"Great ending to this fine fantasy series"
"Anguisette" Comtesse Phedre has for the most part over the
past decade lived in domestic tranquillity with her loyal
swordsman Joscelin though she also meets the demands of her
demi-gods to feel pain when making love by annually taking
on a few "lovers". However, her former lover and rival,
Melisande, imprisoned in a temple for an unsuccessful coup,
asks Phedre for help. Melisande's son, Imriel vanished.
If Phèdre rescues Imriel, Melisande will provide the
location of the lost tribe of Dan, whose elders reportedly
know the hidden Name. Phèdre and Joscelin quickly learn that slavers heading
south abducted Imriel. They follow the trail to the
Pharaoh of Menekhet who informs them that the lad was taken
to the nightmarish Drujan, headed by The Conqueror of Death
and bloody priests who kill, seemingly by magic, for any
slight. Imriel is the sacrifice that authenticates the
Conqueror's dominance. Phèdre knows she needs to get
inside so she arranges for Joscelin to sell her to the
Conqueror of Death as a sex slave. The latest Kushiel tale is fantasy at its most powerfully
visual best. The story line is colorful as the audience
journeys with the heroine on her trek to what is the
equivalent of Africa. The lead protagonists as expected
are complete individuals so that fans understand their
motives and how each interacts with others in adventurous
scenarios while the secondary characters appear so
authentic that the depth of the plot is as deep as a tale
seemingly can become. Though better if read after the
first two novels, KUSHIEL'S AVATAR could stand-alone to the
delight of an appreciative genre. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 3, 2003
SummaryThe land of Terre d' Ange is a place of unsurpassed beauty
and grace. It is said that angels found the land and saw it
was good...and the ensuing race that rose from the seed of
angels and men live by one simple rule: Love as thou
wilt.Phèdre nó Delaunay is a woman born with a scarlet mote
in her left eye and sold into indentured servitude as a
child. Her bond was purchased by a nobleman, and he was the
first one to recognize who and what she is: one pricked by
Kushiel's Dart, chosen to forever experience pain and
pleasure as one.Phèdre's path has taken a strange and
sometimes dangerous course. She has lain with princes and
pirate kings, battled a wicked temptress who is still
determined to win the crown at any cost, and saved two
nations with her courageous actions and sacrifices. Through
it all she has had the devoted swordsman Joscelin at her
side, who knew from the beginning what she was. Her very
nature is a torturous thing for them both, and it is a bane
on their lives--but he is sworn to her and by accepting who
she is, Joscelin has never violated the central precept of
the angel Cassiel: to protect and serve.But Phèdre's plans
will put his pledge to the test, for she has never
forgotten her childhood friend Hyacinthe. She has spent ten
long years searching for the key to free him from his
eternal indenture to the Master of Straights, a bargain
with the gods that he struck so that a nation could be
saved; in doing so, he took Phèdre's place as a sacrifice.
She cannot forget, and she cannot forgive--herself or the
gods. She is determined to seize one last hope to redeem
her friend, even if it means her death.Their search will
bring Phèdre and Joscelin on a dangerous path that will
carry them across the world, to fabled courts and splendid
vistas, to distant lands where madness reigns and souls are
currency, and down a fabled river to a land forgotten by
most of the world.And to a power so mighty that none dare
speak its name.Kushiel's Avatar is the concluding volume in
Jacqueline Carey's evocative novels about the enigmatic
Phèdre nó Delaunay; the third in a triptych of beautifully
constructed historical fantasies that combine passion and
danger, great battles of the sword and soul, deep
eroticism, and mystical enigmas.
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