Title: Conspirator Author: C.J. Cherryh Year: 2009 Publisher: DAW Reviewer: Jake Beal It is with great sadness that I find I must call this book out. As you, my dear reader, may already know, I am a long-time fan of C.J. Cherryh, and particularly of her "Foreigner" series, of which this book is the tenth. But "Conspirator" was a real disappointment to me, and I've struggled to figure out just why. Nothing bad has happened to the quality of the prose, of course, nor the detailed richness with which Ms. Cherryh paints her worlds. But Cajieri, the young prince, is once again central to the story and lending his viewpoint on occasion. So that, I find, is a strike against the book immediately. He's kind of a "Scrappy Doo" character, adding pseudo-charming chaos to events just by his very presence, and confounding the best attempts of his elders to keep him in check. So that's a piece of annoyance just to begin with. Letting parts of the story be told from his viewpoint, though, I feel breaks one of the fundamental premises of the entire "Foreigner" series. In its beginning, we have humans and aliens, unintendedly sharing a planet, and their basic social wiring is just plain different from one another. Things translate just slightly wrong, and a human can no more feel "man'chi" than an atevi can feel "love", so unrestricted contact tends to screw up very badly. For all of the first eight books, we were locked solidly into the perspective of Bren Cameron, the one human translator allowed onto from the human-occupied island of Mospheira onto the atevi mainland. One of the things that made the series really work was that throughout it all, Bren could have his human misinterpretations of what was going on around him come and bite in unexpected ways, shift the landscape and cause him to see that he had always been wrong about some concept in translation. Then every bit of perspective would shift slightly, to a point where past events made more sense. This, for me, was probably the biggest long-term draw of the series. So introducing Cajieri's perspective really loses something, because it means there can be no more mysteries: we, the readers, get to see inside an atevi head, and it's not as different from ours as it used to seem. By the opening of "Conspirator," Bren basically seems to have figured out atevi too. The conflict now seems to be the fact that he's slowly going native, and losing the human side of the interface. We get an excellent setup for exploring this, with him leaving for vacation to the sea-side and to meet his brother. Then Scrappy Doo, I mean Cajieri, hops a train to go join him, the world takes note, and we're back to atevi politics as usual. I feel like Toby, Bren's long-suffering brother, having been put off once again for a piece of Important World Politics. That storyline pushes all the other pieces out of the way, and I ended up feeling subtly betrayed, because the story never comes back there. I think that in the end, it's not so much Cajieri that bugs me---he's just a convenient target on which to vent my spleen. Rather, there's a violation of the fundamental authorial choice of when to start and end a story: the start is chosen in a way that really invites me in to Bren's personal conflicts, and the novel carries those along throughout the rest of the story, but as the political plot takes over, they submerge and in the end are not resolved: the political plot hits its milestone, and chop, the book just ends, leaving me hanging. This is not to say it's not a well-done book. It disappoints me as could only a novel where my expectations are already very high. But Ms. Cherryh has missed the mark on this one, when all it would have taken is a few more pages in which we could have followed Bren's thoughts and feelings back out of political mode and into the questions that started off the book. Maybe this could have replaced a bit of Cajieri? I'll await the next, of course, which is promised by how this one resolves, but with less fervor than before.