Daniel Holm thinks:
"Chris has finally met a woman who's not just a sex machine or a she-Ythrian to him." (p. 587)
That was what I called Arinnian's treble standard: placing bird women on a pedestal where they were expected to measure up to an impossible Ythrian standard while at the same time treating women not in choths with contempt.
Chris/Arinnian jokes with Eyath in Anglic:
"'We Important Executives can't stall around.'" (p. 590)
He explains that, for long distance travel, his chothmates must overcome their claustrophobia and learn to travel in enclosed aircraft whereas earlier he had thought:
"To reach Lythran's aerie before dark, he must start soon. Of course, a car would cover the distance in less than an hour; but who wanted to fly caged in metal and plastic?" (I, p. 439)
In fact, Arinnian and Eyath travel to visit Tabitha Falkakyn on the Oronesian island of St. Li in a flitter that is "'...spaceable...,'" (p. 591) which will be important later. Every plot point that will matter later must be introduced earlier like rogue planets in Ensign Flandry and the idea of capturing the enemy's codes in The Rebel Worlds. Tabitha's house guest is a prisoner of war, used to flying small spacecraft...
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
And it was precisely with this humanizing of Christopher Holm that he finally starts to stop grating on me and being so irritating!
I recently reread ENSIGN FLANDRY and your comments about rogue planets immediately reminded me of Chapter 3 in that book, where Brechdan Ironrede discussed that phenomenon with his son. A rogue planet was to be very significant!
Ad astra! Sean
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