The Tower and the Hive

The Tower and the Hive is a 1999 science fiction novel by American writer Anne McCaffrey, the concluding volume of a five-book series also referred to as "The Tower and Hive" series.

First edition (published by Ace Books)
Cover art by Duane O. Myers

Premise

Humans Talents working closely with the Mrdini, an alien race who have been conflict with the insectoid Hive species for 200 years, discover a solution to curtail the Hivers' explosive population expansions without having to wipe out the species as a whole - a solution which both Alliance species object to. At the same time a similar solution is discovered to help the Mrdini curtail their own birthrate, now that they no longer have to sacrifice huge numbers of soldiers in battle to save their worlds from Hiver attacks.

The book was published (U.S.) on May 1, 1999, by Ace/Berkley.

"The Tower and the Hive" series

Beginning with The Rowan, the series follows the lives and careers of the Gwyn-Raven-Lyon dynasty of Talents in the distant future:

1) The Rowan
2) Damia
3) Damia's Children
4) Lyon's Pride
5) The Tower and the Hive

Reception

Kirkus Reviews concluded its review: "Cuddly family/romance/alien-contact saga with useful ideas but far too many characters distinguishable only by their silly names. Still, fans of the series will plunge right in."[1]

Publishers Weekly on the other hand concluded: "The novel lacks the profound imagination of alien minds that's a hallmark of much recent SF, but it also avoids the kill-the-bugs outlook of such SF as Starship Troopers. Readers looking for intelligent, heroic adventure will find it here, and Rowan fans will be especially pleased at this felicitous closing of a popular SF series."[2]

gollark: Oh, it's called IRC bridge.
gollark: ... *where* did the APIONET bridge go?
gollark: It's a perfectly fine challenge even if palaifaopsfuaoifuasiofaisfohasfo does not like it.
gollark: And then ignore the people who this affects saying "no, this is actually bad idea".
gollark: You could just ASK people to aim for more language diversity, not UNILATERALLY IMPOSE it.

References

  1. "Tower and the Hive". Kirkus Reviews. April 1, 2000. Archived from the original on 2012-08-04. Retrieved 2014-12-10.
  2. "The Tower and the Hive". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on 2012-11-13.


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