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Come Twilight [Paperback]

Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Tor Books (2000)
  • ASIN: B000OTQFK6
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Food for thought, and parallels with the modern world, January 18, 2001
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This review is from: Come Twilight (Hardcover)
As of Dec. 2000, this is the newest book in the series about the almost-immortal vampire St. Germain. Those who already know that they like vampire novels, anything at all that features a vampire, can skip this review, and likewise, those who hate the whole idea of vampires can skip it. But for those trying to decide whether or not to read more of this genre, or whether the one vampire novel you've already read was a fluke, it may help to have some ways to categorize these novels. Thus: BunRab's Standard Vampire Classification Guide. First, most authors of vampire novels approach from one of the main genres of genre fiction; thus their background may be primarily in romance, or in science fiction/fantasy, or in murder mysteries, or in horror. Second, many vampire novels come in series; knowing whether this is one of a series, and where in the series it falls, may be helpful. Then we have some particular characteristics: - Is the vampire character (or characters) a "good guy" or a "bad guy"? Or are there some of each? - Are there continuing characters besides the vampire, through the series? - Are there other types of supernatural beings besides vampires? - Can the vampire stand daylight under some circumstances, or not stand daylight at all? - Does the vampire have a few other supernatural characteristics, many other supernatural characteristics, or none other than just being a vampire? (E.g., super strength, change into an animal, turn invisible) - Does the vampire have a regular job and place in society, or is being a vampire his or her entire raison d'etre? - Does the vampire literally drink blood, or is there some other (perhaps metaphorical) method of feeding? - Is sex a major plot element, a minor plot element, or nonexistent? - Is the entire vampire feeding act a metaphor for sex, part of a standard sex act, or unrelated to sex? - Is the story set in one historical period, more than one historical period, or entirely in the present day?

- Does the story have elements of humor, or is it strictly serious? - Is the writing style good, or is the writing just there to manage to hold together the plot and characters?

Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's series about the vampire St. Germain starts from the historical romance genre (although Yarbro is equally well known as a science fiction writer), and is a continuing series. St. Germain is definitely a good guy, using the knowledge he's gained in several thousand years of living to help others. There are a few characters that continue from book to book besides him: the women he turns into vampires, and his "servant," Roger, who is a ghoul. Ghouls are the only other supernatural characters who appear in these books. St. Germain can stand daylight with the right preparations. He has unusual strength, but not limitless, and unusual wisdom, and is an "alchemist" but there are no other overt magic powers. In most of the series, he has an occupation of being an aristocrat, inasmuch as that was a full-time occupation through most of history; in some books he has another "job" as well. St. Germain does not usually literally drink blood; he feeds on emotions, usually during erotic experiences, but sex is nonetheless only a minor plot element, rare and very discreet. Drinking blood is a substitute for when he can't get the emotional nourishment he prefers. The series covers 3000 years, from ancient Egypt to the modern day; each book is set in a span of a particular period, usually 20-30 years (this book, however, is the exception). The writing is serious, but not self-important; the writing quality is excellent, and Yarbro's abilities as an author qualify these books as literature rather than "merely" genre fiction.

Come Twilight breaks somewhat from the pattern of the series by covering a span of several hundred years, from about 650 CE to 1117 CE (AD) in four leaps. The book is set in Spain, before it was Spain; the periods covered include the Visigothic (when many of the natives still worshipped older religions, and Catholicism had scarcely made a dent); the Moorish, which lasted for hundreds of years, and finally, the beginnings of the Catholic re-taking of Spain and the emergence of Spain as the beginning of a unified <i>pais</i>. Since the Moslem Moors are a much stronger power than the Catholics, they get to be the "bad guys" through much of the book. Yarbro's distaste for the Roman Catholic church in some of the series is more accurately a distaste for religions with too much worldly power and corruption. In this period, Islam was more powerful, and more corrupt, than Christianity, so it gets more criticism. (The Jews, always something of a wild card in history, play a small but significant role in this book.) Other reviews will tell you about the plot; let me point out the strong themes that Yarbro brings out here that have not been as prominent as in earlier books: the uses of actual blood; the part emotional nourishment plays in the development of any whole person, alive or undead, and the horrible effects of a lack of emotional bonds - you may compare this to some of the studies of children or monkeys deprived of emotional and physical contact with their mothers, and how stunted they are as adults. And a strong ecological message, where the deforestation of early Spain in order to build pieces of technology (ships, in this case) and to graze food animals, may serve as a warning for what is happening now in South America and other fading forest areas. Pardon the pun, but: this book provides much food for thought!

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Saint-Germain at his finest, September 24, 2000
This review is from: Come Twilight (Hardcover)
Early in the seventh century, a religious upheaval in his part of Hispania compels Sanct' Germain (Saint-Germain), accompanied by his loyal servant Rogerian, to flee to the nearby mountains. The nasty wintry weather forces the two undead to take shelter in Mont Calcius, a village with one occupant. Apparently, the villagers abandoned their homes leaving behind a pregnant Csimenae. Feeling sorry for the young woman, Sanct' Germain helps her give birth to a son. When a boar fatally injures Csimenae, he ignores his instincts and ironically saves her life by converting her into a vampire.

Over the ensuing centuries, Sanct' Germain learns one of history's more painful lessons that no good deed goes unpunished. Defying all of Sanct' Germain's warnings on survival, Csimenae becomes a mother to a vampire horde that heeds her every word as if she were a goddess. Realizing the danger to his kind, Sanct' Germain knows he must stop Csimenae before she exposes the existence of vampires to the fundamentally religious right and the supernaturally fearful masses.

COME TWILIGHT, the latest Germain tale, is quite insightful when it provides a rapid but scintillating look at Spain between the seventh and twelfth centuries. Sanct' Germain retains his charm when he enables the audience to focus on the upheavals in Spain. Csimenae is a spry character who enhances Sanct' Germain's personality during their mentor-student relationship. However, when conflict enters the story line, the tale seems to lose some of its momentum. Sanct' Germain fans will bite into this well written novel in one sitting, but other readers will believe that long running vampire series seem to need some blood donations.

Harriet Klausner

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Vampires and (real) history. What could be better?, January 14, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Come Twilight (Hardcover)
Thinking about what makes a good book, one that qualifies for inclusion in what to take to the desert isle, but isn't pap, and doesn't get boring on a re-read, leads me to Yarbro's work. St. Germain is sometimes a hero, and sometimes an anti-hero, but here he reveals a really human side. He makes a mistake, in the name of compassion and loneliness. He makes Csismenae. And, in the modern world, she could very well be engineering the next hostile take over. She's headstrong, immediately independent of him, and makes all the mistakes a young person (mortal or immortal) makes, but thinks, because of her position and her immortality, that she will always do the right thing. I see a lot of myself in her; not always a comfortable thought.

The beauty of any of Yarbo's work is her commitment to research and history. Come Twilight is historical fiction. And it's not an "easy" read, in the sense that you put it down, say "gee, that was great", and walk away from it unchanged. Come Twilight is disturbing. It will make you think about the nature of humanity, the evolution of culture, and the ways in which the non-human (or better put, formerly human) vampires show more compassion, (and sometimes less) than their human counterparts, but, while they cast no reflection, truly reflect their times and their cultures.

They also reflect the ability of humanity to learn from experience, and to grow, and they reflect the refusal of some of us to do that.

Recommended highly by this anthropologist!

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First Sentence:
Most of us in America have a tendency to think of places-particularly in Europe and Asia-as being sociologically monolithic, that is, ethnically and culturally intact for as far back as we can imagine. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
senior juggler, older woodsman, native earth, thousand paces
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Ragoczy Germainus, Mont Calcius, Yamut ibn Rabi, Gardingio Witteric, Great Pox, Holy Blood, Comide Ragoczy, Numair ibn Isffah ibn Musa, True Death, Santoz Ennati, Primor Ioanus, Timuz ibn Musa ibn Maliq, Viexa Armoza, Comites Egnacius, Fre Genisioz, Frerer Procopios, Our Lord, Septimania Pass, Atta Olivia Clemens, Gardingio Theudis, Marid ibn Ali, Omma ibn Ali, Episcus Luitegild of Toletum, Hassan ibn Fahsel ibn Hassan, Karif ibn Azim ibn Salah
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Night Blooming by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
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