T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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912.1 | Space Slums | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Sep 12 1990 18:40 | 9 |
| It's interesting, too, for its portrayal of space as a resource-poor
environment (people are short of all sorts of things), rather than
the old-fashioned SF world of lot-and-lots of everything.
I've read several of the Cherryh books, but still don't know what
the actual background is--perhaps this is her goal, as I'm then more
in the situation of a typical low-level person.
-John Bishop
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912.2 | background summary | LUGGER::REDFORD | | Wed Sep 12 1990 19:38 | 32 |
| re: .-1
You mean what's the background of the Alliance-Union setting? A lot of
it comes out in Downbelow Station. It's basically set in the early
stages of human interstellar expansion. The technology level is not
far from our own (e.g. there's no nanotechnology or serious AI), except
that FTL travel is possible. It's expensive, though, so expansion has
been slow. A series of orbital bases are built by colonists from Earth.
Habitable worlds are few and far between, so almost all activity is in
space. The further bases rebel and form the Union, a culture based on
cloned slaves. Earth is too weak and interstellar travel is too
difficult for the Earth to maintain its control. The nearer bases
form a third political power based on an alliance of independent
traders. The trader ships are clans, much like those of Heinlein's
"Citizen of the Galaxy". The more wide-ranging traders are just
coming into contact with aliens, most of whom are not far from the
human technical level.
That's it in a much-too-brief summary. The great strengths of the
setting are the vividness with which Cherryh portrays ordinary life on
ship or on station, and the sophisticated politics that permeates that
life. Its great weakness is that it's too close to the present-day to
be a plausible picture of life several centuries from now. It's
especially unlikely that humans and aliens would meet on near-equal
terms in spaceships. The slightest difference in development rates
would produce dugout canoes paddling out to meet an aircraft carrier.
It would be hard to get interesting stories out of that, though,
so Cherryh does it for the sake of dramatic license. Advanced aliens
do appear in some books (e.g. "Voyagers in the Night"), so she's
aware of the problem.
/jlr
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912.3 | Thanks | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Sep 12 1990 23:01 | 21 |
| Thanks--I'd never seen the "cloned slaves" bit before. I did
get a hint that the Union may be a different species by now,
but not what was going on (beyond the phrase "ritual public
cannibalism").
You say "dugout canoes paddling out to meet an aircraft
carrier"--that's the real experience of many non-Western peoples,
which makes it all the more apposite and persuasive.
The lack of AI and nanotech and other such clearly-about-to-arrive
technologies has always bothered me about standard SF--but the
effort to include them (in cyberpunk, for example) almost instantly
creates a society so alien that I either can't follow or lose interest
or both. I can grant the simplification because what's in people's
head matters as much as what the technology is.
Some authors just throw in a "Butlerian Jihad" or two to explain
the lack of truly advanced technology--so it's a real problem for
the authors, and ignoring it is as good a solution as any.
-John Bishop
|
912.4 | info? | CIMBAD::QUIRICI | | Fri Sep 14 1990 16:15 | 6 |
| re: all previous
this sounds like an interesting kind of 'meaty' series. can anyone list
the novels, in the order that the events described happened?
ken
|
912.5 | | QUASER::JOHNSTON | LegitimateSportingPurpose?E.S.A.D.! | Mon Sep 17 1990 12:07 | 11 |
| I'm not positive even Cherryh can do that ;'D
If you're asking because you are thinking of reading them in some
chronological order, I don't think it's worth the trouble. Her
`universe' is something that slowly builds a coherent picture after
reading many of the books. They weren't written in any chronological
order, and quite a few of them (I feel) were `tied' to that universe as
a convenience (having nothing at all to do with it) just in case a
later plot device might appear.
Mike J
|
912.6 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:24 | 26 |
| < this sounds like an interesting kind of 'meaty' series. can anyone list
< the novels, in the order that the events described happened?
I just picked up "Merchanter's Luck" this weekend and it has a list of
the "Union-Alliance" novels.
Downbelow Station
Merchanter's Luck
Forty Thousand in Gehenna
Voyager in Night
Rimrunners wasn't listed but may be newer than this book. ML is a short
book but so far has got my interest. It's another story of someone just
barely making it in the war torn world of stations and super powers.
This time it's the last survivor of a merchanter ship running on the
margin. He falls for a woman of one of the big merchanter families and
decides that merely surviving isn't enough anymore. Taking an illegal
cargo so he can follow her to Downbelow Station attracts the attention
of Norway, and the fun begins.
Cherryh's depictions of those on the edge make me wonder if she spent
some time on the streets herself. She seems to know that desparate
straits meld people in unusual ways. In this world of "no papers" then
"no existence" an individual is hard pressed to survive. And mind wipe
is the price for capture. I think this could be a look at a possible
future. liesl
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