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It's even harder when you're stupid.

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Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medieval. Show all posts

Friday, February 27, 2015

The Wide-Awake Princess by E.D. Baker ★★★★☆



Magic doesn’t always improve things!
Fiction – Juvenile/YA – Medieval Fantasy
261 pages
 10 - 14  5 – 8
 2010 
Wide-Awake Princess #1  

When a curse is set in motion Annie, the younger sister of Sleeping Beauty, is the only one immune to the enchanted sleep placed on the castle.  Annie, with a little help from her friends, has to find her sister’s one true love to save the kingdom.

The Wide-Awake Princess (Wide-Awake Princess, #1)I found this story idea so fascinating and to me my delight I found its execution nicely handled.  The interweaving of fairy tales was well planned and the comfortable writing style a great asset to keeping it somewhat romantic, but not offputtingly so.  Ms. Baker sets the stage perfectly for the body of the story with a great prologue, and allows this fun story to mature at a comfortable rate.  I appreciated some Annie’s insights on how much magic messes up things and that it isn’t a crutch for her.



Ms. Baker does a great job both in world creation and character construction.  Annie is a delightfully real girl, with no artifice added either through the use of magic like others of her noble class in the book or by the author trying to create a character full of perfection.  The different places and kingdoms have enough of their own culture to contrast with what Annie is used to create the feeling that we are all experience new things together.  My only real complaint is that the nobility titles were not used correctly, which is rather minor and probably would only bother me, but unlikely to cause the intended audience any problems.
 



Thursday, September 25, 2014

The Icebound Land by John Flanagan ★★★★☆

Well Done
Fiction – YA/Juvenile – Medieval
266 pages
Age Level: 10 and up | Grade Level: 5 and up
Publication Date: June 26, 2007
Ranger's Apprentice #3

The Icebound Land (Ranger's Apprentice, #3)Halt and Horace follow after Will and Evanlyn to Skandia to set them free from their kidnappers.

This book was a major improvement and I only have good things to say.  The pacing was superb.  The excitement suspense and drama began right from the start.  The story was a bit unexpected and pleasantly surprising.  The writing never broke with the book reality.  I loved the dynamics of differing points of view of the same events and was impressed at how well done the two story lines were done.  All of the characters were fully realized and distinctive from other as well as the different cultures.

I just really enjoyed it and by the end I was clamoring for the next one and so grateful to have a local library with a decent children’s section.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

The Burning Bridge by John Flanagan ★★★☆☆

Fiction – YA/Juvenile – Medieval
262 pages
Age Level: 10 and up | Grade Level: 5 and up
Publication Date:  2005
Ranger's Apprentice #2
Literary Awards:  Children's Book Council of Australia Award, International Success of the Year Award (2007)

The Burning Bridge (Ranger's Apprentice, #2)Will and Horace are sent on a special mission to their kingdom’s neighboring allies, Celtica, to request help in their fight against Morgarath, but when they arrive the towns are abandoned and frightening new information about Morgarath’s troop movements forces them to rethink their plans.  With the safety of their kingdom hanging in the balance Will and Horace must find a way to thwart Morgarath’s plan.

The orchestration of this novel is leaps and bounds beyond the first.  It has the quality that I had expected in the first and is pretty much an improvement in every way.  The story is more sophisticated and better laid out making the alternating points of view more appropriate. The risk factor is upped and better suited for making this an adventure story.  With a quicker pace and more action it held tightly onto my attention leaving in suspense of what was going to happen next.  The battles were complex and interesting and the ending was exciting and unexpected.  Again I enjoyed the lack of magic and found it unexpectedly refreshing.   Occasionally the writing did trip me up and pushed me out of the story world and I was a little surprised he didn’t draw out the Morgarath storyline, but in comparison to everything else these were minor distractions.  

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

The Ruins of Gorlan by John Flanagan ★★★☆☆

The Ruins of Gorlan (Ranger's Apprentice, #1)A few quality issues
Fiction-YA/Juvenile-Medieval
 10 and up  5 and up
249 pages
 2004 
Ranger's Apprentice #1
Literary awards: Rebecca Caudill Young Reader's Book Award Nominee (2008)


When 15-year-old Will is picked as a Ranger’s apprentice he is disappointed, but with the menace of the Lord of the Mountains of Rain and Night readying for battle he quickly learns that Rangers are the greatest protectors the kingdom can have.

The book world is very authentic, with great multi-dimensional characters and rich detail.  The writing was rhythmic and a have very few complaints other than at times it was a bit amateurish.  The book was easy to get through and kept me wanting to know what would happen next.  The prologue creates a great platform for the rest of the story to be set on.   The focus of this book swings back and forth between Ranger’s apprentice Will and Battle School apprentice Horace, two very different characters.

Okay, now the other side.  I may have been betrayed by my own expectations, but I anticipated a whole lot more suspense and excitement.  The story was fairly slow moving and not big into subtlety.  Also, I have to say Horace not showing up in the climax seemed really weird and I was disappointed not to see him.  My investment of him just didn’t give the payoff that was expected, particularly since he was such a focus in the book.


Now, while I might seem a bit negative I have to say I really do see the potential of this series and have purchased the next two in the series already.  I haven’t given up on it.