Contents: Cassandra (1978) Threads of Time (1978) Companions (1984) A Thief in Korianth (1981) The Last Tower (1982) The Brothers (1986)
Images out of time and space - The terrifying, prophetic vision of a not-too-distant future here on Earth.... An ever-changing journey through Gates in time with countless beginnings but only one End.... A world where man and machine define life - and death - in contrary terms.... A realm where magical intervention can prove both blessing and curse.... From earth the day after tomorrow to light-years distant worlds, here is your ticket for an unforgettable expedition aboard a starship fueled by the powerful imagination of Hugo Award-winning author C.J. Cherryh.
Currently resident in Spokane, Washington, C.J. Cherryh has won four Hugos and is one of the best-selling and most critically acclaimed authors in the science fiction and fantasy field. She is the author of more than forty novels. Her hobbies include travel, photography, reef culture, Mariners baseball, and, a late passion, figure skating: she intends to compete in the adult USFSA track. She began with the modest ambition to learn to skate backwards and now is working on jumps. She sketches, occasionally, cooks fairly well, and hates house work; she loves the outdoors, animals wild and tame, is a hobbyist geologist, adores dinosaurs, and has academic specialties in Roman constitutional law and bronze age Greek ethnography. She has written science fiction since she was ten, spent ten years of her life teaching Latin and Ancient History on the high school level, before retiring to full time writing, and now does not have enough hours in the day to pursue all her interests. Her studies include planetary geology, weather systems, and natural and man-made catastrophes, civilizations, and cosmology…in fact, there's very little that doesn't interest her. A loom is gathering dust and needs rethreading, a wooden ship model awaits construction, and the cats demand their own time much more urgently. She works constantly, researches mostly on the internet, and has books stacked up and waiting to be written.
In the end he remembered nothing at all, except the drive to live.
And the dreams.
And none of the dreams were true.
from "The Threads of Time"
Visible Light purportedly collects some early short stories in C.J. Cherryh's early writing career. Problem is, though, Cherryh does not grasp the concept of "short" in the expression "short story." She readily admits she's more at home writing novellas and novels because her vision requires more time to develop depth. So while there are some actual short stories in Visible Light--including the wonderful SHORT stories "Cassandra" (winner of a deserved Hugo) and "The Last Tower"--there are also some behemoth 100+ page short stories. But despite the length and the false advertising on the cover, they're all engaging.
Cherryh weaves a narrative around her collection, taking on the role of a science fiction/fantasy author traveling the space lanes with an interested reader, commenting on the nature of criticism and writing as they travel. This narrative is contrived but yields interesting insights into Cherryh's thoughts and strategies. My favorite was how she wrote "Companions" (which is 100+ pages) before establishing herself as a solid science fiction/fantasy author and was astonished no publication wished to devote multiple issues to her story. Yes, it's decent, but, given they are receiving submissions from established science fiction authors with large followings, it's not surprising they turned it down. And, too bad, it's a damn good story even if it could have been pruned of irrelevant travel details and repetitious descriptions. And I'm glad it was printed here.
This is a solid collection from a creative author. If you enjoyed her novels, I highly recommend delving into these early stories. They aren't all perfect and they aren't all short, but they're all fascinating and captivating.
A ghost said good morning to her...old man Willis, thin and transparent against the leaping flames. She blinked, bade it good morning in return--did not miss old Willis's shake of the head as she opened the door and left. Noon traffic passed, heedless of the flames, the hulks that blazed in the street, the tumbling brick.
The apartment caved in--black bricks falling into the inferno, Hell amid the green, ghostly trees. Old Willis fled, burning, fell--turned to jerking, blackened flesh--died, daily. Alis no longer cried, hardly flinched. She ignored the horror spilling about her, forced her way through crumbling brick that held no substance, past busy ghosts that could not be troubled in their haste.
Прекрасный сборник рассказов и коротких повестей из раннего - и на мой взгляд, лучшего - периода Черри.
«Кассандра» (про девушку, которая видит будущее и это будущее выглядит как ядерное пламя) и «Последняя башня» (про старика-отшельника, в двери к которому постучалась война) просто шедевральны; автор попроще был бы счастлив создать хотя бы один рассказ такого уровня за всю жизнь, а Черри их печет пачками.
«Братья» (героика с кельтскими мотивами), «Вор в Корианте» (авантюрные приключения) — чуть попроще, но все равно это великолепные образцы фэнтези.
«Компаньонов» все хвалят, а мне не понравилось — повесть по сути является одной длительной медитацией на тему одиночества робинзона на необитаемой планете; мысль, которую можно было бы выразить на 20-30 страницах, раздулась на 100 и заняла почти половину сборника.
Между рассказами вставлены очень странные перебивки, как будто сама Черри в далеком будущем летит на межпланетном корабле и ведет со случайным попутчиком философские беседы на самые животрепещущие темы, «является ли правительство инструментом подавления или формой выражения людских стремлений», «сохранится ли сила искусства после смерти человечества», все такое. Если вы не учитесь на философском, то рекомендую просто игнорировать эти вставки и наслаждаться рассказами.
8/10. Если бы не "Компаньоны" и не беседы с автором, была бы твердая 9.
C. J. Cherryh’s Visible Light is a masterclass in compact, high-pressure science fiction storytelling—a book that illuminates not only the boundaries of known space but the edges of human perception, trust, and mental endurance.
Across this linked collection of stories, Cherryh conducts a meticulous examination of what happens when ordinary people are thrust into extraordinary—and often psychologically destabilizing—circumstances.
The result is a deeply impressive work that is both accessible and intellectually challenging, as sharp in its world-building as it is in its portrayal of the strained human psyche.
Cherryh’s strength has always been her ability to ground sweeping SF visions in intimate, character-centric tension. In Visible Light, this quality is heightened. Space isn’t a backdrop—it’s an antagonist. The harsh anonymity of stations, ships, borders, and political systems becomes a pressure cooker for the protagonists, many of whom function at the thin intersection of duty, fear, and survival. Cherryh excels at portraying the “lived-in” texture of interstellar worlds: cramped cabins, unreliable equipment, bureaucratic hostility, and cultural misunderstanding. She’s never a writer who burdens the reader with technobabble; instead, she lets the environment reveal itself through friction and conflict.
What gives this collection coherence is Cherryh’s fascination with epistemology—with how characters know what they know, and what happens when their senses fail or deceive them. Visible Light is full of moments when a character sees something they shouldn’t, or doesn’t see something they must, or misinterprets a clue because their cultural assumptions mislead them. In other words, perception itself becomes a battlefield. Cherryh turns this theme into gripping drama: stations where something “off” lurks in the corner of vision, planets where signals distort, encounters where the sanity of the observer is the real stake.
One of the most striking stories hinges on a rescue mission gone wrong, where the protagonist’s struggle is not just physical survival but the terror of being unable to interpret reality correctly. Cherryh handles psychological suspense with surgical precision, making the reader feel the same claustrophobic unease as the characters. Such stories elevate Visible Light beyond a simple adventure collection; it becomes an exploration of what space travel might feel like, stripped of romance and confronted with the raw vulnerabilities of the mind.
Yet Cherryh never loses sight of humanity. Even at her most cerebral, she writes people with sweat, fear, stubbornness, and flawed judgement. Her characters are not polished heroes—they’re competent professionals who crack under pressure, misread instructions, or cling to procedural routine as if it were a life raft. This emotional realism makes the tension more acute. When Cherryh writes about isolation, you feel it. When she writes about a small error spiraling into catastrophe, you wince.
The prose is tight and economic, sometimes almost austere, which fits the hard-edged settings. Cherryh doesn’t indulge in lyrical digressions; she drives forward with relentless focus. But when needed, she slips in moments of haunting beauty—light shimmering through an alien sky, a drifting ship glimpsed through radiation haze, a sudden moment of human connection between two terrified crewmates.
If there is a critique to be made, it is that Cherryh demands attentiveness. She reveals information through implication rather than exposition, and inattentive readers may find themselves scrambling. But this is part of her artistry—she invites you into the machinery of perception, encouraging you to assemble meaning as the characters do.
Overall, Visible Light is a powerful, atmospheric, psychologically immersive work. It stands as an exemplary demonstration of Cherryh’s ability to blend human vulnerability with the harsh impersonal logic of the universe. Not all stories hit the same emotional high note, but together they form a vivid, unsettling portrait of the dangers—internal and external—of seeing too much, or too little, in a universe that doesn’t care.
Top 3 stories - The Brothers, Threads of time, Cassandra
A phenomenal collection of heart wrenching stories, that highlight so many different aspects of the human condition. Though not my first choice for a C.J. Cherryh authored collection of short stories - Sunfall being my favorite - these works are up there with some of Cherryh's best. This is also fascinating to consider when you take into account how some of these were written early in her career! She literally has a story that she wrote in a day, and it is beautiful. I think my favorite part of this collection is the way in which she tells each story. It is hard to describe, but Cherryh opts for a sort of second person narration going on between each story. This second person narration is a story in itself, consisting of Cherryh telling a stranger she meets on a space station - that being you; the stranger, not the space station - each of these stories as well as some context for them - where, whys, how's, when's, but never what. This leads for a metacontextual conversation to happen about each of Cherryh's stories. Having an author share there opinion on each of her own works may feel normal in our current society considering all the podcast and interviews that are accessible to modern day publishing; but for the time that this was published, this must have been a treat.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Overall, these stories were a slog for me. I was expecting Sci-fi, but only half of these stories are sf - the others are fantasy. None of them are 5-star stories for me. The first - 'Cassandra' - was haunting and will stick with me. 'Threads of Time' I have already forgotten. 'Companions' had some interesting concepts: a portrait of AI well ahead of its time, but very average in this time. Also a somewhat unique vision of alien life. But buried in a way-too-long text that was a slog. The last 3 - fantasies - were all OK, but nothing that stands out for me.
The last story, "The Brothers," was the only one freshly written for this book, and it is the best one. Perhaps a cautionary example for people who think you can put bits and pieces together into a 348 page book. Separate intros were written for each story, but did not help.