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A Stranger Came Ashore                                                           (Harper Trophy Book)

A Stranger Came Ashore (Harper Trophy Book)

List Price: $5.99
Your Price: $5.39
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Astranger Came Ashore review
Review: A stranger came ashore was the best book ive ever read. Most of the time i hate reading but with this book i couldnt stop reading it. i give this book 5 stars *****!!!!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: One of the best books I've ever read.
Review: A Stranger Came Ashore

A Stranger Came Ashore is a mysterious book. It has lots of action scenes, and it is a great mystery book. It takes place in the Shetland Islands off the coast of Scotland. I thought it was going to be a boring book when we started reading it, but when we got further into it, the book turned out to be amazing. It held my attention all the way through. It is about a young boy named Robbie and his sister Janet. A stranger came to the island on a dark and stormy night. He gave his name as Finn Learson. His eye is caught by Elspeth, a beautiful young woman with long blonde hair. He begins to court her, while her boyfriend Nicol is courting her as well. Robbie doesn't want Elspeth to marry him, so he goes to the school master, Yarl Corbie(who is believed to practice magic)for help. Yarl Corbie promises to help Robbie if Robbie promises not to tell anyone that Yarl Corbie is helping him. Robbie thinks that Fin Learson is The Great Selkie. This book is a very powerful and suspenseful novel. The end is very suspenseful. To find out what happens you'll have to read the book yourself.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't read this book, even if you get paid to.
Review: A very unique fantasy, laced with Scottish traditions and culture and the folklore of the Seal-people, Selkies. Mollie Hunter writes in a style unlike that of many 9-12 authors, and her story is a slow buildup to a shocking climax.

A small family in Scotland encounters a shipwrecked survivor, a handsome young man named Finn Learson. Finn rapidly endears himself to the family, especially to the pretty Elspeth. The only ones who don't like him are young Robbie, Old Da, Tam the dog, and Nicol, Elspeth's increasingly irritated fiancee. Old Da is the grandfather of the family, a learned storyteller who tells his grandson tales about the Great Selkie, a malevolent seal-man who roofs his crystal palace with the golden hair of girls he's married and pulled underwater.

Clues begin to come together as time goes on: Finn loves dancing and strange, eerie music; he has a golden piece of eight; an omen in the ashes; his ability to literally mesmerize; the way his hands feel. Robbie has a strange feeling about it all, and when Old Da suddenly falls ill, he reveals that a stranger like Finn came ashore years before. But he dies before he can tell Robbie all of it.

Finn's intentions toward Elspeth become clearer when he and Nicol begin openly vying for her affections. Elspeth is swayed by promises of wealth and prestige, but Robbie is beginning to realize that Finn is not even human. Desperate for someone to help him, he goes to the old eccentric Yarl Corbie, whose girlfriend was stolen away mysteriously many years ago...

Perhaps one of the few flaws with this book is that it really isn't a "Tale of Suspense." Within the first fifty pages it's clear who and what Finn is, and what he's planning. However, this suspense is kept up by Old Da's last words and the mystery of Yarl Corbie.

Robbie is a fairly standard pre-adolescent, but his concern for his sister and liking for Nicol raise him above the average. We don't see enough of Old Da, nor of Yarl Corbie, who is a delectably sinister character with strange powers who adds a great deal to the plot. Elspeth is sadly a rather annoying character, who seems rather condescending even after the incident with Finn. I liked Nicol a great deal, and felt that he should have done better than Elspeth.

One thing that raises it above the ordinary is insight into old Scottish ways of living, surviving on the combined fishing and farming. Additionally, I liked the parts where the real seals are encountered, and the old legends about them and the Great Selkie; also, old Scottish traditions from the pre-Christian era.

Additionally, the book is worth it for the climax especially. The battle between Robbie, Nicol and Yarl Corbie and the increasingly sinister Finn Learson is fast-paced and almost horrifying in places, and the weird angles of Finn's power come across to the reader. Hunter's writing style is at its peak in that scene--elsewhere, it may lose younger readers with the more mythic pace and method.

An excellent fantasy, marred by only a few flaws.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A STRANGER CAME ASHORE
Review: I CAN HONESTLY SAY THAT THIS IS THE ULTIMATE STORY OF LOVE, SUSPENSE AND INTRIGUE.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Review: I read this book in school suspecting it to be dull and boring when it was the exact oppisite. A stranger come ashore is based on part of a keltic legend about selkies. Selkies are fallen angels whho sinned against heaven when it was shinning new. They are sometimes called sealmen. It was fun to read about all the old beliefs of these people. The story was about a young boy and his family and one rainy night a stranger washed up on shore and came to live in there house. Only the boy by the name of robbie thought something strange about this young man. After awhile they all noticed that the stranger seemed to like robbie's sister, Elspeth but she was already in love with a young man, Nicol. After awhile something changes her mind about Nicol and she starts to like the stranger. What is that changed her mind? And who will she marry? Read the book, anyone and everyone would love it!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I thought this book could be more exiting
Review: I thought the book, A Stranger Came Ashore could have been better. When I read books I like the beginning especially to be exiting so I don't read the first chapter and decide it's to boring and never go back to it. Unlike other books I've read, this one wasn't very exiting at the beginning. I'm also more interested in different kinds of books like Shiloh, The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, books that have to do with kids and school, but I do like mysteries and this book was kind of like a mystery. I think most boys and girls from ages 10 - 13 would enjoy this book if they like fiction and fantasy. This book was suspensful, a little bit boring, and exiting in the end. Over all I'd have to give this book a 3 and a half from a 1 - 5.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Ravens and selkies and skuddlers, oh my!
Review: If you happen to be young, beautiful, blond, and female, your chances of being abducted by a dark underworld spirit are significantly higher than that of your fellows. We're all familiar with the usual beautiful-girl-becomes-a-bride-below-the-ground tales told around the world. Everything from the myth of Persephone to the ever popular "Phantom of the Opera" is based on this story. Less popular, but no less interesting, is the beautiful-girl-becomes-a-bride-below-the-water school of storytelling. "A Stranger Came Ashore" belongs squarely in the latter category. In it, those dewey-eyed seals that look so doggone cute in nature documentaries turn out to hide far more sinister schemes behind their big brown eyes.

To begin, a stranger comes ashore. On a night of a dreadful shipwreak, a young man manages to drag himself into the happy home of young Robbie Henderson and his family. The family rushes to the conclusion that the man is a survivor of the ship below and they immediately take him into their lives. Once firmly ensconced in the home, the man (who goes by the name of Finn Learson - hint hint) does everything he can to win the family's trust and respect. This may have something to do with Robbie's beautiful blond sister Elspeth, a girl that Finn seems to have a definite interest in. When Robbie's dying grandfather informs him that there may be more to Finn than there seems and that Elspeth is in dire danger, Finn finds himself discovering the true nature that lurks behind Finn's gentle complexion. With the aid of the town's schoolteacher/wizard Yarl Corbie, the two form a plan to bring Finn to justice, one way or another.

Originally written in 1975, the book is just as lively and interesting today as it ever was. The idea that selkies (seals that can turn into humans when they choose by shedding their seal skin) are malevolent beasts instead of gentle ones is a particularly interesting idea. Hunter has gently combined selkies with goblins, making them creatures to be avoided at all costs. The book itself reads quickly and with a great deal of excitement. Like the far more contemporary author Susan Cooper, Hunter has a real grasp on the Shetland Islands of northern Britain and their inhabitants. The story in this book isn't particularly original in and of itself. Plus, she pretty much says right from the start who Finn is, only filling in some of the more interesting details later on down the road. I was also a little disappointed that there wasn't much in the way of character development going on here. Robbie becomes obsessed with the notion that Elspeth, at any moment, might find herself spirited away by a lustful suitor. But we never hear enough about Elspeth or her personality to wonder if this might really be a bad thing. Was she particularly close to Robbie? Was she a great person that it would be a shame to lose? Or is it just a case of Elspeth being community property that strangers have no right to take?

In many ways, "A Stranger Came Ashore" is a cautionary tale. Don't go around trusting fellows with funny accents who you take into your home out of the goodness of your heart. They'll stab you in the back they will! Such stories exist all over the world and they're ever-so-slightly-xenophobic for this reason. I'm not accusing this book of perpetuating hatred, or anything complicated like that. I'm just saying that this is obviously the moral lesson we're supposed to draw from it. Otherwise, it's a perfectly good fantasy tale for any kid interested in fairies, selkies, or just mysterious goings-ons in old Britain itself. The book's a good read and one that advertises itself as, "A Story of Suspense". I think that's a fairly accurate statement. If you find yourself getting invested in the story (which will take a little longer than you might hope) you'll enjoy its gripping storyline and threatening villain. A wonderful companion book to the more recent, "Hollow Kingdom" by Clare Dunkle. Give `em both a shot.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't miss this one!
Review: We read this book while driving on vacation. We still had several chapters to go as we approached grandma and grandpa's house. For the first time EVER we heard "Oh no, are we almost there?!" Our kids begged us to drive around until we finished the book. We finally finished this exciting, suspenseful read in grandma and grandpa's living room later that evening. Wonderful book!


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