Recounts the history of the relationship between humans and the insect-like Thranx, as seen through the eyes of a young agricultural expert--and a Thranx--named Ryo. Originally in paperback.
Bestselling science fiction writer Alan Dean Foster was born in New York City in 1946, but raised mainly in California. He received a B.A. in Political Science from UCLA in 1968, and a M.F.A. in 1969. Foster lives in Arizona with his wife, but he enjoys traveling because it gives him opportunities to meet new people and explore new places and cultures. This interest is carried over to his writing, but with a twist: the new places encountered in his books are likely to be on another planet, and the people may belong to an alien race.
Foster began his career as an author when a letter he sent to Arkham Collection was purchased by the editor and published in the magazine in 1968. His first novel, The Tar-Aiym Krang, introduced the Humanx Commonwealth, a galactic alliance between humans and an insectlike race called Thranx. Several other novels, including the Icerigger trilogy, are also set in the world of the Commonwealth. The Tar-Aiym Krang also marked the first appearance of Flinx, a young man with paranormal abilities, who reappears in other books, including Orphan Star, For Love of Mother-Not, and Flinx in Flux.
Foster has also written The Damned series and the Spellsinger series, which includes The Hour of the Gate, The Moment of the Magician, The Paths of the Perambulator, and Son of Spellsinger, among others. Other books include novelizations of science fiction movies and television shows such as Star Trek, The Black Hole, Starman, Star Wars, and the Alien movies. Splinter of the Mind's Eye, a bestselling novel based on the Star Wars movies, received the Galaxy Award in 1979. The book Cyber Way won the Southwest Book Award for Fiction in 1990. His novel Our Lady of the Machine won him the UPC Award (Spain) in 1993. He also won the Ignotus Award (Spain) in 1994 and the Stannik Award (Russia) in 2000.
Alan Dean Foster does solid work. He has been the go-to guy for movie adaptations since the '70s or early '80s. Admittedly, I've tried reading his work before, but it was based on a movie and I ended up putting down the book to rewatch the movie. But maybe I will try one of his adaptations again now that I have a feel for his style.
The thranx are in conflict with a reptilian race who the humans aren't sure even exist. Before they met the thranx, the humans knew they were alone in the universe but now the universe is a busy place. The thranx are a very different race than humans, but are similar enough to bugs to elicit a gag response in most humans. The thranx, however, find humans equally revolting. So, now you have two groups who each find the other repugnant with one bug in the middle to explain why they need to work together to fight a common enemy.
It's a good story about overcoming differences, finding common ground, and working together even when the thought of the other makes you cringe. Could be a good allegory for today's times. Maybe that was what Foster was trying to get at back in '82 as well? Doesn't the other side always make us sick?
If you are a science fiction fan, this will be right up your alley. Foster is a very savvy and technical writer, adding elements of The Hero's Journey to give Ryo's experiences more weight. There were moments when I wished the thranx were more strange and not just humans wearing hats, but such is the difficulty with writing from an alien bug's perspective--if he's too alien, we can't identify with him and if he's too human, then why not place the lens over a human? But if you decide to place the lens over a bug ... make sure it's a cloudy day.
This was the first book I ever read by Alan Dean Foster. I had perhaps an unusual reaction to this book. I really, really loved this book. Perhaps he didn't mean to be that powerful, but I was really touched by it. It is the story of the First Contact between two sentient races, the Thranx and the Humans. It is told from the point of view of the Thranx, an insect-like race resembling praying mantises. The main character is a Thranx agricultural engineer named Ryo. I quickly and very strongly identified with him. In that character I found a bit of a soulmate. I passionately cared about what happened to him. Another thing I found very touching in this book was how at the end the Thranx and the Humans, although very different, managed to form a stong alliance, indeed a strong bond with one another. The Humanx Commonwealth is a great example of how people can overcome strong prejudices and differences to live together in harmony. I fell in love with Foster's writing style, and I've gone on to read many of his other books dealing with the Humanx Commonwealth, including the Flinx & Pip Series.
This is an excellent first-contact kind of novel, set early in Foster's Humanx Commonwealth continuity. Ryo is one of Foster's best characters, and answers Campbell's challenge of creating an alien character who thinks as well as a man, but not -like- a man. It's not necessary to have read any of the other books in the group in order to appreciate this one, and is, in fact, a great starting place for Foster's universe. This first edition has a lovely Michael Whelan cover, too.
My introduction to Alan Dean Foster's Commonwealth Universe.
I picked this book up from the giveaway pile at my high school library about 10 years ago, though it wasn't until a few years later that I got around to reading it. When I picked it up, the kid who had picked it up before me dismissed it and said something negative about it (even though he hadn't read it). When I finally read it, I was SO glad I ignored him. I was intrigued by Michael Whelan's cover art--a Human and an insect (two completely different creatures) looking into one another's eyes and touching hands.
Foster's story turned out to be just as engaging as the art work. It was a brilliant and unique idea to write about the first contact between Humans and Thranx from the Thranx's point of view. Experiencing Ryo's world and society and encountering weird fleshy aliens with single-lensed eyes, spongy skin, and half as many limbs through his compound eyes.
I think it also gave me a greater interest in insects and insectoid aliens.
Not many books or even movies quite like it. Definitely recommended to anyone interested in first contact stories and real alien aliens (and insects can be quite alien).
I’ve seen this book around for years and always passed it up, finally reading it changed my opinion on Alan Dean Foster. I always thought of him as the movie tie-in guy but this book was really interesting. It’s a first contact book between humans and giant bugs called the thranx. It’s got an interesting take on it by telling the story from the thranx point of view instead of the humans. Great job on the world building and a fairly tight plot. The ending was a bit off but great overall.
This is a re-read for me. I read a fair few of Alan Dean Foster's 'Humanx Commonwealth' books when I was knee-high to a Thranx, but in a somewhat haphazard fashion. Having stumbled across the chronology for the series (made up of lots of series-within-series, much like Terry Pratchett's 'Discworld' books) on Foster's website, I decided to revisit the Commonwealth but to read all the books in chronological order this time.
'Nor Crystal Tears' was written as a prequel to the entire series, documenting the first contact between the arthropod-like Thranx and humanity. It serves as a rather wonderful prologue to the rest of the series.
The book is fun, often funny, and fills those of us with a prepondency to look at the night sky and wonder with a sense of hope... or a feeling of 'if only'.
It does stretch the realms of credulity at times; personally, I find the speed with which the two alien races pick up each other's languages to be more than a little hard to believe.
My only other gripe with this otherwise fantastic tale is that the character Wuu disappears from the narrative a little too suddenly for my tastes, after spending so long getting to know him.
These minor issues aside, I loved this book as much as I remembered from my first reading all those years ago. I recommend it to anybody who loves science fiction and still has that urge to look up at night and ponder 'what if?'
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I read this one long, long ago. GR says it's #9 in that long-running series. My dim recollection is that it was earlier? Ah, in the internal chronology it was #1. I'm writing this silly "review" after seeing Neil Asher's blog post http://theskinner.blogspot.com/2020/0... "A classic and still as enjoyable now as the last time I read it, however many years ago that was. Told from thr POV of Ryo (mostly) one of the Thranx - intelligent alien bugs - this is the story of first-contact with the human race. This has to be the first time in a long while that I've sat and read a book cover to cover almost without stopping. Highly recommended."
Well. If I still have a copy, maybe I'll reread. If (more likely) I read a library copy? Well.... Here's Wiki's article on the series: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanx_...
This book covers first contact from a non human perspective and while anthropomorphic, it was an fun and incredibly easy read. Hit me at the right time and had some interesting pieces of plot that would make for a great book grade scifi movie 🎥 haha!!
Awesome book that in my opinion realistically describes the strains between alien races in achieving an alliance. Author is especially clever in devising the plan the protagonist carries out unify the races,
The best parts are the physical descriptions of humans from an alien perspective.
The ending felt rushed, probably because of large sections of summary.
Ah, the feminism of the 80s, where there's a female captain, but even bugs only give us male gaze.
Seriously, it's a matriarchal society where the POV bug can have his job dictated by his girlfriend, yet female bugs are almost universally talked about as beautiful, their eyes and ovipositors mentioned mostly, and no female bug talks about any particular male bug as appealing. And when our bug-hero gets to the big city, he meats a female bug in cheap jewelry, who gets him drunk and flirts with him until she leads him to an alley where other bugs jump him. See... the female bugs are physically larger, but still the author resorts to a human crime cliche where the female's weapon is flirtation, and the male is not threatened by her presence.
I digress, I feel like I'm writing a thesis. It's interesting how even an author skilled in creating an alien society and point of view will miss cultural biases.
Also I felt the bug society's pacifism was a little uneven... behavior at the beginning didn't hold up with the end?
But I did like a number of parts of it, and there are some great lines. My favorite was the one about how being a poet is a great excuse, like being drunk.
In this first contact story told from an alien perspective, agricultural specialist Ryo of the insect-like Thranx, struggles to bring together his people and humans in a cooperative alliance.
This delightful, hopeful read was a great change from the more miserable things I've ingested recently. The main charcater is a little too perfect, but I don't mind that, and it's counterbalanced with him being considered a deviant by his rigidly structured society. Nothing is too heavy-handed though, nor is it too heavy. The Thranx are admirable, if not a little to dull in thier advancement, and the humans do their best to show our less disagreeable attributes. Thranx culture is sometimes a tad too familar, but its distinct and thought through enough for me not to mind those little slips, like mentions of hell. Overall, just a pleasant experience. It's only my second Foster and my first in this lengthy series, but more will be added to my list.
The first meeting of the insectoid Thranx race with the human race and the prejudices they had to overcome.
It is told mostly from the Thranx point of view and starts with the protagonist as a grub in a communal nursery learning, growing, and waiting for metamorphosis. That part was a little slow and I found myself sort of auto-speed reading. It is more interesting during his early adult years, but there were still a few other slow spots. It picks up immensely when he finally manages to leave the farm. The Thranx are quite human despite the differences.
Once the protagonist finds the humans, the primary story begins and it speeds up with a bang, to the point where I did not want to stop reading. The primary action ends after about a fictional year. At the end there is a gap to allow us to see if the experiment worked. Excellent characters and world building with no confusion about who is speaking, what is happening, and what the motivations are. And always interesting. I'm kind of disappointed it is over now.
Written from the POV of the alien (humans are the monsters in this story) we learn a great deal about the culture of the Thranx. I love the first chapter which introduces us to Ryo (the protagonist). He is cunning, resourceful and drawn to the humans for some unexplainable reason.
I've not read any other books in the Humanx Commonwealth series and I don't think I missed anything by starting here. I am interested to see where this series goes with the human & Thranx relationship now that contact has been made.
While I found it an entertaining read and recommend it, I just couldn't give it higher than a 3 star. The plot ending just seemed to forced to me, a little rushed even. But it was a satisfying ending (didn't disappoint).
This is a re-read for me, and I still find it just as exciting and readable as I remember it. Ryo leaves his exceedingly ordered life when he hears that intelligent aliens have been discovered. Along with the poet Wuu he tracks down the persistence rumors and rescues the aliens; fleeing with them to try to establish an alliance between them and his species. After a few false starts and amazingly few dead bodies, they unite against a common enemy--the AAnn.
It has quite a slow start, and things seem to happen and resolve a little too easily, but I came to read this book as a fan of bugs, to see some neat bug alien worldbuilding and humans befriending alien bugs. On those two notes, this book delivered!
I found all the characters very endearing and likable, and had a real fun time reading.
It’s a very unique book, in that it's written from the point of view of the alien bug himself. You get to see his culture, society, and even how their language is structured from his everyday life and interactions. Later you get to see the first contact of his species with humans, and how they have a rather realistic mix of disgust yet interest in each other. This too you see from the bugs’ point of view, how they find mammals just as unnerving as the majority of humans find bugs, and are a little freaked out upon suddenly seeing giant intelligent space-faring ones.
Foster's writing reminded me a little bit of Ursula Le Guin's. Which is a good thing. It is simple and elegantly structured prose through which big ideas and small flit around and gain weight. An easy story to enter and a believable story.
My one qualm was with the pacing of the last twenty pages. Time, which unfolded quite steadily until then, suddenly became a bit unkempt and hurvy turvy. Changing what would have been a five star review to a four.
I actually finished this two days ago. I really enjoyed 'Nor Crystal Tears'. I take off half a point because it seemed as if the characters were constantly escaping from somewhere (so much so that the main character, Ryo, comments on it!). Still, that's a minor quibble. I loved Ryo, and found the worldbuilding and character details fascinating. I will be reading more of this series as soon as I can figure out the order to read it in.
This is only the second book I've read by Foster that isn't a film novelization.
Fantastic book! Relatable yet very alien aliens. A great adventure, well written. Touches on many themes that more recent novels have (badly) explored, such as the Dark Forrest hypothesis. Can't believe I've not read this before.
A pretty solid first contact story, from the perspective of an insectoid alien. For that reason, it requires that the first third or so deal almost exclusively with the insectoid Thranx, and the life of a specific member of them who plays the leading role in that contact. That Thranx, Ryo, is somewhat unlike the rest of his species in being "unsettled" from an early age, and unsatisfied with his lot in life. He is finally compelled to act when he receives credible evidence that alien monsters have been encountered and possibly captured. When he finally finds them, he proves to be the only Thranx capable of bridging the initial gap between us and them (Humans). The plot requires some pretty severe contortions for an unassuming Thranx to acquire the role he does in interspecies contact, ranging from an unexpected financial benefactor, to multiple fortuitous escapes, but it never competely leaves the realm of believability.
The actual first contact portions are fun, with things like Ryo's observations of such things as how humans tilt themselves to walk up an inclined surface, sweat, and the often ignored role of body language in human communication. Unfortunately, this part was all too short. I recognize the necessity of setting the stage of the Thranx before adding Humans to the mix, but that left too little for the initial interactions between the species to satisfactorily play out. Luckily this is part of a series, so perhaps there'll be more in that vein in the others. Some of the worldbuilding with the Thranx also felt a little "safe". What is the point of having the Thranx be monogamous, other than giving Ryo a "wife" to pine over? As things are set up, the Thranx are really not that different from humans aside from their physique and a few other elements. While that adds to the plausibility of finding common ground, I think a more interesting story and world could've been made if they were far more different.
Still, it was a smooth and enjoyable read, if not a little disappointing relative to the potential of its concept.
Ooh, I loved this. Clearly a novel I bought because the cover is amazing, but the story itself is also so much fun.
I really enjoy world-building novels, novels where there is an alien perspective, and novels when alien cultures encounter us humans and then try to figure out why the hell we do what we do. This novel is full of all three, but it never gets dull or repetitive. Mainly because the aliens aren’t morons. I mean, you sometimes see sci-fi movies where the humans are on an alien ship and see a weird bed and are completely flummoxed by it. This book doesn’t do that stupid crap – it presumes that people (and sentient alien bugs) are smart enough to figure stuff out, like how a damn chair works. Yeah, they had no idea what humans looked like, but they knew the chair was a chair, and etc.
You also identify with and understand Ryo’s motivations and character. His people were clearly defined from ours in terms of ideology (e.g. gender roles) and especially biology/language, but it’s also shown that they aren’t all “the same”; Ryo’s mugging and Wuu’s extravagance are examples here.
There’s so much attention to detail in this novel – it’s impeccable in that regard. But it’s also fun and interesting and exciting. Ryo’s rather mundane life sets up the stage for the culture, but the story also moves a good pace – we get to see these different parts of the Thranx culture and learn about how they function, but we also have some human interaction. I wish that part was a little more in-depth, to be honest.
And while I definitely had a wonderful time reading this novel, there are a few things that seemed a bit too convenient, like Wuu and Ryo’s entire relationship for one, and the ending seemed to wrap up a little easier than it would realistically. But overall, a lot of run to read.
I guess I have to go and buy the entire Humanx Commonwealth series now, I suppose.
Das war nun mein erster Reread eines "das hat mir gefallen, aber ich weiß echt nicht mehr richtig worum es ging"-Bücher, die ich dafür in englisch nachgekauft habe. Eine wirklich interessante Erfahrung. So hatte ich mir gedacht die Erinnerung würde beim Lesen schon noch kommen, aber Pustekuchen! Ja, wie ich feststellen musste hatte ich nicht mal mehr das grobe Gerüst korrekt parat und durch eine, wohl vom Klappentext gestützte, Scheinerinnerung ersetzt. Mal wieder ein Beleg, das das menschliche Erinnerungsvermögen ein Trottel ist :-) Worum es nun geht: der Erstkontakt zwischen Menschen und einer Insektenkultur aus der Perspektive letzterer -- so weit so richtig -- doch ich dachte das Treffen würde im Weltall und gleich zu Beginn stattfinden. Stattdessen trifft Ryo erst zur Mitte des Buches wirklich auf die "Aliens" und das auf seiner Ursprungsheimatwelt in deren Äquivalent zu "Area 51". Und es ist auch nicht sein Auftrag diesen Kontakt herzustellen, er selbst hat es sich, fast als fixe Idee, selbst auferlegt. Aber fangen wir am Anfang an. Alles beginnt mit Ryos Zeit als Larve, in der seine Rasse alles für das spätere Leben lernt auch wenn ihre Wahrnehmung und Bewegungsfreiheit in dieser Entwicklungsphase noch sehr eingeschränkt ist. Nach dem Verpuppen und der Umwandlung in den erwachsenen Körper sind die Thranx bereit in der von ihnen zuvor gewählten Stellung in die Gesellschaft integriert zu werden. Nur Ryo fühlt sich nicht so bestimmt wie alle anderen, er wählt seinen Beruf, anders als seine "Kinderstationsgenossen" und Geschwister, mehr aus Notwendigkeit als aus echter Überzeugung. Dennoch lebt er ein erfolgreiches Leben bis eine Nachricht an seine Partnerin ihn aus seiner eingeschlagenen Bahn katapultiert. Die Schilderung fremdartige Monster in einem havarierten Schiff ist es, die der Raumschiff Kapitän an seine Kindheitsfreundin sendet und diese an ihren Partner Ryo weiterträgt. Schon bald wird dieser Bericht revidiert und als Psychose deklariert, doch Ryo sieht darin endlich seine Bestimmung. Er muss herausfinden was das für Wesen sind und macht sich gegen den Widerstand seines Klans auf die Suche nach der Wahrheit. Dank Beharrlichkeit und einiger günstiger Zufälle landet er schließlich tatsächlich in einer geheimen Forschungseinrichtung just als es zwei jener furchterregenden Aliens, die ihr Skelett von außen nach innen gekehrt tragen, gelingt zu fliehen. Zuerst wird Ryo von ihnen als Geisel genommen doch schon bald gelingt es ihm sich mit jenen Menschen zu verständigen und den Plan einer Allianz zu formen um gegen die Spezies der AAnn, einer aggressiven Echsenrasse, die immer wieder auf Welten der Thranx einfällt und auch für den Angriff auf das Erdenschiff verantwortlich ist, bestehen zu können. Doch damit steht er zunächst ganz alleine. Okay, ist der Roman nun so gut, wie ich mich glaube zu erinnern es als Jugendliche geglaubt zu haben? Vielleicht nicht ganz :-) Aber ein Fall von "wie kann ich das je gut gefunden haben?!" ist er bei weitem auch nicht. Der Beginn ist ohne Frage faszinierend. Die Alien-POV einer wirklich fremden Art und Weise "aufzuwachen". Was ich später etwas vermisst habe ist, dies auch in der erwachsenen Kultur widergespiegelt zu sehen. Es wird kurz erwähnt, dass die evolutionäre Änderung, dass alle Thranx-Frauen fortpflanzungsfähig sind ihre Entwicklung zur dominanten Rasse ihres Planeten begünstigt hat und so ergibt es schon Sinn, dass die „Stock-bezogene" Lebensweise nur mehr rudimentär vorhanden ist, aber dennoch ist mir die geschilderte Gesellschaft, für so signifikant anders sozialisierte Wesen, uns Menschen doch einen Tick zu ähnlich. Was mich auch ein wenig stört ist, daß der Plot zu viele Zufälle braucht um seinen Weg zu gehen: -Ausgerechnet die Frau, deren Partner der (zumindest scheinbar) einzige Thrax ist, der sich nach einer neuen Aufgabe sehnt erhält die ansonsten geheimgehaltene Nachricht über die Fremden, weil sie zufällig bekannt mit genau dem Raumschiffkapitän ist, der den Erstkontakt erlebt hat und sich ihr, gegen das Protokoll, mitteilte, auch wenn sie als Larvenpflegerin ganz außerhalb der Materie steht. - Ausgerechnet der Mann den Ryo verloren in der Hauptstadt und dem Hungertod nahe, beschließt zu überfallen entpuppt sich nach misslungenem Raub als weltoffener Poet, der dem unglücklichen Ryo nicht nur Kost und Logis, sondern auch Hilfe bei seiner Mission anbietet. -Der Soldat, auf den Ryo und der Poet bei ihren Recherchen zufällig stoßen entscheidet sich dafür ihnen einzig deswegen weiterführende Informationen zu geben, weil genau er ein großer Fan des Poeten ist. -Ryo braucht eine ganze Weile um schließlich in der abgelegenen Forschungsbasis anzukommen in der die Menschen gefangen gehalten werden, aber just in jener Minute in der er ankommt brechen diese gerade aus. Einen (bis zwei) passende Zufälle gebe ich jedem Autor, danach aber muss ich es als "lazy writing" abrechnen :-) Und einmal kann ich auch Ryos Motivation nicht verstehen. Später mit den Menschen geflohen und auf einer ihrer Basen, muss er erfahren, dass er womöglich doch nicht als Diplomat angesehen wird, sondern die Obduktion von ihm geplant wird. Seine menschlichen Freunde (jene zwei, die er als erstes kennengelernt hat) sind entsetzt, aber er will ganz einmütig für die Wissenschaft sterben. Durchaus okay, dass sich sein Gemüt hier stark unterscheidet und er ein solches Opfer ansich auch unbekümmert angenommen hätte, wenn es der Vermehrung von Wissen dient, aber bedeutet das nicht auch sein hohes Ziel Menschen und Thrax zu vereinen ist gescheitert? Dagegen muss er doch Sturm laufen! Das Ziel für das er alles aufgegeben hat kann doch so nicht erreicht werden, oder? Wenn doch wird es mir auf jeden Fall nicht richtig vermittelt. Das Ende der Geschichte kommt dann schnell indem Ryo zu einer drastischen Lösung greift. Seine These: Menschen und Thrax müssen zusammen aufwachsen um gegenseitige Ablehnung gar nicht erst aufkommen zu lassen. Anstatt aber eine langsame Annäherung auf diese Weise zu planen entführt er flux eine Gruppe Larven aus ihrer Kinderstube um sie mit mitgebrachten Kindern in einem geheimen Lager im Dschungel seiner Welt "anzufreunden". Ein Glück das seine Artgenossen das am Schluss lockerer sehen als unsereins das würde :-) Wirklich zuende ist die Geschichte über die Thrax/Menschen-Allianz mit diesem Buch aber natürlich nicht. Alan Dean Foster hat viele Romane geschrieben, die in diesem Universum angesiedelt sind und bestimmt werden da noch weitere Aspekte behandelt werden, die hier vielleicht noch nicht ganz ausgebaut sind. Fazit: Vielleicht nicht so ein großer Wurf, wie ich mal dachte, aber dennoch ein unterhaltsamer Blick auf eine interessante Alien-Rasse durch einen clever umgekehrten Erstkontakt.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This is one of those books which opens its arms and welcomes you home. So much more than a page-turner, this book is a prime example of why I love science fiction and fantasy. I lost myself in this world and read it all in one sitting in the middle of the night. This is one of those rare books that is a must-have. I wildly recommend it. My dreams after reading were almost as good. My imagination raged about how *I* would have continued the story. Great book. All I have is sleepy and determined praise for it. =)
This is one of the books I totally stole from my mom when I moved out because I couldn't imagine not having it around. Fascinating insectoid space-faring race! They smell like flowers! First contact with humans!
And, as usual, Foster is kind of a bio nerd, which is endlessly enjoyable when applied to world building.
An amazing novel of first contact; I've read it at least 3 times and plan to do so again. The Thranx are fascinating and Alan Dean Foster has done a great job of creating them; their thoughts, society, and worlds.
This was a great story about first contact between humans and an alien race from the viewpoint of the aliens. I highly recommend giving this one a read!
Yeah...yeah...I know. It's not a surprise I rated this five stars. I mean, I'm a fan of Alan Dean Foster, and I love Pip and Flinx AND I love the Commonwealth Alan Dean Foster built up in his books. SOOOO, when I found this Book that I DIDN'T OWN in a second hand bookshop I SQUEALED in happiness and added it to the ten book high pile I already had and presented that pile to my mother with a huge grin. Tah dahhh...
This book though. Wonderful. From the first page I adored it. It's from the point of view of Ryo the Thranx (do not ask me to spell his entire Thranx name...) and I just adore Ryo so much. It's wonderful to have a book from the perspective of aliens meeting humans and its so much fun. Alan does a masterful job building up the Thranx, their society, their customs, their worlds so that when the "Human Monsters" are introduced the reader can - well - I could at least - understand everyone's point of view on the matter.
Ryo as a characters is terribly relatable - maybe it's just due to where I am in life at the moment, searching for who I am, where I belong, and why I exist, but I found his quest, his desires, to really be very personal. I highly enjoyed his wit and sarcasm as well - though I don't know if sarcasm was what Alan Dean Foster was going for but Thranx being as "logical" as they tend to be, sarcastic is how he came across.
I think my only jarring compliant is how quickly the Humans learnt how to speak, understand Thranx, being just how complicated it seems as not just a language, but a whole, physical body form of communication. But...hey...Science Fiction. It didn't take away from my immense enjoyment of seeing these two species interact. If you're a fan of Alan Dean Fosters works, then I do recommend picking it up - if you're a fan of the older sci-fi era, then I also recommend giving it a read - if you want something a bit different, also pick it up. But it will NOT be for everyone. That's why there are so many wonderful books out there. Surely there is something out there you'll enjoy. ^_^