Starbridge

by A. C. Crispin

StarBridge (1)

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Fiction. Science Fiction. WE ARE NOT ALONE, AND WE'RE ABOUT TO MEET OUR NEIGHBORSAfter more than a hundred years of space travel, a stray radio signal indicates the possibility that alien life might exist.The crew of the Désirée has no training in interstellar diplomacy and a minor dispute turns to disaster that could escalate into a full scale war.Can the bond formed between two very different friends be strong enough to bridge their differences and save their people?Come along in this show more first book in the StarBridge Series in an exciting journey across the stars in a desperate gamble to save both their worlds.BOOKS IN THE STARBRIDGE SERIESWe hope that you have enjoyed this first book in the StarBridge Series. It is a pleasure to be bringing back this classic young adult tale to readers everywhere and hope you will continue in the series with the next book, Silent Dances.Book 1: StarBridge - Earth discovers they are not the only sentient beings in the universe and their first contact turns deadly in an unfortunate turn of events.Book 2: Silent Dances - Deaf since birth, Tesa is the perfect ambassador to the alien Grus whose sonic cries can kill. Has earth made its own discovery of a new sentient species?Book 3: Shadow World - A young man learns how to cope with death from a golden-eyed race of beings with tragically short lives.Book 4: Serpent's Gift - A young girl creates a mind-link with the StarBridge computer, and a series of deadly accidents threatens all life on the asteroid.Book 5: Silent Songs - Amphibious beings from a distant world land on the planet Trinity, threatening the native creatures and the StarBridge ambassadors.Book 6: Ancestor's World - When a member of an archeological team on the planet Na-Dina is brutally murdered, Mahree Burroughs arrives to find the killer, no matter the cost.Book 7: Voices of Chaos - The feline beings known as Arrekhi have requested admission into the Cooperative League of Systems, but they are harboring a secret that could have deadly consequen show less

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5 reviews
This book, along with four sequels, was among the Sci-Fi book horde I purchased a month or so ago. It look mildly interesting and I had the set (or so I thought), so I kept it, not really intending to read it anytime soon. I mean, look at the cover! So cheesy!
But then, Jim C. Hines, a favorite author, mentioned he was reading it to his son. Since I admire Hines' work so greatly, I reassessed my initial appraisal of the series. After this first book, I see what Hines is speaking about (not that I doubted him).
I enjoyed this book greatly! The beginning is a bit slow and the story doesn't pick up pace until things go wrong. A story about humanities First Contact, this could easily shift into a parade of cliches. But it doesn't. It felt show more truthful, as if things might actually happen this way. I felt Mahree was a bit young, but her character grew up in the story and I like how Crispin handled that. In the end, this is a fabulous sci-fi tale, with all the charm of an old classic and all the wit and twists of a good story. I highly recommend if you want a solid sci-fi tale! show less
½
Ever so often, I pull a book out of my library to see if my reading tastes have changed. The last time I read "Starbridge" was 1996. I knew nothing about the art of writing in 1996, and now I am studying the craft.

A.C. Crispin wrote the book in 1989 when female heros in sci-fi were largely unknown. Like many of the changes for women in our culture, we often accept the change without thinking about the way it happened. For the first confident steps toward heroic women in sci-fi, we have A.C. Crispin (among others) to thank.

After 19 years, this book continues to satisfy a reader with a plot that surprises with almost every turn of the page, characters who take life, and a satisfactory - though unexpected - ending. This book is still show more easily found and worth the price. show less
This reads like a homeless man's Vernor Vinge or lower rent Timothy Zahn. A human freighter picks up signals and encounters aliens. There are various misunderstandings, leading to finding a whole Federation-type thing of other aliens. None of the characters really seemed real to me. The main character, Mahree, was supposed to be 17 but it was hard for me not to think of her as a whiny 12-year-old. That said it's still some fun light sci-fi reading. If the sequels were cheap enough I might read them.
One of the better YA novels I've read. I like that it is optimistic Sci-Fi. I like that it features a heroine without getting preachy about gender roles. I like that there's a talking rug.
Author has written some good ST novels.

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Author Information

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51+ Works 12,630 Members
A. C. Crispin was born in Stamford, Connecticut on April 5, 1950. She received a bachelor's degree in English literature from the University of Maryland in 1972. Before becoming a full-time author, she worked for the US Census Bureau. Her first novel, Yesterday's Son, was published in 1983 and was part of the Star Trek series. She wrote three show more other Star Trek novels: Time for Yesterday, The Eyes of the Beholders, and Sarek. She wrote V, a novelization of the television miniseries, in 1984 and collaborated on two more books in the V series: East Coast Crisis with Howard Weinstein and Death Tide with Deborah Marshall. She also wrote Star Wars: The Han Solo Trilogy and The Starbridge Chronicles. Her most recent works include The Exiles of Boq'urain: Storms of Destiny, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom, and Time Horse. She died of cancer on September 6, 2013 at the age of 63. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Original publication date
1989
Dedication
This book is dedicated to Andre Norton, First Lady of science fiction and fantasy...and my friend.
When I was growing up, your stories, more than any others, filled me with a sense of wonder about the universe. A sense o... (show all)f wonder is one of the greatest gifts a writer can bestow...something to treasure always. Thank you, Andre.
First words
Dear Diary:
Nothing ever happens in space.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I'll watch them...but, believe me, it'll be a long time beore I do any more wishing.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3553 .R519Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-

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Reviews
5
Rating
(3.86)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
5