The Great Divide is a historical event mentioned by Marten when explaining the existence of alien races. He referenced it when Tera expressed surprise about other alien races existing, saying she must not remember the Great Divide. The details of this event are not fully explained in the early chapters, but it appears to be a significant historical event related to humanity's first contact with alien civilizations. Marten suggested Tera visit an Archive to learn more about it.

I'm not sure specifically which 'great divide novel' you are referring to. There could be many novels with this name or something similar. It could potentially be about a great divide in society, like the gap between the rich and the poor, different social classes, or ideological differences.
I'm not sure exactly as I haven't read it yet. But generally, it might be about some kind of major separation or difference between characters, groups, or ideas.
I don't know who the author of the 'great divide novel' is as there are no more details given. There could be many novels with this name potentially written by different authors.
I'm not entirely sure as I haven't read it specifically. But generally, a novel titled 'The Great Divide' might be about a significant separation or difference, perhaps in a society, between characters, or in an ideology.
I'm not sure exactly, but there might be a character who is a bridge - builder, trying to close the great divide.
I think the main theme might be about social or cultural differences. It could explore how different groups of people are separated by various factors.
I don't know without reading the book. They could be ordinary people caught up in extraordinary circumstances related to the great divide.
I'm not sure exactly as I haven't read it. But perhaps it's about some sort of adventure or relationship set in the context of Texas with the 'great divide' being a central element in the story, like a geographical or social divide.
The unique setting might make it special. Maybe it's set in a world where there are distinct cultural or social divides that we don't often see in other books.
There's no way to tell exactly who the great drivers are without reading the novel. They could be fictional characters created by the author.