The first
trilogy of books in C.J. Cherryh’s Foreigner series grabbed me.
The third book, Inheritor,
snorted too many lines of cheap sf, but overall the novels’
in-depth exploration of culture and otherness was unlike anything I’d
encountered to that point. The second trilogy was a major departure,
but again, the focus remained on relationships and the differences
between them, and had the strongest overarching storyline of any of
the trilogies to date. With the third trilogy things started to
crack and fray. Where each of the first two trilogies had a defined
arc, the third moved like a drunken man at a Rolling Stones concert,
i.e. according to its own set of rhythms that only it understood. It
was worrisome. Was the series I enjoyed so much starting to fall
apart?
Reading the
blurb for the next Foreigner book (the tenth), Conspirator
(2008), my senses went on full alert. That
is just a repeat of the plot from Deliverer!!!
my inner voice screamed. What is
Cherryh doing?!?! I have since
picked up and completed Conspirator.
What are my senses telling me now?
The events of
Deliverer
led the reader to believe that the southern uprising was put down,
and that Tabini had re-established himself as Atevi leader. Bren had
returned to his old post as translator, advisor, and otherwise
jack-of-all-human-trades. Cajeri had been returned to his family.
And with the leader of the coup dead, the overall situation appeared
calm once again. We could get back to the human-atevi conflicts that
were introduced and escalated through the first six novels.
Conspirator
says: “No no, think twice.”
While the larger thematic picture has yet to be fully revealed for
the fourth trilogy, Conspirator
puts readers right back into the waters—literally and
figuratively—of Deliverer.
There are events wherein Cajeri is once again alone and hunted. The
southern uprising appears not to have been quelled (at least so it
seems). And Bren and the dowager must once again use their talents
and skills to get out of a sticky situation. And oh, Barb is back,
being Barb.
It’s been a
few weeks since I read Conspirator,
and the one summarizing thought I keep coming back to is: is
Conspirator
Cherryh’s attempt to redo, to wipe from the record books the mess
that was Pretender
and Deliverer?
As mentioned, the plots are similar (not the same, but similar),
only this time the focus is laser sharp, no drunken man dancing. If
one ignores the Barb scenes, Conspirator
feels like the novel Pretender
and Deliverer
should have been, or at least Pretender
(we don’t yet know enough to make the full comparison to
Deliverer).
But for as
much as Conspirator
improves upon yet repeats the previous novels, it still begs a lot of
questions. For me, this is primarily singular: what the hell
happened to the storyline in space from the second trilogy? There
have been sparse mentions of the third alien race, as well as only a
sentence here or there about tensions in the human-occupied space
station over the past few novels. All of the drama that went with
Bren, Cajeri, and the dowager’s multi-year run through space
remains a moot point four books onward. I don’t believe, nor do I
expect Cherryh to have had a master Foreigner plan in mind when she
began the series decades ago. It’s clear she’s feeling her way
as she goes, which is fine. But I can’t help but think she is not
building from the successes of her labor in the second trilogy by
echoing the storyline of the third trilogy at the beginning of the
fourth. It feels like there is so much more to mine from, for
example, a third alien race, particularly conflict with another race.
This would put a new light on Atevi-human relations as well, and
bring with it a whole new set of relationship struggles and
conflicts… As mentioned, human-Atevi relations regarding
technology and space remain unresolved. But here we are at
Conspirator,
characters predominantly rehashing what they did two books ago... I
digress.
Given the
strength of Conspirator
from a technical perspective I will hold out that Cherryh has a hand
on the series’ reins, and read the next novel, Deceiver.
But I’m losing faith… If it too proves to be no more than
echoes, I don’t know what I will do…
I have been meaning to read this series for YEARS.
ReplyDeleteWarning!! Warning! Serious investment! :) I've been reading the series for literally 10 years, and still haven't finished...
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