note, Scott Hampton's illustrations are scratchy and drab with irregular human faces. All significant details are masked in monochromatic shadow. To think you could potentially pay one hundred and fifty dollars for the signed edition!

SKY HORIZON isn't a book for young people, nor is it a book for adults who remember what it was like to be young. It's a book for old people who think they know what's good for young people.
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