Point Based On Books Regenesis (Cyteen #4)

Title:Regenesis (Cyteen #4)
Author:C.J. Cherryh
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 585 pages
Published:January 6th 2009 by Daw Books (first published 2009)
Categories:Science Fiction. Fiction
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Regenesis (Cyteen #4) Hardcover | Pages: 585 pages
Rating: 4.01 | 1207 Users | 123 Reviews

Description As Books Regenesis (Cyteen #4)

The direct sequel to the Hugo Award- winning novel "Cyteen", "Regenesis" continues the story of Ariane Emory PR, the genetic clone of one of the greatest scientists humanity has ever produced, and of her search for the murderer of her progenitor -- the original Ariane Emory. Murder, politics, deception, and genetic and psychological manipulation combine against a backdrop of interstellar human societies at odds to create a mesmerizing and major work in "Regenesis." Who did kill the original Ariane Emory? And can her personal replicate avoid the same fate? Those questions have remained unanswered for two decades since the publication of "Cyteen." Now, in "Regenesis", those questions will finally be answered.

Describe Books In Pursuance Of Regenesis (Cyteen #4)

Original Title: Regenesis
ISBN: 0756405300 (ISBN13: 9780756405304)
Edition Language: English
Series: Cyteen #4, Alliance-Union Universe
Characters: Justin Warrick, Grant ALX, Ariane Emory II


Rating Based On Books Regenesis (Cyteen #4)
Ratings: 4.01 From 1207 Users | 123 Reviews

Critique Based On Books Regenesis (Cyteen #4)
4.5 stars

Regenesis is a frustrating book. It is painfully slow in the middle. By the end it's exciting and full of intrigue, but then it's all immediately over. It's necessary to read Cyteen before this. Forty Thousand in Gehenna is optional. The events on the planet of Gehenna are mentioned in Regenesis, but Cyteen goes over that territory and its related problems in more detail than Gehenna ever does.In Regenesis, Ari II is now 18 years old. She's been studying psychsets with Justin, attempting to make

Regenesis, the "long-awaited sequel" to C.J. Cherryh's Cyteen, moves at the same deliberate and complex pace as its predecessor; its climax is political more than anything else, and key nuances can be found largely in character interactions rather than pulse-pounding action sequences. However, that does not mean that it doesn't carry an emotional heft--there may have been some suspicious moisture in my eyes when the ragged Council was finally reassembled and got down to business.Questions posed

I still really want another sequel.Maybe I'll manage to write a review this time..

The trend toward longer and longer SF/F books and series reminds me of the 19th-Century French tradition of romans fleuves -- books that went on and on. The notion at the time was that readers wanted more and that the more-was-more paradigm was a good thing. No author or literary aficionado would ever consider less as more!I guess I march to a relatively minimalist beat these days. While I really liked this book, its 800 pages pace a mere eight narrative days. The result (and I find this true of

I've been a life-long fan of Cherryh, first for the original Cyteen, then Downbelow Station, and then, a few novels later, Foreigner, which set me on a path where I squeed every time a new one came out.So returning to the Union-Alliance universe and specifically with the characters from the original Cyteen now seemed like a perfect treat! What's not to like about waking up to learn you're a clone of a brilliant scientist who has left you tons of brain-engrams and a political squabble and the

Regenesis was worth reading, but overall disappointing compared to the rest of Cherryh's oeuvre. That's not to say it was bad, because it wasn't. But it was not up to the standards I'm used to from Cherryh. I have two main complaints. First, Ariane Emory does not do any growing or changing over the course of this book. Sure, she builds her own insular little society of people and realizes the control of Reseune that Ari I set up for her to have, but that's not at all surprising. In many ways, it