Unlike the reactions of carbonyl clusters with pyridine leading to the formation of μ-pyridyl complexes, the reaction of the triruthenium pentahydrido complex {Cp*Ru(μ-H)}3(μ3-H)2 (Cp* = η5-C5Me5) (1) with pyridines provided μ3-η2(//)-pyridyl complexes, (Cp*Ru)3(μ-H)4(μ3-η2(//)-RC5H3N) (2a, R = H; 2b, R = 4-COOMe; 2c, R = 4-COOEt; 2d, R = 4-Me; 2e, R = 5-Me), in which the molecular plane of the pyridyl group was tilted with respect to the Ru3 plane. Electron-rich metal centers of the trimetallic core enabled back-donation to the pyridyl group, which caused the additional π-coordination of the C═N bond. The electron-rich metal centers of 2a–2c also promoted further transformation into face-capping pyridine complexes {Cp*Ru(μ-H)}3(μ3-η2:η2:η2-RC5H4N) (3a, R = H; 3b, R = 4-COOMe; 3c, R = 4-COOEt) upon heating. In contrast, the thermolysis of 2d did not afford a face-capping picoline complex because of the poor electron-accepting ability of the picolyl moiety. Instead, the coordinatively unsaturated μ3-picolyl complex (Cp*Ru)3(μ-H)2(μ3-η2-4-Me-C5H3N) (4d) was obtained. Owing to its unsaturated nature, 4d can react with γ-picoline to yield 4,4′-dimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine. Although the reaction rate was slow, complex 1 catalyzed the dehydrogenative coupling of 4-substituted pyridines containing an electron-donating group. The protonation of 2a also afforded the coordinatively unsaturated pyridyl complex [(Cp*Ru)3(μ-H)2(μ3-H)(μ3-η2:η2(⊥)-C5H4N)]+ (5a), but the coordination mode of the pyridyl group in 5a was completely different from that in 4d. The pyridyl moiety in 5a was coordinated on one of the Ru–Ru bonds in a perpendicular fashion. The methylation of the face-capping pyridine complex 3a, which led to the formation of the N-methyl pyridinium complex [(Cp*Ru)3(μ-H)3 (μ3-η2:η2:η2-C5H5NMe)]+ (7b) was also examined. NMR studies on 7b as well as X-ray diffraction studies suggested enhanced back-donation to the pyridinium moiety because of the localized cationic charge on the nitrogen atom.