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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Interesting, Fun and a Teaser – The Hawk and His Boy by Christopher Bunn

January 9, 2013 by Kathy 1 Comment

I love good fantasy and this first book, The Hawk and His Boy by new author Christopher Bunn has the makings of a good story.  The story could have been contrived and formulaic using familiar characters – a young thief, a set of scholars in search of a long lost book, a guardian type girl – but Christopher Bunn added unusual twists and lovely settings.

My favorite character was Levoreth, the niece of a duke and far more than she appears. The scenes with Levoreth remind me of Patricia McKillip’s novels with the same attention to setting and character which make McKillip’s novels engrossing. Levoreth’s dialogue with the beasts who acknowledge her as Mistress of Mistresses and with her aunt are excellent.

The nominal hero is the young thief boy Jute, a mystery character who is only sketched in.  Jute tells us himself he doesn’t know who he is and we don’t learn much more about him.  The Knife is well drawn as are many of the lesser characters.

It was obvious reading The Hawk and His Boy that it was setting the stage for further novels. In fact the tagline at Amazon is that The Hawk and His Boy is volume one of the Tormay Trilogy.

The book is short at 210 pages in the paperback. I bought the sequel immediately which is longer. Look for future posts on the next two books and likely more by Christopher Bunn as he develops future fantasy worlds.

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Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy

Sobering Read that Lingers in Your Mind – Messenger, Lois Lowry, The Giver Trilogy

January 5, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Messenger is book three of The Giver trilogy by Lois Lowry, but it stands on its own.  You do not need to read the other two books to enjoy this one.  The four main characters repeat from The Giver and Gathering Blue but the actions, plot and setting are unique.

I had not heard of Lois Lowry until I browsed our local library’s E book selection of science fiction and fantasy. Her books were always checked out. That intrigued me so I placed a hold and read them in the order they arrived, not the order of the plot sequence. In fact I read Messenger second.

Messenger is listed under teen or older teen but the concepts and characters resonate with adults.  The main character, Matt, has a unique talent to travel the dangerous Forest and at the beginning of the story, he finds another unique talent, the ability to heal.  Healing frightens Matt and drains him and he keeps it secret.

Matt’s small village has recently begun a new type of Trading, where people are no longer trading things for other things, but trading part of themselves.  This is not stated, but instead is obvious to the reader through Matt”s eyes.  Village, formerly open and welcoming to all, decides to close itself off from other refugees and the Forest becomes darker, more sinister and dangerous.

Messenger is the story of Matt’s last journey to the outside world, his friendship and love for Seer and Kira, and the timely intervention of Leader.  I didn’t find Messenger as unsettling as the first book, The Giver, but it has stayed in my mind and I expect I will remember this one for a long, long time.

Messenger is available from Amazon I got this from the Southwest Michigan Digital Library, a consortium of small area libraries.  You are likely to find Messenger in your local library or E library.

Amazon links pay commissions to blog owner.

Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy Fiction

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