Kushiel's Chosen (Kushiel's Legacy)
Kushiel's Chosen (Kushiel's Legacy) book cover

Kushiel's Chosen (Kushiel's Legacy)

Hardcover – April 6, 2002

Price
$45.32
Format
Hardcover
Pages
704
Publisher
Tor Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312872397
Dimensions
6.26 x 2.11 x 9.66 inches
Weight
2.09 pounds

Description

In this engrossing adult fantasy tale, the fascinating Phèdre nó Delaunay fights to save her queen and country in a battle whose greatest weapon proves to be Phèdre herself. This sequel to Carey's accomplished debut novel, Kushiel's Dart , finds Phèdre, now Comtesse de Montrève, once again plying her skills as an anguissette --a courtesan for whom pain becomes pleasure--and her talents as a spy. She uncovers a conspiracy of treason and murder and begins an adventure that takes her once more to distant lands in the company of an intriguing cast of characters--and a new confrontation with her old enemy, Melisande Shahrizai. There's some evidence of haste in this novel: the writing is not always as tight and controlled as it was in Kushiel's Dart . Nevertheless, Carey's fans will certainly enjoy this return to Terre d'Ange, and those new to her work will find a satisfying combination of fantasy, sex, and adventure, as well as a smart and engaging heroine. --Roz Genessee From Publishers Weekly After Carey's boldly imaginative fantasy debut, Kushiel's Dart (2001), in which the dauntless Phèdre nó Delaunay used intelligence and sexual skill to triumph in politics and war in a Renaissance-like world, Phèdre, elevated to the peerage and resuming her anguisette duties, returns for further fabulous, if at times redundant, adventures, determined to rest on something other than her laurels. While the first novel told a coming-of-age story, the sequel covers only a relatively brief period, though it has enough plot lines and melodrama for six heroines. The action first focuses on the recapture of Phèdre's evil nemesis, the dominating Melisande Shahrizai, who has escaped from prison and death. Alas, the initially fascinating Melisande turns into a tiresome harridan. Later plot twists include everything from a journey to the Venetian La Serenissima to imprisonment at Melisande's hands in a mountainous jail on a lonely island. For opulence, a costume ball rivals that of Broadway's Phantom of the Opera. Carey is adept at bringing both her exotic settings and vast cast of characters fully to life. The dream of every man and not a few women, Phèdre is too much to handle for all but her faithful Joscelin, the Cassiline monk who defied his vows to remain her loving companion. Phèdre's first outing deservedly won her a host of followers, but wordiness and needless complexity combine to make this hefty novel less of a stellar achievement than its predecessor. (Apr. 16)Forecast: A push that includes national print advertising, regional author appearances and targeting to romance readers will bring back the faithful, but if too many of them are disappointed, Carey might do well to give her heroine a rest and apply her considerable talents to fresh challenges.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal When Phedre no Delaunay, Comtesse de Montreve, receives a direct challenge from the traitor Melisande Shahrizai now an escaped fugitive from the land of Terre d'Ange she undertakes a bold venture to find the treasonous noblewoman and bring her to justice. She dons once again the symbolic sangoire cloak of her former profession that of courtesan in service to the Temple of Naamah, the angelic patron of love in all its forms and uses her special talents to ferret out a conspiracy that threatens her realm and the life of its queen. Set in a richly detailed Renaissance-like world, this sequel to Kushiel's Dart boasts a wealth of stunning visual images and vivid, complex characters. Carey's sensual, often erotically charged prose, reminiscent of the best efforts of Tanith Lee and Anne Rice, adds an unmistakably sexual tension to an already tautly plotted tale of conspiracy, intrigue, passion, and, ultimately, love. Highly recommended for a mature fantasy audience, this title belongs in most libraries. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From Booklist *Starred Review* Carey's second extravagantly sensuous novel fulfills every promise made by Kushiel's Dart [BKL Jl 01]. Phedre no Delauney, courtesan, spy extraordinaire, and now Comtesse de Montreve, continues as confidante and champion of Queen Ysandre of Terre d'Ange. Phedre's worthy opponent, the beautiful and devilishly Machiavellian Melisande Shahrizai, has escaped from prison with the aid of unknown conspirators. Although she can't prove it yet, Phedre just knows that there is a plot afoot to depose Ysandre, and that it involves Melisande. Sworn to the service of the gods Kushiel, Naamah, and Asherat-of-the-Sea, Phedre follows a path of danger, mystery, pain, love, and betrayal. Yet many in her life love and labor to protect her: the Cassiline warrior-priest Joscelin, the love of Phedre's life; Kazan Atrabiades, a pirate with a blood curse on his head; Phedre's Boys, three former sailors pledged to serve her; and a host of others. Masterful treatment of those relationships of Phedre's and the depth and complexity of the major characters make this book powerfully compelling, and Carey's ability to take readers inside Phedre's head and heart fully and completely gives it tremendous emotional punch as well as an unforgettable heroine. There is seemingly something for everyone here: a great love story, intense spirituality, high eroticism, and lots of adventure, intrigue, and swordplay. Paula Luedtke Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved " Kushiel's Chosen is elegant, intricate, sensual, and captivating. Once you pick it up you won't want to put it down."--Robert Jordan"There is seemingly something for everyone here: a great love story, intense spirituality, high eroticism, and lots of adventure, intrigue, and swordplay." - Booklist (starred) Born in 1964, Jacqueline Carey was an avid reader since early childhood. She began writing in high school, not realizing her hobby would become a permanent vocation. After receiving B.A. degrees in psychology and English literature from Lake Forest College, she spent time living in London and working in a bookstore, then traveling throughout Europe. While living abroad, the desire to become a professional novelist emerged as a driving passion. Upon returning she embarked in earnest on a writing career, which came to fruition some ten years later. During this time, she worked at the art center of an area college, gaining a strong background in the visual arts. This, along with her early studies in literature and psychology informs her work, as does a lifelong interest in mythology. She enjoys doing research on a wide variety of arcane topics, and an affinity for travel has take her from Finland to Egypt to date. Although often asked by inquiring fans, she does not, in fact, have any tattoos.Jacqueline currently resides in west Michigan, where she is a founding member of the oldest Mardi Gras krewe in the state. She is the author of the critically acclaimed Kushiel's Legacy fantasy trilogy, including Kushiel's Dart , which received the Locus Award for Best First Novel and the Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award for Best Fantasy in 2001. Other previous publications include a nonfiction book, various essays and short stories. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. ONE No one would deny that I have known hardship in my time, brief though it has been for all that I have done in it. This, I think, I may say without boastfulness. If I answer now to the title of Comtesse de Montrève and my name is listed in the peerage of Terre d'Ange, still I have known what it is to have all that I possess torn from me; once, when I was but four years of age and my birth-mother sold me into servitude to the Court of Night-Blooming Flowers, and twice, when my lord and mentor Anafiel Delaunay was slain, and Melisande Shahrizai betrayed me into the hands of the Skaldi.I have crossed the wilds of Skaldia in the dead of winter, and faced the wrath of the Master of the Straits on the teeming waters. I have been the plaything of a barbarian warlord, and I have lost my dearest friend to an eternity of lonely isolation. I have seen the horrors of war and the deaths of my companions. I have walked, alone and by night, into the vast darkness of an enemy encampment, knowing that I gave myself up to torture and nigh-certain death.None of it was as difficult as telling Joscelin I was returning to the Service of Naamah.It was the sangoire cloak that decided me; Melisande's challenge and the badge of my calling that marked me as an anguissette , Kushiel's Chosen, as clearly as the mote of scarlet emblazoned since birth in the iris of my left eye. A rose petal floating upon dark waters, some admirer once called it. Sangoire is a deeper color, a red so dark it borders upon black. I have seen spilled blood by starlight; it is a fitting color for one such as I, destined to find pleasure in pain. Indeed, the wearing of it is proscribed for any who is not an anguissette . D'Angelines appreciate such poetic niceties.I am Phèdre nó Delaunay de Montrève, and I am the only one. Kushiel's Dart strikes seldom, if to good effect.When Maestro Gonzago de Escabares brought the cloak from La Serenissima, and the tale by which he had gained it, I made my choice. I knew that night. By night, my course seemed clear and obvious. There is a traitor in the heart of Terre d'Ange, one who stands close enough to the throne to touch it; that much, I knew. Melisande's sending the cloak made it plain: I had the means of discovering the traitor's identity, should I choose to engage in the game. That it was true, I had no doubt. By the Night Court and by Delaunay, I have been exquisitely trained as courtesan and spy alike. Melisande knew this--and Melisande required an audience, or at least a worthy opponent. It was clear, or so I thought.In the light of day, before Joscelin's earnest blue gaze, I knew the extent of the misery it would cause. And for that, I delayed, temporizing, sure in my reasoning but aching at heart. Maestro Gonzago stayed some days, enjoying the hospitality I was at such pains to provide. He suspected somewhat of my torment, I do not doubt. I saw it reflected in his kind, homely face. At length he left without pressing me, his apprentice Camilo in tow, bound for Aragonia.I was left alone with Joscelin and my decision.We had been happy in Montrève, he and I; especially he, raised in the mountains of Siovale. I know what it cost Joscelin to bind his life to mine, in defiance of his Cassiline vow of obedience. Let the courtiers laugh, if they will, but he took his vows seriously, and celibacy not the least of them. D'Angelines follow the precept of Blessed Elua, who was born of the commingled blood of Yeshua ben Yosef and the tears of the Magdelene in the womb of Earth: Love as thou wilt . Alone among the Companions, only Cassiel abjured Elua's command; Cassiel, who accepted damnation to remain celibate and steadfast at Elua's side, the Perfect Companion, reminding the One God of the sacred duty even He had forgotten.These, then, were the vows Joscelin had broken for me. Montrève had done much to heal the wounds that breaking had dealt him. My return to the Service of Naamah, who had gone freely to Elua's side, who had lain down with kings and peasants alike for his sake, would open those wounds anew.I told him.And I watched the white lines of tension, so long absent, engrave themselves on the sides of his beautiful face. I laid out my reasoning, point by point, much as Delaunay would have done. Joscelin knew the history of it nearly as well as I did myself. He had been assigned as my companion when Delaunay still owned my marque; he knew the role I had played in my lord's service. He had been with me when Delaunay was slain, and Melisande betrayed us both--and he had been there that fateful night at Troyes-le-Mont, when Melisande Shahrizai had escaped the Queen's justice."You are sure?" That was all he said, when I had finished."Yes." I whispered the word, my hands clenching on the rich sangoire folds of my cloak, which I held bundled in my arms. "Joscelin…""I need to think." He turned away, his face shuttered like a stranger's. In anguish, I watched him go, knowing there was nothing more I could say. Joscelin had known, from the beginning, what I was. But he had never reckoned on loving me, nor I him.There was a small altar to Elua in the garden, which Richeline Friote, my seneschal's wife, tended with great care. Flowers and herbs grew in abundance behind the manor house, where a statue of Elua, no more than a meter tall, smiled benignly upon our bounty, petals strewn at his marble feet. I knew the garden well, for I had spent many hours seated upon a bench therein, considering my decision. It was there, too, that Joscelin chose to think, kneeling before Elua in the Cassiline style, head bowed and arms crossed.He stayed there a long time.By early evening, a light rain had begun to fall and still Joscelin knelt, a silent figure in the grey twilight. The autumn flowers grew heavy with water and hung their bright heads, basil and rosemary released pungent fragrance on the moist air, and still he knelt. His wheat-gold braid hung motionless down his back, runnels of rain coursing its length. Light dwindled, and still he knelt."My lady Phèdre." Richeline's concerned voice gave me a start; I hadn't heard her approach, which, for me, was notable. "How long will he stay there, do you think?"I turned away from the window that looked out at the garden loggia. "I don't know. You'd best serve dinner without him. It could be a good while." Joscelin had once held a vigil, snow-bound, throughout an entire Skaldic night on some obscure point of Cassiline honor. This cut deeper. I glanced up at Richeline, her open, earnest face. "I told him I am planning to return to the City of Elua. To the Service of Naamah."Richeline took a deep breath, but her expression didn't change. "I wondered if you would." Her voice took on a compassionate tone. "He's not the sort to bear it easily, my lady.""I know." I sounded steadier than I felt. "I don't chose it lightly, Richeline.""No." She shook her head. "You wouldn't."Her support was more heartening than I reckoned. I looked back out the window at the dim, kneeling figure of Joscelin, tears stinging my eyes. "Purnell will stay on as seneschal, of course, and you with him. Montrève needs your hand, and the folk have come to trust you. I'd not have it otherwise.""Yes, my lady." Her kind gaze was almost too much to bear, for I did not like myself overmuch at this moment. Richeline placed her fist to her heart in the ancient gesture of fealty. "We will hold Montrève for you, Purnell and I. You may be sure of it.""Thank you." I swallowed hard, repressing my sorrow. "Will you summon the boys to dinner, Richeline? They should be told, and I have need of their aid. If I am to do this thing before winter, we must begin at once.""Of course.""The boys" were my three chevaliers; Phèdre's Boys, they called themselves, Remy, Fortun and Ti-Philippe. Fighting sailors under the command of Royal Admiral Quintilius Rousse, they had attached themselves to my service after our quest to Alba and the battle of Troyes-le-Mont. In truth, I think it amused the Queen to grant them to me.I told them over dinner, served in the manor hall with white linens on the table, and an abundance of candles. At first there was silence, then Remy let out an irrepressible whoop of joy, his green eyes sparkling."To the City, my lady? You promise it?""I promise," I told him. Ti-Philippe, small and blond, grinned, while solid, dark Fortun looked thoughtfully at me. "It will need two of you to ride ahead and make arrangements. I've need of a modest house, near enough to the Palace. I'll give you letters of intent to take to my factor in the City."Remy and Ti-Philippe began to squabble over the adventure. Fortun continued to look at me with his dark gaze. "Do you go a-hunting, my lady?" he asked softly.I toyed with a baked pear, covered in crumbling cheese, to hide my lack of appetite. "What do you know of it, Fortun?"His gaze never wavered. "I was at Troyes-le-Mont. I know someone conspired to free the Lady Melisande Shahrizai. And I know you are an anguissette trained by Anafiel Delaunay, who, outside the boundaries of Montrève, some call the Whoremaster of Spies.""Yes." I whispered it, and felt a thrill run through my veins, compelling and undeniable. I lifted my head, feeling the weight of my hair caught in a velvet net, and downed a measure of fine brandy from the orchards of L'Agnace. "It is time for Kushiel's Dart to be cast anew, Fortun.""My lord Cassiline will not like it, my lady," Remy cautioned, having left off his quarrel with Ti-Philippe. "Seven hours he has knelt in the garden. I think now I know why.""Joscelin Verreuil is my concern." I pushed my plate away from me, abandoning any pretense of eating. "Now I need your aid, chevaliers. Who will ride to the City, and find me a home?"In the end, it was decided that Remy and Ti-Philippe both would go in advance, securing our lodgings and serving notice of my return. How Ysandre would receive word of it, I was uncertain. I had not told her of Melisande's gift, nor my concerns regarding her escape. I did not doubt that I had the Queen's support, but the scions of Elua and his Companions can be a capricious lot, and I judged it best to operate in secrecy for the moment. Let them suppose that it was the pricking of Kushiel's Dart that had driven me back; the less they knew, the more I might learn.So Delaunay taught me, and it is sound advice. One must gauge one's trust carefully.I trusted my three chevaliers a great deal, or I would never have let them know what we were about. Delaunay sought to protect me--me, and Alcuin, who paid the ultimate price for it--by keeping us in ignorance. I would not make his mistake; for so I reckon it now, a mistake.But still, there was only one person I trusted with the whole of my heart and soul, and he knelt without speaking in the rain-drenched garden of Montrève. I stayed awake long that night, reading a Yeshuite treatise brought to me by Gonzago de Escabares. I had not given up my dream of finding a way to free Hyacinthe from his eternal indenture to the Master of the Straits. Hyacinthe, my oldest friend, the companion of my childhood, had accepted a fate meant for me: condemned to immortality on a lonely isle, unless I could find a way to free him, to break the geis that bound him. I read until my eyes glazed and my mind wandered. At length, I dozed before the fire, stoked on the hour by two whispering servant-lads.The sense of a presence woke me, and I opened my eyes.Joscelin stood before me, dripping rainwater onto the carpeted flagstones. Even as I looked, he crossed his forearms and bowed."In Cassiel's name," he said, his voice rusty from hours of disuse, "I protect and serve."We knew each other too well, we two, to dissemble."No more than that?""No more," he said steadily, "and no less."I sat in my chair gazing up at his beautiful face, his blue eyes weary from his long vigil. "Can there be no middle ground between us, Joscelin?""No." He shook his head gravely. "Phèdre…Elua knows, I love you. But I am sworn to Cassiel. I cannot be two things, not even for you. I will honor my vow, to protect and serve you. To the death, if need be. You cannot ask for more. Yet you do.""I am Kushiel's chosen, and sworn to Naamah," I whispered. "I honor your vow. Can you not honor mine?""Only in my own way." He whispered it too; I knew how much it cost him, and closed my eyes. "Phèdre, do not ask for more.""So be it," I said with closed eyes.When I opened them, he was gone. Copyright © 2002 by Jacqueline Carey Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Following hard on the heels of Kushiel's Dart, Jacqueline Carey's spectacular debut novel, comes Kushiel's Chosen, a glittering and riveting historical fantasy.The land of Terre d'Ange is a place of unsurpassed beauty and grace. It is said that the angels found the land and saw it was good, and the ensuing race that rose from the seed of angels and men live by one simple rule: Love as thou wilt.Phèdre nó Delaunay is a young woman who was born with a scarlet mote in her left eye and sold into indentured servitude as a child. Her bond was purchased by Anafiel Delaunay, a nobleman with a very special mission--and the first to recognize her for who and what she is: one pricked by Kushiel's Dart, chosen to forever experience pain and pleasure as one.Phèdre has trained in the courtly arts and the talents of the bedchamber, but, above all, the ability to observe, remember, and analyze. Having stumbled upon a plot that threatened the very foundations of her homeland, she gave up almost everything she held dear to save it. She survived, and lived to have others tell her story, and if they embellished the tale with fabric of mythical splendor, they weren't far off the mark.The hands of the gods weigh heavily upon Phèdre's brow, and they are not yet done with their charge--for while the young queen who sits upon the throne is well loved by the people, there are those who believe that other heads should wear the crown. And those who escaped the wrath of the mighty are not yet done with their schemes for power and revenge. To protect and serve, Phèdre will once again leave her beloved homeland. From the sun-drenched villas of La Serenissima to the wilds of old Hellas, from a prison designed to drive the very gods mad to an island of immutable joy. Phèdre will meet old friends and new enemies and discover a plot so dreadful as to make the earth tremble, masterminded by the one person she cannot turn away from.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(912)
★★★★
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★★★
15%
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★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Eh...

Jacqueline Carey returns to the lush and decadent world of Terre d'Ange in "Kushiel's Chosen", sequel to the strange but beautiful "Kushiel's Dart", and produces a sequel that unfortunately doesn't quite live up to its predecessor.
Our masochistic heroine, Phedre, leaves behind her comfortable new life as a country countess when she begins to suspect that all is not well in Terre d'Ange. She believes that Melisande Shahrizai, from her hiding place in La Serenessima (Venice), still plots against Queen Ysandre--with the help of at least one D'Angeline noble. But who is her co-conspirator, and what are they planning? Phedre returns to prostitution in the hopes of finding clues, but doesn't accomplish much except driving away her bodyguard-lover Joscelin. Phedre decides there is only one thing to do--travel to La Serenissima and investigate there. In Italy, Phedre uncovers the conspiracy--but disaster strikes and she finds herself lost at sea and entangled with pirates. Now, Phedre's task is to get back to La Serenissima in time to save Ysandre. Along the way, she begins to realize that maybe being marked by the angel of punishment means more than having weird sexual proclivities.
While "Chosen" is a decent book, it fails to engage the reader in the way that "Dart" did. I think my essential problem lies with the middle section of the book--the pirate part. Maybe it's because Phedre's skills are espionage and seduction, not sailing and fighting, so she doesn't do much during this period of time except sit around and feel guilty whenever someone dies. Maybe it's because this sequence doesn't seem to advance the main plot any (except maybe that Phedre's absence makes Joscelin think about his feelings). It almost feels like Carey wrote the beginning and ending of the book, then said, "Oh no...I unraveled the conspiracy too quickly and now I need 300 more pages."
This isn't a bad book; it's a faster read than "Dart", though it never attains the heartbreaking power or the sensuality of the previous novel. I still plan to read the third.
15 people found this helpful
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Check it ouf from the library instead.

To be honest, this book could have been a lot better. As its predecessor could have been as well.
There were times where I thought to myself: "Did an editor really let that slip? Did that grammatical error really mean to be there?" Answering yes or no doesn't take away the lack of fluid writing one should expect of this genre. Thus, this book is sadly disappointing because it makes the story less than what it could be. It could've been brilliantly engrossing.
Let me reassure you-- the plot basis is actually quite good. Yet, I felt at times that I was reading some paperback romance instead of fantasy. It was not as original as I had hoped, with a very predictable set of scenarios.
I wouldn't buy it. Get it from the library if you enjoy the idea of an anguisette. Your money is better spent elsewhere.
11 people found this helpful
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Just as enthralling and beathtaking as Kushiel's Dart

When I finally got my hands on this book, and then had the chance to read it (exams...so annoying!), I was completely enraptured and finished it in under two days. I loved the first novel as I thought Jaqueline Carey's writing style was beautiful and her world was intriguing and incredibly interesting. I feel that Kushiel's Chosen lives up to its predecsor, and in some ways it surpassed it, and of course in others it did not.
I did miss the characters which had featured prominantly in the first, namely Delaunay and Alcuin, but then they're dead so this is a stupid gripe. The prose was just as good as the first, I never found it too repetative, but everyone has their own opinions. The story was perhaps a tad slow to get going, but I think that that only added to the depth of the story, and was a good introduction to the fast paced adventure which faced Phedre.
I really enjoyed the movement of the book the travelling was wonderful, and made it all the more exotic. The complex plot was very good and keeps the reader on their toes, a very important commodity for novels these days. Especially in the fantasy genre, which is steadily becoming more and more formulated. Its a rare thing to find wonderful new authors which are creative and raise it all to a new level. For further recommendations, go the SF site, which has excellent reviews. my main happiness in this novel was Phedre and Josclin finally sorting out their issues and being together properly. But then I am a complete romantic sap at heart.
So overall, if you are looking for a good strong read, with vivid characters, intricate plotting and exotic settings, then look no further than this novel. It is advised that you should read the first of the trilogy, Kushiel's Dart, but there are references to keep you going if you do forget at times what happened. There is strong sexuality and sensuality in this novel, although I think it is a lesser extent than the first. Carey treats it all with lyrical prose and never makes anything seem like [bad] porn. It is part of Phedre, and only enhances her tale. Give this novel a go, you cannot go wrong.
9 people found this helpful
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Carey Keeps the Plot Twists Coming In Kushiel's Chosen

The only thing I like more than a good book is a good LONG book. (Anyone who has read Kushiel's Dart can indulge in all the double entendres they like). It is hard to classify Ms. Carey's D'Angeline world -- fantasy is perhaps the closest; it is an alternate universe but very like our own. She has subtly twisted cultures, countries, languages, history and religions so they are just similar enough to our own to be comfortably familiar, but different enough to fire the imagination. For example, the Yeshuites who play such a prominent role in this novel are clearly a speculation of what might have occurred if Christ had been officially accepted by Judiasm as the Messiah. But there are also elements of adventure and historical romance and, of course, dollops of titillating soft-core sex.
Her characters are complex, likable and engaging and the plot is full of surprises. I was able to predict some of what was to come, but that's not unusual when one already knows a third book is in progress. I could live without some of the language affectations -- "Of a surety" and "Twas" got on my nerves after a while, but only a little.
Carey's lays on too thickly her insistence that Phedre's beauty alone enthrall everyone she meets. Certainly I have known that sex can make people stupid (the old "Men have 2 brains, but only enough blood to run one at a time"), but there is a limit. Also, Phedre's weakness for Melisande just does not ring true, when all is said and done.
These flaws did not change at all the fact that this book was a blast, far better than Kushiel's Dart, and leaves me eagerly awaiting the next book, and anything else Jacqueline Carey publishes.
9 people found this helpful
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Flabby and overhyped, but still an interesting read

Phedre is back in her ongoing pursuit of sex and power in the sequel to Kushiel's Dart, one of the most praised books of last year. The early review copies drip with praise that has always been over the top in my mind, but there was no denying that Dart was a startling read. Kushiel's Chosen is a decidedly less impressive. The character of Melisande has gone from menacing to annoying, while Phedre is suffering from Honor Harrington Syndrome; is there no trial too great for our heroine to overcome?
The excessive praise heaped on this series is just that--excessive. Which is a shame, because it ends up meaning that the praise that IS deserved--this is a mostly interesting, though not earthshattering book--gets lost in the great hype, which only serves to make the experience disappointing...
8 people found this helpful
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Still waiting for the author to let loose

This novel is a capable sequel: Jacqueline Carey gives her readers more of what they've come to expect after Kushiel's Dart. Therefore, if you enjoyed the first book, you will probably enjoy this one, too. However, if you're like me, Carey will continue to leave you a little disappointed, given the story's potential. She has developed an intriguing alternate reality Europe, in which the child of Jesus and Mary Magdalene fostered a kingdom in France, built around the credo: "Love as thou wilt." She has a compelling character concept in Phedre, a masochistic courtesan and adept spy. She immerses her heroine in a web of political intrigue, as well as giving her an unlikely lover in the form of Joscelin, a warrior monk sworn to protect her despite his distaste for her way of life.
These elements are all familiar from Carey's previous work, but I still feel that she has yet to exploit them fully. The tension between Phedre and Joscelin feels too artificial; we don't see enough of Joscelin's struggle among his love for Phedre, his vows of chastity, and his seeming destiny among the Jews. The resolution here is far too facile. I similarly wish that Carey would give us more direct confrontation between Phedre and her nemesis, Melisande, whose power over Phedre is the only force that makes our heroine seem truly vulnerable. The relationship between these two women also bridges the gap between the plot Phedre's masochism, which otherwise plays far too small a part in the story, outside of some rather enticing scenes with some of her patrons. If you're into that sort of thing.
Honestly, Kushiel's Chosen works well enough as a tale of adventure, but I feel that Carey has laid too much groundwork to ignore her heroine's more internal conflicts. I still intend to read the last novel in the trilogy. Perhaps then Carey will not be afraid to bring these conflicts to a head.
7 people found this helpful
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Wowwwwwwww!!!!!!

I'm not going to get into the plot here. Several people have already gone that route. I would simply like to disagree with the many reviewers that claim this book to be somewhat less than the first book. I loved Kushiel's Chosen MUCH more than Dart. There were certainly better scenes in the first book, that I agree with. As a whole, however, Chosen is more exciting. I had read 50 pages of Kushiel's Dart and I couldn't decide if I liked it. I wanted to keep reading because the writing was excellent. Whereas many writers speak to me, Carey's writing sang to me. It was beautiful. But the story was dragging for me. Just a little mind you. It kicked in when Joscelin entered the picture. It REALLY kicked when the Skaldi entered the picture. So, as a whole, from page one to page the last, Kushiel's Chosen was the better book. We're all entitled to our own opinions, of course. Just,PLEASE!, don't let other reviewers keep you away from this book. You won't be disappointed.
6 people found this helpful
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"Make way for Ysandre de la Courcel, Queen of Terre d'Ange!"

After the epic Kushiel's Dart, Kushiel's Chosen continues the saga by following, yet again, the story of the Comtesse Phedre no Delunay no Montreve, marked by two gods: Naamah, the goddess of prostitution, and Kushiel, the One God's punisher, who is the lord of pain. Beacause of these marks, she is destined to feel pain and pleasure and one--making her something called an "anguissette". In Kushiel's Dart, her position as an anguisette put her in a position to uncover a plot to overthrow Terre D'Ange, and the book ended in a cliffhanger: Whre is Melisande Shahrizai, traitor to the nation of Terre D'Ange, and who is the mysterious D'Angeline noble that helped her escape the night of her execution? Kushiel's Chosen begins the day after Kushiel's Dart ended; Phedre makes her decision to pursue Melisande...a decision that will take her to the Night Court again, and back into the intrigue of Terre D'Ange. And, as in the first book, Phedre must leave her homeland, traveling to La Serenissima, Illyria, and Kriti in a neverending quest to save her country and her queen.
Kushiel's Dart was a masterpiece, unfolding in ever-deeper layers; Kushiel's Dart has just as many, if not more, layers of political intrigue and human nature. Phedre is a unique woman, and because of her training in both the arts of prostitution and the arts of politics and diplomacy, she is a hidden weapon for her sovreign, Queen Ysandre de la Courcel. But because she IS a prostitute, her Cassiline consort, Joscelin, is driven away, to the cause of the Yeshuites, and it looks an awful lot like they won't ever make up.
It is a 700 page book, but I was so engrossed I finished in three days. This book is AMAZING. I highly recommend it. I hope that the summary convinces you to read it.
Oh, and if by any chance you find yourself compulsively saying "Make way for Ysandre de la Courcel, Queen of Terre d'Ange!" for a few days after reading this book, believe me, it's perfectly normal.
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Where's the steam?

A small quibble, perhaps...but I felt like Ms. Carey sold out to the contingent who were squeamish about the intensity of the sex scenes in Kushiel's Dart. This book is SLOW going in comparison. I was so riveted by the exotic nature of the Night Court and Phedre's compulsions in the first book that the second has paled in comparison. The prose is much more dry and contrived until well into the novel. Character was the great strength of the first book, and Phedre remains compelling, but I miss the lack of self-consciousness that Carey had in the first book. It SEEMS that the editors have had their hand in here...
The "machiavellian" political intrigue is here...but Phedre seems to have lost a bit of her charisma or perhaps it is just a bit more controlled. The something missing might be termed "abandon".
Nonetheless I enjoyed the book and hope Carey returns to form in Kushiel's Avatar. Phedre is one of the best written female characters I have had occasion to "meet" in modern fantasy, and the invented universe is akin to that of Guy Gavriel Kay in its unique combination of original and "real" elements of history.
Bravo!
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Winner of the WordWeaving Award for Excellence

With the return of her sangoire cloak, Phedre recognizes the challenge issued by Melisande Shahrizai. The cloak marks Phedre an anguissette, one of Kushiel's chosen, as does the scarlet mark in the iris of her left eye. Phedre is a woman destined to enjoy pleasure in pain, finding love with Joscelin, who knew from the beginning what she was. Despite being condemned as an oath breaker, Joscelin has never violated the central precept of Cassiel: To protect and serve. But Phedre's plans will put his pledge to the test. When Phedre makes plans to rededicate to the Service of Naamah who commands only love as thou wilt, she risks Joscelin's love.
Phedre seeks two things. She needs the answer that will free Hyacinthe from his eternal indenture to the Master of Straights, and she also seeks the conspiracy that allowed Melisande to vanish from a well-guarded chamber the night before her execution for treason. Melisande had once been Phedre's patron, later selling her into slavery. Phedre knows that the cloak was only the opening gambit of a deadly game. Until she can prove it, however, Phedre must use her gifts to gain the knowledge she seeks. Phedre's gift for courtly arts, and arts of the bedroom, is only surpassed by her ability to observe, remember, and analyze.
Complexity of characterization and masterful plotting make KUSHIEL'S CHOSEN an addictive read. Phedre is a flawed heroine, ever aware of the consequences of her actions. The gift of Kushiel makes for a fascinating balance of pleasure and pain, lending her character a mesmerizing complexity. Her deep-seated attraction and love for her nemesis, as well as her complicated relationship with Joscelin, masterfully reveal both her strengths and flaws. Indeed, Phedre is one of those rare heroines who truly captures the reader's heart and imagination. Other characters are likewise memorable, including Joscelin with his heart torn between duty and love, and the pirate Kazan . Phedre's nemesis, Melisande likewise reveals a cunning and intricacy of characterization worthy of the most powerful of anti-heroines.
Not having read the first book of the trilogy entitled KUSHIEL'S DART, I initially found KUSHIEL'S CHOSEN a challenge to follow. Missing the first 700 pages of a series definitely inhibits one understanding of the complexities of personal and political affiliations and affections. Nevertheless, I quickly found myself swept away on author Jacqueline Carey's prose and transported to an alternate world of breathtaking historical fantasy. By the conclusion, I did not feel that not having read the books in order inhibited my enjoyment in any way; it did, however, feed my need to immediately order the first book of the trilogy. Winner of the WordWeaving Award for Excellence.
6 people found this helpful