> On Fri, 10 Aug 2012 16:50:42 -0700, Don Bruder <
dak...@sonic.net>
> wrote:
>
> >Second query: Is it as heavily loaded with his increasingly tiresome
> >tree-hugger/save-the-whales/etc propaganda disguised as SF as,
> >ferinstance, Earth?
>
> Why do people go on about that? It's *only* in Earth that he includes
> that sort of thing.
"*only*"????
By that statement, I haven't got any choice but to conclude that you've
not read any Brin other than "Earth". Or if you have, you somehow
managed to overlook his eco-compulsion.
The Uplift series utterly drips with it - perhaps even more than
"Earth", albeit at a higher scale. Not so much "Gotta save the <pick a
single species on a single planet>!" as "Gotta save the entire ecology
of the 4th spiral arm of galaxy <mumble>!"
It's noticeable in Sundiver, thankfully as a relatively small,
reasonably contained side-excursion. It gets a bit thicker in "Startide
Rising", but remains at least decently under control. In "The Uplift
War", the gloves come off - it's a fairly major sub-plot. In the second
trilogy of the bunch, it's practically the central premise throughout
the first two volumes - we get beat over the head with the "Oh woe!
We're evil invaders destroying the pristine ecosystem!" club almost
continuously. It gets harped on over and over, although not quite as
stridently, in the third. Taken as a whole, the entire Uplift series
could have been a sermon written by Greenpeace. (or pick whatever other
eco-nutters you prefer) The fact that it's wrapped in a pretty decent SF
tale (despite kind of going off the rails towards the end) doesn't do
much to change that reality.
Even "The Postman" uses it as "spice". I haven't gotten around to "Glory
Season" yet, but from a reference to it in one of his author's notes,
(can't recall the precise wording, but it went something like "expands
on some of the ideas in Glory Season") it likely has just as much.
Of the eight novels from him that I've read, six of them pound the
"eco-drum" so hard that it frequently drowns out the rest of the
orchestra, another one thumps it pretty solidly, And the 8th taps on it
a few times. Hardly "*only* in Earth"...