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The City Among the Stars (Fiction Without Frontiers)

door Francis Carsac

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752,380,801 (1.63)Geen
"Tankar Holroy, Lieutenant in the Stellar Guard of earth's Empire, floats in space after his spaceship is sabotaged. Rescued by an enormous, unknown ship, he awakes to discover himself saved by the People of the Stars who are born and live in space with minimal contact with planets and their occupants whom they call, with contempt, planetaries. The chilly welcome he receives from the ship's leader, the Teknor, is followed by overt hostility from the other inhabitants of the Tilsin. Only a woman named Orena reaches out to him. Tankar soon realizes that he was rescued for his knowledge of tracers, the technology that allows Empire ships to track others through hyperspace, a technology the People of the Stars lack. Out of spite, he refuses to deliver the one piece of knowledge that can protect the people who saved but now spurn him - and the consequences will be catastrophic."--Provided by publisher.… (meer)
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Toon 5 van 5
French author, written circa 1960. Military theme, a soldier gets separated from his fleet and finds himself rescued by a human civilisation that had escaped the military regime on earth years before and had utilised alien technology they had discovered abandoned in space to create a harmonious and well balanced society. The soldier finds himself redundant and questions which lifestyle was better, before going back to Earth. An enjoyable story, made me think of conscription for the French National Service. ( )
  AChild | Aug 30, 2022 |
I love Sci-fi books. Old, new and most anything in between. When I saw that The City Among the Stars was the first English translation of a French sci-fi classic, I jumped right on it. But....I did not enjoy this story as much as I originally thought I would.

First, the translation seems a bit clunky. The sentences don't flow very well....awkward phrases, stilted conversation, strange word choices. I had a hard time keeping my mind in the story as I struggled through awkwardly written sentences. Not a clean translation...needs some work. The story definitely seems to have lost something in translation.

Second, I found the characters annoying. The entire force of the plot is backed by various characters (and cultures) being completely unwilling to bend or compromise in any way. And all seem to be willing to put others in danger to feed their own selfish ends. That gets really old after awhile. And female characters seem to exist to drape over the arm of men. The main character seems to believe all women are in love with him -- and that they enjoy being yelled at constantly. It's hard to enjoy a story when you detest the main character. Tankar Holroy is an asshat.

This story is just not for me. I didn't like the story or the characters. I'm willing to chalk it up to something lost in translation....or maybe that this story just didn't age well. It was originally published in 1962.

**I voluntarily read a review copy of this book from Flame Tree Press. All opinions expressed are entirely my own.** ( )
  JuliW | Nov 22, 2020 |
Ok, right off the bat I'd like to confess my ardent love for the Sci-Fi genre. I adore it to itsy teenie tiny pieces and now, couple that with a Space Opera backdrop and BAM... a recipe for hours of blissful escapism and endless possibilities. The premise of The City Among The Stars had me imagining myself fully engaged and immersed in geeky Sci-Fi/Space faring heaven... my shangri-la, my haven away from the craziness of Real Life. And so, armed only with an intriguing premise, I anxiously dove into this book untethered.

First off, there are two important factors to mention. 1) this book was published in the '60s and 2) it is a translated work. Early on, both of these facts were painfully obvious. I took the age and the fact that things can easily get lost in translation into consideration while reading and later on when deciding how to rate the book. With these provisos in the back of my mind I read and read and after reading for quite a long time I am sad to report that this great expectation fell flat on it's overreaching butt.

The wording felt disjointed and clunky... more so than with other translated works. I am a girl who loves her character driven novels. I'll also gladly take a book centered around rich, diverse world building with character development coming in a close second BUT The City Among The Stars was neither of those. The characters were criminally flat and weren't even likeable. The MC was a tool, a creaton, a POS who loved to yell and lash out at women and THAT made me cringe.



The female representation was appalling! Women were portrayed as property... pretty, shiny arm candy and it definitely chaffed... nay, it wrankled! I (a self proclaimed shiny mess of a female) for one, couldn't get past the flagrant injustice. Women were meant to be draped over the arm of some man and our main purpose was for "pleasure or breeding". I feel nauseated just thinking about the blatant sexism... yes, this might be a reflection of how far the notions of gender equality have come in the last 60 years BUT if you're going to translate the author's blood, sweat, tears and dreams made tangible then don't just go to Google Translate, toss it in and regurgitate whatever shows up on the screen. The translator should be both fluent and finely attuned to the nuances of both languages!



So, I'm thinking that I am probably not the targeted demographic here so I'll cut it some slack.



Overall:
I gave this book more chances than I should have. I would pick it up only to put it right back down again. Over and over... rinse and repeat. I wanted to like it, I truly did, but The City Among The Stars made it hard to love... or even like. I appreciate the chance to review the ARC ahead of the release date though! Unfortunately, the bottom line is that it wasn't for me and I wouldn't reccomend it to others.

*** I was given a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review *** ( )
  BethYacoub | Sep 23, 2020 |
Ok, this book made me realize that science fiction is just not for me. I found something very lacking in this story too.
I honestly detested Tankar the protagonist. You probably won't find a more immature and whiny guy than Tankar. The entire book he whines, he cribs, he complains. He was supposedly treated a little rashly in the beginning in a new place and he holds that silly grudge till the end of the book? I couldn't tolerate the juvenile nature of it all.
And let's not even begin with the "romance" portions of this book. Zero chemistry, insta-love, supposedly hate to love but it was more physical attraction than any other deep form of love. I couldn't care less for the romance or for any of the characters in this book.
I enjoyed the first part of the book a lot. The science parts were good, the concept of a star city was novel. But, apart from that, there was nothing much that appealed me to the story. I would recommend it to science-fiction fans, also to people who are starting out with the science-fiction genre as the language is quite easy to follow. The novel reads fast and you can complete it in no time.

RRKReads rating: ⭐⭐1/2
  rrkreads | Jul 30, 2020 |
I'd be angry at this but honestly I just don't want this to have that much of an effect on my life. Longer Review to come.

ARC received from Flame Tree press on Netgalley. This did not affect my review.

To read more reviews, check out my blog keikii eats books! ( )
  keikii | May 5, 2020 |
Toon 5 van 5
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"Tankar Holroy, Lieutenant in the Stellar Guard of earth's Empire, floats in space after his spaceship is sabotaged. Rescued by an enormous, unknown ship, he awakes to discover himself saved by the People of the Stars who are born and live in space with minimal contact with planets and their occupants whom they call, with contempt, planetaries. The chilly welcome he receives from the ship's leader, the Teknor, is followed by overt hostility from the other inhabitants of the Tilsin. Only a woman named Orena reaches out to him. Tankar soon realizes that he was rescued for his knowledge of tracers, the technology that allows Empire ships to track others through hyperspace, a technology the People of the Stars lack. Out of spite, he refuses to deliver the one piece of knowledge that can protect the people who saved but now spurn him - and the consequences will be catastrophic."--Provided by publisher.

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