Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Restoration

Restoration

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.99
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good conclusion to an interesting trilogy
Review: Berg keeps her characters interesting for this third book. Prince Aleksander comes in for his own share of angst and Seyonne is (briefly) captured by quasi-selfish temptation. Definitely get this book after you have read Transformation and Revelation.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good conclusion to an interesting trilogy
Review: Berg keeps her characters interesting for this third book. Prince Aleksander comes in for his own share of angst and Seyonne is (briefly) captured by quasi-selfish temptation. Definitely get this book after you have read Transformation and Revelation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Heartbreakingly Triumphant Conclusion of Seyonne's Story
Review: By the time Seyonne survived 16 years of slavery under the Derzhi, reclaimed his life among the Ezzarians, had his people try to murder him and joined with a demon, he knew that there were gods at work on his world - and they must have had a doozy of a sense of humor. Seyonne is exiled from his homeland and wants nothing more than to watch his son grow up from afar, try to heal and to find out what to do with the demon that is inside of him. But when a group of assassins show up, sent to kill him by a Derzhi heged, Seyonne has no choice but to go to Aleksander, his former master, and warn him. It turns out that Aleksander already knows, but his father, the emperor, just died and the Council of the Twenty is fighting Aleksander's ascension to the throne. Tricked into starting a battle that he knows he cannot win, Aleksander is betrayed and only Seyonne can save him.

While Seyonne waits for Aleksander to heal, he comes in contact with a mysterious sage in a long-deserted city and Seyonne knows that he can only delay his destiny, not change it. For Seyonne has long seen a terrible warrior in the dreaded palace in the land of the demons - a warrior with his face. Seyonne waits as long as he can to try and help Aleksander, but the demon part of him is tearing his soul apart and the nightmares keep him from any kind of rest. Seyonne forces himself to journey across the borders of the world to the palace where something dark waits to destroy him and the world as he knows it...

This is an absolutely stunning trilogy by Carol Berg. It began with Transformation (my personal favorite), continued with Revelation and ends here with Restoration. Seyonne and Aleksander are some of the most memorable heroes in all of my fantasy reading and all of Carol Berg's characters are well drawn and absolutely fascinating. The world that Seyonne inhabits is never static - the rules of the game change in every book so the reader never really knows what to expect. This book was absolutely heart wrenching and really showed the costs that are associated with changing the world for the better. Seyonne lost everything and then regained everything and it was so hard to watch him change and to lose that core of honor and belief in the value of lives for a brief time. For anyone who loves fantasy, this trilogy should be on your must read list - and they are well worth keeping to read again and again! I am eagerly awaiting more fabulous tales from Carol Berg, a tremendously talented author.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: It's an ending (possible spoilers)
Review: Carol Berg is competing with a five-star book -- her own "Transformation". By that standard, the second and third books are lacking something.

The beginning is great -- assassins, a battle, and Seyonne helping Aleksander as the prince becomes a fugitive. When Seyonne decides to take another path, things become less interesting.

As with "Revelation", much of the middle section takes place in a supernatural realm. The author created a complex, fascinating human world in her first book, and wisely kept almost all of the action there. The magical realms in the other two books become rather boring. And very few authors can make a reader care about godlike superbeings.

The ending is problematic. A worthy, important adversary was introduced early on in the book. However, he only reappears at third hand, and is disposed of offstage. Very disappointing. And, in order to wrap up the series, dot every i and cross every t, the author gives us a politically correct, fairytale resolution of the world's problems. Aleksander's role, and that of the Derzhi, are completely changed. Aleksander may have agreed, though even that seems a stretch -- he was just a bit too "transformed" from the Aleksander we know. But the Derzhi? The conquerors who make ancient Egypt look progressive, and the Romans look like softies? I can't see them swallowing the new society for one second (no matter whether they supported Aleksander in the war).

The very last bit has yet one more sacrifice by Seyonne. It seems unnecessary -- there must have been another way. As for what he gains -- well, he seems happy, but I have always found Seyonne's women, and his relationships with them, hard to believe. Unlike so much of what Carol Berg writes, they just sit there on the page and don't come alive.

Of course there are good things -- the beginning, the climactic duel which uses the strengths of the first book. And Carol Berg seems incapable of writing a *bad* book. Even through the less interesting parts, I wanted to know what happened and was anticipating the next meeting of our heroes. She created vivid new characters and fleshed out some old ones. Her writing style is far above most of the fantasy today. I suspect she has spoiled me, and many other readers, for a lot of what's out there. I look forward to her next book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Final installment of Rai-Kirah trilogy
Review: Carol Berg's 'Rai-Kirah' trilogy "Transformation," "Revelation," and "Restoration" is so believable (well, except for the wizards and demons), it almost falls into the category of historical fiction. It is narrated by Seyonne who was once a mighty wizard and Warden against demonkind, then a slave to Prince Aleksander, then the savior of demonkind and a wizard-in-exile, and finally in "Restoration," a mighty winged warrior who fights for the deposed heir-apparent to a fantastical Arabian Nights Empire.

"Restoration" develops logically from the interaction of its two main characters, Aleksander and Seyonne, especially after Aleksander is accused of killing his father, the King and is deposed from his rightful throne. With Seyonne's assistance, Aleksander escapes from the usurper and then suffers humiliation, defeat, and near-death in his quest to regain what rightfully belongs to him. Author Berg believes in building character through suffering, and Aleksander loses everything, including his princely arrogance and most of his warriors.

Meanwhile Seyonne has his own internal demon to battle (joined to him in "Revelation"--you really, really need to read this trilogy in the correct order). He must also make his way to a fortress of profound darkness, where a wizard who frightens even the demons has been imprisoned, almost since the beginning of history. Seyonne meets the prisoner in a dream, and the old man seems harmless. When he finally enters the fortress, all Nyel, the old prisoner wants to do is help Seyonne find his own true form.

Seyonne realizes that he can help his friend Aleksander far more as a powerful winged warrior, rather than in his current human form. Thus begins his slow seduction to the beauty and utility of absolute power.

This third book in Berg's trilogy has prodigious battles, hair's-breadth escapes, and journeys to locales from her previous two novels, including the land of the demons. It is a vast, fabulous landscape and a pleasure to revisit, but the plot has a tendency to wander, bifurcate, and even lose this reader completely. This book definitely seems to bring the trilogy to an end, but I'm still in doubt about the fate of demonkind.

Seyonne spends almost the whole of "Revelation" in helping them escape from their frozen hell, but in "Restoration" all we get are a few guest appearances. So this trilogy comes to an untidy end with the dissipation of the demons, but it is still a great and glorious read.

Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Betterer and betterer!
Review: Carol Berg's fantasy trilogy, culminating in the brilliant third novel, "Restoration," is what every series of this genre strives to be. Berg's vividly-imagined world in which demons, gods, and winged men vie for domination of the human race, is done with rich detail, flawless execution, and riveting storytelling. Not since R.A. MacAvoy's "Damiano" series or "Lens of the World" series has a world so enthralled its readers. And once you make your way through Berg's trilogy, be sure to purchase her "Song of the Beast," an excellent new novel!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Betterer and betterer!
Review: Carol Berg's fantasy trilogy, culminating in the brilliant third novel, "Restoration," is what every series of this genre strives to be. Berg's vividly-imagined world in which demons, gods, and winged men vie for domination of the human race, is done with rich detail, flawless execution, and riveting storytelling. Not since R.A. MacAvoy's "Damiano" series or "Lens of the World" series has a world so enthralled its readers. And once you make your way through Berg's trilogy, be sure to purchase her "Song of the Beast," an excellent new novel!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Please, Carol, write more books!
Review: From the first time I picked up Carol's first book I fell in love. This world she created was so unusual and unique, and her main character, Seyonne had so many trials he went through and faced that I couldn't help myself and found it impossible to put down. As soon as the next book came out, I grabbed it. Her intricate descriptions, and well described sideline characters helped to enrich the story. So often these days authors spend little time describing all the rest of the characters that help make the story. Her plot was well designed and thought out and in no way glossed over with a: it happened off camera type of scenario, where you're never quite sure how or why things came to a conclusion that they did -- which you so often see with unimaginative writings. She is a great writer and I cannot wait to see what else is forthcoming from her pen and paper!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I wish this wasn't the last book!
Review: I bought Transformation, Book 1 of this series, on a recommendation and it sat on my bookshelf for a year. This summer, I needed something to read on a trip, and into my carryon luggage it went.
Half way through the trip, I was scouring phonebooks for the location of a book store that had Book 2, Revelations. I had the 3rd book, Restoration, pre-ordered, and I opened it as soon as it arrived in the mail, and hardly put it down until the end. That's how good this series is!
I have nothing but admiration for Carol Berg -- her writing is spectacular. The worlds she has created are vividly detailed, and as for Seyonne, her sorcerer-turned-slave-turned-savior, I haven't felt so much concern for a character since I first read LofR and encountered Frodo.
She has a knack for sustaining tension -- she starts her characters in hot water, and keeps turning the heat up right until the end. But there is also gentleness, humor and heart in these books. Plenty of adventure, too.
I don't want to say too much about the plot -- there are surprises in store -- more than sufficient payoff for enduring Seyonne's trials through three books.
But briefly, Seyonne finds it necessary to discover the answers to the mystery of his people , the Ezzarians -- and learn what he has become himself. More than his life depends on it. Once again, he is thrown in with his former master-now friend, young Prince Alexander of the warlike Derzhi, on his own journey of loss and self-discovery.
A wonderful book, a fantastic trilogy. I'm looking forward eagerly to more from this very talented writer!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Conflicts abound...
Review: I enjoyed this book immensely, especially the ending of the book (if you must know, you'll have to read it) because it made me cheer for Seyonne even more. The characters are as believable as ever and the inner conflicts Seyonne endures are well thought out and executed.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates