All things atevi!
May. 19th, 2013 06:24 pmThis is the spoiler discussion thread for talking about C.J. Cherryh's Protector and all the books that came before it. This is #14 in the series, so there is plenty to spoil here--careful of the comments section.
We have often joked in my house that the plot of the last trilogy is How Bren Got His Apartment Back. But honestly, I think one of the things I appreciate most about this series is how she has used the groundwork she laid with "big story" in the earlier volumes to tell "little story" here with big consequences. By the time you get this far in the series, Cajeiri's birthday party has implications that would have been completely opaque if she'd tried to start the series with it. Bren can struggle to get his apartment back and Cajeiri can have his friends for a birthday party, and these simple plots are thoroughly, completely SF.
There is still the obvious Looming Big Story Plot Point. But she's getting places with little story. I will be fascinated to see how she ties the two together at the end of this trilogy and in the next one. Any guesses on how long she's aiming for? After Protector I felt like 18 might do, although 21 would be more fortuitous and honestly I will keep reading them as long as she keeps writing them.
We have often joked in my house that the plot of the last trilogy is How Bren Got His Apartment Back. But honestly, I think one of the things I appreciate most about this series is how she has used the groundwork she laid with "big story" in the earlier volumes to tell "little story" here with big consequences. By the time you get this far in the series, Cajeiri's birthday party has implications that would have been completely opaque if she'd tried to start the series with it. Bren can struggle to get his apartment back and Cajeiri can have his friends for a birthday party, and these simple plots are thoroughly, completely SF.
There is still the obvious Looming Big Story Plot Point. But she's getting places with little story. I will be fascinated to see how she ties the two together at the end of this trilogy and in the next one. Any guesses on how long she's aiming for? After Protector I felt like 18 might do, although 21 would be more fortuitous and honestly I will keep reading them as long as she keeps writing them.
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Date: 2013-05-20 12:49 am (UTC)There was an odd lack of danger in this book, for me. I mean, there was even a point made of how likely a place for an ambush the basement the kids were in was, and no. And Cajeiri's pet escaping didn't turn out to endanger anybody. As a thing in a series this is great, because not every basement has ambushes, especially when security is good, and not every little slipup has terrible consequences-- some are neutral, or, as in this one where the pet found the security hole, good. But it made the pacing on the book level weird. I believe these are three-volume novels at this point rather than trilogy installments, because if I think of this one as the middle of a book it is just fine, and if it has to be a book all by itself it's kind of... wonky in shape.
No idea how long she's going, though.
A question I've been meaning to ask somebody: so I bounced off the first book, Foreigner, so hard I have never been able to read it. I started at book two, it clicked, I proceeded. I keep trying to go back, and it doesn't work. Was there any group established in Foreigner, in like, the first-contact bit at the beginning or something, which might be the lineal ancestor of the deeply-hidden anti-non-atevi faction which was at the root of this coup and which Bren etcetera have been chasing down for so long now? Because it felt, when the group was described, as though it ought to be a callback to something or other, it had the feel of something that should be a loop or tie something together, but I could be hallucinating, and I haven't read the relevant book and can't.
Thank you for the thread, that was a pleasant fifteen minutes off from sewing.
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Date: 2013-05-20 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-20 10:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-20 10:45 am (UTC)Tatiseigi for one, flexing his stance as he understands how the world around him is changing, but always being at core himself.
And Geigi demonstrating in this last book what an astute judge of situations and tactics and strategy he is, placing essential and unexpected firepower exactly where it will affect the situation best -- and giving me one of those 'well of course that would happen; why didn't I see it coming moments.'
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Date: 2013-05-20 11:13 am (UTC)What I admire is that she spent six books saying "Everything could fall apart without Tabini. Everything. We have to support him no matter what" and then Bren goes away to deal with humans and aliens and everything falls apart without Tabini.
Also I was so pleased to see Jase, on the planet! The whole "gets apartment back" sequence was all atevi, and it's nice to have some human faction politics too -- I'd been dying to know what was happening with the Reunioners on the station for books now.
I was pleased for the lack of danger. The danger in Intruder felt thin.
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Date: 2013-05-20 11:16 am (UTC)And there's an interesting long term pattern she's doing where she introduces a character as an antagonist and then makes them an ally. This happens with Ilisidi, with Geigi, with Gin, and with Macheigi now I think.
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Date: 2013-05-20 11:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-20 11:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-20 12:14 pm (UTC)Right, it's like the previous bit of, "Wait, we still don't know whether Bren gets his apartment back or not."
And I do agree that they are three-volume novels at this point.
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Date: 2013-05-20 12:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-20 01:07 pm (UTC)