This is a sequel to Darkchild, and is again set on the planet of Brakrath but here Scyoc broadens out her depiction of the societies there. Events are seen through two viewpoint characters, Keva and Danior, but a third appears in the Epilogue which sets up another sequel.
Keva has been brought up in the warmstream among the fisher-people by Oki. But Keva’s dreams are dominated by thoughts of fire. While seeking a poison antidote in Oki’s stash she finds a blue cloth which sings to her when she touches it. She finds Oki has lied to her about her origins and that her memory of a bearded man on a horse is real. She is the daughter of Jhaviir, one of the clones of Birnam Rauth - a Rauthimage - from the earlier book, and of a barohna now dead.
Danior’s mother was also a barohna (Khira from Darksong) and his father was The Boy from that book. Since barohnial inheritance comes through the female line Danior sees no place nor future for himself in the barohnial palace.
Both Keva and Danior set off on their own, Keva to attempt to find her father, and Danior to make his own way. Jhaviir - as the Viir-Nega - has collected together some of the desert people to live in a settlement but they are constantly at war with those who still roam. This pastoral existence and the wanderings through the plains reminded me of Phyllis Eisenstein’s In the Red Lord’s Reach, but perhaps hunter-gathering/partly settled societies are all similar.
When the nomads discover that a barohna has come to the settlement it provokes them to form an alliance to attack. Despite her reluctance Keva is forced to use her barohnial powers as mediated by her sunstone to defeat them.
The vast majority of this novel deals with the situation of the desert clans. The background to Scyoc’s trilogy remains resolutely that - background – for the most part. Little of the Rauthimage inheritance both Keva and Danior embody is referred to – except for the glimpse of Birnam Rauth, as tramsitted via the white cloth Jhaviir possesses, experienced by Danior as he touches it. This presages the third in the trilogy.
Bluesong can be read on its own. No knowlegde of the previous book is necessary and it reads as not merely the second part of a series but works by itself as a novel.
Dreams of fire and jagged mountains. Dreams of the sweet wordless yearnings of the songsilk. Dreams of a dark restless man riding for her on his proud whitemane... A quest to understand her dreams had driven Keva from her home to the hardlands. Danior sought his young life's purpose. And a path. In the desert they discovered their kinship, their power, and the bluesong that sang to them from the distant stars...