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The Pride of Chanur [Mass Market Paperback]

C. J. Cherryh (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher: Daw Books; First Thus edition (1982)
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000OUJW96
  • Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 4.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,025,685 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I've written sf and fantasy for publication since 1975...but I've written a lot longer than that. I have a background in Mediterranean archaeology, Latin, Greek, that sort of thing; my hobbies are travel, photography, planetary geology, physics, pond-building for koi...I run a marine tank, can plumb most anything, and I figure-skate.

I believe in the future: I'm an optimist for good reason---I've studied a lot of history, in which, yes, there is climate change, and our species has been through it. We've never faced it fully armed with what we now know, and if we play our cards right, we'll use it as a technological springboard and carry on in very interesting ways.

I also believe a writer owes a reader a book that has more than general despair to spread about: I write about clever, determined people who don't put up with situations, not for long, anyway: people who find solutions inspire me.

My personal websites and blog: http://www.cherryh.com
http://www.cherryh.com/WaveWithoutAShore
http://www.closed-circle.net

 

Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (18)
4 star:
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3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars as good a treatment of aliens as one can find, April 30, 1998
By 
The Pride of Chanur is crewed by members of a felinoid race that were latecomers to space travel, interacting with about six other races *not* including humans for the most part.

Cherryh's aliens are *very* alien. Some are barely comprehensible to others. Some simply lack concepts that others are heavy with: for example, the main 'bad guy' race in the book, the Kif, neither comprehends nor harbours racial bigotry (which cannot be said for the felinoid Hani). What this all means to the reader is a refreshing need to abandon one's human assumptions while getting to know these cultures and races. Watching them all interact is fascinating.

The book, again typical of Cherryh, does not waste words. Two are not used where one will do. Therefore, scan-reading types like myself can miss a great deal by not taking their time, because the book is thicker than it looks. As such it is a better bargain than its size suggests. And since there is always a lot going on, this is a strength rather than a drawback.

There is not a lot of emphasis on TSFBS; Cherryh apparently figures that her energy is better spent creating interesting characters, plots and interactions than trying to wow one with the futuristic-sounding devices she can come up with, and I believe she's right. There is enough, but not too much, and it is never forced. Emphasis is on beings rather than gadgets.

The matriarchal (at least in reality rather than in name) Hani are a great alien race to follow. They are loud, brassy, and gutsy. Many of them hate other Hani clans much worse than they hate other races, and this is ingrained in their culture. Absent is the mindless assumption that all members of one race are likely to have common interests. In the case of three of the races, it's not even easy to figure out what their interests might be.

The entire Chanur series, of which this is the start, ranks with the Morgaine, Cyteen and Faded Sun series as superb reading of the rich type that few authors can give you. Recommended without reservation to new or experienced SF readers.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The pride, only "The Pride" cause all this, November 24, 1999
By 
If you ask her, how it's all began, she will answer - because of the pride. She, the red-mane, lioness-like hani, the captain of a hani ship, a ship belonging to noble hani clan - Chanur. And all this began because of the pride - her "Pride". The Compact space is a little space is the big galaxy, in which six species live in delicate balance. Kif, living for cruelty and piracy; Mahendo'sat, full their curiosity and always involved in strange experiments; Stsho, with their xenophobic minds. T'ca-Chi - two symbiotic species, acting like one organism, their brains made like matrix. K'nnn, who no one can talk to, except T'ca. And Hani, whit their clans pride, and the female presence in the space because no hani male can travel on a spaceship - being too aggressive and out of control. Six completely different species, six completely different minds - had so far lived in a little place, in delicate balance. And this balance was about to explode, and with it - the whole Compact, when a seventh specie arrived, from the other side of the galaxy. A kif battle-ship intercepted and captured unknown ship with its crew, but when it docked at the Meetpoint Station, the biggest trade center it whole Compact, the last survivor of the crew escaped. The pink-skin, no-mane creature has appeared at the dock of a hani trader ship - "Pride of Chanur". The strange creature called himself "human". And when a kiff prince came at the dock of "The Pride", with all arrogance of his demands, it was only the pride of the honest captain, that Pianfar Chanur, that stops her from returning the "human" to the kif. But where the pride can lead Pianfar to? What can a small hani trader ship make against the full-armed kif battle-ships? Who she can count on? Her own specie, who turned away from her, after all the troubles she have brought them? Mahendo'sat, who doublecrossed her? The mad Stsho whose station was blown down because of her? Or methane breathers, with their weird logic? Who? Who will help her, rescue her from the deadly situation, which her own pride have brought? And what would happen when she arrives home, with a whole kif battle-fleet on her tail?
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Humans as aliens, April 12, 1999
For me the most amazing aspect of this book was the view of previously unencountered humans through alien eyes and mindsets. Not only are her aliens believable (and not simply exaggerated humans), but her humans are entirely incomprehensible, at least as first encountered. The author strives to present the familiar from a different perspective, and she suceeds admirably.

Gradually as the book progresses the main character pieces together the puzzle presented by a sole human castaway, not only learning about his motivation and personality, but about the species as a whole. Think of it as Shogun from the Japanese perspective - who is this barbaic creature, what does he want, how does he think, can we learn anything from him? In the larger context, Chanur not only has to figure out the human Tully, but place him within a larger, shadowy power struggle between several other species. Cherryh's predilection for labyrinthine, partially visible wrangling and maneuvering is in full force.

An astonishing job of creating a truly different species and getting inside their skin - and without the device of using a human interpreter.

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