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In the Company of Others
 
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In the Company of Others (Paperback)

by Julie E. Czerneda (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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In the Company of Others + Web Shifters #3 Hidden In Sight + Web Shifters #2 Changing Vision
Price For All Three: CDN$ 28.97

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Product Description

Amazon.ca

In the middle of a vast terraforming project, planetary engineers introduce the seemingly harmless species known as the Quill to the newly created environments, but the project goes awry and ships full of eager colonists are suddenly unable to land on planets that have become deadly dangerous to them. This situation is a generation old when Dr. Gail Smith arrives at Thromberg Station in search of the one human being rumoured to have survived contact with the Quill. When Gail finds Aaron Pardell, their meeting, and the subsequent search for a solution to the Quill problem, will determine the fate of every other character in Julie Czerneda's In the Company of Others.

At the beginning, with its space station crowded with uneasy refugees, the perceived hostility of the Earth government, and an alienated young man at the heart of the story, In the Company of Others reads a lot like a long-lost C.J. Cherryh novel. But where Cherryh creates tension mainly through interior and exterior dialogue, Czerneda's storytelling style is more action-oriented: the drama and tension arise as we learn enough about the characters to anticipate their reactions to the decisions and acts of others. And there's plenty of tension and action as the novel builds to a grand finale with Gail, Aaron, the Earth military, the Quill, and the stranded refugees all locked in a desperate confrontation. A fitting resolution guarantees that SF readers looking for a good space-adventure story, well told, will find In the Company of Others an enjoyable experience. --Greg L. Johnson


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Customer Reviews

23 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (23 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars I Really, Really Tried, Aug 26 2003
By David "dtstrange" (Pleasant Hill, CA United States) - See all my reviews
I admit that I WANTED to like this book. I tried to like this book. I kept reading this book even though I didn't like this book. I kept hoping that somewhere, somehow, this book would click with me and just kept reading. Well, my efforts were in vain. I didn't like this book. Not to be discouraged, I read two more Julie Czerneda books and didn't like them either. She got her money's worth out of me, that's for sure.

I think the main problems with her books is that her characters just don't have any character. They are almost TOO REAL, which in order to make interesting in a SF novel, requires the talents of an exceptionally good author. I think Ms. Czerneda borrows heavily from A.C. Clarke, which is good, but doesn't have what it takes to bring Clarke's writing style into the 21st Century. The characters in this book are just plain dull, there is very little action to make up for it and the resolution at the end of the book doesn't really make a whole lot of sense. Thanks anyway, Julie, I wish you luck, because I REALLY WANTED TO LIKE YOUR BOOKS!!!!

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2.0 out of 5 stars Acceptable, but not her best, Jun 23 2003
By Barb Caffrey "writer-for-hire" (In a Midwest State (of mind), USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"In the Company of Others" is an extremely disappointing, flawed novel. It's too long, overburdened with description, and I don't believe the romance between hardened scientist Gail Smith and much younger Aaron Pardell.

I did like most of Ms. Czerneda's minor characters, and enjoyed her perspective of what life on an actual space station might be like. But compared to "A Thousand Words for Stranger" or "Beholder's Eye," this book is extremely disappointing.

It seems to go on too long; I'm not sure why this is. Some of the description is absolutely essential, and I buy into that. And I like the two main characters separately; I just don't believe in their romance.

Maybe I'm a romantic at heart, and that's the main reason I'm downgrading this book. But in her other novels, the romances make sense and are believable; here, it doesn't make sense on Gail's side (although I can see why Aaron would like her, as she accepts him for who he is), and that's why the romance wasn't believable to me.

Another person may find it differently than I did.

In addition, as I said before in re-reviewing these novels, Ms. Czerneda is one of my favorite writers. I hold her to a higher standard. And that's the main reason this book gets 2 1/2 stars (not two -- I gave it that before because I didn't know you could give fractions in a review) . . . it has some very strong pluses as well as the minuses.

But the writing is good, mind, and the premise makes sense (with the exception of that romance). I'd just rather people started with "A Thousand Words for Stranger" or "Beholder's Eye," which are much better and involving novels, than this; "In the Company of Others" just isn't as interesting to me as the other works, which is why I give it two and a half stars...

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3.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Flawed Potential, May 19 2003
By jrmspnc (Maryland, USA) - See all my reviews
If In the Company of Others were Jule Czerneda's first novel, it would receive an enthusiastic four stars. This is, however, her fifth and so flaws that would be acceptable in a novice become more glaring.

What do I mean? Czerneda's preface declares that writing third person is difficult; I suspect she talked herself into making it more difficult than it really is and ends up goofing. For example, there is ample italicized inner monologue, a device most often used to allow a third-person narrative to slip into first-person mode; Czerneda, for some reason, maintains the third-person perspective which is jarring. If there is to be no change in narrative voice, why the change in font?

There are other problems. The heroine, Dr. Gail "several middle names" Smith, is a top professor at a major university, commanding dozens of top scientists and with a budget that must be in the trillions. While her age, wisely, is never specified, she is never described as progidy, so she must be at least in her mid-30s - young enough to still be so attractive to every male character in the book, old enough to have reached her position. Yet she falls for a twenty-year old man, and engages in sexual banter with another twenty-year old. Cradle robber? Her personality is also at odds with her position; while our initial impression is of a tough, no-nonsense type, turns out she's weepy-eyed, indecisive, and maudlin. The same is true to a lesser extent of the hero, Aaron Pardell. All of which makes for an at times aggravating read.

Yet there is much good in In the Company of Others. The concept of space stations cut off from Earth with a population fighting off despair is an interesting one that Czerneda pulls off well, and the background story of how humanity got that way is fascinating. The alien Quill end up being satisfying as well, different than the usual bug-eyed aliens and also not a diatribe about human contamination.

If this were a first effort, I would be thrilled by the rich imagination and be looking forward to when Czerneda hits her stride. This is book five, however, and the stride should have been struck by now. I'm not sure if there was enough about In the Company of Others to warrant seeking out the author's other books; In the Company of Others itself will probably warrant another read down the line.

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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Fuzzy feelings make all the difference.
I agree with other reviewers that it takes about 200 pages for this novel to hit on all cylinders. My qualm with the book is that until around page 400 this book was setting... Read more
Published on Dec 14 2002 by John F. Arnold

2.0 out of 5 stars Time Spender
After reading the back cover, I thought to myself that there can't be too much of a development from that idea. I was right!

The first 200 pages are running idle. Read more

Published on Oct 28 2002 by Tzadok

5.0 out of 5 stars Solid one volume slice of the future
In the Company of Others is a character-driven future history novel in which the drive for space terraforming and colonization is ruined by a particularly interesting ecological... Read more
Published on Sep 24 2002 by Robert H. Nunnally Jr.

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best
Czerneda has done it again! The love story here resonated for me, though it seemed to be fumbled away at the end, without the climax (no pun intended) it deserved. Read more
Published on Mar 2 2002 by Bobby R. Treat

4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Sci-Fi Adventure
In the Company of Others, there are a few crusial elements that all come together in Sci-Fi. One is science and the other is fiction. Read more
Published on Feb 12 2002 by Andrew

3.0 out of 5 stars a desperate future
This novel is set in the far future when earth's millions are desperate for a new start off the overcrowded homeworld. Read more
Published on Nov 29 2001 by K. Maxwell

4.0 out of 5 stars Another good show from Czerneda!
Julie E. Czerneda caught my eye with "A Thousand Words for Stranger," and I've done my best to get a hold of everything she has written since. Read more
Published on Sep 3 2001 by Jonathan Burgoine

3.0 out of 5 stars slow start, but a good read overall
I liked Julie Czerneda's "In the Company of Others" well enough, but it's not a book I need to read again. Read more
Published on Aug 29 2001 by Diana Nier

3.0 out of 5 stars Had potential yet...
The book had potential. But it seemed to go on and on about stuff I wasn't much interested in. Verbose to the extreme about incidental things. Read more
Published on Aug 19 2001 by Rudolph Henderson

4.0 out of 5 stars Another fine tale from a gifted writer
Ever since I read Julie E. Czerneda's A THOUSAND WORDS FOR STRANGER, I have looked forward to each of her new novels with their unique perspective and insight. Read more
Published on Jul 12 2001 by Edward Alexander Gerster

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