this post was submitted on 28 Oct 2023
9 points (100.0% liked)
Print SF
386 readers
1 users here now
A community for the discussion of science fiction and speculative fiction in print.
Rules:
- No hate speech, bigotry, homophobia, sexism, racism, etc.
- No spam or advertising
- No AI generated content, posts, or comments
- No piracy or suggesting or linking to piracy
- No discussion or submissions of movie, TV, or game related SF
Related communities to visit:
[email protected] [email protected].
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Is it part of Alliance-Union? I've read a couple of hers and always enjoyed them, but they never felt ship-and-crew. Rimrunners, you say (... heads to Wikipedia... )
Yeah, most Cherryh is not ship-and-crew in the sense you are talking about (though I loved the duct-tape feel of the ships in Heavy Time, iirc). Rimrunners might be the closest to what you are looking for though. And yep, it is Union-Alliance. For Cherryh, I guess maybe The Pride of Chanur would be ship-and-crew adventure? I can't quite remember as it was long, long, long ago I read that stuff -- who knows how well its aged. It's cover doesn't look super compelling to me these days. So I'm not recommending it. Ha ha.
I was just looking over some reader reviews of the first book in this series, and I noticed this: "Really nice story setting, oddly enough the background story reminded me of C.J. Cherryh's Chanur novels, which is a good thing." So maybe that is a recommendation after all?
Very, very late to the party but ship and crew ones she’s written in the A-U universe are Rimrunners, Tripoint and Merchanter’s Luck. Heavy Time almost falls into the category too but it takes place mostly on-station after a mining expedition gone wrong with a little bit of flashback to ship and crew.
Yes, it is. Cherry writes about different topics in that universe. Some books are ship-and-crew like Merchanter's Luck and Heavy Time, some like Cyteen or Downbelow Station aren't. The Chanur books are as well, but they are a series.
Also, Becky Chambers' Long Way To A Small Angry Planet.