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The Companions [Mass Market Paperback]

Sheri S. Tepper (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 31, 2004

Three planets have been recently discovered in deep space, and prosaically named to reflect their respective environments. Jungle, lush and foreboding, swallowed up an eleven-member exploratory team more than a decade earlier, while hot, harsh, and dusty Stone turned out to be phenomenally rich in rare ore, the most profitable new world to be found in a century. But it is the third, Moss, that could well prove to be the most enigmatic . . . and dangerous.

Enlisted by the Planetary Protection Institute -- an organization founded to assess new worlds for potential development and profit -- famed linguist Paul Delis has come to Moss to determine whether the strange multicolored shapes of dancing light observed on the planet's surface are evidence of intelligent life. With Delis is his half sister, Jewel, the wife of one of the explorers lost on Jungle. Working together, they are to determine the true nature of the “Mossen” and decipher the strange "language" that accompanies the phenomenon.

Yet the great mysteries of this bucolic world -- three-quarters covered in wind-sculpted, ever-shifting moss -- don't end with the inexplicable illuminations; there is the puzzle of the rusting remains of a lost fleet of Earth ships, moldering on a distant plateau. Perhaps the biggest question mark is Jewel Delis herself and her mission here at the far reaches of the galaxy. Leaving an overpopulated homeworld that is rapidly becoming depleted of the raw materials needed for human survival, Jewel is a member of a radical underground group opposing a recent government edict that will eliminate all of the planet's “nonessential” living inhabitants. And it is here, at the universe's unexplored edge, where the fate of endangered creatures may ultimately be decided -- though it will mean defying ruthless and unforgiving ruling powers to repair humankind's disintegrating relationship with the beasts of the Earth.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Fans will hail Hugo nominee Tepper's latest (after 2002's The Visitor), with its compelling story of an ordinary woman flung into extraordinary circumstances, but interesting ideas left undeveloped, awkward transitions from first to third person and unfair withholding of information may annoy others. Earth, incredibly overcrowded, has passed a new law prohibiting nonhuman life on the planet. Jewel Delis, dog keeper and member of an underground animal-rights group, wrangles her way to the planet Moss with several dogs, ostensibly to help her unpleasant half brother Paul, a linguist, figure out the peculiar language of the planet's varied inhabitants. Jewel finds Moss every bit as odd as advertised, with strange and dangerous plants, fantastic dances performed by creatures that may or may not be intelligent, and a group of humans descended from the crew of a spaceship that crash-landed years earlier. But figuring out how the Mossen communicate is only the beginning, as Jewel and her dogs get sucked into a portal, where Moss, Mars, the dogs, a missing alien race and Jewel's ex-husband collide. As usual in this author's novels, overt themes of ecology and feminism combine with thrilling mystery, and just as typically, a deus ex machina-here aliens stepping in to save the day-makes for a less than emotionally satisfying ending. Still, Tepper talks about important issues, besides excelling at world-building and at creating strong and independent characters.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Tepper's new grand-space opera contains a mysterious planet that may or may not bear intelligent life but does host the remains of a fleet of Earth ships; several predatory cultures, human and alien; an implausible law that will eliminate all nonhuman animal life on Earth; and a heroine who is a true speaker to animals and is trying to find a refuge for them. The good guys are larger than life, the bad guys smaller (whining rather than bold villains), and everything in the book comes together in a magnificent climax. The profeminist, antimale, antireligious didacticism that marks so much of Tepper's work is present in full measure, but so is her extremely fine writing. Tepper's command of language and characterization should have readers busily turning pages right up to the climax, even if, now and then, they will want to install earplugs to soften the shrieking of axes being ground. Oh, well, Tepper's hefty following will happily receive this book, which, neophytes should be advised, isn't the ideal introduction to her. Frieda Murray
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Voyager (August 31, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060538228
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060538224
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,621,869 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Sheri Tepper returns to "Grass", only this time it's "Moss", October 31, 2003
In a novel reminiscent of her best-selling "Grass", author Tepper creates a complicated exobiology on a world "Moss" that has an abundance of perplexing denizens. At first, the explorers from the "PPI" or Planetary Protection, aren't even sure if what they are observing on Moss is an indigenous species. Rest assured, however, something is living there, and it may not be entirely friendly.

Jewel and her half-brother, the slimy Paul, go off on an expedition to Moss. Jewel is happy to leave Earth, which is overcrowded and being threatened by a draconian leadership with the extinction of the sad remnants of non-Human species which take up too much valuable space.

This novel is ambitious, complicated and darker in tone than "Grass" or "Family Tree" but is similar in ideology (ecological concerns, harmony with nature and all creatures.) The complexity of the system on Moss is like the complex interactions Tepper created in "Six Moon Dance" but with again, a darker tone. If you like imaginative science fiction that is not a re-hash of typical sci-fi generic themes, you will enjoy "The Companions" though it is not perhaps quite as good as "The Fresco", "Singer from the Sea" and "Six Moon Dance."

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Tepper's best, but still worth reading, July 26, 2004
By 
avanta7 "avanta7" (Northeast Alabama, USA) - See all my reviews
Sheri Tepper's latest is a remarkably ambitious and complex story, perhaps too ambitious and complex. The story encompasses so many different locations, and different species, all with competing agendas, it was difficult to keep track of who was doing what to whom, and for what purpose. I had a little trouble remembering who some of the individual players were, and their various foibles and attributes.

I appreciated being introduced to each set of players one at a time. The back story was quite useful, and once we got to the action set on Moss, the plot moved along briskly. And along the way, Tepper paid homage to her customary icons: environmental responsibility, religious (in)tolerance, human rights, the interconnectedness of us all. However, the conclusion felt rushed, almost as if Tepper hurried her characters along to meet the publisher's deadline rather than their own destinies.

Still, it's an enjoyable read, full of lovely moments and beautiful sentences. The poem which opens the book ("The Litany Of Animals") is fun and melancholy at the same time. I wish Tepper had given us more of Jewel's mother's epic poem than the few bits and pieces sprinkled here and there throughout the text.

I remain one of Tepper's most fervent admirers. This is nice work, worth reading. It's just not her best.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Liberated Chaos, June 3, 2006
By 
The Companions (2003) is a singleton SF novel. Sometime in the future, humanity has gone to the stars, but much of mankind still lives on Earth in mile-wide square Towers more than two hundred stories high. Each Tower is self-contained, yet associated with other such arcologies into a mega-city -- an Urb -- and all these Urbs are linked together by highspeed podways. Among the Towers are scattered several Sanctuaries wherein dwell the only surviving Terrestrial nonfood creatures, mostly pets and domestic species, but also other types of animals as well as plants.

A popular movement -- In God's Image - Humans First and Only (IGI-HFO) -- seeks to close these few havens for nonhuman life and to destroy all nonhumans therein, allegedly to provide resources for more humans. An ecological protection group, the arkists, has created Earth-like habitats on various worlds to preserve the remaining species. Animal activist groups are also opposing the iggy-huffos through lobbying and legal suits.

Of course the iggy-huffos don't oppose concs, sexual toys who dwell in millions -- or billions -- upon the Earth. Now they are turning up on the colony planets. Even though they are mobile, bisexual, somewhat intelligent, and resemble humanity, the concs inhale carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen like plants, thus don't use up valuable air. Besides, they have no legal rights; concs can be abused and even killed without any authorities making a fuss.

Humans are not alone among the stars nor are they very important to the other races. Most intelligent species are joined in the Interstellar Coalition/Interstellar Confederation, in which humanity is a very junior member. Some of these species despise humanity, but others merely consider them acceptable-vermin.

Two human organizations investigate planets under contract for other IC races. The Exploration and Survey Corps does the initial analysis and later the Planetary Protection Institute does long-term, deep-level examination. The ESC clears a sterile area for their station and sends out remote instruments to complete their analysis; the PPI, however, lives within the environment and grows intimately aware of its nature.

In this novel, Jewel Delis works in the Alred Sanctuary, one of those that the iggy-huffos are trying to close. She is also a subleader in the arkist movement. Her brother is a noted linguist who has taken her with him to various alien worlds. Her major assignment for the arkists is to accompany him; the minor items she learns in casual conversation with aliens are sometimes of great importance to the arkists.

Of the aliens she has met, Jewel enjoyed the Phaina the most. These elder race women put great store in melding in with the environment. Moreover, they are acquainted with animals very similar to dogs. Since they seem to like Jewel, she gets to know them very well. But the officials in the human embassy are not so knowledgeable.

The PPI on Moss requests a linguist and Paul is offered the contract. He asks Jewel to come with him, but she insists that her dogs and their handlers go with her. Paul agrees if, and only if, the ESC concurs; unknown to him, Jewel works directly for General Manager Gainor Brandt of Earth Enterprises, the parent company of the ESC. Since Brandt is also an arkist and the arkists want the dogs to experience Moss, her demands are quickly approved.

Strangely enough, Jewel's liaison was lost a decade ago on Jungle, a sister planet to Moss in the Garr'ugh 290 system. He and ten other PPI associates just vanished as they were walking through the jungle; they were at the end of the line and were not even missed until the PPI group entered a clearing. Jewel found out about this loss when ESC Intelligence Division officers began hounding her for conspiracy in the disappearances. Later Jewel found out that her mother-in-law was behind this harassment, but Dame Cecelia really had only herself to blame for putting Witt on Jungle.

Others have plans for the Garr'ugh 290 system. The alien Derac issued the contract to ESC and PPI for certification of the system as eligible for sale and are irritated that the study has not already been completed; of course, the ESC is waiting for the PPI to finish their portion and the PPI is still not sure about native sapients. The alien Orskimi have planned for the Derac to attack the humans somewhere (maybe on Moss), thus precipitating an interstellar war. The Phain appear to be keeping an eye out for just such troubles.

Then again, all these plans do not take in account another group. The ESC had located several abandoned human spaceships on the nearby plateau. They reported their findings back to Earth and then did nothing else while awaiting completion of the PPI portion of the contract. When the PPI were stalled indefinitely, the ESC contingent decided to go on to the next contract. Since Jewel did not want them to depart the planet just yet, she indirectly initiated a brief survey of these ships to keep the ESC busy. Maybe there were human survivors still on the planet?

This novel also makes much of the human/dog remains and artwork found on Mars. Mattie Delis, Jewel's mother and a great audiovisual artist, found this site and made a very popular composition on it. Yet this location is the only place on Mars in which such remains have been found; furthermore, the site must be at least fifty thousand year old. Could humans have originated on Mars? Not likely, but no one can explain how humans and dogs could have gotten from Earth to Mars so as to leave such signs. Jewel's Phaina friend is strangely interested in Mattie's recording of this find.

This novel is constructed as a mystery, with prior telegraphing of later disclosures. Everything is cleverly foreshadowed, but still pops up as a surprise to the reader. One gets so involved in the crisis of the moment that the long awaited denouement of each enigma is a shock.

Highly recommended for Tepper fans and for anyone else who enjoys a good mystery with interesting characters and relevant problems.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The moss world, so said one XT-ploitation writer who had reviewed first-contact images of it, was a Victorian parlor of a planet, everywhere padded and bolstered, its cliffs hung with garlands, its crevasses softened with cushions, every cranny silk-woven, every surface napped into velvet. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
retirement planets, odor organ, cohabitation liaison, pod lobbies, scent mistress, seeking splendor, ark planets, mercantile floor, odor language, crab armor, liaison contract, jar trees, exempt estates, park floor, moss world, elder races, dog shape, moss forest, jungle world
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dame Cecelia, Gainor Brandt, Night Mountain, Walking Sunshine, Gavi Norchis, Day Mountain, High Priest, Chief Larign, Earth Enterprises, Jon Point, Bar Lukha, Duras Drom, Botrin Prime, Joram Bonner, Holme's World, Jewel Delis, Species Control, Chief Quilac, Evolun Moore, Shiela Aired, Abe Durrow, Great Mahalus, Law of Return, Shiela Alred, Guardian House
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