A review by essinink
Port Eternity by C.J. Cherryh

4.0

At an indeterminate point on the Alliance-Union timeline, the Lady Dela, her lover Griffin, and her Azi servants (Elaine, Lance, Lynnette, Percival, Vivian, Modred, and Gawain) are preparing to voyage aboard Dela's luxury ship The Maid of Astolat when they are pulled in by a wandering instability in space-time. Trapped in the folds between time and space, the crew confronts the possibility of eternity separate from everything they have known.

This is Cherryh's self-indugence: a mock-Arthurian romantic space thriller, with each chapter headed by a quote from Tennyson's Idylls of the King. While the chattel-status of Elaine and her fellow Azi is a chilling undercurrent, the mood avoids the oppressive claustrophobia that Cherryh is known for. Instead, there's a softness about it all, like a dream gone slightly sideways.

And there are dreams. It's clear early on that the Lady Dela has cultivated a careful fantasy for her household, and the unreality of their present circumstance makes the trappings of that fantasy increasingly real, the crew of The Maid latching on to what stability they can, because outside something is lurking...

Read if you like Alliance-Union, but want something a bit less oppressive than the norm for that 'verse.