Chernevog

by C. J. Cherryh

Paperback, 1991

Status

Available

Call number

PS3553.H358 C47

Publication

Del Rey (1991), 316 pages

Description

In spirit-haunted ancient Russia, Eveshka, a destructive ghost restored to life, seeks her mother, and Kavi Cherevog, freed from a binding stone slab, stretches forth his power and wizardry.

User reviews

LibraryThing member asciiphil
This one's a worthy successor to Rusalka. More that's familiar Cherryh style, including characters worrying over their choices and not knowing which characters to trust.

Spoilers below.

I thought the climax seemed more hasty than Rusalka's. Sasha & company show up, confused stuff with Draga and
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Eveshka happens, Draga and Chernevog end up battling it out at a distance, and it's over. I felt more of a sense of completeness at the end of Rusalka than I had from this book. Still, the writing throughout the thing was good enough that I'm happy to have read it.

Other stuff I liked. The exploration of the difference between wizardry and sorcery, though I would have liked to see more definite results from Sasha's claimed better understanding of wizardry. I was rather expecting to see a Sasha/Draga showdown, with Sasha defending himself by cooperating with the natural things that Draga was trying to change.

The characterization was, not too surprisingly, well done. It was nice to see more of Chernevog and get a plausible, "He's wrong, but understandable and isn't completely evil."

I need to see if I can get a copy of the last book in the series, Yvgenie. Interestingly, that name doesn't appear anywhere in the first two books, so my guess is that it's Peytr's and Eveshka's daughter.
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LibraryThing member reading_fox
Revised Ebook edition, edited and co-authored by J Fancher. I've not read the original version, but almost immediately in the opening sections you can feel the slight difference in emphasis that Jane adds to the work.

Plotwise this is conitnuing the tale that ended in Rusalka. Sasha, Petyor and the
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now not dead (hopefully this is different to un-dead but it becomes apparent that we're not quite sure) Eveshka live happily for three months, while the villain Kami Chernevog of the title lies sleeping in his briar of thorns, guarded by the ent-like tree spirits called leshys. As happily that is as two wizards can be when one of them is married to an ordinary man. Sasha now 18 but carrying the memories (ish) of 118, still feels a bit of a gooseberry between the other two, but that deosn't stop him wishing for their happiness together. Sasha is in fact a bit naive and sentimental, and eventually he starts wondering about Chernevog, and whether he is suffering, lying there trapped in magical sleep. Such doubt is fatal to the working of wizards, and as is to be expected, Chernevog wakes. Chernevog is no mere wizzard despite his appareent youth, he is a sorcerer, fully capable of bargaining pure magic into the world despite nature's limits. However all such beings have their weak points, one being their natural human limitations and the other being the creature with whom they've baragined their power. Sasha Petyor and the headstrong Evesahka find out just little they understand of the magical world around them.

Much better than the old version of Rusalka, but still far from CJC's best writing. The opening third is quite good indeed, the cahracters live, the interactions and banter are well constructed and belivable, but then the turgid woods appear again, motivations become lost, and before you all know it, it's ended. The ending did seem particularly un-CJC-like, going out in a bang, which isn't, from what I've read of her work, much int he way of Jane's style either. It remains unclear whether this was a permenant end to the dark forces in the woods, (and hence how the heros survived) or merely a temporary reprieve. Somehow I suspect the third book won't clarify matters that much.

More readable than the opening, the mental wishing magic is still intruiging, and the characters at times have the full CJC brilliance, but generally a slow paced folk tale style faerie magic that won't appeal to every reader.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1990-10

Physical description

316 p.; 4.25 inches

ISBN

0345373510 / 9780345373519
Page: 0.9591 seconds