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Hardcover Riders of the Storm: A Novel of the Clan Chronicles Book

ISBN: 0756405181

ISBN13: 9780756405182

Riders of the Storm: A Novel of the Clan Chronicles

(Part of the Stratification (#2) Series and The Clan Chronicles (#2) Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The next chapter in the Stratification saga that "delivers all the right elements". (Sci Fi Weekly) On the distant world of Cersi, Om'ray Aryl Sarc and her supporters have been exiled from the rest of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Settling Amidst Ruins

Riders of the Storm (2008) is the second SF novel of the Stratification series, following Reap the Wild Wind. In the previous volume, Marcus and Aryl reached the Watchers and temporary safety after the crash of the aircar. Enris guided a rescue craft to them and they were carried back to Site Two. From there, Aryl escaped with Enris to Yena through the Darkness. They found the swarm attacking and burned the village to drive back the predators. Then the Yena Adepts exiled Aryl and others who had shown new Talents. The exiles traveled to Grona, but left when Aryl was almost forced to relinquish her knowledge of the Darkness. In this novel, Aryl Sarc is an Om'ray, an unChosen of the Yena Clan, and daughter of the Adept Speaker. Like her mother, she possesses powerful Talents, including manipulation of the Darkness. She can travel through it to a known location. Enris Mendolar is an Om'ray unChosen of the Tuana Clan. He was a metalworker like his father. He had come to Yena as an UnChosen, but now he is an exile with the others. Bern Teerac is an Om'ray Chosen of the Grona Clan. He had been Aryl's Heart-kin in Yena. He had left the Clan as an unChosen when Aryl was not ready to be a Choser. Now he is the Chosen of Oran and has shared his memories of the rescue by Aryl using the Darkness. Oran di Caraat is Bren's Chosen and a minor Adept of Grona. She had tried to force open Aryl's shields to obtain knowledge of the Darkness, but Aryl resisted her attempt and left the village. Marcus Bowman is a human Triad First in the Trade Pact. He has met Aryl several time and has some knowledge of the Om'ray language. He has promised to leave the Om'ray alone. In this story, Aryl leaves Grona and travels into the mountains. The other exiles follow her. Enris goes with them, but stays away from the higher paths in the mountains. He does not have the Yena disdain for heights. Enris wants to travel to Vyna, the farthest village of the Om'ray. He has heard that Vyna has some technology and wants to learn how to make and use this ancient knowledge. Still, he will stay with the exiles until he believes them to be safe. As they travel though the mountains, both Aryl and find bones and the effects of other Om'ray. Seru Parth -- Aryl's cousin -- starts having dreams about the Sona village. Then Ziba -- young daughter of Taen Uruus -- also starts having such dreams. Aryl's finds the Darkness talking to her. She resists it, but words and pictures come in her dreams. She finds that she is dreaming about the same things as Seru and Ziba. Then they find the remains of a village within an area restructured by the Oud. The exiles realize that this is the village about which Seru has been dreaming. Then they find the village stores and find that Ziba knows how to prepare the rokly in the storage jugs. Aryl finds the village Cloisters high up the path that runs into the mountain. She also finds Marcus nearby. She panics and runs away, only t

Riders of the Strom #2

I own all of Julie Czerneda books and am thoroughly enjoying the Stratification series. She is an extremely imaginative writer and I am now anxiously waiting for part 3 of the series!

Best of Czerneda

I'm not going to go in to a long review of this book, I'll let you read it. I will say it was, in my opinion, the best I've read of Czerneda's works. Very enjoyable story line, nice flow, interesting characters. I highly recommend this one! Looking forward to the next installation.

Master of Storytelling and Alien Perspectives at Work

Just so you don't think I didn't accomplish anything this weekend during ConClave, behold a new review of Julie Czerneda's latest in her Clan Chronicles series. Warning: Gushing fanboy alert. That's why I'm posting this here instead of in Evolutions. There's nothing here that'll build my cred at a "critic". If that's going to bother you, skip this post. I finally managed to pick up a copy of Riders of The Storm at a vendor's table at ConClave in Romulus, Michigan this past weekend. Since the con was small and so is my presence, I needed something to do while sitting in the public areas. Is it good? Oh, heck yeah. I bought the book Friday evening and by a little after dinner time Saturday I was finished. My neck hurt and it felt like my sinuses were going to do a Scanners redux on my head, but I was done. Okay, touchstone here. The aforementioned "Clan Chronicles" basically encompasses the fiction universe Julie kicked off with "A Thousand Words for Stranger" oh so many years ago. (You want exact numbers? Go visit her site, www.czerneda.com.) Anyhow, I think there's Thousand and two other books in the initial trilogy (To Trade the Stars and Ties of Power.) After Trade (I think), Julie shifted gears and did Reap the Wild Wind, a kickoff to a prequel series that will eventually explain the "Why?" of how things got to the point where they started in Thousand. Riders is the second book in her prequel series (which I think is supposed to be a trilogy, but I'm not taking an oath on that.) So, what do you get from a series like this? Good lord, where to start. First off, you need to realize that any Julie novel is very layered. There's nuance and subtlety hiding in every odd corner of the narrative. So, you'll start out thinking, "Oh, this is just an adventure-romance," and then suddenly your trip over the fact that Julie's biologist background uniquely equips her to not just create alien races, but to extrapolate believable alien cultures and to maintain the congruency of their presentation such that they never become "people with rubber masks on." This takes a lot of discipline and organization in addition to just out and out writer talent to pull off. Case in point, the point of view Om-ray, who are presented as externally impossible to differentiate between humans, occasionally may seem for a moment or two to be regular people, but it never lasts. Their abilities and biology directly affect not only their culture, but even how they navigate and sense the world around them. Ergo, you're never more than a paragraph away from a reminder that these creatures, although wonderfully empathic and compelling, are definitely not human. Add in the enigmatic Tikitik and Oud (although enigmatic in different ways), and you get an impression of how many balls Julie juggled to make this book happen. But it's not just alien races. The presentation of conflicts internal, external, and sometimes just flat-out tangential beg larger questions

excellent Stratification "pre" saga

On the planet Cersi lives three very distinct sentient species. The Oud reside under the earth tunneling to where they want to go and have the ability to restore clan lands; the impoverish Om'ray can pass as human and have psi power so that all in a clan are interconnected; finally the Tikitik are by far the most feral. All three species adhere to the Agreement, which demands they keep their society stagnant and stay inside their assigned areas except during the Passage if they are to have peace. Aryl the Om'ray is a person with tremendous power, but was exiled by her Yena clan for developing a new talent that upset the delicate balance and broke the Agreement and almost the clan. Her followers left with her hoping she would start a new clan. They travel to the mountains and settle in the place where the ruins of the village of Sona are. Aryl's people want to settle here and begin a new clan with her as their leader. While people are forced to come to Sona by the Oud leaders, Enris Mendolar of Tuana clan learns of a new clan in the wilds of the mountains. However when he finds them he learns they discourage visitors and he barely escapes with his life. He is the man Aryl wants, but first she must set guidelines for her new clan so that everyone is treated better and know how to live free of the rule makers. Julie E. Czerneda is a first class world builder as she creates the earlier years on Cersi with characters from three differing species and diverse cultures living in peaceful coexistence when the Trade Pact humans arrive. RIDERS OF THE STORM is filled with plenty of action and deep characterizations so that the audience will feel the author is a tour guide showing off a real world with genuine races and cultures. However, the bottom line in the Stratification "pre" saga remains Aryl who was coming of age in REAP THE WILD WIND when she shook the foundation of the Agreement, but now is coming of power as she tries to do the right thing for her people. Harriet Klausner
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