T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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776.1 | trilogy fever | RESOLV::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Apr 17 1989 21:20 | 10 |
|
My first guess would be that you have to have something to talk
about in the 2nd and 3rd books. Isn't everything a trilogy
now days? On the other hand, real life has multiple sub-plots and
many of them go unresolved so maybe they are just being realistic.
I do agree that I hate a compelete cliff-hanger of an ending. Even
though I loved the follow-up book, Mirror_of_her_Dreams annoyed me
the way it ended in the middle of a paragraph. I think the
authors owe us a complete book. liesl
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776.2 | Charlie brown says | WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZ | barren of Brains | Tue Apr 18 1989 07:58 | 11 |
|
I _thought_ Mirror of her Dreams was a single book. In the
last two pages....... eeeeyyyyaaauuuggghhh .... I'm glad no one was
around when I finished it. I waited over a year for the sequel (AMWT)
Errrr that's Baron.
mk
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776.3 | | RICKS::REDFORD | Co. Conspiratorial Infernal Use Only | Wed Apr 19 1989 00:27 | 13 |
| "Startide Rising" does have a sequel, "The Uplift War", but it's
not a very satisfactory one. Instead of following up on some of
the interesting alien races, Brin concentrates on a boringly
humanoid alien and a gang of intelligence-enhanced gorillas.
Actually, I like it when the author leaves tantalizing hints of
further stories lying around. It gives one a sense of a
vast and open-ended world just outside the window of the novel.
It's one of the main appeals of "The Lord of the Rings". I agree
that in "The Forge of God" it's just clumsy writing, but it can
add a lot to a book.
/jlr
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776.4 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Wed Apr 19 1989 00:48 | 18 |
| re:.0
In many cases, the author writes a book that it just too damn long
for the publisher to be comfortable issuing as a single book, so
the editor cuts it in two.
But in others, it's just a tendency to leave a hook open for further
novels in a series.
And I think the other Benford title you're thinking of is IN THE
OCEANS OF NIGHT.
re:.3
Actually, THE UPLIFT WAR isn't a sequel, as it occurs pretty much
concurrently with STARTIDE.
--- jerry
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776.5 | general replies | MCIS2::TKELLEHER | Need moral fiber? Try Zen Flakes | Wed Apr 19 1989 11:07 | 36 |
|
re: .3, .4
I agree. It can add a LOT to have all sorts of hooks and tendrils
reaching out from the main book, leading your imagination on and
letting it fill in details. Like in STARTIDE RISING, Brin introduces
psi-bombs, and other "psi-" technology, in a totally taken-for-granted
manner. His characters accept psi-energies as blandly as we accept
electricity...and so no explanation is offered for how it works,
what it does, how it's produced. In Brin's case, I loved it...
But Bear...! Have I mentioned that I didn't like THE FORGE OF
GOD? I think I did. Just in case...I didn't much like THE
FORGE OF GOD.
And, yes, Benford's other book is IN THE OCEAN OF NIGHT. By the
way, despite the chop-stop ending to ACROSS THE SEA OF SUNS, I *do*
recommend it. It's a very solid, very good book. Just brace yourself
for the end.
Benford wrote another book (don't know yet if it's the same universe,
though), called GREAT SKY RIVER.
OCEAN OF NIGHT,
SEA OF SUNS,
and
GREAT SKY RIVER. _I_ see a pattern developing!
Stay tuned for Benford's next book,
POND OF PLANETS
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776.6 | Future History != series... | COFLUB::WRIGHT | and miles to go before I sleep. | Wed Apr 19 1989 16:15 | 21 |
|
Picking a nit -
Startide Rising and The Uplift War are not part of a series. They
are part of a Future History. That Future History was started in
Brin's book Sundivers where a lot that is taken for granted in Startide
and Uplifted is explained. Sundivers also occurs many years before
Startide and Uplift and fills in a lot of the background (like what
uplift is, why the aliens don't like us, psi weapons, etc....)
If you want to better your understanding, go read sundivers...
Also, David Brin is currently working on several more books in this
universe. (at unicon '87, David Brin was the Guest of honor and
he said that (if my memory recalls correctly) that there would be
several more books in the series, with one currently under revision,
one in first draft and one being planned....)
Grins,
clark.
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776.7 | ...or is it a Brin-and-Bear [it!] book? | MCIS2::TKELLEHER | Need moral fiber? Try Zen Flakes | Wed Apr 19 1989 17:15 | 12 |
|
Yowzah!!
Gimme some more Brin!
As long as the topics collide, as anyone here read HEART OF THE
COMET? It's a Brin-Benford collaboration, isn't it?
Tom
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776.8 | Heart of the Comet | SQM::MCCAFFERTY | | Thu Apr 20 1989 16:49 | 7 |
| RE: HEart of the Comet
Yes it is a collaboration by the two authors and I found it excellent
reading, good science, good adventure, good...good..well you get
the point.
- John
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776.9 | Oh yeah, thats the one where...... | CSCOA3::CONWAY_J | Marietta Cuisenart | Thu Apr 20 1989 16:56 | 4 |
| I have read both startide, and sundiver and found them both
(apparently) eminently forgettable. So much so that I can't really
enter into this discussion since I cannot recall one thing about
either of them.
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776.10 | Starscape? | CHEFS::BARK | | Mon Apr 24 1989 09:39 | 11 |
| I'm sure I read somewhere, some time ago that Benford was going
to write a book called "Starscape" which would be a sequel to "Across
the Sea of Suns". Presumably, this is the book to which the ending
of "...Sea of Suns" points rather than "Big Sky River".
Personally though I'm cherishing the hope that having stranded Nigel
Walmsley on a godforsaken planet watched over by an automated
Deathstar, he's going to leave the unbearable smartass there and
go on to something new...
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