Posts Tagged downbelow station
Downbelow Station by C.J. Cherryh
Cherryh takes us into a future in which Earth has established colonies in deep space—some are stations orbiting stars, some are stations orbiting planets. Over the centuries, as colonies have extended further into “The Beyond”, conflicts have developed. No longer the only livable planet, Earth has lost its importance as an anchor to its colonies—Earth Company, aka “The Company” has lost its influence. The Union, a faction first formed on the outskirts of the colonies, is extending its influence Earthward, taking one station after another. The Fleet, once the enforcement arm of The Company, now acts largely according to its own directives.
The Company and the Union have been at war for some time—and The Fleet is quite willing to destroy inhabited stations in order to keep them from falling into Union control. Caught in the middle of the war are The Merchanters and of course the stations. The Merchanters regard themselves as separate from both Union and Company—they only wish to haul goods between worlds and stations without interference. The stations fear both the controlling Union and the ruthless Fleet.
Downbelow Station begins with the chaos caused by the arrival of too many refugees on an already-crowded station. It’s a bit slow-going at first as we are introduced to the various players—keep reading! The pace picks up dramatically once the battle for Pell begins.
As a work of political science fiction, Downbelow Station is quite good—Cherryh realistically illustrates the economic and ideological forces that lead groups of people to oppose one another—she avoids simplistic portrayals of good and evil.
Downbelow Station is the foundation for Cherryh’s Union-Alliance novels. Each novel in the ’series’ is complete in itself; however, together they are part of a story spanning 5,000 years. Downbelow Station received the Hugo Award in 1982.
For more on the Union-Alliance novels, please visit http://www.cherryh.com/www/univer.htm#Alliance-Union .
For more on the Hugo Award, please visit http://www.thehugoawards.org/
Becky, Interdepartmental Librarian
1 comment May 2, 2008
C. J. Cherryh’s Alliance-Union Universe
Political intrigue, interpersonal conflict, the struggle of the individual against governments and corporations, alien cultures, and a touch of the mystical - this is C. J. Cherryh’s recipe for great science fiction. I’ve been reading the Alliance-Union novels since the first one, Downbelow Station, was published in 1981. They don’t have to be read in order, though I’d suggest starting with Downbelow Station.

Downbelow Station - Winner of the Hugo Award in 1982. After the colonies farthest away from Earth declare their independence (as the newly formed Union) and the Earth Company fleet is sent to bring them to heel, hostilities escalate and atrocities abound. This novel is set near the end of the Company Wars, and details the events leading to the formation of the Merchanter Alliance and its precarious balance between Earth and Union. The fate of the Earth Company fleet directly sets up some of the later books. The political intrigue is very sharp. And Signy Mallory is one of the best characters ever written in science fiction.
Cyteen - A huge novel set on Cyteen, the Union capital and home of Reseune, the research facility that makes it possible for Union to exist and compete with Earth (and its much larger population) using cloning technology. The head of Reseune, Ariane Emory, is found dead, and a rival researcher is held responsible. But Emory has already set in motion her plan to retain control of Reseune, which involves having her clone - a genetic duplicate - raised in circumstances that duplicate her own experiences in as much detail as possible. This novel is on my list of the top five books of all time. It won the Hugo Award in 1989.
Other novels set in the same universe include Merchanter’s Luck, Forty Thousand in Gehenna, Rimrunners, Tripoint, and Finity’s End. And Cherryh has written a new book with the working title Cyteen II, which I’m really looking forward to. There’s no information yet on Amazon, but it might not be wishful thinking to hope for a publication date of late 2008 …
Ian, Young Adults’ Services Librarian
1 comment December 16, 2007