You are currently browsing the monthly archive for July, 2006.

Title: Darkhenge

by Catherine Fisher

Publisher & Imprint: Harper Collins/Greenwillow Books

Pub Date: March 2006

Price: 15.99

ISBN: 0-06-078582-9

Primary audience: ages 12 and up, lovers of mythology, art, and subtle magic

Notable aspects: language, sensitivity, shifting points of view, plot, interesting setting

Review: “The tree branched like a brain.” I was hooked from the very first sentence by this “imported” author. DARKHENGE originally appeared in Great Britain in 2005, but this book is accessible to well-read American readers.

It seems to start out as a tale about Rob, a student in his late teens with an artistic streak, who carries the burden of a family tragedy. We are led through a day which seemingly blends the ordinary with the magical….. his bike goes off the path in precisely the place that his younger sister had her horseriding accident. As Rob picks himself up, a horse passes him on the path, its rider seemingly his sister Chloe. That, however, is patently impossible, since his sister is lying in a hospital in a coma several miles away….

The story itself branches outward like the limbs of a tree. An archaeological dig led by a professor with an agenda, a man who literally appears from underground, Rob’s parents in their separate grief and avoidance of same, Rob’s godfather [a priest with some highly nontraditional views], and Chloe herself…. all have their tales to tell in this novel which leans equally heavily on Welsh mythology and the Celtic tree calendar, but which has at its heart the issue of self-perception and communication.

The language in this book is glorious. When we are seeing things through Rob’s eyes, we are given solid descriptions which involve the richness of colors, invoking his gift and training as an artist. When it shifts to Chloe’s point of view, words seem to matter more, since she aspires to be a writer, but they are slippery and not easily grasped, since she is younger and more tempestuous.

There is a happy ending, but it does not come frivolously or without cost.

Reviewer’s name & bookstore: Patty Cryan, Mike’s Comics, Worcester, Massachusetts

Rating: 9

Title: The King of Attolia

by Megan Whelan Turner

Publisher & Imprint: Harper Collins / Greenwillow Books

Pub Date: February 2006

Price: $16.99

ISBN: 0-06-083577-X

Primary audience: lovers of medieval fantasy, fans of intrigue

Notable aspects: plot, characters, strong ending, sensitivity

Review: I have to admit that I’ve not reread The Thief since its original publication, and I’ve never had the opportunity to read The Queen of Attolia.  Even so, I am delighted to report that this sequel needs neither to support it as a splendid book in its own right.  In fact, my lack of knowledge of the characters of the King and the Queen was not dulled in the slightest, because this time around we are seeing them through another’s eyes.
 
Those eyes are those of Costis, one of the Queen’s guards who is biased against the King, who he perceives to be an interloper.  Due to an incident where Costis is disgraced, he is assigned to personal duty to this new King, whom he first despises, then is confused by, with the final result being respect and devotion.
 
The long-term reader of Megan Whalen Turner’s books *knows* that the King and Queen are Gen and Irene, *knows* that they truly love each other despite the courtly games they play.  Costis, and thus the first-time reader of this novel along with him, does *NOT* know these two in the guise of mind-mates.  Seeing the King and Queen through his eyes, and watching the court intrigue unfold and flow around them, makes for a dramatically different story than the usual fantasy tale.
 
This is a very mature story with subtle themes; although traditional “mature” material such as marital relations is not explored here, there is much in the dialogue and descriptions that will go over the heads of younger readers, not because of “inappropriate content”, but because of a lack of life experience.  The dialogue, especially between characters who must speak in code to one another for fear for their lives, is *so* realistic, with so many undercurrents, that it requires multiple readings to truly “get it”. 
 
That being said, this book is a marvelous whirlwind, extremely rich in characters and descriptions, and one that I will not only treasure reading again and again, but which is prompting me to seek out the first two books to see the “other” sides of Gen and Irene.

Reviewer’s name & bookstore: Patty Cryan, Mike’s Comics, Worcester, Massachusetts

Title: Poison Ivy

by Amy Goldman Kross

Publisher & Imprint: Roaring Brook Press

Pub Date: March 2006

Price: $16.95

ISBN: 1-59643-118-0

Primary audience: Advanced middle readers and young teen girls

Notable aspects: Characters, authenticity, child-connected, humor, significant underlying ideas

Review:  This book presents an idea which has been done before – the notion of “the popular clique” being put on trial for bullying, even though it’s “only” in the setting of a Government class assignment.
 
What makes this different and fresh is the diary approach used in narration, and that the “victim” is not shown to be particularly likeable or laudable…. not even in her own writings about herself.  Nor is the teacher who sets up this experiment any kind of hero.
 
The voices of the “prosecutor”, the “defendants”, and the “jurors” are very well drawn, and multidimensional.  It’s a good realistic book worth at least one read.

Reviewer’s name & bookstore:  Patty Cryan, Mike’s Comics, Worcester, Massachusetts