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  1. Oct 23, 2023 · Wave Without A Shore | C.J. Cherryh's Own Weblog: e-books, science fiction and fantasy. Welcome to the new look. Wave Without A Shore. It’s a work in progress but everything should work now. Another surgery…. by CJ | Nov 13, 2023 | Journal | 72 Comments. Get those tests, people.

  2. American writer C. J. Cherryh 's career began with publication of her first books in 1976, Gate of Ivrel and Brothers of Earth. She has been a prolific science fiction and fantasy author since then, publishing over 80 novels, short-story compilations, with continuing production as her blog attests. [1]

  3. Book 1. Foreigner. by C.J. Cherryh. 3.92 · 10,321 Ratings · 794 Reviews · published 1994 · 34 editions. The first book in C.J. Cherryh's eponymous series,… Want to Read. Rate it: Book 2. Invader. by C.J. Cherryh. 4.17 · 4,970 Ratings · 222 Reviews · published 1996 · 18 editions. The second novel in Cherryh’s Foreigner space ope… Want to Read.

  4. Dec 23, 2018 · https://www.goodreads.com/cjcherryh. edit data. 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.

  5. |. C.J. Cherryh : Bio and Bibliography. (c) 2002 by C.J. Cherryh. Resident of the Pacific NW. BA in Latin in 1964, U of Okla; MA in Classics at Johns Hopkins U. in Maryland, 1965; and additional language course at OU in 1967.

  6. Carolyn Janice Cherry (born September 1, 1942), better known by the pen name C. J. Cherryh, is an American writer of speculative fiction. She has written more than 80 books since the mid-1970s, including the Hugo Award –winning novels Downbelow Station (1981) and Cyteen (1988), both set in her Alliance–Union universe, and her Foreigner series.

  7. Apr 15, 2021 · C.J. Cherryh is an absolute titan of science fiction. She started writing science fiction in the 1970s, and wrote under her initials to hide that she was female…and added the “h” to the end of her real last name because her first editor thought she sounded too much like a romance writer.

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