Heaven's Reach

the final book of the new uplift trilogy , #6

557 pages

English language

Published Aug. 24, 1999 by Bantam Books.

ISBN:
978-0-553-57473-9
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OCLC Number:
41499547

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4 stars (22 reviews)

Winner of the Nebula and Hugo Awards, David Brin brings his bestselling Uplift series to a magnificent conclusion with his most imaginative and powerful novel to date--the shattering epic of a universe poised on the brink of revelation...or annihilation.The brutal enemy that has relentlessly pursued them for centuries has arrived. Now the fugitive settlers of Jijo--both human and alien--brace for a final confrontation. The Jijoans' only hope is the Earthship Streaker, crewed by uplifted dolphins and commanded by an untested human.Yet more than just the fate of Jijo hangs in the balance. For Streaker carries a cargo of ancient artifacts that may unlock the secret of those who first brought intelligent life to the Galaxies. Many believe a dire prophecy has come to pass: an age of terrifying changes that could end Galactic civilization.As dozens of white dwarf stars stand ready to explode, the survival of sentient life in the …

4 editions

reviewed Heaven's Reach by David Brin (The Uplift Saga, #6)

Heaven's Reach: A mild improvement after a dip in quality in the series

4 stars

I considered David Brin one of the three best genre writers among those who started writing after 1970 (the other two being Lawrence Watt-Evans and Steven Brust; Barry Longyear might be on that list except I think he started writing before 1970, and I haven't seen anything new from him in quite a while). Barry Hughart would be on that list if he hadn't given up writing. An unpleasant personal interaction with Brin online later put me off Brin's work.

Brin's original Uplift trilogy is a favorite of mine. But I was disappointed by the first two books in his second Uplift trilogy. Heaven's Reach represents a significant improvement on those books.

It might get a bit too cosmic (in the same way that his Kiln People did, towards the end), but it's a solid, intelligent, imaginative, and well-written book. Perhaps I like it more because the action takes place …

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Subjects

  • Life on other planets -- Fiction.