### From Publishers Weekly A passionate wartime love affair haunts Yarbro's 21st Saint-Germain novel (after 2008's *A Dangerous Climate*). Yarbro returns to her heroic vampire in 438 C.E., when he was known as Dom Feranescus Rakoczy Sanctu-Germainios, Regional Guard of Apulum Inferior. Series fans
Saint-Germain 18: Dark of the Sun: A Novel of the Count Saint-Germain
β Scribed by Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn
- Book ID
- 107264845
- Publisher
- Tor Books
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 562 KB
- Series
- Saint Germain 18
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Yarbro's 17th entry in her historical-horror series (_Path of the Eclipse_, etc.) adroitly uses the ever-metaphoric vampire to portray the human dimensions of a cataclysm that changed the course of history. Vampire Saint-Germain and his faithful companion, Roger, who go under the names Zangi-Ragozh and Ro-shei in this solid installment, are merchants in sixth-century A.D. Yang-Chau, as Shanghai was called during this period. Forced by political necessity to journey westward to Chang'an (aka Xian) during winter, the pair soon realize that this is a winter like no other. Never in his more than 3,500 years of existence has the well-traveled vampire experienced anything similarΠ²Πβa sun with "no warmth or strength," strange yellow snowfall and an "invisible cloud" distorting the sky. Unbeknownst to most of the world, an eruption of the volcano Krakatau (aka Krakatoa) is to blame. Agricultural and economic disruption result, illness spreads, social unrest and collapse follow. The Dark Ages begin. Faced with a multitude of hardships, Saint-Germain determines to travel across Asia to his native soil in the Carpathian Mountains. The romantic and supernatural play second fiddle to history in this well-told story that deals with the meaning of being human.
Copyright ΠΒ© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
"Will entertain lovers of all genres. Fascinating."_--Midwest Book Review_ on M_idnight Harvest_
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Publishers Weekly _Starred Review._ Set in decadent third-century C.E. Rome, Yarbro's 19th volume in her majestic fantasy series (after 2005's _Dark of the Sun_) is one of her finest yet to feature heroic vampire Saint-Germain, here known as Ragoczy Germainus Sanct-Franciscus. Despite his
### From Publishers Weekly Rich with historical detail and intrigue, Yarbro's 21st Count Saint-Germain novel (after 2007's *Borne in Blood*) unfolds in 18th-century Russia at the height of Peter the Great's effort to wrest St. Petersburg from the swamps and spearhead the modernizing of his nation.
### From Publishers Weekly In Yarbro's rewarding 18th Saint-Germain novel (after 2004's *Dark of the Sun*), religious conflict makes life dangerous for almost everyone in 1530 Europe, but publishing is a particularly hazardous undertaking. The agents of the doge are spying on Conte di Santo-Germano
### From Publishers Weekly If Anne Rice is the celebrity journalist of vampires, Yarbro is their domestic chronicler. The meticulous 20th entry in her Count Saint-Germain saga (after 2006's Roman Dusk) finds her 4,000-year-old hero in the Swiss countryside of 1817, helping the struggling locals rec
### From Publishers Weekly Yarbro's long-running series featuring the millennia-old vampire Saint-Germain continues to mix rich historical detail and erudite eroticism, though the horror element has become nearly invisible. Known now as Rakoczy Ferancsi, Comes of Santu-Germaniu, Saint-Germain has b