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Into the Green

Into the Green

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Brief.
Review: A very short, very rushed, emotionally devoid novel about characters with little-to-no personality. The plot was fine, the story almost good, but without a reason to care what the characters did these things were meaningless.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: what a dissapointment : (
Review: At a young age, a girl named Angharad who grew up as a tinker, is identified by a wizard as having the Summerblood (being a witch, having some of the green (Faerie) in her). She is taught the ways of a witch, and also is granted a harp, and the ability to play it, by the kowrie (elves). This is all prelude to her being sent, by the old gods, on a dual mission: help reawaken the green (magic) in those who have the ability, and destroy an ancient and evil talisman that could destroy all those who possess the Summerblood. Along the way, she is harassed and tormented, but also finds unexpected allies.

The writing is flawless, as one would expect from de Lint, but this book differs in format from most of his other books. The pace is much faster than in most de Lint stories and, while Angharad does collect a small band of allies along the way, this story focuses much more on one character than do most de Lint books, which often feature ensemble casts. As usual for a de Lint book, though, there is a heavy cultural component. Another difference is that the culture is a mythical one, albeit one closely kin to Celtic culture. While many of the names are clearly Celtic-ish, the map given in the beginning is NOT of the British Isles (although it is a cluster of island-nations off the west coast of a continent).

Hang on tight and prepare for a wild and magical ride through a tale that will not be ignored, once begun!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of de Lint's Best
Review: At a young age, a girl named Angharad who grew up as a tinker, is identified by a wizard as having the Summerblood (being a witch, having some of the green (Faerie) in her). She is taught the ways of a witch, and also is granted a harp, and the ability to play it, by the kowrie (elves). This is all prelude to her being sent, by the old gods, on a dual mission: help reawaken the green (magic) in those who have the ability, and destroy an ancient and evil talisman that could destroy all those who possess the Summerblood. Along the way, she is harassed and tormented, but also finds unexpected allies.

The writing is flawless, as one would expect from de Lint, but this book differs in format from most of his other books. The pace is much faster than in most de Lint stories and, while Angharad does collect a small band of allies along the way, this story focuses much more on one character than do most de Lint books, which often feature ensemble casts. As usual for a de Lint book, though, there is a heavy cultural component. Another difference is that the culture is a mythical one, albeit one closely kin to Celtic culture. While many of the names are clearly Celtic-ish, the map given in the beginning is NOT of the British Isles (although it is a cluster of island-nations off the west coast of a continent).

Hang on tight and prepare for a wild and magical ride through a tale that will not be ignored, once begun!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Score another for De Lint
Review: De Lint is by far the best at blending urban reality with fantastical lands that are just "around the corner". He has done it again with this book. I have as many of his books as I could get my hands on...you'll be hooked, although Moonheart was by far his best. If you like him, you'll also like the Taliswoman series by Carole Nelson Douglas...Book 3 of that series is coming in November, 1999. (The other 2 are Cup of Clay and Seed Upon the Wind.)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Score another for De Lint
Review: De Lint is by far the best at blending urban reality with fantastical lands that are just "around the corner". He has done it again with this book. I have as many of his books as I could get my hands on...you'll be hooked, although Moonheart was by far his best. If you like him, you'll also like the Taliswoman series by Carole Nelson Douglas...Book 3 of that series is coming in November, 1999. (The other 2 are Cup of Clay and Seed Upon the Wind.)

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: what a dissapointment : (
Review: I'm a casual fan of Charles de Lint. I've only read Forests of the Heart and a huge handful of his short stories, but I've generally considered him a good author. However, with Into the Green, we have an author exploring themes he's already done (and better, in "The Little Country"). Plus, the reader never gets into the minds of the characters and often pages are filled with trite and redundent lamentations of grief, either concerning the main heroine or how tragic it would be if the "fey wonders of the world" disappeared. This man can write better than this. If you must read this book, try and get a used copy.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Dissapointing
Review: In all honesty, I found this book contrived and irritating in the extreme. It talks down to the readers, and the only time I have seen language as overtly flowery was when I picked up a Danielle Steel. The author has no identity of his own, and is instead trying to accomplish something that freely borrows from Marion Zimmer Bradley and J.R.R. Tolkein. If you're looking for something that reaches out to an audience above the age of thirteen, give this one a pass.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Magic of Being Human
Review: Much of Charles de Lint's work has been categorized as urban fantasy - tales that tell of the power and magic in the world today, in people's lives now, in places here. "Into the Green" could be a transition tale: how did we get to a time in which magic and power seem to have disappeared, in which urban fantasy comes into being as the longing for that power and magic? What was the world like just before the very last traces of that power disappeared?
Angharad the tinker, a nomad of gypsy kind, lived in the world at such a time. The "time" is of course disguised as a different place - the Kingdom of the Green Isles - and in fact has a history, a past time of its own in which power and magic, and those who wielded the power and magic, were not so rare. The Kingdom of the Green Islesis not thick with magic; this isn't Earthsea, with its mage winds, competing mages, priestesses, Roke's college of mages. It is more akin to Middle Earth at the end of the Third Age: political and military powers are wielded in the open, while ancient wisdoms and subtle forces fade and dissipate as surely as, though more slowly than, the morning fog lifts and disperses with the rising sun. Then we are in the heat and rush and bright light of day.
One of the remaining spirits in the Kingdom of the Green Isles - a mere breath, a shimmering wisp of that world's magic - warns Angharad of the impending final retreat of "the green", of magic and light, from their world. It is Angharad's triad of dispensations - tinker, witch, and harpist - that signal her right to this wisdom, and allow her understanding of and response to that wisdom. The spirit, an oak's spirit, instructs Angharad in, if not preventing the final retreat of "the green", at least closing off the most obvious and sure avenue of that retreat. This is a magical box, a sort of negative Pandora's box. If let open in the world, the box wouldn't release a mob of calamities and troubles, but would rather suck out of the world the last of that breath of magic of the green into the blackness of the box. Her task is to find the box, and somehow take that blackness into herself before it can darken the fey light in the heart of the world.
De Lint's story seems to come to us through the mists of Irish history, language and legend, much of which is left obscure. The many references, and even more subtle allusions, to a nomadic Irish gypsy life do give a certain time-depth to the Kingdom of the Green Isles, and to Angharad's life and journey there. At times, these same idioms and colloquialisms lack substance, and stand out like props. Also, the storytelling suffers from a choppy plot in the first third of the book. The acknowledgment at the beginning of the book partly explains, and confirms, this: the "early portion of this novel appeared, in much altered form, as short stories." About one-third the way into the book, I got the sense that I'd left behind any story that had been developing, or not developing, and now was coming quickly into the thick of a mystery novel. Angharad has temporarily left her meandering tinker ways to get wrapped up in, and get to the bottom of, intrigues involving the sale of purported witch bones, and finding the mysterious box that may after all be somehow involved in the gruesome business.
Nonetheless, the last half of the book is quite engaging, and actually less "fantastic" than is the first "early portion." Perhaps the most engaging of this part of the story is its more soulful, psychological, and human, rather than fantastic and fey, quality. A broken, unredeemed outcast - a forgotten, crippled soldier bent on blowing his brains out with alcohol (he is a coward to boot, and so resists cutting his own throat or falling on a sword) - flickers into the picture. He can't bear to look at his love, the woman he held in her dying moments, as she speaks to him in his memories, and we ache for him to look and listen long enough to hear beyond his shame and fear. Angharad finds him in the gutter, but he's been there a very long time; his mind is darkened, and alcohol helps him to keep it that way. Alcohol, anger and resentment. If Angharad's humility can be counted on, she won't mind that in fact the reader finds the real joy, the real power and magic, not in her ghostly harp playing and witchy frights, but in this man's facing of his own wasted life. This could be the ultimate triumph of "the green," and the sure genius of "Into the Green."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best works of Fantasy
Review: One of the first fantasy books I ever read, it has stood up to multiple rereadings. De Lint weaves a tale of mystery and magic in a unique land with the courage and compassion of one woman. This book is amazing.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting ideas - but not enough elaboration
Review: This book has some interesting ideas - and some catchy story elements too! But it seems like parts of the storyline are "sketched out", not quite finished and incorporated in the plot. There are too many unnecessary repetitions in the first half of the book, (about 'the green', and about the main character containing "the triad" etc.) This made me think the first chapters might have occured as short stories by themselves at some point, and then had been put together at a later date.

All in all it's an entertaining book (if you can bear with the repetitions), and much of the mythology is interesting enough as well. Worth reading - just don't expect too much:-)


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