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Chanur #1

The Pride of Chanur

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When Tully, a fugitive from a spaceship captured by the arrogant, thieving, rodent-like Kif, takes refuge on the Pride of Chanur, a merchant vessel belonging to a clan of the lion-like Hani, Pyanfar Chanur, its captain, gives him shelter, in spite of all the dangers she and her crew will face.

223 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1981

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About the author

C.J. Cherryh

307 books3,376 followers
Currently resident in Spokane, Washington, C.J. Cherryh has won four Hugos and is one of the best-selling and most critically acclaimed authors in the science fiction and fantasy field. She is the author of more than forty novels. Her hobbies include travel, photography, reef culture, Mariners baseball, and, a late passion, figure skating: she intends to compete in the adult USFSA track. She began with the modest ambition to learn to skate backwards and now is working on jumps. She sketches, occasionally, cooks fairly well, and hates house work; she loves the outdoors, animals wild and tame, is a hobbyist geologist, adores dinosaurs, and has academic specialties in Roman constitutional law and bronze age Greek ethnography. She has written science fiction since she was ten, spent ten years of her life teaching Latin and Ancient History on the high school level, before retiring to full time writing, and now does not have enough hours in the day to pursue all her interests. Her studies include planetary geology, weather systems, and natural and man-made catastrophes, civilizations, and cosmology…in fact, there's very little that doesn't interest her. A loom is gathering dust and needs rethreading, a wooden ship model awaits construction, and the cats demand their own time much more urgently. She works constantly, researches mostly on the internet, and has books stacked up and waiting to be written.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 385 reviews
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,522 followers
November 8, 2017
I have complete respect for Cherryh. I've been reading her for almost thirty years and I've made it through most of her novels, but as with most writers and their works, there are a few you can immediately connect with and a few you can't.

Don't get me wrong, I think this novel is pretty solid when I think about it in isolation with the rest of Cherryh's work, but I don't think I'd ever call it a classic. It definitely has some really cool elements, however, which is somewhat marred by my enjoyment of her other works (like the Foreigner series)... namely, the first contact and the focus on language, translation, and cultural misunderstandings. Add that to the fact we're reading this entire novel from a lion-like humanoid, it seems like it could be a winner, right?

Well, yeah, I suppose it could be... assuming Cherryh hadn't completely outdone herself with Foreigner. :)

Or the fact that there were a few weak aspects of the Hani worldbuilding, or Captain Pyanfar herself and her choices...

Or the fact I never really got into any of the other characters... Tully the human, included.

Even so, there's lots of space action and more alien action. What starts out as a benevolent turn then becomes a huge political disaster for the Hani. It just gets worse when the ramifications threaten to topple the peace between all the aliens in this far-flung corner of space. All in all, I think it is deep-down impressive as a novel of ideas, exploration, and events. It should be mentioned that it connects with the rest of Cherryh's expanded universe, as well.

I just wish I had connected more with the characters!
Profile Image for Anthony.
Author 4 books1,939 followers
July 10, 2020
As is typical of the work of C.J. Cherryh, who’s quickly become one of my favorite SFF authors, this book is packed with ideas and features remarkably wrought sequences. What’s most fascinating here is the rendering of several new species of aliens and their societies; and Cherryh’s unusual approach of telling a first contact story from the point of view of the aliens rather than the humans works incredibly well. This is another thoroughly involving adventure tale, showcasing her talent for populating her stories with richly authentic characters, and I look forward to continuing the journey with the Chanur in its sequels.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,321 reviews257 followers
November 7, 2017
This is a reread for me, but I first read this series over ten years ago. I've knocked a star off my earlier review, mainly because I'm a little bit more critical as a reader now. It's still a great immersive read.

Pyanfar Chanur is the captain of The Pride of Chanur, an interstellar trading ship of the hani, a leonine species. While at Meetpoint station a strange creature attempts to board The Pride, clearly fleeing from kif, a sinister species also docked at Meetpoint. Pyanfar's snap decision to shelter this strange-looking human creature, Tully, has immediate and far-reaching consequences as the kif attack with the lethal force and set off in pursuit of The Pride. Running for their lives, the hani ship encounter the bizarre methane-breathing knnn and mahendo'sat, allies with ulterior motives, and soon find themselves at the center of a major political incident that threatens the whole of the multi-species Compact. All of that on top of the domestic political and familial events triggered by the situation.

Cherryh's Compact Space is an adjunct of her Alliance-Union series in a different part of space. That's not immediately apparent from this first book, but there are more tie-ins in later books and space travel works the same in both series. It feels a bit dated now, over 35 years after first publication, particularly in the lack of ubiquitous computing and communications access, but even so the series remains an absolute classic of space opera.

The rich characterization of each of the alien species and the characters are typical of Cherryh's books, as is the almost claustrophobic closeness of the intense third person narrative from Pyanfar's point of view. She is a proud and cranky character prone to impulsive actions, but is deeply caring and protective of the people she considers her own. Many of the criticisms that her fellow hani and bystander aliens are completely valid, but Pyanfar goes to a lot of trouble to do the right thing despite there being are far easier and much less moral way of resolving the situation.

Two final points:

The Pride of Chanur is full of a defining feature I find in nearly all of Cherryh's writing. Like in real life, important pivot points are often over before you even realize it, with consequences and implications to be sorted over for ages afterwards. What this translates to in terms of a reader is that you need to read this stuff carefully because key points may be as simple as a sentence in the middle of action.

Lastly, while this is the first book of a series, it's actually a standalone and can be read as such. The next three book form a trilogy followed by another standalone for a total of five books.
Profile Image for Lata.
4,248 reviews237 followers
June 6, 2021
I first read this in my teens, and was astounded. This was the first science fiction novel I came across where the dominant pronoun in use for the entire story was "she". I had never read a science fiction or a fantasy novel until then where women were anything but props for the main male character, nothing more than helpmates (disgusting idea) or punching bags (even worse idea). For the first time, I read about a group of women flying spaceships, conducting trade, managing complicated political situations, keeping their heads in crises, and I was totally thrilled.
I reread this book every so often and though I still find points that are a little confusing, I never feel anything but thrilled with Pyanfar Chanur and Haral and Hilfy and the other very capable women who crew the Pride. (I realized that Pyanfar reminds me a little of what a much younger Ilsidi-ji might have been like, many years before she met Bren in Foreigner.)
Pyanfar is competently managing trade for the Chanur, a fairly respected and well-off family on Anuurn, the hani homeworld. She's well-off, knows how to get a good deal, can deal well with the various other oxygen breathers in Compact space, and wham! A human drops into her world, and brings a massive number of problems to her ship, her family, her world, and all her assumptions about males and their behaviour. Py spends a good portion of the novel just trying to keep her ship intact and her crew alive and ahead of the machinations of Akukkak, a rather terrifyingly organized kif. She is also forced to begin rethinking her views of the value and actions of males, thanks to Tully, the human. Up till then, Pyanfar had been fairly content with the way hani females and males worked together.
Though this novel wraps up its action, it does set up a much bigger and more dangerous set of political situations across Compact space, which is actually in the same universe as Cherryh's Alliance-Union stories. And I find that once I follow Pyanfar onto the bridge of the Pride, I can't just leave her at the close of this book, and usually end up reading the entire series again.
Profile Image for Apatt.
507 reviews847 followers
April 19, 2015
C.J. Cherryh is one of the most respected SF authors in the genre, she has written hundreds of books over several decades and won several awards. Yet – until now – I have never read any of her books, I attempted her highly esteemed Cyteen but had to give it up after struggling mightily with it for 50 or so pages. So, The Pride of Chanur is my second attempt at a Cherryh book. I did finish it but it was still a mighty struggle. I thought I had a false start with Cyteen but this Chanur book may just be the deal breaker for me. I appreciate her talent but I just can not seem to tune into her wavelength.

The Pride of Chanur starts off well with an intriguing premise and clever narrative from an alien point of view. At the beginning of the book a man named Tully stowaways on board the eponymous "Pride of Chanur" spaceship owned by Captain Pyanfar Chanur, an alien of the “hani” species. Tully does not speak the alien language and has to rely on the ship’s not terribly effective translation machine to communicate with the hanis. Tully is on the run from evil aliens of the “kif” species who captured and killed his crewmates when they came across and captured a human ship. The kifs want him back for commercial gains but he finds the hani species to be more sympathetic and begs for their protection.

Great plot, I was initially intrigued by the possibility of this plotline and the potential for a tremendous adventure of a lone human aboard an alien ship, gradually assimilating into their crew and society, each species learning something from each other. To my chagrin Ms. Cherryh did not go there, perhaps the idea seems too predictable for her given the setup. Instead the narrative concentrates on the kifs pursuing the hanis across space (and hyperspace) in their spaceship with their superior firepower. This is not even as exciting as it sound as there is no sense of momentum in the narrative, the attack on the “The Pride of Chanur” spaceship is described in a rather detached manner and I just could not feel involved in it.

Around the half way point I became more and more disengaged from the narrative and by the time I was reading the last 50 pages of the book I decided to just speed read through them without worrying about missing nuances or some plot details, the alternative is to give up on it. To be fair to the author the problem is my personal expectation of what I thought the story is going to be about vs. the actual story C.J. Cherryh wanted to tell. It’s like I was happily riding on a horse and suddenly the damned thing shook me off and dumped me unceremoniously on the ground.

The protagonist Pyanfar Chanur (not the human character) is quite well developed and I like her well enough (the ladies are in charge in the hani culture), the other supporting characters did not come alive for me, perhaps because the narrative is strictly from Pyanfar’s point of view and there is not much dialogue from the supporting characters to get a feel of their personality. The scenes featuring the lone human Tully are of the most interest to me (as a fellow human!) but he is not featured all that much, besides he is depicted as cautious, fearful and miserable for most of the book so he is not as dynamic and interesting as I hoped he would be. The ending of the book is actually quite good and I wish I had liked the book more so I can read the sequels, but for me to read any more from this series would be ridiculous.

While I definitely do not like The Pride of Chanur I do appreciate Cherryh’s talent, imagination and the attention to details that went into its creation (there is an impressive appendix at the back of the book). Her execution of this book alienates me completely but I guess that cannot be helped, this is an intelligent book and a lot of people like it even though I don’t. I still want to give her Foreigner series a try as I have read a lot of good things about it. One more attempt won’t hurt.

(2.5 stars)
Profile Image for Terry .
422 reviews2,165 followers
December 31, 2014
Definitely a high 3.5 stars, but not quite a 4 for me, Cherryh’s _The Pride of Chanur_ combines space opera with some gritty “hard-ish” sf elements in the beginning of a saga that deals with the political and economic ramifications of first contact. In this first volume of the Chanur saga we follow the exploits of a crew of Hani (lion-like aliens) on the eponymous merchant space freighter The Pride of Chanur. Expecting nothing more than a routine run across their trade routes, Pyanfar Chanur, captain of the Pride, imagines the worst trouble she’s likely to have to deal with is her headstrong niece Hilfy. Of course she’s wrong and what was proving to be a rather boring trip becomes deadly as they run across trouble in the form of an alien stowaway while they are docked at the Meetpoint space station.

The reader is thrust into the middle of things which quickly come to a head as Cherryh examines what appears to be one of her favourite tropes: the idea of the human being as alien. In this case our point of view characters are the lion-like Hani and our view of the lone human character is completely from the outside as the typical barriers of communication, biology and mind-set stand between full understanding. The Hani themselves are an alien species that is only one part of a precarious Compact between numerous alien races: the ape-like Mahendo’sat, the tall and whispy Stsho, and the long snouted and nefarious Kif all of whom share at least a minimal biological similarity and exist in a precarious political balance of trade and travel. Added to this fragile structure are aliens of an even more strange make-up: several species of methane breathers whose biology and mind-set are a mystery even to those with whom they share space, but who barely manage to co-exist with the others.

All that is needed to throw the entire political structure of the Compact off-balance is one secret advantage that can be exploited by one member race at the expense of the others. Enter Tully, a lone human in Compact space recently captured and tortured by the Kif in the hopes of gaining sole access to human space for exploitation, only to escape and seek refuge in the belly of The Pride of Chanur. Too altruistic to exploit or harm Tully, and too mistrusting of the wily Kif to return him to their clutches, Pyanfar cuts and runs in the hope that she can escape the Kif hunter ships and find refuge and aid among the people of her homeworld. Pyanfar hadn’t gambled on the single-mindedness of the Kif captain whose reputation and very existence now hinge upon regaining his lost prize and she gets much more than she bargained for as the Kif calls in more and more ally ships in a hunt across the galaxy and Pyanfar’s allies and options become thinner and thinner as her journey progresses.

Cherryh covers a lot of ground in this first volume: what does it mean to be an alien? How do we communicate and interact with each other? How far should one go int he name of one’s principles at the expense of other’s lives? An especial concern for the Hani is the relation between genders. The Hani themselves have an interesting social make-up in which all males are confined to their homeworld due to their unsuitability to interacting with other races: they are far too violent and headstrong to be trusted amongst races whose ways and customs differ so greatly from their own and to whom the slightest insult could mean interstellar war. While the males rule the clan Holds that retain political power on their own world and seem to inspire some level of deference in their females, it becomes apparent that they do not do this without the aid of their high ranking wives and the fact that females control all interstellar travel and trade definitely makes the gender politics of the Hani interesting. One of Pyanfar’s greatest concerns is how to deal with a male alien amongst her all-female crew.

I’m curious to see where this story goes: what will become of Tully and the entire human race now that it has been discovered by a society made up of multiple alien species? Are the Kif really as evil as they are painted in this volume or is there more to them than black hats? Will we ever learn more about the mysterious methane-breathers and their own designs within the Compact?

This is only my second Cherryh novel, but I certainly enjoyed it enough to want to continue going through her extensive oeuvre. My real quandary is what to tackle next? Continue exploring Compact space with Pyanfar and her crew? Check out one of her gritty sci-fi books concentrating solely on the human political and ideological conflicts within the Alliance-Union universe? Follow Morgaine in her science-fantasy adventures through gates that bend space and time? See how she tackles an homage to the genre classic Dune with the Kesrith saga? Explore the ramifications of cloning in the classic Cyteen? Re-examine the ‘human-as-alien’ concept with Cuckoo's Egg? The opportunities are almost endless and the embarrassment of riches makes the choice a difficult one.
Profile Image for Susannah.
51 reviews4 followers
February 2, 2008
CJ Cherryh doesn't take a lot of time to fill you in on the background in her worlds. . . she just dumps you into the deep end and from there it's catch as catch can. It can be tough to understand what's going on at times, but basically it's a fast-moving action-adventure story which has a breathless momentum that drags you along in its wake. I've read the whole series about half a dozen times, and they make more and more sense (in terms of the political maneuvering). There's definitely an internal logic at work. If you like hard sci fi, you'll love this series.
Profile Image for Phil.
2,082 reviews230 followers
July 7, 2023
Fascinating world building and aliens populate The Pride of Chanur, the first book a series Cherryh started back in the early 80s. Cherryh has a knack for aliens, convincingly making them, well, alien. Here, she introduces the world of the 'Compact', a region of space containing seven sentient species operating under a loose code of behavior/trade known as the Compact. Three of the species are methane breathers and rather mysterious to say the least. The other four are oxygen breathers-- the Kif, the Mane, the Stsho and the Han.

The titular Pride of Chanur is a space freighter run by the Chanur clan of Han. The Han are relatively new to the space age, being introduced by the Mane to it largely to counter the Kif, who seem to lack ethics, are active slavers and pirates. Han are a lion-like bipedal species with occasional hot tempers, especially the males; hence, all Han ships are crewed by females of the species. The tale begins at 'Meetpoint', a neutral space station run by the stsho where all the races can trade freely. The Pride, captained by our main protagonist Pyanfar are doing their deals there when a strange creature basically crashes their ship. What is this thing? Pyanfar recognizes that it is sentient, but she has never seen anything like it.

Well, long story short, the ship crasher is a human named Tully, and the Kif essentially pirated his ship and he is the only human left alive; he made a break for it on the docks at Meetpoint and ended up on The Pride. Why did he pick a Han ship? "Because your crewmates laugh." Problem is, the Kif know where he went and they want him back. It seems the Kif are just dying to find a new region of space to exploit and only Tully can tell them where the human sphere is. Han, and Pynafar in particular, have no love for the Kif, and are not intimidated by them either, so begins a cat and mouse chase through the Compact space...

The strengths of this reside in the alien sociology and psychology Cherryh develops; in a novel populated entirely by aliens, this will either work or not. Tully, the sole human, works great as the alien in the story! Neat inversion of scifi tropes for sure. The Pride also features Cherryh's frenetic pacing and stylistic prose. I still felt a little rough around the edges and the entire Han politics part was a little thin, but overall, I really enjoyed this and looking forward to the rest of the series. 3.5 stars, rounding up!
Profile Image for Roger.
83 reviews
February 7, 2013
I liked this series! An all-female crew of cat people finds a poor lost human male. Nobody in this part of space has ever encountered a human being before, so the crew take pity on the poor creature. I mean, you can't let a male out of the ship! He is too excitable to fend for himself!

I found myself chuckling at the sexism exhibited by the female protagonists. We men have populated plenty of books with a token, beautiful female. This is PAYBACK! This book is not for those without a sense of humor. To top it off, there is a good story with plenty of space opera action.
Profile Image for Nate.
497 reviews24 followers
November 12, 2023
Another nicely constructed, well thought out novel from Cherryh, sadly it didn’t meet my expectations

Based purely on my own assumptions of the whimsical cover illustration by the great Michael whelan, I thought that unlike Downbelow station this was sure to be a light hearted, possibly humorous space adventure.
The end result was a bit austere and lacked some characterization. Like the other two of her novels I’ve read the world building is as good as anything from the other grand masters of science fiction.
The lion like Hani who’s males never leave their home world while the females venture out into space was interesting. I really enjoyed how she told the tale from the Hani perspective, leaving the sole human as an alien curiosity. My only complaint about her writing is that it so thoroughly considered that she seems to leave out really likeable characters and a sense of adventure. This same complaint could be made of many of her classic sci fi contemporaries.
Still, I intend to continue with some of her other work.
Profile Image for Gabi.
729 reviews147 followers
July 19, 2020
2.5 stars. This was the least engaging of Cherryh's novels I've read. I stopped three times to read other books start to end till I finally finished this one. I will try the Foreigner series next, but I won't continue with the Chanur one.
Profile Image for Cathy.
1,799 reviews274 followers
November 13, 2017
"There had been something loose about the station dock all morning, skulking in amongst the gantries and the lines and the canisters which were waiting to be moved, lurking wherever shadows fell among the rampway accesses of the many ships at dock at Meetpoint. It was pale, naked, starved-looking in what fleeting glimpse anyone on The Pride of Chanurhad had of it."

I might have read this 30 years ago or so, but I remembered nothing. Just a vague feeling that I liked it.

I did like it, although it took a while to warm up to Pyanfar, Tully and the crew of the Pride of Chanur. I did love most of the other characters and alien races, their descriptions, oddities and quirks. The knnn sound fascinating. The cat/lions and their familial structure were nicely done. The Personage with her/his fluff and voice was fun. The pidgin was confusing at times.

That is really where Cherryh seems to shine--world building, a great way of creating a "feel" for other societies and how they tick. Even in Foreigner, which I found boring for very long stretches, her society and world building stuck with me the most. I will definitely read more of Pyanfar's adventures.

P.S: Is it weird that in my head the Kif sound like Benedict Cumberbatch as Smaug?

3-4 stars, not quite decided yet.
Profile Image for Veronique.
1,304 reviews219 followers
November 22, 2017
3.5*

Up until now, my only experience with Cherryh was through her excellent Foreigner series. This novel felt rather different, although at the base of it, politics, diplomacy, economics and linguistics are still very much at the fore. However their treatment is changed.

The crew of the space freighter Pride of Chanur find a stowaway on their ship, a weird creature seeking refuge from the aggressive Kif, who captured and tortured him in order to get valuable information. Once more, the ‘human’ is the alien of the piece, and is seem from the eyes of the Hani captain, Pyanfar Chanur, who is faced with a dilemma. Distrusting the Kif, she decides to help the sentient stranger and evades their manipulations. However, the situation is much more complicated than that...

What surprised me was the pacing. This novel has plenty of action, jumping from one scene to the next with hardly a moment to breathe. Yet, Cherryh’s writing style is recognisable. Weirdly, it kept reminding me of Ann Leckie’s too. The other interesting aspect was the Hani’s views on gender, resulting with their ships being manned solely by females, which added a further angle to their reactions to the male human.
Profile Image for DivaDiane SM.
1,079 reviews107 followers
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June 20, 2022
I have to admit that I didn’t actually finish this one. For some reason that I don’t understand or even remember I bounced off it. I love SF/Space Opera and I love cats. I might give it another try soon, though, if it gets chosen as out BOTM in the SFFBC group.

I decided to remove the stars if given (not many), because I didn’t finish it and it’s not really fair. I know a lot of people like this series.
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,087 reviews445 followers
January 12, 2015
Number 144 on my SFF reading project list. This was a rollicking good space opera--lots of alien life forms, plots of intrigue, plenty of things going boom! I don’t know about you, but I can’t exist on a reading diet of only serious, thoughtful books and this provided a fun, relaxing romp through the universe when I needed one.

Cherryh writes aliens well. I loved the lion people of Anuurn—The Pride of Chanur may have been the name of their vessel, but they are also socially arranged into prides, as are lions. Just as in lion society, where the females do most of the hunting for the pride, the females of Chanur are sent out to do the important job of trading and bringing home the spoils. They work in family groups with a lioness at the head of a group which includes nieces and cousins—leaving the unpredictable, impulsive males at home. Male lions are valuable to lion society as the defenders of territory and cubs, holding land to enable the lionesses to hunt without hazard, both on the savannah and on Anuurn, the Chanur’s home planet. Just as on the plains of Africa, younger males are always looking to push their way into the leadership position in a pride by defeating older males—this added level of intrigue on Anuurn ups the ante for the Pride’s crew.

I could understand why Tully, the human stowaway, would choose the Anuurnan ship as a potential safe haven—they shared mammalian characteristics and social structures which humans, as primates, are programmed to understand. I also liked that Tully, although the nucleus around which the book revolved, was really a minor force in the action, putting humanity in its place as a new comer to the Compact and its alliances. Too often, just as the Catholic church in Galileo’s time, we tend to put humans in a position of central importance and I appreciate it when an author resists that urge.

A fast, fun, thoroughly enjoyable novel.
Profile Image for Oscar.
2,080 reviews538 followers
December 9, 2015
La Orgullo de Chanur es una nave mercante perteneciente a las hani, una raza extraterrestre semejante físicamente a felinos, cuya capitana, Pyanfar Chanur, y su tripulación pertenecen al género femenino. En la actualidad existe un Pacto para comerciar entre las diferentes especies, tanto las que respiran oxígeno como las que respiran metano, siendo posible el viaje interestelar a largas distancias entre planetas y estaciones gracias a la tecnología existente. La historia comienza con la nave de Pyanfar en la estación espacial Punto de Encuentro, mientras los kif, una raza agresiva y ladrona, andan inquietos; parece que por la estación anda suelta una extraña criatura. Los problemas empiezan cuando esta criatura, de la que no tardamos en saber que es un humano, se cuela de polizón en la nave de Pyanfar.

‘El Orgullo de Chanur’ (The Pride of Chanur, 1981), de la escritora norteamericana C.J. Cherryh, es el inicio de una de las sagas space opera más reconocidas. Resulta curioso que la historia esté narrada desde el punto de vista de otra raza que no sea la humana, sin duda uno de sus puntos fuertes. Cherryh sabe dotar a sus novelas de un realismo muy particular, plagado de detalles. He disfrutado nuevamente con la relectura de este libro, que me maravilló hace tantos años.
Profile Image for Jamie.
1,306 reviews171 followers
August 2, 2019
This felt like a mediocre late 70's/early 80's sci-fi TV series made for teenagers. Maybe not the best choice for my first C.J. Cherryh read.

The concept isn't a bad one, a first contact experience portrayed from the perspective of the aliens. However, it seems like the author was trying to impress with the diversity of alien species, languages and weird names, and never evolved the story beyond a kind of galactic chase, with the protagonists pursued by devious pirates. The main characters, primary among them heavily anthropomorphized lionesses, feel robotic, and the relationships shallow.

The aliens have interstellar ships and hyperspace drives, but still examine graphs on paper and possess only primitive means of inter species communication, mostly relying on the broken, caveman like utterances that each is capable of giving in another language. If you were cutting corners in a cheap TV production I could understand this, but in a book it just feels uninspired and frankly lazy.
Profile Image for Bogi Takács.
Author 60 books624 followers
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January 8, 2023
Longer review coming later (G-d willing; but already mostly written). Trying to restart my QUILTBAG+ SFF Classics series now that I've graduated and also work is maybe less overwhelming; please cheer me on :) This will probably not be the first column, because I have some other books I promised to discuss before I had to go on hiatus.
_____
Source of the book: Bought with my own money (I think from the library booksale?)
Profile Image for Michael Finocchiaro.
Author 3 books5,940 followers
January 9, 2024
I enjoyed this disovery of the outer limits of the Cherryh universe where the species of oxygen and methane breathers clash. What an imagination in this book. Just the idea of methane breathers is mindblowing, but then to have a female alien as the narrator and a human stowaway creating an explosive situation was marvelous writing. The Kif are great villains as I suppose I will see in the other 4 Chanur novels. Cherryh is such a talented writer and this book was a bit lighter and faster moving than some of the Alliance-Union novels I have read. A real pleasure!
Profile Image for Joseph.
719 reviews114 followers
September 1, 2019
Pyanfar Chanur, captain of the merchant ship Pride of Chanur is a hani -- a vaguely leonine humanoid species, one of the seven intelligent species that form the Compact (more of a loose trading affiliation than an actual government); other species include the mahendo'sat, the stsho, the kif (altogether bad news, those) and the really exotic methane breathers: knnn, t'ca and chi. Pyanfar's ship is docked at Meetpoint Station (the central location where, true to its name, the Compact species come together to trade) when her ship is invaded by a heretofore unknown sapient being captured by, tortured by, and fled from the kif: A naked, pink-skinned being who says his name is "Tully" and his species is "human". And what the kif have lost, they most very definitely want back -- a new intelligent species could offer untold possibilities for trade (or, perhaps, exploitation of a more nefarious sort) to the ones who can establish communication (or, perhaps, torture the location of its homeworld out of it). Thus begins a chain of events that will send ripples (and casualties and destroyed ships) across the whole of the Compact; while at the same time, there's trouble afoot at the Chanur holdings on their homeworld, Anuurn ...

This was probably the first, second or third Cherryh book I read (it may or may not have been preceded by Downbelow Station and possibly Merchanter's Luck) and it was altogether glorious! Fast-paced space opera, tense times drifting slow and dark in a dust & debris-filled system with only the occasional scrape of some bit of rock on the outer hull for company, negotiations and misdirections in station offices, and entirely scrupulous with the viewpoint -- we never get inside Tully's head; we see him only through Chanur eyes. In fact, although it's third-person, Pyanfar is the only viewpoint character.

Highly, highly recommended.
Profile Image for Silvana.
1,212 reviews1,205 followers
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January 21, 2021
DNF at 40%. I enjoyed the appendix more, which describes the aliens, compared with the rest of the book. The writing is stilted, the space tech stuff vaguely confusing, and we spent too much time in the MC's head including when she bathed and putting clothes or whatever. Seriously, I felt like I was reading David Weber's stuff, though not as annoying.

The premise of making a human the alien and having an alien POV was actually interesting but I can't handle the boring plot despite several attempts. Anyway, since I previously DNFed Foreigner, I guess Cherryh's writing and I are not meant to be. YMMV
Profile Image for Ron.
Author 1 book151 followers
February 22, 2022
“I’ve gotten into a larger game than I planned, and there’s no going home until we’ve gotten it straightened out. How we do that is another question, because the kif know our name.”

A fun human-as-the-alien science fiction space opera. Modern SF writers should read this forty year old classic. Protagonist is no superhero, but keeps plugging away to defend family, crew and what she thinks is right. In the end, the stakes and the odds become higher than she imagined.

‘He, Hilfy insisted at every opportunity. Her first voyage, a tragic (and safely unavailable) alien prince. Adolescence.’

A more realistic take on faster-than-light jumps: physical and psychological consequences. The physics takes some puzzling out because Cherryh doesn’t dump the data. Even invented a system of expletives.

‘They rode the odds; they came in like a shot, counting on statistics and blind luck and traffic being exactly where it ought: one could do that a few times in a lifetime and not run out of luck.’
Profile Image for Olivia.
742 reviews130 followers
January 5, 2021
The Pride of Chanur is my first Cherryh and I must say, I enjoyed myself a lot. I'm most impressed by Cherryh's aliens and their societies. They're truly alien, and have been rendered with care.

The Pride of Chanur combines space opera with hard science fiction and focuses on the ramification of first contact.

Female characters take centre stage, and Cherryh's prose flows beautifully.

Overall, I'd say this is a 3.5 stars, and I'm very interested in reading her Foreigner series after this one.
Profile Image for Krbo.
326 reviews43 followers
June 1, 2014
Mada sam ovo pročitao 1988 u izdanju Mladosti na upis me potaklo svježe izdanje Algoritma, posebice jer vidim da su namjerili izdati i ostale iz serije.

Kako se radi o vrhunskoj space-operi preporuka svim SF-ljupcima.

Jedna od rjeđih knjiga gdje se Zemljani nađu kao slučajni "alieni" u tuđem, izuzetno fascinantnom svijetu.



Za ostatak prikaza posuđujem riječi kolege:


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Fascinantno je ono što je u stanju smisliti ženski mozak.

Ako ste čitali Bujoldicinog Milesa vidjeli ste hrpu raznih civilizacija no ono što je smislila
C.J.Cherryh je daleko luđe.

Labava trgovačka zajednica nazvana Kompakt sa hrpom neobičnih vrsta sposobnih za svemirske letove.
Zajednička trgovačka postaja - Sastajalište - pod dvojnom upravom. Zašto?

Ne "snifaju" sve rase isto:

Kisikaši:
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Hani - doslovno prave mačke, lavolike, grivaste s pandžama, matrijarhat - samo žene u svemiru.
Mahendo'sat - smeđi ili crni primati oko ljudske veličine ili veći. Znatiželjni, inventivni i politički orijentirani.
Stsho - lomljivi blijedoliki "jahači" , ksenofobni i neagresivni. Imaju tri roda gtst, gtste i gtsto koji se mijenjaju pod stresom.
Kif - ovi su najgadniji, najviši, predatori s dva reda zubi (jedni čupaju, drugi žvaču). Agresivni i smrtonosni,
trebaju živi plijen.


Metanci:
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Tc'a i Chi - Tc'a su velika žuta, petooka, crvolika stvorenja. Ne zna se točan odnos dvije vrste no pretpostavlja se simbioza. Izuzetno tehnički napredni i moćni no obzirom da imaju višestruke mozgove i komuniciraju u matricama vrlo ih je teško (nemoguće) shvatiti. Uvijek upravljaju metanskim dijelovima svemirskih postaja.
Bilo bi zanimljivo vidjeti kako izgledaju planete naziva V'n'n'u, Tt'a'va'o ili Chchchah.
Knnn - višenožna kosata čuda. Tehnološki najnaprednija vrsta Kompakta. Samo Tc'a mogu komunicirati s njima
(ili samo tako tvrde). Knnni su potpuno nerazumljivi ostalima te ih se nastoji ne provocirati. Trguju tako da uzmu što god im je zanimljivo i ostave ono što misle da je kompenzacija (što je značajan napredak na raniji
običaj samo uzimanja trgovačkih brodova). Jedini razumiju hipersvemir kako spada.

I tu su, naravno, ljudi koji imaju sreću da ih pronađe jedan Kif princ i posluži se prvim istraživačkim ljudskim brodom pa se stvari debelo zakuhaju kada jedini preživjeli čovjek pobjegne i zatraži utočište kod...


Jedini problem u svemu do sada je prijevod samo prve knjige Chanur sage, da se ne spominje ostatak opusa izuzetno kvalitetne SF & F autorice.
No to vas ne smije omesti da uživate u prvom nastavku odlične space opere koje su prilično rijetke u ovako kvalitetnoj izvedbi.
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tko imalo uživa u space operi obvezno čitati!


Profile Image for Jim Gorman.
183 reviews7 followers
November 23, 2020
This is an old series that came out when I was a kid. I enjoyed it and have the series in my home library. It had been a few years since I had last read the books, so I decided to pick the first one up again. It is a pretty easy read, and nothings super dense. The science fiction is pretty real, in regards to potential velocities and travel between the stars, travel in a solar system, communication over vast distances, etc. What I most enjoyed about the series is how each of the major races that we meet from the different star systems, have a well developed sense of culture, language and beliefs.

The Hani, the cat people you see on the cover, are the main focus. They have a very well developed way of acting and thinking that is totally realistic when you look at lions and your basic house cats. They meet the first human and we get into the whole issue of trying to figure out what he is thinking and saying due to language barriers. They are also trying to keep him alive while being chased by a race, the Kif, who had captured and tortured him in the first place before he escaped.

OK, enough of the plot, back to the character development. You get a ton of more cultural development on top of the main character development. She really worked out things down to the type of clothes they wear, how they talk and think, everything. That made it an enjoyable book to read.

If you are looking for a new, easy read series, I would suggest this one. I am sure there are people who will not enjoy it too much. But if you like some good and new takes on alien species and politics, this is the one for you.

1 review2 followers
October 30, 2007
An old favorite. Cherryh has an amazing ability to craft cultures that are both believable and completely alien. It's fun to get inside the head of the cat-like hani, because they don't think like a human, but nevertheless finds themselves having to deal with one. That outsider's view of our species is a refreshing twist. The other races are unique and fascinating in their own rights, even though I have a perverse soft spot for the cold-blooded kif. More than enough alien psychology, Machiavellian politics, and culture shock to keep things interesting.
Profile Image for Jamesboggie.
299 reviews19 followers
December 11, 2019
The Pride of Chanur is the introduction to the fascinating Compact, a part of the Alliance-Union universe. The Compact is a trade agreement and region of space occupied by seven of the most unique and compelling alien species in writing. The story is a somewhat shallow space opera from the perspective of a space lion, but it is serviceable and establishes this fantastic setting.

As I said, the plot is pretty basic. The good guys save a prisoner from the bad guys, and desperately try to outrun the bad guys to safety. Once there, the good guys must defend their home from the bad guys. This plot may be simple, but it provides plenty of action and suspense. I was personally satisfied with the story. In fact, I only noticed the simplicity of the plot in retrospect.

The more important part of The Pride of Chanur by far is the setting. The Compact is literally a trade agreement among seven species, but it also generally refers to the region of space occupied by those species. Four of those species breathe oxygen - hani, kif, mahendo’sat, and stsho - and three breathe methane - t’ca, chi, and knnn. These aliens are all unique and interesting. I would say they are among the most memorable aliens in fiction. (My favorite are probably the t’ca, yellow serpentine aliens with six brains that speak in matrices.) The species have complex relationships and various motivations, creating opportunities for conflict and drama. The Compact was a nice change of pace from the Federation style societies or military alliances I see much more often. Exploring the Compact alone was worth the time.

The Pride of Chanur has a few outstanding strengths. It is a rare story from a nonhuman perspective. The entire story is told in third person close from the perspective of the hani Pyanfar. It actually feels like she has an inhuman psychology, and I LOVE speculation about alternative intelligences. Not just is the story told from an alien perspective, but the reader gets to see a human from through alien eyes. The Pride of Chanur is also a space opera that cares more about economics and culture than military action. I liked that approach a lot. Cherryh created a setting with uncommon amount of depth and detail.

I am glad my science fiction book club chose The Pride of Chanur. I may never have gotten to it on own, and that would have been a shame. Now I am eager to continue the Chanur novels, and the wider Alliance-Union universe as a whole.

CHARACTER LIST (abridged)
Profile Image for Snarktastic Sonja.
546 reviews63 followers
May 24, 2017
This book has been on my radar for a long time . . . probably since it was actually written. I've picked it up a few times and been unable to get into it. Along came a sci-fi pick it for me challenge - and it was picked. I was intrigued enough to pick it up again.

The beginning was a little rough. The language is quite stilted and the story is sometimes hard to follow. I believe this is intentional - we are, after all, in the head of an alien. To further this . . . uncomfortableness . . . we have alien races and names that are very hard to pronounce and separate. There are lots of K's and H's in this world. Also, while I typically despise desriptive text, I'm not sure I actually have a feel for what each race looked like or how they were different. Combined, it makes the story hard to follow - not only can we not pronounce the names, we don't recognize them, and they are hard to differentiate.

Despite this - and I do believe it is the story's biggest flaw - I persevered. Probably the challenge in the back of my brain. And, the buddy read. I did really like Pyanfur and I really appreciated her concern for her crew, her race, and her word. I struggled to define exactly what the responsibilities were for each member of the crew - and all except Hilfy seemed to blend together. The evil Kif (whose name I cannot duplicate here), who killed needlessly and wantonly, and Pyanfur and Tully were basically the only characters who stood out and became memorable to me. Pyanfur - if for no other reason than the only "P" name in the book.

Even with all that, I kept reading and enjoyed the plot of the story - yes, even with the things that made it hard for me to follow. I was quite intrigued with Pyanfur's care and concern for Tully. And her determination to see him safe.

But. Then we hit the last 15%. Where the feministic streak hit hard. This is where Ms. Cherryh lost me. The gender roles in the Hani society were very strictly defined because one gender was defined by its emotions and the other was not. I do believe, in the conclusion, that there was an attempt to say it didn't have to be. But, it was faint of heart. Instead of saying that all genders should work together, we still have roles defined by gender.

Now. I realize this was written in 1982. It is, indeed, a product of the times. When science fiction with strong women were hard to find. I also think the names and descriptions and what not are a function of the times. It is interesting to see the changes in the genre in the last 35 years - some for the better, some for the worse. The genre seems to now be overwhelmed with strong women. That is likely a good thing.

Ultimately, I am unlikely to continue the series. Mostly because reviews on the next books are not favorable. And, that last 15% of the story. I like where this one ended. I think I will stop there.
Profile Image for Jamie Collins.
1,479 reviews312 followers
August 9, 2015
2.5 stars. I liked a lot of things about this, but I found the prose muddled and unsatisfying, as I sometimes do with Cherryh. It’s frustrating, because her settings are fantastic.

This is early 1980’s space opera. A crew of feline-ish beings rescues a human refugee, who’s just escaped from being kidnapped and tortured by a villainous race of beings who are eager to be the first to take advantage of humankind, a previously unknown species.

This has multiple spacefaring civilizations interacting with each other, some of which (the methane breathers) are completely incomprehensible to the rest. I liked the introduction of the human race as a new and unknown factor which could disrupt the existing agreements between the races.

The characterizations were pretty good. I liked the defiant protagonist Pyanfar, who, despite the trouble her refugee causes, is utterly repelled at the thought of trading a sentient being as cargo. I was intrigued by the societal structure of the Hani, although the description of their politics was vague. The linguistic bits were very well done, as usual with Cherryh.

I liked this enough to read straight through the next couple of books, but I had the same problem with the prose. It just misses with me, somehow. Cherryh’s Foreigner books started weak but they grew on me, and I was hoping these would, too.
Profile Image for Jacqueline J.
3,533 reviews346 followers
March 28, 2010
The best ever human as alien book. Ms. Cherryh is the master of making me believe a human is the alien. Love the series but this one is comfort food for me and I reread it all the time. I also recommend it to readers at the bookstore where I work as the best introduction to Ms. Cherryh's work.
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