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Lädt ... Dragon of the lost sea (Original 1987; 1982. Auflage)von Laurence Yep
Werk-InformationenDragon of the Lost Sea von Laurence Yep (1987)
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Adventure I first read this book decades ago as a kid- and it really fired my imagination at the time. Now on a re-read images instantly sprang up in my head as I came across familiar scenes again- human features from ancient statues sticking out through trees grown over an abandoned city, the hero and heroine trudging across a vast salt flat bickering and reconciling at turns, the final tense scene when it seems all hope is lost but the younger, smaller of the two pulls a marvelously clever trick to attain their goal. The unlikely pair are Shimmer- a haughty dragon princess who’s been living in exile- and Thorn, an orphan boy who wants to join her quest. She reluctantly accepts his help, thinking that his smaller size, physical weakness and total lack of magical ability (the dragon can shapeshift, among other things) make him more of a liability than an asset, but the boy soon proves he can be useful and loyal. Shimmer may be a royal dragon, but she’s actually quite young as far as dragons go in this story world (where they live for centuries) and her personality is grating- she’s smug and conceited for starters. She has a lot to learn from Thorn about just being a good friend. Well- the main storyline is an adventure as they journey to find a witch named Civet that basically stole the inland sea where Shimmer’s people used to live, and locked all the water up in a magic pebble. Along the way they meet other allies and enemies- quite a few of them also magical- there’s a wizard and a trickster Monkey. I felt like I ought to recognize the Monkey character from somewhere- but I couldn’t quite place him. Lots of the story has roots in Chinese mythology which I know very little of. I really liked- both as a child and now- that the dragons in this world are aquatic creatures- they don’t breathe fire and their home is in the sea. It’s a very different take on dragons and the description of how Shimmer can move effortlessly through water, how she misses certain aspects of the sea that is no longer there- were really vivid to me. from the Dogear Diary Shimmer, an exiled Dragon Princess, reluctantly allies with a human boy named Thorn to restore her family's homeland, and hopefully, eventually, reconcile with her people. The latter plotline isn't resolved in this book -- there are sequels! -- but Shimmer makes substantial progress toward her first objective. I should add: substantial progress toward what is possible. There's a strong element in here that the past is only a memory and a history: it can never be restored. Time passes, things change, change radiates outward, and while the single big root changes might be reversed, all the myriad attendant little changes cannot be. I'm expecting that this theme is further developed in later books. The other theme I found interesting is that of Shimmer and Thorn's (very unequal) partnership. I was expecting a resolution akin to Aesop's "The Lion and the Mouse" (even small people are capable of big service), but Shimmer does not judge Thorn's value by his utility: she judges him by his loyalty. Thorn does eventually become useful -- no spoiler there -- but Shimmer grudgingly commits to him long before that, solely on the basis of his loyalty and heart with respect to her. (In fact, one senses that Shimmer would prefer Thorn to not be useful, since that places an obligation of gratitude upon her.) While I was reading the book, it didn't make a big impression on me -- my fault, in part, for reading it during the I'm-so-tired escapist time slots. But since then it's grown on me a lot, and I'll be checking out the sequels. Zeige 4 von 4 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Shimmer, a renegade dragon princess, tries to redeem herself by capturing a witch with the help of a human boy. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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