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Brightness Reef (Uplift S.) by David Brin
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Brightness Reef (Uplift S.) (edition 1996)

by David Brin

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
2,491225,983 (3.72)1 / 41
Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:

Strange visitors throw a planet of refugees into chaos in this science fiction adventure by the author of New York Times bestseller The Uplift War.

Book One in the Uplift Storm Trilogy

Centuries ago, the Buyur race abandoned Jijo. Now off-limits to settlers, it??s warded by guardian machines who will protect the planet until the Institutes of the Five Galaxies declare Jijo ready??in another million years??for new civilization.

But mere laws and guardians can??t keep out the desperate. Clandestine bands of ??sooners? have sneaked down to the lonely planet. Six intelligent races??all refugees??have bickered . . . then built a new society in the wilds of Jijo, hidden beneath forest canopies. Together they live in harmony??and in fear of the day their illegal colony will be discovered and judgment from the Five Galaxies will rain down upon them.

One day a strange starship finally does appear on Jijo. But its owners do not bring law or judgment. Only dire secrets. And they??ll do whatever it takes to keep them . . .

This ebook features a new introduction by the author.

Hugo Award Finalist

??A captivating read . . . Brightness Reef leaves you looking forward to more. It??s a worthy addition to what promises to be a great science fiction series.? ??Star Tribune

??Brin is a skillful storyteller. . . . There is more than enough action to keep the book exciting, and like all good serials, the first volume ends with a bang.? ??The Plain Dealer 

??A universe that??s immensely appealing, leaving readers hungry for more of this exciting, epic adventure.? ??Publishers Weekly 

??Tremendously inventive, ambitious work.? ??Kirkus Reviews

??A timely, science fictional… (more)

Member:rift
Title:Brightness Reef (Uplift S.)
Authors:David Brin
Info:Orbit (1996), Paperback
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:science fiction, uplift

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Brightness Reef by David Brin

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» See also 41 mentions

English (20)  Spanish (1)  Finnish (1)  All languages (22)
Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
32
  freixas | Mar 31, 2023 |
The different natures of the species was very well done, they are each quite unique. However, there is little description of each of the different peoples. Presumably this is because in the setting the differences are normal but it makes it harder to picture.
All in all I found this very slow paced and jumbled. ( )
  eleanorg | Feb 15, 2023 |
I admit I had some difficulty getting into this. I was fascinated by the characters and the world, but that's not quite the same thing as being engaged and understanding it all. Despite this being the first book in a new Uplift series--and perhaps my problem is that I hadn't read Brin's earlier Uplift books, though I'd been told I could enter into this one instead--it really felt like I was entering into the middle of a series. The learning curve was a big one, and although I could get wrapped up in scenes and characters' stories easily enough, the larger picture was never easy to grasp. And, truth be told, I'm sure I missed quite a bit. I'd like to say that I'll go and read the earlier Uplift books and then re-read this one, but that's a big ask for a 700 page book which left me wishing that there'd been a bit more clarity and story included, vs. all of the incredible world-building (because world-building and character-building alone don't make books).

I am going to try to move into the next book in the series at some point, though I need a break before then. I'd recommend readers not enter into the Uplift universe through this book, though--I was told I could, but I suspect that wasn't an ideal choice. ( )
  whitewavedarling | Mar 27, 2021 |
This happens to be one of those books that is both brilliant and lacking at the same time. I will explain myself.

The novel is actually quite as daunting and impressive as [b:Startide Rising|234501|Startide Rising (The Uplift Saga, #2)|David Brin|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1476445711s/234501.jpg|251634] and [b:The Uplift War|234489|The Uplift War (The Uplift Saga, #3)|David Brin|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1375272637s/234489.jpg|98235] in it's way, but it's mainly because Brin doesn't ever stint on world building. Ever. He goes all out and develops tons of alien races, tons of characters, and a great many implications for the amazingly complex alien culture among the 16 galaxies.

Truly, I have nothing bad to say at all about the quality and depth of its development. It's actually rather staggering. Brin never rests on his laurels. He finds new avenues to drill down into and I should say that there are VERY few authors who do it as deep or consistently as he does.

So what's lacking?

Well that's a very complex creature, too. My primary go-to complaint is in the basic story, but it isn't because it's too simple or too complex. Rather, it's because I was constantly wondering why I should care about some far distant fallow world where a bunch of alien refugees including humans had tossed all their technology into the drink in order to hopefully devolve genetically, culturally, and intellectually. Why would they do it? Because while they're political and cultural dissidents to the rest of the galactic society, they're also adherents to a weird quasi-religious tenant that is diametrically opposed to Uplift in general.

They want to return to innocence.

(Of course, not everyone believes. Humans are a bit more complex and have their own reasons to buck this trend with their books and their skepticism of the galactic culture that either doesn't want to be bothered to help the upstarts, but that's a sub-plot.)

I have no problem with the concept. In fact, if this was any other novel by any other author, I'd be touting it and the way it approaches the subject as honestly unique and fascinating. So what's my problem with it? I don't like book-burning. I'm in love with books. Of course, these guys take it all the way and sink their spaceships and all their tech, too, with a few human exceptions, but the core is the same.

What we've got is a novel about aliens and humans interacting in very complex ways with the ever-present fear that the galactics will find them and punish them and their entire RACE for the crimes of despoiling a fallow planet that should have remained fallow and untouched by anyone for several billion more years. That's a steep punishment for a broken law. Notice, too, that the galactic culture with its many, many, many species is an establishment that has been around for a very, very long time. Nothing stays around that long without being a very robust system. Mostly it relies on just out-waiting problems. :)

...Including dissidents who are thinking in terms of devolving themselves to pre-sentience. :)

Too bad that plan goes to seed. :)

So what's my problem? Too slow, maybe? My expectations wanted more resolution on a huge scale instead of what amounts to a tiny backwater and backward hamlet in the middle of nowhere?

Well that's my own damn problem, right? The novel is still a damn sight better than the majority of alien society novels out there by any yardstick. My problem is that I am judging it by his other brilliant Uplift novels instead of just focusing on what it does right. And it does a lot of things very right.

Of course, it's also book one of a trilogy that really needs to be read together if you want any sense of closure, too, so there's that. :)

And since I've read these before and I know that the end is practically a full 180 degrees from where we start now... I should have just kept faith from the start. :) So I will. I *was* of two minds about doing this re-read, but now that I've done this second read two decades after it was published, I'm now somewhat amazed and chastened that I should have worried. This is still a classic Brin.

I just needed to manage my expectations. :) ( )
  bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |
I was a bit confused at first, because aside from human beings I had not encountered any of the other races living on Jijo. ( )
  Eternal.Optimist | Aug 22, 2018 |
Showing 1-5 of 20 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (2 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
David Brinprimary authorall editionscalculated
Gambino, FredCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Gardini, CarlosTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Gunn, JamesIntroductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Lenagh, KevinMapssecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Warren-Youll, Jamie S.Cover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Whelan, MichaelCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Dedication
to Herbert H. Brin
Poet, journalist, and lifelong champion of justice
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I must ask your permission. You, my rings, my diverse selves.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
This was published as two books in Germany as Sternenriff and Fremder der fünf Galaxien.

This was published as two books in France as Rédemption - Le Monde de l'exil and Rédemption - Le Monde de l'oubli.

Do not combine the German or French works with the English.
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:

Strange visitors throw a planet of refugees into chaos in this science fiction adventure by the author of New York Times bestseller The Uplift War.

Book One in the Uplift Storm Trilogy

Centuries ago, the Buyur race abandoned Jijo. Now off-limits to settlers, it??s warded by guardian machines who will protect the planet until the Institutes of the Five Galaxies declare Jijo ready??in another million years??for new civilization.

But mere laws and guardians can??t keep out the desperate. Clandestine bands of ??sooners? have sneaked down to the lonely planet. Six intelligent races??all refugees??have bickered . . . then built a new society in the wilds of Jijo, hidden beneath forest canopies. Together they live in harmony??and in fear of the day their illegal colony will be discovered and judgment from the Five Galaxies will rain down upon them.

One day a strange starship finally does appear on Jijo. But its owners do not bring law or judgment. Only dire secrets. And they??ll do whatever it takes to keep them . . .

This ebook features a new introduction by the author.

Hugo Award Finalist

??A captivating read . . . Brightness Reef leaves you looking forward to more. It??s a worthy addition to what promises to be a great science fiction series.? ??Star Tribune

??Brin is a skillful storyteller. . . . There is more than enough action to keep the book exciting, and like all good serials, the first volume ends with a bang.? ??The Plain Dealer 

??A universe that??s immensely appealing, leaving readers hungry for more of this exciting, epic adventure.? ??Publishers Weekly 

??Tremendously inventive, ambitious work.? ??Kirkus Reviews

??A timely, science fictional

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