Golden Witchbreed

by Mary Gentle

Paperback, 1985

Call number

823.914

Publication

Signet (1985), Mass Market Paperback

Pages

495

Description

The distant world of Orthe is littered with spectacular remnants of the Golden Empire, an ancient yet advanced civilisation extinct some 2000 years. Envoy Lynne de Lisle Christie arrives on Orthe to find a now technophobic society.

Media reviews

Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
There is action, intrigue, and, surprisingly, a full-scale murder mystery... It's one of these ultrasatisfying lo-o-o-ong novels, packed with detail and based in an alien culture thatt after a time the reader starts to live in.

Awards

British Science Fiction Association Award (Shortlist — Novel — 1983)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1983

Physical description

495 p.; 6.9 inches

ISBN

0451158482 / 9780451158482

User reviews

LibraryThing member Black_samvara
Suspiciously similar to The Left Hand of Darkness, good read too.
LibraryThing member rakerman
Amazing. Also read the sequel, Ancient Light.
LibraryThing member RobertDay
A remarkable first novel with great fluency of style. My one problem was the map inside the back of the book. It very quickly became clear to me that Gentle was going to take us to every place named on that map; and she did, with a terrible inevitability.
LibraryThing member Jasignature
Been a long time since I've read this (must do so again sometime), but I do remember that I enjoyed it muchly as an introduction to Female Writers (Authoress - still a valid word) and how good they can be upon many levels besides just a good imagination.
LibraryThing member krazykiwi
Rating based on how much I adored this book as a young teenager.

Having just run across it again, I'm going to keep an eye out for a copy to re-read, and see if it's as good as I remember. And bonus! I just found out there's a sequel I never knew about either, so two for the price of one.
LibraryThing member wishanem
As awful as the cover of this book is, the actual story it tells is pretty good. Less than a generation after humans discovers faster-than-light travel, they have found over 100,000 planets inhabited by intelligent life, and Earth is strained to send even the most inexperienced emissaries to most
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of them. Lynne Christie is one such emissary, sent to a planet that appears at first glance to be in a Medieval period, complete with a fallen pseudo-Roman civilization in the planet's history. However, soon the Machiavellian politics and alien aspects of life on this planet begin to complicate the envoy's life and then the story really gets going.

Words I learned in this book:
batrachian - amphibian, froglike
crepuscular - of or like twilight
eidetic - of visual imagery that is extremely accurate, such as a photographic memory
nictitating - generally blinking, specifically the movement of the "third eyelid" in animals that feature that additional membrane.
tenebrious - dark, gloomy, or difficult to understand
tersion - the act of rubbing something off
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LibraryThing member wunder
Fascinating book that unveils more and more details about the world and the characters as the story continues. I wish it had a more appealing title. I pretended I was reading a book titled "Orthe: Envoy". And I could do without the apostrophes in the names. Besides that, it was great.
LibraryThing member Cathery
This is fantastic. Only drawback -- The end wasn't an HEA and the sequel broke my heart. But damn, what writing.
LibraryThing member zjakkelien
I liked it enough to finish it, but it was a bit laborious to read. I liked the world and the discoveries, but it was too descriptive for me. Ok, we´re on an alien world, so I´m ok with some descriptions of what is different, but I don´t want to know what every single plant and animal looks
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like, most certainly not if you´re then going to move to a different part of the world where everything looks different again. I felt a bit the same about the storyline; did she really have to be accused of murder and hunted across country twice?
I did like the relationships, the way the natives were different and the history of the world.
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