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Cloudcry

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Verrons, the interstellar explorer, is infected with the dread "bloodblossom" disease, and exiled to the quarantine planet. But Verrons is not the kind of man to stay quietly in a depressing little colony of dying men and other humanoids. Together with Wells, a human from the ice-planet Talberon, and Tiehl, a bird-man alien, he strikes out across the surveyed-but-unexplored wilderness of the planet. All of them are cynical about the prospects of a cure and determine to live or die on their own.

216 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1977

3 people are currently reading
57 people want to read

About the author

Sydney J. van Scyoc

56 books40 followers
aka Sydney Joyce Brown

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5 stars
7 (12%)
4 stars
12 (22%)
3 stars
23 (42%)
2 stars
9 (16%)
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3 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Nacho Urenda.
200 reviews2 followers
July 28, 2023
Unos científicos exiliados en un planeta de cuarebtena descubren unos seres con los que la comunicación es tan difícil que pone en tela de juicio incluso la inteligencia de ambas prtes.
919 reviews11 followers
September 2, 2022
I have found previous books written by Scyoc to be solid if unspectacular SF/fantasy, well put together. This, though, was only her second novel (I haven’t read her first, Starmother,) and getting through it was a bit of a slog. A disease called bloodblossom has caused the book’s two main human characters, Verrons and Sadler, to be quarantined on the planet Selmarri, along with a bird-like creature variously referred to as the Ehminheer (after the name of the planet it came from,) as k’Obrohms to the humans, Tiehl to itself and Bright-Feather to Aleida, one of Selmarri’s indigenous inhabitants. Another group of humans came to Selmarri long ago and have regressed into subsistence.

Aleida’s people have an ancient history where they had the ability, now lost, to harness the sun’s energy in order to fly and to manipulate matter. Her quest to obtain the crystal material which will restore this power is intermixed with that of the humans to understand the processes whereby flutes with a calming effect on the regressed humans are dispensed from a temple. Using them tends to produce a kind of brain fog. Tiehl has a rigid sense of territoriality and as his faculties decline defends his perch with ever more ferociousness.

The conflicts between them all escalate to a climax in which all but the Eminheer come out relatively well.
Profile Image for Thomas Hale.
973 reviews31 followers
August 18, 2025
Strange SF adventure about two researchers on an alien world on the cusp of developing sapient life. Accompanied by a grumpy, flightless bird-man, they explore ancient ruins and uncover a secret of crystals and flutes and cruel hierarchy. Concurrently, a young woman from a native alien species has the spark of intelligence and ambition inside her, and is on her own quest to gain the power to change everything. It took me a while to get into this but I really ended up enjoying it. I was constantly distracted by the deluge of phallic imagery, with towering pink mesas and lovingly-blown flutes. I liked how van Scyoc contrasted the different characters and species; the coming-of-age/coming-of-intelligent-life dynamic was also cool. Glad I picked this up!
Profile Image for Karen.
443 reviews
June 13, 2021
There was only one sentence I enjoyed in this book and it involved the word "booty". And yes, my childish mind had to hear the sentence over and over and over again as I laughed and laughed and laughed. "She emerged from the underground in a rush, hardly noticing that the palehands lingered in the small temple, wedging their BOOTY into the opening from which they had emerged, preventing the stone door from closing completely." THAT'S SOME BOOTY!!! Hahahaha. That sentence comes on page 210 of a 218 page book. Way to bury the lead.

The rest of the book was worthless.
Profile Image for Judi.
283 reviews4 followers
May 12, 2019
I really enjoyed this book, was enrapt from the beginning. Will our hero get off the world where he's been imprisoned? Will the heroine realize her dream to fly? I was surprised by the method for ending it all and kind of dissatisfied by the ending...however, I was left with questions and wanting more, what I consider the mark of an excellent story teller.
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,167 reviews1,451 followers
April 28, 2012
I really disliked reading this thing, finishing it only because it wasn't too long and because of an incipient obsessive-compulsive disorder which has led to the completion of many mediocre books. My dislike probably relates to my general dissatisfaction with fantasy novels. This is more of that genre than of science fiction.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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