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Rider at the Gate por C. J. Cherryh
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Rider at the Gate (edição 1995)

por C. J. Cherryh

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MembrosCríticasPopularidadeAvaliação médiaMenções
6961232,816 (3.82)39
Stranded on a distant planet that abounds with fertile farmland, human colonists appear to be in paradise. But all the native animals communicate by telepathy, projecting images that drive humans mad. Only Nighthorses stand between civilization and madness. When a flare of human emotion spreads to all the horses, chaos erupts.… (mais)
Membro:kokipy
Título:Rider at the Gate
Autores:C. J. Cherryh
Informação:Warner Books (1995), Hardcover, 437 pages
Coleções:Science Fiction, A sua biblioteca
Avaliação:
Etiquetas:science fiction

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Rider at the Gate por C. J. Cherryh

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This sounded like a concept that would be quite fascinating: on a remote planet, a colony of humans have set up a sort of wild west society in which they depend on the sentient nighthorses, creatures which bond with humans. Most of the wildlife is telepathic and has the ability to send distorting emotion laden images which can overwhelm and kill human beings in umpteen different ways: the nighthorses defend against those and keep most at bay. They also enable travel and trade, with their riders acting like a travel guild who ride gunshot, literally, on convoys of trucks between settlements, enabling people to live a fairly comfortable if precarious existence.

Into this, early in the tale, comes the rumour of a rogue horse: one which can turn human emotions and impressions back on themselves and amplify negative emotions to a fever pitch, resulting in fights, murders, and at worse, people opening the gates of towns and letting in the multitude of predators great and small which look on human beings as a walking larder. A man called Guil Stuart is told his partner Aby has died because of a rogue horse, but then enemies of his start to twist things, amplified by the large numbers of nighthorses in the rider camp beside a large settlement town, into making out Stuart and his horse to be the rogue. He is forced to set off into the wilderness, initially unarmed and wounded, on a quest to kill the real rogue.

Another main character is a young man, Danny Fisher, a town boy who has been 'called' by a nighthorse, Cloud, and villified by his family and the local priests who teach that listening to nighthorse sendings means people will go to hell - despite the fact that without nighthorses, human existence is impossible on the planet. Danny is struggling to come to terms with his alienation from his family and his inability to calm his young horse at crucial moments. Feeling a debt to Stuart who once gave him sound advice, he becomes involved in an attempt to track Stuart and then falls in with Stuart's enemies.

The story switches constantly between the different characters, mainly Stuart and Danny, but others also, as the situation with the rogue becomes deadly for all.

So far so good. But I found the execution of the story a barrier to enjoying it fully. The narrative is an attempt at immersion in the experience of emotion-laden telepathy, with words constantly appearing in pointy brackets, and becomes quite hard to follow in places. Also, the story seems overworked and laborious, taking pages and pages for the smallest bit of action, and a lot of emphasis on travelling in the onset of winter. The story didn't really need 468 pages to tell in my opinion and might have worked better with some judicious cutting of what came over in places as unnecessary blow by blow spelling out of every piece of character internal dialogue. For that reason, I can only give it a 3-star rating. ( )
  kitsune_reader | Nov 23, 2023 |
Love the premise of this book, and the way she examines the consequences of the environment she built on the characters in it.

It's a bit Dragon Riders of Pern, but with a lot more balance - the pairing of riders and ridden isn't all sweetness and light, and can both moderate and accentuate those involved.

Recommended for both horse people and Cherryh fans. ( )
  furicle | Aug 5, 2023 |
Cherryh's worlds are always vivid and well-formed, and her characters interesting and more than just stereotypes. The story was engaging, and the ending a classic mystery-reveal (all the clues but they didn't click for me; perfect).
As usual, lots of musing about the meaning of friendship, love, loyalty, trust, responsibility, etc.
However, if you are easily confused, read this one with caution & attention; the mind-reading between people (not native to the planet) and "horses" (three-toed omnivores, never fully described - kind of an alien-world cross of canine and equine) takes a lot of getting used to.
NOTE: a large part of the story concerns a man (Harper) carrying a grudge against another person (Stuart) and eventually hurting many other people and dying himself, even though Stuart isn't even aware of the vendetta and not really its cause; nor does Stuart remember the help he gave to a boy (Fisher), who comes to his aid because of it. ( )
  librisissimo | Feb 27, 2019 |
Cherryh at probably her best, but with some nightmare qualities to it.

I don't as a rule care for 'scary', but this is on my shelf, and I've reread it several times.

Be sure to follow up by reading the sequel, "Cloud's Rider". ( )
  fuzzi | Jul 24, 2011 |
I enjoyed this story which featured people and horses who can communicate with each other using images. I especially liked the interactions between Guil and his horse Burn and between Danny and his horse Cloud. ( )
  krin5292 | Oct 17, 2008 |
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C. J. Cherryhautor principaltodas as ediçõescalculado
Posen, MikeArtista da capaautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado

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The first of the truck convoy had scarcely topped the rise that would lead them down to Shamesey town when three riders broke free of its line and raced up on a gust of autumn wind, past he bell-arch of Shamesey camp and through the open gates behind which over a thousand riders and nighthorses were encamped.
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Stranded on a distant planet that abounds with fertile farmland, human colonists appear to be in paradise. But all the native animals communicate by telepathy, projecting images that drive humans mad. Only Nighthorses stand between civilization and madness. When a flare of human emotion spreads to all the horses, chaos erupts.

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