Foreigner

a novel of first contact , #1

Paperback, 432 pages

English language

Published Nov. 1, 1994 by DAW.

ISBN:
978-0-88677-637-4
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
31348025

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Humans stranded on an alien world. Accepted by the aliens, until suddenly it was war. Because when the aliens are hard-wired in their brains to not even be able to understand the concept of friend; and loyalty to your boss is unbending and forever, until you realize a higher boss has pulled you away -- and that's not betrayal just natural, well, then, how can humans possibly interact? So, now, one man, Bren, is the sole interpretor for all human-alien interactions... and then the whole dynamic changes. A fascinating insight into what it really means to discover an "alien" culture. Gripping story that sets off a series now more than 13 titles strong.

6 editions

reviewed Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh (Foreigner, #1)

Foreigner

CJ Cherryh's Foreigner series is one of my favorites, and I feel like it's wildly underappreciated. I'll keep my future reviews shorter I promise, but let me pitch these thirty year old books to you.

Here's what brings me back to these books:

(1) Interesting alien psychology. The alien Atevi do not have a concept of "love" or "trust". They are instinctually and biologically hierarchical, with upward loyalty in their associations. This creates all sorts of translation friction across cultural boundaries. They are also incredibly numerically-minded, with the numerical equivalent of astrology, finding particular numbers innately more felicitous than others. They do truly act in interesting and non-intuitive ways, and it's so fun to read.

(2) Humans aren't particularly privileged. This isn't an uplift story. Although the humans show up with more technology initially, the Atevi have their own inventions, and have very mixed feelings about how …

reviewed Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh (Foreigner (1))

Review of 'Foreigner' on 'Goodreads'

That was superb. Foreigner is a first contact novel wrapped in a thriller, the twist being that, this time, it's humans that have landed on an alien planet and having to navigate a completely alien culture.

There are two things that really stand out here, the first of which is the Atevi themselves. This is a truly alien race in terms of their attitudes, their instincts and their culture, and this alienness makes them difficult to comprehend and impossible to fully understand. This keeps Bren permanently off balance as his human instincts are consistently wrong.

The other thing to note is CJ Cherry's writing style. Once Bren is introduced, the story is told entirely from Bren's perspective -- what Bren doesn't know neither does the reader and if Bren doesn't understand the importance of something it won't be mentioned. This approach demands some work from the reader in that there …

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Subjects

  • Science Fiction
  • Fiction - Science Fiction
  • Science Fiction - General
  • Fiction / General