Binding: Unknown Binding
Edition: Collector's ed
Label: Easton Press
Manufacturer: Easton Press
Number Of Pages: 464
Publication Date: 1994
Publisher: Easton Press
Studio: Easton Press
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Average Rating: 
Rating:  -
The second book in the uplift series but in reality part 1 of the Uplift Wars.A good read which is more about the dirty politics of alien cultures including our own, but it maintains the readers interest despite never properly addressing the cause of the problem which no doubt is to come in the Uplift Wars proper. Early on, one is left thinking that the author will struggle to hold your interest until the end but the tension builds nicely and the conceptual originality which started in Sundiver ... Read More
Rating:  -
I think some reviewers have missed the point when they say that books in this trilogy (and the next one) are disjointed. I think Brin has seen that authors of double trilogies often end up telling convoluted stories across large periods of time and large areas of space. This usually results in an unsatisfactory mess with a bad conclusion that leaves you unsatisfied. Brin instead concentrates each book on one situation in one place. Although the situation always has relevance to what went ... Read More
Rating:  -
I am sorry that I havent read this and other Uplift books before. But better to read late than never. In this book with the background given in SUN DIVER (First book of Uplift Saga), you find yourself in a forgotton corner of the uplift universe. With the dolphins and man as a team (though it is weird for the ancient galactics to work as a team for the clients and masters) earthlings are against all universe. Usually when reading a book you put yourself in the place of the main character. In this book ... Read More
Rating:  -
The plot is a little too contrived, although its passable. The end drags on too much in my opinion. There is little or no continuity with the first Uplift book other than a passing remark, certainly none of the characters are involved.
Rating:  -
Like the first Uplift book, this is rather slow to star off. The lack of human characters may make this book rather confusing at first but it quickly improves and, in my opinion, is the best book in the series.
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