This book took me longer to read than the previous two in the trilogy. Not because I didn't enjoy it, because I did - very much so - but because this was a bringing together of all the disparate parts, not only of the Galactic Milieu trilogy, but also of the Saga of the Exiles, whose story begins after this one, but which takes part, mostly, in an Earth of six million years previous to this one.
So much of Julian's writing is full of her characters - their emotions, their needs, and wants, their dreams, and the realities of their lives but, what it all seems to boil down to, is that need we all have for a fulfillment, whether of our sexual needs, our need of family and friends, or our need to build something bigger than ourselves, that will live on after us.
She also describes the worlds surrounding her characters, in a way that the reader could almost be there, themselves - even to the point of smelling the scents surrounding them!
The fact that Julian has used a family who carry the genes of near immortality is both relevant to the story, but is also a blind, that diverts the reader from what's really important - that unconscious need in humanity for some kind of unity with all of those around us.
From the moment that humanity looked up at the stars, and wondered whether we were alone in the universe, and had the imagination to people it, we have told each other tales of what, or who, might be out there.
So many writers over the centuries have peopled the universe with gods, and monsters - and gods who are so monstrous, that they resemble ourselves far too well!
Julian, though, chose to use five races of Unified Mental stalwarts who, despite their being as unalike as possible, still found a oneness among themselves, that drew them to seek others to guide along the same pathway as themselves.
The irony of this, of course, is that they are steered in this way, by the very man who almost caused a holocaust to start, because they chose to help mankind achieve that same Unity!
Julian continues to write that theme of a continuous circle of time. A loop where, because Marc was so determined to have Mental Man in the way that he had been quietly steered to, by both Fury, and Hydra, that he goes back in time, six million years in the past, still determined to follow his plan, but diverted in the end, and made to see just how badly he had erred.
He then spends the next six million years, trying to atone for all the deaths he had caused and, through his own great uncle, Rogi Remillard, steers his young self, and his family, into that self-perpetuating circle of time, where nothing can be changed, only slightly steered, to an ending that will bring humanity either to a cataclysmic end - or resting within true Unity with the rest of the universe.
I don't have the words to describe the many themes that are used throughout these books, but Magnificat brings them all together in an amazing conclusion, and so I'm really glad that I went ahead and bought this series, after reading Saga of the Exiles.
If you enjoyed that series, then this one will please as well, because Julian has written them in a way that both entertains, but also makes you think about the unthinkable. To investigate human morality, and of all the decisions we make either through love, or through arrogance - and how every decision we make, impinges on everyone around us!
I look forward to the time when I reach Julian's books again, to read - it'll probably be about 6 years, because I have thousands of books, and love to read every single one, then start all over again! Lol