Book
The Mote in God's Eye

Average Bufph Rating: 3.0 / 5.0

The Mote in God's Eye

Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle

1974

In the year 3016, the Second Empire of Man spans hundreds of star systems, thanks to the faster-than-light Alderson Drive. No other intelligent beings have ever been encountered, not until a light sail probe enters a human system carrying a dead alien. The probe is traced to the Mote, an isolated star in a thick dust cloud, and an expedition is dispatched. In the Mote the humans find an ancient civilization--at least one million years old--that has always been bottled up in their cloistered solar system for lack of a star drive. The Moties are welcoming and kind, yet rather evasive about certain aspects of their society. It seems the Moties have a dark problem, one they've been unable to solve in over a million years.

Reviews by public Bufph profiles
  • scifi-nerd profile picture
    scifi-nerd
    September 25, 2025

    The Moties as an alien species were fascinating - their biological cycle and the way it drives their entire civilization's behavior reminded me of the kind of hard science-based alien psychology that made The Dark Forest so compelling. However, while the scientific concepts around the Alderson Drive and the detailed military aspects were well thought out, I found the pacing slower than I hoped and some of the human characters felt a bit flat compared to the intricate alien society they were discovering. The book definitely had that sense of cosmic scope I crave, but it didn't quite reach the philosophical depths or game theory complexity that keeps me coming back to Liu's work.

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