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| Reviews ]Reviews of ForeignerThis file contains reviews byby Dani Zweig (dani@telerama.lm.com)Date: Thu, 5 Jan 1995 02:57:42 GMTCherryh has carved herself a recognizable niche through her portrayals of alien species trying to get along, trying to understand each other, and often settling for some degree of mutual accomodation. Her Chanur novels, for example, are set in a Compact of space-faring species, some of which can barely communicate with others, and they combine interesting stories with thought-provoking backgrounds. In Foreigner, Cherryh focuses upon the problem of understanding the alien at the expense of the story, and it doesn't work very well. In the main, we get over three hundred pages of Bren Cameron - the Human liason - and his guards stepping on each others' sensibilities. The problem itself isn't that interesting, either: The source of the friction between Atevi and Humans is not so much their inability to understand each other as the insistance of each on relating to the other as they would to members of their own species. Whereas a Hani would say "I don't understand them, but I can trade with them, and if things blow up I'll duck", Cameron wants the Atevi to like him. I didn't enjoy Foreigner. The story, such as it is, consists of a not-very-interesting character trying to cope with a situation he doesn't understand, and to deal with issues that Cherryh's handled in more interesting ways in other novels. by David Langford (ansible@cix.compulink.co.uk)Date: Wed, 21 Sep 1994 19:20:16 GMTCopyright by the authors of the reviews. 14.3.96, Andreas Wandelt, Louis Perrochon |