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The Cygnet and the Firebird |
List Price: $17.95
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Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Better than the first one?? Review: I reread the Cygnet and the Firebird every other year or so. It was so magnificently done. Each character in there is unique. First, you have Nyx Ro, the land-heir to Ro Holding, who is an eccentric soceress/bog witch/mage and who tries to help Brand, a man that was turned into a firebird for mysterious reasons. And then you have Nyx's cousin--strong and honor-bound Meguet--whose natural powers allowed her to overcome the time-stopping spell of a strange mage who had come to steal something from Ro Holding. I guess you just have to read it yourself to see what I'm talking about. It might mean more to the reader if she had read the "Sorceress and the Cygnet" first, where you see more character development of Nyx, Meguet, and Corleu (the main character of that book). This book focuses on the mysteries surrounding Brand, the strange and powerful mage, and the whole different world that they come from. Whenever I read one of Mckillip's work, I am always amazed at how people are missing out on her stories. They're always so original and beautifully written--this one is no different. So buy it and read it before it goes out of print like the first one!
Rating: Summary: I loved it! Review: It was a bit confusing at first to swallow all the details. I found it discarded on a "free table"; it other words, its previous ower had not wanted it and simply tossed it away... I will never understand just WHY. It is magnificent. The characters seem to have a maturity that I have not found in McKillip's other works (or maybe this is just because the kingdom was described differently than in McKillip's other masterpieces--I can't quite put my finger on the EXACT reason). I loved it! It got me into Patricia McKillip's other books, and I am an avid fan now, trying to get my hands on McKillip's latest "Song for the Basilisk." I don't EVER get bored of McKillip's books. The second book of this wonderful author's that I read was Winter Rose, which is just as bewitching (is that the right word...?--maybe enchanting fits better...). Buy it. Read it. Or don't, and know that you are missing on something BIG
Rating: Summary: one of her best Review: This is undoubtedly one of her most poignantly written books. McKillip has a sensitivity to the human mind that is simply unparalleled. She explores that part of ourselves we see only glimpses of in dreams, and realizes them in this novel. The stories are real to life--there is no happily ever after, yet still there is closure to all of the conflicts that develop throughout the book. Her prose is both beautiful and surreal; often times I felt like I was reading an archaic composition of music or an enchanted poem. If you have not read one of her books start with this one; it will blow you away.
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