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Vergil in Averno: The Sequel to the Phoenix and the Mirror (Doubleday science fiction)
 
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Vergil in Averno: The Sequel to the Phoenix and the Mirror (Doubleday science fiction) [Hardcover]

Avram Davidson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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From Publishers Weekly

Inspired by medieval legends about the poet Vergil, who was revered not only as the author of the Aeneid but also as a powerful necromancer, Davidson embarked on his Vergil Magus series in the '60s with the intriguing novel The Phoenix and the Mirror. In this sequel, Vergil answers a magical summons from Averno, both the wealthiest and the filthiest of cities. The magnates there are worried about the waning and shifting of the natural fires that have fueled their industries and fouled their air. The bare skeleton of plot is fleshed out with an eccentric, wide-ranging series of digressions, reminiscences, dreams and cabalistic glosses, all in a rich, baroque, rhetorical style. Between that form and the subject matter (counterfeiters and alchemists, rituals of superstition and sorcery, mystic visions and magic lantern shows), the novel is less akin to fantasy than to the fiction of Laurence Sterne or William Gaddis. An acquired taste, the work is by turns witty and obscure, frustrating and fascinating.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 184 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; 1st edition (December 23, 1986)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385197071
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385197076
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,572,898 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The sequel to "The Phoenix and the Mirror", September 29, 2003
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This review is from: Vergil in Averno: The Sequel to the Phoenix and the Mirror (Doubleday science fiction) (Hardcover)
Even though Avram Davidson wrote "Vergil in Averno" after "The Phoenix and the Mirror," Vergil is a younger, less accomplished mage in this sequel.

Davidson's hero, the author of the Aeneid is also Vergil Magus, the necromancer of medieval legend in this alternate history of the first century Roman Empire.

The 'Averno' of the title was a region in southern Italy known for its intense sulfuric fumes, caused by volcanic activity (now extinguished), that supposedly killed the birds flying over it. The ancient Romans regarded it as the entrance to hell (as did the real Vergil), and Davidson's city could very well perform that function. It is a noxious city of forges and dye vats, built above a huge, meandering reservoir of natural gas that slowly poisons all who try to live in Averno. However it is known as 'the very rich city' and commerce at least, thrives. Much of this novel graphically details the suffering of the workers in the forges, tanneries, dye-vats, and abattoirs of Averno. Poison gases churn in their lungs. Their limbs are crippled in the ceaseless production of cheaply dyed cloth and coarsely forged iron. Everyone dies young, even the wealthy.

Vergil is lured to Averno by a half-dream. He meets up with a blind jeweler and a mad king, among others, and finally contracts with a group of rich merchants to investigate the recent faltering of the city's source of natural gas--the underpinning of its immense wealth.

This novel defies all of the stereotypes of the fantasy genre. There is very little magic as we fantasy-readers know it. Averno is a dark, hellish city constructed of greed and poison. Vergil functions more as a civil engineer than a mage, and is constantly plagued by visions of what-might-have-been or what-might-be. The Sibyl's prophecies are impenetrable until after the fact, and the mannered, erudite narrative is at times as impenetrable as the Sibyl's prophecies.

"Vergil in Averno" is hard slogging, but a determined reader is rewarded with the minutely-detailed depiction of a Roman Empire that could have been but never was. Davidson sometimes swamps his narrative with idiosyncratic, archaic-sounding language---he reportedly performed massive amounts of research over a period of more than 20 years for his alternate histories--and the world he evokes seems totally authentic, for all that it never existed.

If you have the patience to work your way through the phantasmagoric thicket of Vergil's digressions, visions, memories, 'might-be's, and 'could have been's, his story might solidify into a structure of peculiar, intricate beauty found nowhere else, except perhaps in the novels of Gabriel García Marquez and other magical realists.

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Vergil's early career as magician, March 4, 1999
By 
Dean L. Surkin (Bronxville, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Vergil in Averno: The Sequel to the Phoenix and the Mirror (Doubleday science fiction) (Hardcover)
This is a prequel to The Phoenix and the Mirror. Davidson the author imagines Vergil as a renaissance scholar may have imagined him(based upon renaissance era paintings of him showing him wearing dress more appropriate to the renaissance than to his actual era). Thus, Vergil is shown as an alchemist and sourcerer. This story shows Vergil's early years, describing his first major client, the City of Averno. Vergil's task is to help the city manage its wealth of natural gas deposits. The author's characters are gripping, and his narrative (which lets the reader slowly discover the background to the action) is unique. I love Davidson's writing, and am only sorry he did not write more about Vergil.
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