E-book extra: A "work-in-progress" sneak preview of Abhorsen, the third book in the trilogy.Book Two of the Old Kingdom Trilogy.It is Lirael in whose hands the fate of the Old Kingdom lies. She must undertake a desperate mission under the growing shadow of an ancient evil -- one that threatens to break the very boundary between Life and Death itself. With only her faithful companion, the Disreputable Dog, to help her, Lirael must find the courage to seek her own hidden destiny.Book I: Sabriel; Book III: Abhorsen
E-book extra: A "work-in-progress" sneak preview of Abhorsen, the third book in the trilogy.Book Two of the Old Kingdom Trilogy.It is Lirael in whose hands the fate of the Old Kingdom lies. She must undertake a desperate mission under the growing shadow of an ancient evil -- one that threatens to break the very boundary between Life and Death itself. With only her faithful companion, the Disreputable Dog, to help her, Lirael must find the courage to seek her own hidden destiny.Book I: Sabriel; Book III: Abhorsen
A bit odd. I only give it this rating with the understanding that I’m going to read the sequels. This book by itself doesn’t really tie up many of its conflicts, certainly not the main ones.
A bit odd. I only give it this rating with the understanding that I’m going to read the sequels. This book by itself doesn’t really tie up many of its conflicts, certainly not the main ones.
I was a bit disappointed in this book. The Empire Strikes Back notwithstanding, I generally think mid-series stories should still have plots of their own, even as they set up the next story. This one did not – it seemed primarily concerned with making revelations that were too long in coming and which were not all that revelatory in the end. It also spent way too much time on characters not Lirael (coughSameth*cough) to be called Lirael.
That said, what we get of Lirael and the Clayr is generally great, and I continue to enjoy learning how the two forms of magic – free magic and Charter magic – work and are differentiated. Lirael's adventures in the library are especially great. I only hope that the payoff in the next book is worth the somewhat slogging buildup in this one.
I was a bit disappointed in this book. The Empire Strikes Back notwithstanding, I generally think mid-series stories should still have plots of their own, even as they set up the next story. This one did not – it seemed primarily concerned with making revelations that were too long in coming and which were not all that revelatory in the end. It also spent way too much time on characters not Lirael (coughSameth*cough) to be called Lirael.
That said, what we get of Lirael and the Clayr is generally great, and I continue to enjoy learning how the two forms of magic – free magic and Charter magic – work and are differentiated. Lirael's adventures in the library are especially great. I only hope that the payoff in the next book is worth the somewhat slogging buildup in this one.
For all that Lirael in the library is some of my favorite stuff in the series, overall I feel like this is the weakest book of the trilogy, in large part because it is intended as a transition between the more straight-forward adventure story that was Sabriel and the more epic battle of Abhorsen. It does, however, do a good job of setting up the characters and giving hints at what is yet to come.
The Disreputable Dog and Mogget are probably my favorite characters in the series. They manage to be clearly magical creatures that fit into this world and can talk, and yet also very clearly act like a dog and a cat, respectively. Since I am re-reading it, I love all the hints about their pasts that I didn't understand the first time through.
It was not uncommon for librarians to lay down their lives for …
For all that Lirael in the library is some of my favorite stuff in the series, overall I feel like this is the weakest book of the trilogy, in large part because it is intended as a transition between the more straight-forward adventure story that was Sabriel and the more epic battle of Abhorsen. It does, however, do a good job of setting up the characters and giving hints at what is yet to come.
The Disreputable Dog and Mogget are probably my favorite characters in the series. They manage to be clearly magical creatures that fit into this world and can talk, and yet also very clearly act like a dog and a cat, respectively. Since I am re-reading it, I love all the hints about their pasts that I didn't understand the first time through.
It was not uncommon for librarians to lay down their lives for the benefit of the Clayr as a whole, either in dangerous research, simple overwork, or action against previously unknown dangers discovered in the Library's collection.
Lirael and the library of the Clayr is one of the most fun ideas I've ever seen. The idea of 'librarian' being one of the more dangerous jobs in a community--and quite rightly!--tickles my fancy to no small degree. I resent her leaving the library at least as much as she does. I also feel for her throughout quite a bit; having the Clayr blindfold her to lead her to and from the Observatory was heartbreaking.
I found Sam's story to be a bit more questionable. His hopeless naivete throughout is a little harder to deal with on a re-read than it was the first time through (or perhaps it is the fact that I am no longer an angsty teen myself), and he doesn't have as clear an ending arc as Lirael does. Much of my sympathy for him is due to the fact that were I forced into a position where I was supposed to spend my life waltzing through Death, I would also probably act like a huge, whiny, terrified baby.
The arc of this particular book is very much a personal one for Sam and Lirael, which is part of why it feels out of place. There is no epic evil fought and defeated, no war won, no happy ending: it is about the two of them finding out who they are, both personally and in the grand scheme of things.
Was quite enjoyable, I even liked it more than the previous one! Though it is a sequel, it takes place many years later and the protagonists of Sabriel are more background characters. This book ends in the middle of a story, though, to be continued in the sequel.
It takes a lot to make me dislike a female lead, but being a selfish, whiny, typically obnoxious teenager with few redeeming qualities and then making me sit through her moaning forever will do it!
Loved Sabriel though. It's shocking that this is so unbearable in the light of that. Or maybe that makes it MORE unbearable because I know that Nix is perfectly capable writing an extremely likeable teenage heroine.
Insanely annoying protagonist.
It takes a lot to make me dislike a female lead, but being a selfish, whiny, typically obnoxious teenager with few redeeming qualities and then making me sit through her moaning forever will do it!
Loved Sabriel though. It's shocking that this is so unbearable in the light of that. Or maybe that makes it MORE unbearable because I know that Nix is perfectly capable writing an extremely likeable teenage heroine.