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Cherryh, CJ - Gate of Ivrel
An alien race once travelled everywhere via gates, but something in the technology made it so that a) the alien race didn't survive and b) the existence of gates still is a threat to the world.
Or, um, something like that.
Morgaine is a legend in Vanye's world, which explains Vanye's surprise when she appears in front of him after he's exiled from his clan. He becomes something like a bond-servant to her and her quest to destroy all the gates.
Unfortunately, I read this while my brain was going wonky, and as such, I don't remember much of it at all. The prose is rather old-fashioned in that old-fashioned fantasy way, and no one has a sense of humor. I really like Morgaine's type, but I had a difficult time getting in the story because of all the honor systems and assorted clans and the formality of the language, for some reason.
But I still want to read more books in the Morgaine cycle, just because of the ending of this book, which made up for much of the Clans and the language and etc.
Or, um, something like that.
Morgaine is a legend in Vanye's world, which explains Vanye's surprise when she appears in front of him after he's exiled from his clan. He becomes something like a bond-servant to her and her quest to destroy all the gates.
Unfortunately, I read this while my brain was going wonky, and as such, I don't remember much of it at all. The prose is rather old-fashioned in that old-fashioned fantasy way, and no one has a sense of humor. I really like Morgaine's type, but I had a difficult time getting in the story because of all the honor systems and assorted clans and the formality of the language, for some reason.
But I still want to read more books in the Morgaine cycle, just because of the ending of this book, which made up for much of the Clans and the language and etc.
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MKK
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Vanye completely won me over in the last chapter.
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But it's got that fabulous tortured relationship with Vanye's families, and the image of Morgaine coming through the gate, 100 years after everyone she knew died, and I'm a sucker for that kind of legendry, and faux-archaic poetry.
When Thiye ruled in Hjemur, came strangers riding there, and one was dark and one was gold and one like frost was fair.
Fair was she, and fatal as fair, and cursed who gave her ear
Now men are few and wolves are more and winter drawing near.
What I like about the Morgaine books, on a more serious note, is how they play with issues of identity (who is Roh? How can he be? What does he mean?), of loyalty (that final chapter, yeah), of ethics (the qual gates do great damage--but so does Morgaine in destroying them). Morgaine and Vanye are like a tornado, or the worst kind of entropy, destabilizing things wherever they go, but for the purest kind of altruism. They're terrifying and wonderful.
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And, well, overt humor not a typical feature of Cherryh protagonists. They're too busy being run down/running things down. The woman rarely ever lets up on the poor people.
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The bad news: A whole new set of characters to keep straight in the next book!
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Oh well, I'm going to go hunt for the next ones int he library today.
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I think the problem with the gates was that (being FTL transport) they created causality violation and paradox when they were used to go backwards in time, and eventually it got bad enough to destabilize the Universe.
There's a related story in the short story collection that came out the other year, set at the time when the Gate network was starting to unravel.
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(And yeah, Vanyee sticks around for a bit.)
I personnally rec "smaller" novels like Cuckoo's Egg rather than Cyteen for people just getting started on CJC.
If you like the Russian flavor of the novels at all, look for Rushalka (sp?) which is Russian fantasy.
- hg
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I think I've read Rusalka, but that was back when I was in middle school, and I don't remember much of it at all!