Astounding Award for Best New Writer
Gate of Ivrel (Morgaine Cycle)
『Gate of Ivrel』は、C. J. Cherryh のモルゲイン物語の第一作です。古代のゲートが世界と時間を脅かす土地で、使命を負うモルゲインと彼女に従うヴァニェの旅が、ファンタジーとSFの境界で展開します。
作品情報
Gate of Ivrelは、C. J. Cherryhがscience fantasy novelの形式で人物と時代の手ざわりを描いた作品です。
『Gate of Ivrel』は、C. J. Cherryh のモルゲイン物語の第一作です。古代のゲートが世界と時間を脅かす土地で、使命を負うモルゲインと彼女に従うヴァニェの旅が、ファンタジーとSFの境界で展開します。 単行本・文庫・短編集として確認できた場合はその識別子を採用し、雑誌号や関連資料の識別子は流用していません。
レビュー要約
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冒険性と神話的な雰囲気を評価する読者が多い一方、硬質な文体や世界設定の説明の少なさを手ごわく感じる受け止め方もある。
書籍情報
- 出版社
- DAW
- 発売日
- 1988-01-05
- 言語
- 英語
- サイズ
- 17.78 x 2.54 x 12.7 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9780886772574
- ISBN-10
- 0886772575
- カテゴリ
- 洋書/Science Fiction & Fantasy/Fantasy
Amazon配送商品ならGate of Ivrel (Morgaine Cycle)が通常配送無料。更にAmazonならポイント還元本が多数。Cherryh, C. J.作品ほか、お急ぎ便対象商品は当日お届けも可能。
C. J. Cherryh planned to write since the age of ten. When she was older, she learned to use a type writer while triple-majoring in Classics, Latin and Greek. At 33, she signed over her first three books to DAW and has worked with DAW ever since. She can be found at cherryh.com.
レビュー
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alternate universes-a great start!
good adventure novel but not up to andre norton adventures,would recommend to any teen reader,fun but is a bit rushed at the end. Gate of Ivrel entertains.
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Epic with Female Swordfighting Heroine
Gate of Ivrel by C. J. Cherryh was recommended to me by a friend who knows I actively seek out stories with strong heroines who wield a sword. This novel definitely qualifies! First, the good. The story drew me in right away. I was intrigued by the sci-fi aspect of the gates, and the idea of a dedicated team of people who sacrifice their lives to see the portals destroyed. I liked the idea of a medieval style world embroiled in the chaos and war that these gates caused. I enjoyed how, just like in Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, and many other similar epics, we have a variety of cultures each with their own motivations and intersests. We have the few-structures-nature-living group. We have the high-honor-castle-living group. We have other groups with unique personalities. That's always enjoyable in a story. The heroine, Morgaine, is certainly strong and wise. She's able to protect herself. She also has flaws, which is good to keep a story real. I admit I wish she wasn't the romance-novel-cliche of being so drop dead beautiful that every man who sees her has to have her. The hero, Vanye, also is a bit cliche with his perfect fighting and perfect muscles. The book does well with plot, catching you up in all the layers of what is going on and wondering what is going to happen next. I stayed up all night in order to finish it and see how it ended. Now, that all being said, there were some issues. First, the book sets itself up to be a long, multi-book epic. It's clear in how it's worded and how it ends. This is fine in theory, but instead of rolling out the characters and history in a way readers can absorb, it's dumped in a massive pile that one would need to map out a family tree and relationship map to be able to keep track of in the prologue. That leaves the reader with the task of spending a while memorizing all the names in case some are important soon, or just ignoring the whole lot as "non-important filler" and moving on with the story. I hate to read-and-ignore content. To me, if an author presents something, it's because it's important. So working those details smoothly and gradually into the story is key for me. Next, there are some fascinating cultures in here, but we get only bare descriptions of them. We get a skim of what they're like, without the beautiful underlying foundations that we see for example in Lord of the Rings. The same with characters. We get the "mad king". And then there's the "malicious king". For all that we have a great heroine, she's it for women. Somehow the rest of the world only has females who are prostitutes. Or obnoxious little girls. Lots of little mistakes were made that editors should have caught. The use of "thee" and related language is wrong which is continually jarring. From Shakespeare, it should be: "Seest thou this letter? Take it up, I pray thee." An example from the Bible: "Remember, I beseech thee, that thou hast fashioned me as clay; And wilt thou bring me into dust again?" The progression also makes it hard to visualize what is going on at times. We're barely told that the hero, Vanye, has had a manhood ceremony in the past - but that's about it. Does that mean he's 13? 15? The only real clue we ever seem to get is the cover, and that is so outrageously off on the heroine's outfit (putting her only in a bikini as a trained warrior) that it's hard to imagine it's very accurate. Finally, for a book all about a sword-fighting woman and her sword-fighting man, there's very little detail about the sword-fighting in here! It seems more a convenient skill to get them out of scrapes than a real aspect of their characters that's covered in the book. We hear more about how he cuts his hair. Still, I did like the interweaving of their codes of honor, and their challenges of loyalty. I love stories that cover those things. I enjoy strong female characters, and we certainly have one here. However, usually there is a male character worthy to be at her side. Here, he seems more like a fifteen year old boy. Yes, he was raised in a certain culture, and I wholeheartedly understand that. But even there, the way he acts seem to lack a level of wisdom / maturity in some scenes. Men in medieval times had to grow up quickly - and especially men in the position Vanye was in. He seems a bit too naive to be believable. Still, clearly the story did suck me in, and I cared about the characters. I wish an editor had done a more thorough pass at the book to clean up some of its issue and encourage the author to provide more layers in some areas. It's as if they didn't trust the readers to be able to handle the larger level of detail, but absolutely we can. One only has to look at the great success of other similar novels to see that.
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An excellent book. It must be read in the proper sequence with the other 2 of the trilogy.
An excellent book. It must be read in the proper sequence with the other 2 of the trilogy.
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Odd beginning but it gets better.
The Gates of Ivrel started strange. It is written from the perspective of the Hindu Culture. It is confusing with references to Hindu gods and goddesses that are bewildering to someone who is not of that culture. If you stay with the book until the 3 or 4th chapter, the story and the characters become interesting. By the end of the book you are hooked. I ended up having a deep desire to continue with the main characters in the next of the Morgaine Cycle. While the book is no epic along the line of Tolkien, it is a great read.
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morgaine cycle
I have read this series at least ten times. Morgaine's mysterious character, as well as her dangerous goal beckons the reader to follow this saga. The ending of the last book is open-ended and I dearly hope C.J. Cherryh continues Morgaine's deadly quest.