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Mass Market Paperback The Revenants Book

ISBN: 0441718213

ISBN13: 9780441718214

The Revenants

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

They seek to answer riddles that have no answer. They are bound on a quest that has no end. Thewston of the Lion Courts; Leona, Queen of the Beasts; Medlo, outlawed Prince; Jasmine the Dancer;... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

The Story Stays With You

I bought this book at a UBS in the 80's. I don't know what made me do it, it wasn't the cover nor the write up at the back. Since then I must have read that book 5 times and I still have it. The story was original, unlike many Fantasy books today. Somehow authors in the 80's managed to get alot done plot and character wise in half the number of pages of today's fantasy books. The main character Jaer is an original. Switching gender throughtout the book both physically and mentally. The other characters are equally interesting. The book's ending is open to interperation. It haunts you. Sadly this book is out of print, but well worth the trouble of tracking down. It is one of those books that dig beneath the surface. ----------------------- Back cover.. They seek to answer riddles that have no answer: They are bound on a quest that has no end. Thewson of the Lion Courts. Leona, Queen of the Beasts. Medlo, outlawed Prince. Jasmine the Dancer. Terascouros the Singer. And young Jaer, whose like has never been seen: Jaer, the greatest riddle of all... They are the Revenants. This is their story.

One of my favorite Tepper novels

Out of all of Sheri S. Tepper's books that I've read, this and _The Gate to Women's Country_ remain my favorites. While the writing in _The Revenants_ may not be as confident nor as polished as in her later works (e.g. _The Gate to Women's Country_, _Grass_, _Sideshow_, _A Plague of Angels_, _Six Moon Dance_, etc.) I find it friendlier, less bitter, and warmer. I *liked* most of the characters in this book. I enjoyed hearing them talk, watching their struggles, and empathized with their pain. In some of Tepper's other books, I found the characters boring or annoying.The world of _The Revenants_ hurtles towards the ultimate in Separation: myth from reality, race from race, nation from nation, village from village, everyone forced into vanishingly smaller pigeonholes, until they are altogether Separated into extinction. Black-robed Keepers speed the process by exacting a harvest of young men and women.A few individuals struggle to remain free. Jaer is at the heart of this struggle: Jaer embraces male and female, myth and reality, and by the end, all of humanity, the living opposite of Separation. Jaer is on a Quest, and so are Jaer's companions. Tepper gives us an interesting "behind the scenes" look at Quests, fairy tales, and prophecies.Jaer's Quest is a garbled mish-mash partially made up in jest by the two old men who were Jaer's foster parents. They die before explaining it to Jaer. Prince Medlo's Quest is a politically motivated, veiled assassination attempt. Jasmine's Quest was also engineered to get her out of the way. Thewson's Quest is fueled by a young man's ambition to be King. Leona's Quest is a mission to save the life of an ailing friend. All the quests are rendered meaningless by Separation and the murderous, destructive Keepers; yet they are also fulfilled, though the nature of the Quest changes as the protagonists become wiser and more knowledgable.It's all a fairy tale, as one of the characters observes, but fairy tales do not reach happy endings on their own, as this book shows us. Someone has to make them work. The prophecies were made to come true --- doesn't that impy some sort of time travel? The characters must answer this question in the end.As usual, Tepper throws in more ideas than she has time to fully develop, but this time, I didn't mind. The book worked as a whole, and the hinted-at ideas gave me the sense of a big, wide world with a real past. This book foreshadows some of the ideas Tepper works with in _Beauty_ and _A Plague of Angels_ (for example, being set in the far future after much of humankind has left the earth for the stars), but I liked _The Revenants_ better.Like many books in the fantasy genre, there is an Evil with an Army of Darkness threatening to take over the world, but in this case the Evil is unusual, and we pity the Army of Darkness after we see who they are, and how they suffer. I liked the twisted way the Keepers fit their philosophy of Separation: facele
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