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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tracking the Myrokynay,
By
This review is from: Regeneration (Species Imperative #3) (Hardcover)
Regeneration (2006) is the third SF novel in the Species Imperative series, following Migration. In the previous volume, Mackenzie Conner convinced the Sinzi consul to stop broadcasting to the Myrokynay and the oncoming Dhryn ships also stopped. Nikolai Trojanowski and Vessel traveled back to the Progenitor with news of Ro treachery. Mac stayed behind with the gravely injured Emily Mamani Sariento, but received treatments for her alexia while keeping Emily company.
In this novel, Mac decides that Emily needs to be among familiar people doing familiar activities. She gets permission from Anchen to take Emily back to Base. With Mac and Emily leaving, Anchen also allows the Origins Team to return to the Dhryn's original homeworld (now named Myriam for the victim of Brymn's feeder form). While trekking through the recovering Castle Inlet Preserve, Emily suddenly remembers that the Ro had hidden something in the sea nearby. Mac immediately relays this information to the Ministry and soon materiel and personnel are moving into the area. As Mac leaves to rejoin the Origins Team in orbit, Emily is quite busy rebuilding her DNA Scanner to help track down the Myrokynay facility. Mac has a side trip on the way to orbit; the lev leaves Mudge, Sam and herself in Dawson City. That night, Mac has a surprise visit from Hollans -- Nik's boss in the Ministry -- who has arranged this layover to get some advice. She also learns that there are abandoned Dhryn ships in the Myriam system and that her team will be transferred to Myriam on the Annapolis Joy, a glorified customs cutter with massive offensive weapons. On the way to the Naralax Transect, a Sinzi courier dart comes aboard the Joy. Mac and the Joy's Captain find that they now have two Sinzi-ra onboard, one for the Myriam system and the other to open a consulate on the Annapolis Joy itself. The Joy's Captain keeps turning over more of the ship to the Interspecies Union. The Joy also has another passenger, Sigmund Eduardo Norris, for whom Mac develops an instant dislike. Yet Norris has an interesting exploration vehicle that seems to be invisible from the inside. He takes Mac out on a short hop to one of the abandoned Dhryn ships and sneaks them aboard. Searching the ship for clues, Mac notices an invisible Ro walker -- it has a distinctive sound -- and yells for Norris to flee. She hides under a cargo pallet and discovers that she is not alone. A Dhryn Wasted is also hiding under the cargo. Mac listens for the walker and, after hearing nothing unusual, takes the Wasted with her back to the lander. She finds Norris's body near the lander ramp and the walker lurking close by. The Wasted spits on the walker with his acidic sputum and kills it. After contacting her escort vessel, Mac manages to get the walker body on the lander and the Dhryn ejects the lander from the ship. In this story, Mac learns much more about the Ro and the Dhryn, discovers that Cayhill has his good points, and rejoins the Dhryn Progenitor whom she had last met on Haven. The IU seems to be breaking up because of suspicion of the Sinzi actions, but the Sinzi come to the support of the Dhryn and herself. The Myrokynay finally demonstrate their malevolence to even the idiot faction within the IU. This story concludes with a very convincing ending to a highly realistic problem. The xenophobic Myrokynay consistantly underestimate their competition and pay for their blindness. They just can't believe that any species has as much, or more, intelligence as themselves. And they ignore the advantages of greater numbers over slightly advanced technology. Reminds me of certain humans, although greatly exaggerated. Highly recommended for Czerneda fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of scientific discovery, high adventure and romance. -Arthur W. Jordin
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mac, the intrepid salmon researcher, to the galactic rescue!,
By
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This review is from: Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 (Mass Market Paperback)
REGENERATION satisfyingly concludes the Julie Czerneda sci-fi trilogy, SPECIES IMPERATIVE, centering on a salmon-cycle researcher who gets drafted into off-world intrigue with several memorable species, including two murderous ones: the migrating and world-devouring Dhryn and the more terrifying no-space Ro. The books in this series, SURVIVAL, MIGRATION, and now REGENERATION, were the first Czerneda novels I'd read, and I must say that the author's writing style requires some acclimation. Although the narrative reveals many complexities -- such as an amazing array of aliens with exceedingly distinct biologies and natures, as well as intricately developed plotline -- one has to strain to translate what is on the page into a flowing "mental movie." The characters speak in shorthand a lot. And descriptions of critical events can be ambiguous or vague. Reading these books is somewhat akin to arriving at a bridge across a chasm made of wooden slats where random planks are infirm or missing and one has to uncertainly tiptoe over certain sections and jump across others. The books also take their own sweet time in many a scene -- i.e., the languid reconnection between heroine biologist Mac and her wayward (but also heroine) friend, Emily, in REGENERATION's opening chapters -- and that can lead to reader impatience. However, the strangeness in the prose also companionably enriches the trilogy's theme of a human scientific woman's unasked-for immersion in extraterrestrial species' evolution, competition, and, yes, maturation cycles. Mac's struggle to stay on her bridge over the chasm (so to speak) -- or perhaps one should use the analogy "keep her head above water" since she administers the Norcoast Salmon Research Facility -- when she must deal with various races of the galactic Interspecies Union is keenly transmitted to the reader. So is her scholarly social awkwardness with her own kind, and her slowly blossoming romance with the mostly-absent cosmic spy, Nik. It takes reader investment to fully appreciate these SPECIES IMPERATIVE books (just as it does to know and imbibe a fine wine), but all three volumes are worth the effort. REGENERATION brings the perilous and yet, often comedic, mission of Dr. Mackensie Connor and her earthly and unearthly friends (Oversight and Fourteen are among my favorite friends; they are each gratingly adorable in their own inimitable ways) to a nail-biting finale and a resolution that a salmon-cycle researcher would find befitting. This isn't a stand-alone though. Read the trilogy in order. If you are starting now, you won't have to wait on pins and needles for release of the next installment like I did.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Fitting End to A Wonderful Trilogy,
By
This review is from: Regeneration (Species Imperative #3) (Hardcover)
Julie Czerneda is a very talented writer of science fiction and certainly she is destined to be one of the greats after her current trilogy "Species Imperative." The third in the saga, "Regeneration" spins the tale of Dr. Mackenzie Connor, an earth biologist who specializes in salmon life cycles, to an exciting and very satisfying conclusion.
The civilizations of the universe are threatened by the total destruction brought on by the migrating Dhryn, a very complex species of highly intelligent but driven aliens who are literally eating every living being in sight through their "feeder" form. These provide sustenance for the huge progenitors as they travel to new worlds, but no one knows why they transform from apparently gentle creatures to this monstrous life-destroying stage. Mac (as she is known) has been dragged away from her comfortable studies on the salmon to solve this mystery and help save the universe. Her associates include Emily, a South American biologist and close friend who has just returned from being a tool of the possibly helpful (or possibly evil) Myrokynay (the Ro), who live in no space. Other important humans include "Oversight", the crusty representative of the conservation organization overseeing the salmon research, and Nicholas Trojanowski (a spy and Mac's love interest). Add numerous complex aliens, such as the Mygs, the Sinzi, the Trisulians, the bear-like Gromnoii and others, and you have a classic scifi story of biological entities that will warm the heart of any hardened scifi fan. A great series from a great author! If you like solid scifi, you should love this book, especially if you are into weird biology! But then Earth organisms have at least as weird life cycles as the Dhryn, if on a smaller scale. Czerneda's background in biology serves her well here!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Satisfactory conclusion to three-part series,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 (Mass Market Paperback)
"Regeneration," the third of Julie Czerneda's "Species Imperative" series, starts with a jolt, as Mac and Emily rediscover each other after Emily's restored to health, and Mac is given a new assignment by the Sinzi, who we first met in book two, "Migration." Emily then is packed off to Norcoast to do research on the origins of the Ro, while Mac is going back to the planet from which she was rescued at the end of the first volume of the series, "Survival," which has now been renamed Myriam.
Unfortunately, the book now bogs down severely at this point in the tale, as it gets far too involved with Mac's leave-taking than is really necessary (complete with a farewell party and visit from her family--totally unnecessary in that the visit does not really give us enough new information about Mac to justify the pages taken up with it), but finally picks up again as Mac does leave, and encounters the usual delicious (and often humorous) Czerneda mix of aliens. After the characters new to this installment in the series are introduced, the action really gets going. Nothing goes off quite as planned (a good thing--in real life nothing ever goes off like clockwork), as Mac learns to become increasingly bloody minded as she navigates her way through intergalactic politics, trying to figure out if the Ro or the Dhryn or both are the real enemies. Eventually, she finds out. And so will you! Notes and asides: This book will make no sense to you at all unless you've read the two previous books in the series, "Survival" and "Migration." This review probably won't either.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Four stars for the book. Four stars for the series.,
By frumiousb "frumiousb" (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 (Mass Market Paperback)
I have really valued reading Species Imperative, largely for the entertainment value. As a biologist, Czerneda is really good at creating other species with variety and flair. It is a relief to be away from the inevitable giant kitty-cats and ugly insect people.
Czerneda also writes well. During the first book, I was annoyed by the romantic sub-plot. Luckily, in the other series books this aspect was back-burnered and it became much less obtrusive and clumsy. It remains a touchy-feely kind of space opera. (Fans of hard core military maneuvers, empires and shooting games will probably be disappointed by the series. Think Anne McCaffrey, not Jack Vance.) I found it great comfort food reading, and there really is room for that in the world. Regeneration, the third book in the series, neatly wraps up the open questions in the first two. The world is poised on the brink of disaster. Whose approach is going to win? Science and communication or paranoia and military might? Dr. Mackenzie Connor races to find a solution before anyone takes any irrevocable steps. I'm planning to move on to another Czerneda series. Any suggestions? Recommended, with the caveats noted above.
7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Fantastic Conclusion!,
By
This review is from: Regeneration (Species Imperative #3) (Hardcover)
Regeneration, by Julie E. Czerneda, is one of those books you long for, but never expect to receive - that is, the conclusion to a trilogy that far exceeds your every expectation. The final chapter in the story of Mackensie Elizabeth Winifred Wright Connor Sol is a triumph.
"Where on that scale do you and I lie?" A haunting, haunting question posed in the first book of the Species Imperative trilogy, and one that takes on new meaning as all Mac has ever known comes under threat. Mac has already lost Brymn Las to the Ro's tampering, as she has almost lost her dearest friend, Dr. Emily Mamani. Now, in Regeneration, Mac parts with those she desperately wants to see safe in order to find the truth behind the Ro's actions. As the trilogy comes full circle and the danger of a species' imperative to survive is played out on a grand scale, the individual's journey - Mac's journey - is told with a depth of compassion that will remain with readers long after the final scenes are read. In every sense, Regeneration is a book that will satisfy readers. It is a book enormous in meaning, enormous in purpose, yet one that still has room for combustible aliens, sheep ... and ribs. In its pages, there is loss and laughter, joy and tears, heartache and humour - there are moments and thoughts and questions that will resonate with readers on a deeply personal level. And after the book has come to its stunning and unexpected finale, readers won't be able to help but ask themselves where on that scale they...
6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Could have used an editor,
By
This review is from: Regeneration (Species Imperative #3) (Hardcover)
This trilogy started off well and ended poorly. It seems like half the book is taken up by the main character thinking about her feelings (and letting us read about her thinking about her feelings). Not a good thing for science fiction. I think the other reviewer had it right by saying this book is the intersection between sci fi and chic lit. Maybe there's an audience for it, but hard core science fiction fans should go elsewhere.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Farewell to Mac...,
By
This review is from: Regeneration (Species Imperative #3) (Hardcover)
I can count on the fingers of one hand the number of books that have had me in tears at the end, not because the ending was paricularly sorrowful, but because it was so completely and utterly RIGHT.
REGENERATION is one of those books. The saga of salmon researcher Mackenzie "Mac" Connor comes to a conclusion in this final chapter of the SPECIES IMPERATIVE trilogy, and once again Julie Czerneda manages to outdo herself. The stakes are higher, the characters are deeper, and the biolological concepts driving the story are so detailed, you can practically smell the salmon. The result is a rich and wonderful book that is an absolute delight to read, and a perfect end to the trilogy. Highly recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superb conclusion,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 (Mass Market Paperback)
This is a superb conclusion to a wonderful trilogy. Really, books like these are the reason why I'm a science fiction fan. I haven't been this impressed with a story in some time.
I know these books won't appeal to everyone. They are detailed, thoughtful, dense (in the sense of "filled with information") novels. The story is very rich in detail, and it doesn't jump from one scene to another, but rather shows all of the intervening steps. That style may not appeal to you. (In my review of the first book, I compared it to C.J. Cherryh's "Foreigner," and I still think that's appropriate.) It might seem slow-moving, but I really hate to use that phrase. These are very big books, but the fact is, they were almost impossible for me to put down. I read each book in the trilogy in just a couple of days apiece. And trust me, I have no patience at all these days. If the whole story hadn't been fascinating, I wouldn't have read it. It's not non-stop action, but every bit of it is interesting (and some of it funny). This book, like the others is idea-based AND character-based. You'll really care about the characters, and not just the human beings. Czerneda's aliens are alien, but also people. And their struggle to get along, despite their differences, is as relevant today as it's always been.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Worth the Read,
By Peregrine "Captain Peregrine" (Bemidji, MN USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 (Mass Market Paperback)
Though I thought 'Regeneration' was somewhat lacking compared to its counterparts 'Survival' and 'Migration', I did think this third book in the Species Imperative trilogy is well worth the read. It is still wonderfully written, still filled with the same wonderful characters, and offers what, I believe, most trilogy readers want: a satisfying ending.
Trust me, there is plenty of laughter, adventure, sadness and intrigue to keep the plot moving. As always, the characters of this science fiction novel are more real than some I have met in several non-fiction books. It may not quite be up to par with the former two books in the trilogy, but it is still a wonderful ending to a wonderful series. |
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Regeneration: Species Imperative #3 by Julie E. Czerneda (Mass Market Paperback - March 6, 2007)
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