Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Seventh Son (Tales of Alvin Maker, Book 1)

Seventh Son (Tales of Alvin Maker, Book 1)

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 3 4 5 6 7 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read this series!
Review: this will end up being at least a 7 book series. 5 of them are written to date. This first book is a great read. I give it 4.5 stars (5 is rare).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book introduced me into sci-fi/fantasy literature.
Review: This book is the beginning of my addiction to reading sci-fi and fantasy books. And I always come back to the Alvin Maker Series. There is no equal joy reading stories of this kind, and I think this is the only one of its kind. It touches the heart and staggers the imagination. Highly recommended. Indeed!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best I've ever read!
Review: This is definitely one of the best books I've ever read. From the moment I picked it up I could not put it back down until I had finished it. I recommend it to all readers, as well as the others in the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This 'classic fantasy' may be Card's little masterpiece!
Review: OS Card is a storyteller par excellénce and Seventh Son is the second of his early works to showcase his genius to the world,(the first was Enders Game). Unfortunatly Card seems to loose interest in any particular genre shortly after mastering it and this four piece series(Alvin Maker Series) should only have been 3 books long. But in Seventh Son Card achieves a simple brilliance that will outlive him. The work is a seamless blending of scholarship and the storytellers art that will enthrall any reader while challenging the most discriminating---and can easily stand, as a work, on its own. It is onion-layered in meaning and illustrative of Cards deep understanding of human nature and his speculative intellect. Where was this kind of work when we were forced to read Salinger or Burroughs in High school? Hurrah for Card and books like Seventh Son!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantasy and American History
Review: This is the only fantasy book I've every read that takes place in America, on the frontier. It is VERY well written, and I have read everything I could get my hands on by Card since. Be warned, you could get some serious questions about God and religion vs. magic and the universe

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This book is almost magical
Review: Young Alvin almost does not become what he was meant to be, (the seventh son to a seventh son) because the earth and all of nature alike tries to kill Alvins older brother befor Alvin can be born. This book is so full of a mistical kind of magic once I picked it up I could not put it down.Mr. Card is one of the best authors there is, and this is the best book I have ever had the pleasure of reading and I read ALOT. In case you are womdering, yes Alvin is born befor his brother dies and does become a very magical person even though he has to fight nature all his life just to stay alive. There is also a very misterious young girl in this story who helped with his birth. Now if you think I have given away the whole story, I haven't there is much much more. This IS a must have/read. -Angela Cooper

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fanstasy on the frontier: this is a intriguing tale
Review: Alvin Miller is the seventh son of a seventh son. Living in a world where knacks and hexes really work, this means he has the potential to be a Maker, having powers greater than many. But will he survive to make use of them? Read this first book in the Tales of Alvin Maker, and find out why many people have taken Card's fictional frontier community to heart. For the story is about Alvin, but it also has a rich cast of true to life charecters, with motives, desires and feelings that are moving and interesting as well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: Seventh Son is the first in the Alvin Maker series (Seventh Son, Red Prophet, Prentice Alvin, and Alvin Journeyman). The story is about an alternate American history, where the events of the early 1800s twist into a different time continuum. Alvin Miller is the seventh son of a seventh son; the story follows his family from their migration from the Northeast to Indiana, where they begin to settle a town and start a new life on the frontier. The difference is that hexing and magic aren't completely dead, and some of the pivotal characters of the time are just slightly altered. Alvin himself has a special gift for pulling things together and making them right, which naturally makes him an enemy of the devil, or chaos, whichever you prefer. As usual for Card, the plot and characters are compelling and the story is well told. Highly recommended

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Wishful thinking
Review: Ah rekon it'd be fair to say that this yere tale is an alternative fantasy history of the ole USA as close as no never mind.

It's a frontier story set in the mid-continent, featurin tha birth and strange childhood of Alvin, a suspiciously accident-prone lad who just has this yere Talent for unknowingly makin' things with a little magic. He and his ilk are much to the frustration of the Rev. Thrower, who's a high-falutin' newly arrived English sophist, and probably a dang Cavalier to boot, against whom good Tom Jefferson and the Cheriky people be a-fightin', watched by the governor of Canada, the Marquise de la Fayette (hold, he's more important in tha next un, RED PROPHET).

Instead of putting it right out, as a Turtledove might, Card has the good sense to hide much of his alternative view and let it sort of just seep its way into the story. The leisurely pace encourages a good bit of ambiance of early white America, with Apalachee style homespun and folksy wisdom and ways, really the backstory for the whole series. The history is wonderfully askew, with a quite different political landscape for familiar landmarks, and there's already steam power, in "Irrakwa" gun factories! Eventually Alvin does have a terrible vision, finds his purpose, and is about to start his wayfaring saga. Those readers who think God spoke long ago and preachers have "got the Bible safely interpreted" may have trouble with the way Card has God "show his hand of power" through differently-enabled practical people.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An alternate-reality in early America
Review: While a departure from some of the sci-fi themes in Card's other series, this book and its successors are still distinctly OSC.

Set in an alternate-reality of early America, before the civil war, the story follows the life of Alvin and his family. He is the seventh son, which in this world gives him special abilities. As with most of OSC's stories, there is a dark side to Alvin's life - a constant pursuit by an evil power that he calls the Unmaker, which causes the death of his oldest brother just as Alvin is born. This is a world where some people have a "knack" or special powers, and nothing keep evil away like a good old hex on your front porch and above your window. And no matter how much good Alvin does with his life, the Unmaker is always there, tearing things down, laying snares, inspiring evil men to do evil deeds.

Its a fascinating story, and I've thoroughly enjoyed the entire series. OSC does a great job of keeping you on the edge of your seat.


<< 1 .. 3 4 5 6 7 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates