Brightness Reef (The Uplift Trilogy, Book 1)
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Book details
- Print length672 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSpectra
- Publication dateOctober 1, 1996
- Dimensions4.27 x 1.43 x 6.8 inches
- ISBN-100553573306
- ISBN-13978-0553573305
Book overview
The planet Jijo is forbidden to settlers, its ecology protected by guardians of the Five Galaxies. But over the centuries it has been resettled, populated by refugees of six intelligent races. Together they have woven a new society in the wilderness, drawn together by their fear of Judgment Day, when the Five Galaxies will discover their illegal colony. Then a strange starship arrives on Jijo. Does it bring the long-dreaded judgment, or worse—a band of criminals willing to destroy the six races of Jijo in order to cover their own crimes?
Review
“Brin is a skillful storyteller.”—The Plain Dealer
“Immensely appealing, leaving readers hungry for more.”—Publishers Weekly
“Tremendously inventive, ambitious work.”—Kirkus Reviews
From the Publisher
"Brin is a skillful storyteller."--The Plain Dealer, Cleveland
"Immensely appealing, leaving readers hungry for more."--Publishers Weekly
"Tremendously inventive, ambitious work."--Kirkus Reviews
From the Inside Flap
The planet Jijo is forbidden to settlers, its ecology protected by guardians of the Five Galaxies. But over the centuries it has been resettled, populated by refugees of six intelligent races. Together they have woven a new society in the wilderness, drawn together by their fear of Judgment Day, when the Five Galaxies will discover their illegal colony. Then a strange starship arrives on Jijo. Does it bring the long-dreaded judgment, or worse--a band of criminals willing to destroy the six races of Jijo in order to cover their own crimes?
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
I guess it’s all right, for a hoonish tag. It rolls out from my throat sac easy enough, even if I get embarrassed hearing it sometimes. The handle’s supposed to have been in the lineage ever since our sneakship brought the first hoon to Jijo.
The sneakship was utterly gloss! Our ancestors may have been sinners, in coming to breed on this taboo planet, but they flew a mighty star-cruiser, dodging Institute patrols and dangerous Zang and Izmunuti’s carbon storms to get here. Sinners or not, they must have been awfully brave and skilled to do all that.
I’ve read everything I can find about those days, even though it happened hundreds of years before there was paper on Jijo, so all we really have to go on are a few legends about those hoon pioneers, who dropped from the sky to find g’Keks, glavers, and traeki already hiding here on the Slope. Stories that tell how those first hoon sank their sneakship in the deep Midden, so it couldn’t be traced, then settled down to build crude wooden rafts, the first to sail Jijo’s rivers and seas since the Great Buyur went away.
Since it has to do with the sneakship, I guess my given name can’t be too bad.
Still, I really like to be called Alvin.
Our teacher, Mister Heinz, wants us upper graders to start journals, though some parents complain paper costs too much here at the southern end of the Slope. I don’t care. I’m going to write about the adventures me and my friends have, both helping and heckling the good-natured sailors in the harbor, or exploring twisty lava tubes up near Guenn Volcano, or scouting in our little boat all the way to the long, hatchet-shadow of Terminus Rock.
Maybe someday I’ll turn these notes into a book!
And why not? My Anglic is real good. Even grumpy old Heinz says I’m a whiz at languages, memorizing the town copy of Roget’s by the time I was ten. Anyway, now that Joe Dolenz, the printer, has come set up shop in Wuphon, why should we have to count on the traveling librarian’s caravan for new things to read? Maybe Dolenz would even let me set the type myself! That is, if I get around to it before my fingers grow too big to fit around those little backward letters.
Mu-phauwq, my mother, calls it a great idea, though I can tell she’s partly humoring a childish obsession, and I wish she wouldn’t patronize me that way.
My dad, Yowg-wayuo, acts all grumpy, puffing his throat sac and telling me not to be such a humanmimicker. But I’m sure he likes the idea, deep down. Doesn’t he keep taking borrowed books on his long voyages to the Midden, even though you’re not supposed to, because what if the ship sank and maybe the last ancient copy of Moby Dick went down with the crew? Wouldn’t that be a real disaster?
Anyway, didn’t he used to read to me almost from the day I was born? Booming all the great Earthling adventure tales like Treasure Island, Sindbad, and Ultraviolet Mars? So who’s he to call me a humicker!
Nowadays, Dad says I should read the new hoon writers, those trying to go past imitating old-time Earthers, coming up with literature by and for our own kind.
I guess maybe there should be more books in languages other than Anglic. But Galactic Two and Galactic Six seem so darn stiff for storytelling. Anyhow, I’ve tried some of those writers. Honestly. And I’ve got to say that not one of them can hold a peg to Mark Twain.
Naturally, Huck agrees with me about that!
Huck is my best friend. She picked that name even though I kept telling her it’s not a right one for a girl. She just twists one eyestalk around another and says she doesn’t care, and if I call her “Becky” one more time, she’ll catch my leg-fur in her spokes and spin till I scream.
I guess it doesn’t matter, since g’Keks get to change sex after their training wheels fall off, and if she wants to stay female, that’s her business. As an orphan, Huck’s lived with the family next door ever since the Big North-side Avalanche wiped out the weaver clan that used to squat in Buyur ruins up that way. You’d expect her to be a bit strange after living through that and then being raised by hoons. Anyway, she’s a great friend and a pretty good sailor, even if she is a g’Kek, and a girl, and doesn’t have legs to speak of.
Most times, Pincer-Tip also comes on our adventures, specially when we’re down by the shore. He didn’t need a nickname from some story, since all red qheuens get one the minute they set five claws outside the brooding pen. Pincer’s no big reader like Huck and me, mostly because few books can stand the salt and dampness where his clan lives. They’re poor, living off wrigglers they find in the mudflats south of town. Dad says the qheuens with red shells used to be servants to the grays and blues, before their sneakship brought all three to hide on Jijo. Even after that, the grays kept bossing the others for a while, so Dad says the reds aren’t used to thinking for themselves.
Maybe so, but whenever Pincer-Tip comes along, he’s usually the one chattering—with all leg-mouths at once—about sea serpents, or lost Buyur treasure, or other things he swears he’s seen … or else he heard of somebody who knows someone else who might’ve seen something, just over the horizon. When we get into trouble, it’s often on account of something he thought up inside that hard dome where he keeps his brain. Sometimes I wish I had an imagination a dozenth as vivid as his.
I should include Ur-ronn in the list, since she comes along sometimes. Ur-ronn’s almost as much of a book maniac as Huck and me. Still, she’s urrish, and there’s a limit to how much of a humicker any urs can be, before planting four feet and saying whoa.
They don’t take to nicknames, for instance.
Once, when we were reading a mess of old Greek myths, Huck tried calling Ur-ronn “Centaur.” I guess you could say an urs sort of looks like one of those fabled creatures—if you’d just been conked on the head by a brick and can’t see or think too well from the pain. But Ur-ronn disliked the comparison and showed it by swinging her long neck like a whip, nearly taking off one of Huck’s eyestalks with a snap of her three-way mouth
“Huck only said “Centaur” just that once.
Ur-ronn is a niece of Uriel, who runs a forge next to fiery lava pools, high up on Mount Guenn. She won a scholarship to ’prentice as a smith instead of staying with the herds and caravans on the grassy plain. Too bad her aunt keeps Ur-ronn busy most of the time and won’t ever let her go off in the boat with us, on account of urs can’t swim.
Ur-ronn used to read a lot, back in that prairie school. Books we never heard of in this hick corner of the Slope. She tells us the stories she can recollect, like all about Crazy Horse and Genghis Khan, and urrish hero-warriors from those big battles they had with the humans, after Earthers came to Jijo but before the Commons got patched together and they started the Great Peace.
It’d be uttergloss if our gang could be a complete Six, like when Drake and Ur-jushen and their comrades went on the Big Quest and were the very first to set eyes on the Holy Egg. But the only traeki in town is the pharmacist, and that er is too old to make a new stack of rings we could play with. As for humans, their nearest village is several days from here. So I guess we’re stuck being just a foursome.
Too bad. Humans are gloss. They brought books to Jijo and speak Anglic better than anybody, except me and maybe Huck. Also, a human kid’s shaped kind of like a small hoon, so he could go nearly all the same places I can with my two long legs. Ur-ronn may be able to run fast, but she can’t go into water, and Pincer can’t wander too far from it, and poor Huck has to stay where the ground is level enough for her wheels.
None of them can climb a tree.
Still, they’re my pals. Anyway, there are things they can do that I can’t, so I guess it evens out.
About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.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.
David's latest novel - Existence - is set forty years ahead, in a near future when human survival seems to teeter along not just on one tightrope, but dozens, with as many hopeful trends and breakthroughs as dangers... a world we already see ahead. Only one day an astronaut snares a small, crystalline object from space. It appears to contain a message, even visitors within. Peeling back layer after layer of motives and secrets may offer opportunities, or deadly peril.
David's non-fiction book -- The Transparent Society: Will Technology Make Us Choose Between Freedom and Privacy? -- deals with secrecy in the modern world. It won the Freedom of Speech Award from the American Library Association.
A 1998 movie, directed by Kevin Costner, was loosely based on his post-apocalyptic novel, The Postman. Brin's 1989 ecological thriller - Earth - foreshadowed global warming, cyberwarfare and near-future trends such as the World Wide Web. 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.
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/DavidBrin
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/cab801
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Product information
| Publisher | Spectra (October 1, 1996) |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Mass Market Paperback | 672 pages |
| ISBN-10 | 0553573306 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0553573305 |
| Item Weight | 11.4 ounces |
| Dimensions | 4.27 x 1.43 x 6.8 inches |
| Best Sellers Rank |
#1,593,469 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#5,365 in Alien Invasion Science Fiction
#16,159 in Space Operas
#26,032 in Science Fiction Adventures
|
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 584Reviews |
4 stars and above
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Customers say
Customers find the book well-written, magical, and well-paced. They also describe the story as imaginative, intriguing, and inventive. Opinions differ on the pacing, with some finding it intense and compelling, while others say it's slow and difficult to keep up.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book well-written, magical, and full of character. They say the author has created a dense, complex futureverse. Readers also mention the rhythm makes reading effortless.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...Brin is a fantastic author, who has created a dense, complex futureverse with generally amusing alien races and uplifted Earth races, who amuse..." Read more
"...For the most part, they're all intense, heavily detailed and fully characterized books. "..." Read more
"...This makes the story hard to read for a non-naive English speaker...." Read more
"...like prose and poetry, flows at time, with a rhythm, which makes the reading effortless...." Read more
Customers find the story quality great, imaginative, and inventive. They also say the characters are fascinating and the science is well thought out. Readers also mention the book is gripping and thought-provoking.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...His work is fascinating." Read more
"...As a whole, it's one of the great works of science fiction and one of the few pieces of science fiction that belong in the class of true..." Read more
"The idea of the book is great. The story itself is good...." Read more
"...An easy to read, yet highly imaginative series. And a rousing good space opera!" Read more
Customers find the book's character development great. However, some readers say the cast of characters is great.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...Like "Startide Rising," Brin produced a gripping plot, great character development, and a good progression towards a positive goal...." Read more
"...The characters are fairly well thought out, but not well explored. The concept is quite novel, for me anyway...." Read more
"...its tale of tolerance and environmental sensibility mixed with fascinating characters and sci fi so well thought out it barely feels like sci fi and..." Read more
"Great book; skip the cast of characters..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it intense, compelling, and thought-provoking, while others say it's slow and difficult to keep up with the various words used to describe things.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...I have only two issues with the book: the story is dragging forever in several, parallel lines an each of them is kind of dull on its own...." Read more
"...For the most part, they're all intense, heavily detailed and fully characterized books. "..." Read more
"Slow. Slow. Slow. David Brin's style of telling you what's going on from oblique angles is on full display here...." Read more
"...creatures is simultaneously innate, thought provoking and sometimes a little disturbing...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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Unlike the first three books in the saga, the second three books DO form a series. The first of this trilogy, "Brightness Reef," picks up with yet another totally independent plotline and brand new characters. However, it does contain a central character who ties the first three books into this set. Unfortunately, Brin doesn't say, specifically, who that character is until the very end of the book. Even worse, the last time the character was used was so far back in the saga that it's hard to remember anything about him. The remaining two books, "Infinity's Shore" and "Heaven's Reach," continue sequentially from the first and form a tightly knit trilogy with no breaks in time.
None of these books is "happy" or "light reading." For the most part, they're all intense, heavily detailed and fully characterized books. "Sundiver" is the least "heavy" and most lacking in the realistic feel of the rest of the books. But, for the most part, if you like "Sundiver," you'll definitely want to continue with the rest of the saga. Even if you don't like "Sundiver," I highly recommend you read at least "Startide Rising:" it has an entirely different feel to it and might be more to your liking. This saga is just too important to miss out on. As a whole, it's one of the great works of science fiction and one of the few pieces of science fiction that belong in the class of true literature.
The following are some comments on the individual books:
Sundiver: Somewhat different from the other books in the saga in that it's more of a science fiction mystery than a science fiction drama. This book sets the stage for the rest of the saga as it chronicles events that happen several hundred years before what happens in the other books. About the only thing negative I can come up with is that I wish Brin had written several prequels to it so we could read about the earlier adventures of Jacob Demwa that are referenced in this book.
Startide Rising: This book focuses on the group that starts all the other events noted in the remaining books of the saga. Though the main characters start off in a very bad way, Brin does a good job of moving them forward, and upward, throughout the book.
The Uplift War: The events in this book start from the same event that kicks off "Startide Rising." But, other than that, the two books are totally independent. Like "Startide Rising," Brin produced a gripping plot, great character development, and a good progression towards a positive goal.
Brightness Reef: This is definitely not a happy book. It starts out with many non-pleasant activities and fights its way forward from there. The biggest problem I have with it is that it's very hard to see how anything good or positive is going to happen to the main characters, no matter how much they try.
Infinity's Shore: First, the negative: once this book starts, it's very apparent that a whole lot of relevant stuff has been happening elsewhere that we missed. Essentially, there's at least one entire book that sounds extremely interesting that's missing from the saga. Brin fills in most of this back-story during this book and "Heaven's Reach." But, I'd sure like to have read that missing book. On the positive side, this book re-introduces us to old friends and subtly changes the focus to them. Everything's still happening in the same place with mostly the same characters, but the attitude changes and becomes more can-do.
Heaven's Reach: One difficulty with this book is due to how it continues from the previous book. It's merely a change of venue instead of a new set of adventures. A quote from one of the main characters near the end of this book sort of sums up my feelings about it: "...what will one more worry matter? I've long passed the point where I stopped counting them." Essentially, by the time this book and saga starts winding down (and even at the point of that quotation, it really hasn't started that yet), the reader is totally fatigued by never-ending problems. I really like these works, but the lack of a tie-up between "Infinity's Shore" and this book is grinding.
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About the only complaints I have of the six uplift books so far are: a) the very first book, Sundiver, seems very disconnected from the sextology per se. It is more like a standalone prequel. b)The second two books are much more connected, but the third in particular can almost stand alone as all of the characters from the second are pretty much absent. c) Brightness Reef is at first glance completely disconnected from all three of the books, but as you proceed to read you realize that there is a strong connection to the second (but not so much the third) book. And you have to read the fourth and fifth for it to all start to come together. d) One is STILL left with lots of loose ends dangling at the end of the sixth book. We all await the happy day that David Brin returns to his uplifting muttons and brings us the next three books, hopefully books that illuminate what happens on the world introduced in Brightness Reef, reveals to us where and how the 6 (!) orders of life work out the crisis that ends the sixth book, and of course, hopefully manages a happy ending with those pesky humans and their home world not blown to smithereens by all of the races that apparently are out to destroy them all because they found critical evidence concerning the Progenitors. Maybe even with those pesky humans establishing that the Galactic Library is utterly corrupted the exact same way that the Internet is being corrupted now, with noise that overwhelms the signal and with so MUCH information that even with sophisticated searches, it is effectively useless.
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This one's a slow burn - he aims for a pretty vast scope, in describing this world and the different things that happen, so there's a lot of setup and a lot of characters to track. But it heats up toward the end, and I'm utterly enthralled now that I'm into the second book.
Really important: There's a cast of characters at the beginning of the book. Don't read it. It's got at least two major spoilers, including one that's a spoiler for Infinity's Shore. The others lists - "Cast of Sapient Species" and "Glossary of Terms" - are mostly OK with some minor spoilers. I'd say dive right in to the main text.
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His writing, like prose and poetry, flows at time, with a rhythm, which makes the reading effortless.
Sometimes the complexity of the characters and species/beings forces one to backtrack to absorb or create a visual representation in one's mind of the characters but once this construct is established, the flow begins.
For me, a truly enjoyable read. Now on to the 2nd book in this 3 book series.
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Then the next journey starts here.
It starts with meeting some Galactics you've not really met before, and though this trilogy is a sequel to the first, this volume is just an introduction for the second.
You really should read the first trilogy before starting the second.
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