C. J. Cherryh – Brothers of Earth 1983 1st Turkish Book Turkey
C. J. Cherryh – Uzay Düğümü (Brothers of Earth) – Baskan Yayınevi First Edition (1983)
Description:
This Turkish first edition of Uzay Düğümü, published by Baskan Yayınevi in 1983, is the Turkish edition of C. J. Cherryh’s science fiction novel Brothers of Earth. Issued during the 1980s expansion of science fiction publishing in Turkey, this edition is a notable example of translated space literature and a desirable collectible for genre readers.
C. J. Cherryh is an award-winning science fiction author known for her deep world-building, political complexity, and focus on alien cultures and communication. Her works often explore the tension between human perception and truly alien civilizations, emphasizing realism and psychological depth over action-heavy storytelling.
Brothers of Earth is set in a distant future where humanity encounters an alien civilization with deeply different biological and cultural structures. The story follows a human protagonist who becomes entangled in political and social conflicts between species, where misunderstanding and communication barriers shape every aspect of survival and cooperation.
The novel focuses on themes such as interspecies communication, identity, cultural conflict, and adaptation. Rather than simple space adventure, Cherryh builds a complex psychological and political narrative about what it means to coexist with truly alien intelligence.
As a 1983 Baskan Yayınevi first edition, this Turkish translation represents an important period of science fiction publishing in Turkey and is a valuable collectible for readers interested in classic, more “hard” and sociological science fiction.
Key Features:
• Author: C. J. Cherryh
• Title: Uzay Düğümü (Brothers of Earth)
• Publisher: Baskan Yayınevi
• Date: 1983
• Edition: First Turkish Edition
• Language: Turkish
• Format: Paperback Novel
• Genre: Science Fiction, Political Science Fiction, First Contact
• Subject: Alien contact, interspecies communication, and political conflict
• Themes: Identity, cultural misunderstanding, diplomacy, and adaptation
• Author Significance: Award-winning science fiction writer known for complex alien world-building
• Significance: Turkish edition of a major first-contact science fiction novel
• Collector Appeal: Desirable 1980s Turkish science fiction collectible