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Brother to Dragons, Companion to Owls (1994)

von Jane Lindskold

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3371476,978 (4.19)5
The Magic That Doesn't Go Away Cutbacks have forced Sarah out of the asylum in which she was raised--and into a strange new place where the Head Wolf rules the beautiful and the doomed. But Sarah can never truly assimilate, for she possesses wild talents. Walls tell her their secrets. Safes tell her their combinations. And a favorite toy dragon whispers dire warnings about those who would exploit her for their own malevolent purposes. There's no place Sarah can hide, from her pursuers or from her past...… (mehr)
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This was absolutely lovely. The premise is somewhat whimsical, with a heroine who can hear objects speak, but who can only speak in quotes herself. It starts out simple enough, with getting to know her, and when she is adopted by the free people (a pack of street people with a society based on the jungle book), getting to know them and their ways. Before long, the story gets more involved, with finding out who is after Sarah and why, and so do the heists the pack pulls. This was the only thing that jarred me a bit sometimes: at first I had the impression that the street people were young, no older than teenagers. I must have picked up the wrong clues, though, because later it seems that they must be adults at least. The skills and technology that they have are certainly advanced. I really do feel that they evolved throughout the book, but perhaps the situation around Sarah helped speed along this development.
Anyway, I could live with the small incongruities easily enough, and I loved the concept of this book, the talking to objects. Sarah is a lovely heroine, in some ways very innocent and sweet, but ultimately not afraid to stand up for herself. And she has friends. She makes friends, which is one of her strengths. The Pack is lovely, and it shows a loyalty that is very attractive, even if they can be harsh as well. I always love it when my books show loyalty and teamwork in its protagonists.

This book was really lovely, and I wonder if it would not do very well if it were released again, riding on the current dystopian YA wave, perhaps with a new cover... ( )
1 abstimmen zjakkelien | Oct 19, 2014 |
The first half of this book is kind of genius, then it falls apart into a roiling mass of cliche, as if Lindskold got bored with the story she was telling and just rushed to get the whole thing over with. It's a shame, because the premise is smart--dystopian future, first person narrator who can only speak out loud in found text but can speak to/hear inanimate objects. I'm actually mad about the lost opportunity of this book. ( )
1 abstimmen anderlawlor | Apr 9, 2013 |
I had pretty much no expectations after [b:Thirteen Orphans|3356979|Thirteen Orphans (Breaking the Wall, #1)|Jane Lindskold|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1312058010s/3356979.jpg|3396128], and this met them. Ugh. Also, reading this 1st person supposedly crazy narrator made me appreciate [b:Marcelo in the Real World|3700085|Marcelo in the Real World|Francisco X. Stork|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1328838330s/3700085.jpg|3743599] all the more, even with its imperfection. Oh well.
  GinnyTea | Mar 31, 2013 |
In her asylum, Sarah is different than the rest. She only speaks in memorized verse--especially Shakespeare and Blake--and always has her vinyl two-headed dragon close by. However, she's not really autistic. When budget cuts force her onto the streets, she falls into a street gang that guards her with fierce protectiveness. Sarah soon realizes something strange: she can hear the voices of more objects than her dragons. Walls speak their security codes, and paintings tell their history. And when a doctor from the asylum that raised her begins a frantic search for Sarah, she'll need all the wiles of her street friends and her own gifts if she'll make it out alive.

I love the premise here. Sarah is an amazing character, and first person narration works perfectly here because she can think like other people, but she doesn't speak or listen like others. The beginning of the book is filled with vibrant characters from the street; on some levels those interactions worked, though some sexual elements felt forced and didn't fit with the rest of the book. Her friend Abalone shines. In the latter half, that feeling isn't there. Sarah is on the run and the cast is limited, and some of the best characters from the beginning fall into stereotypes. It makes the book feel unbalanced. One of the big plot twists at the end was easy to see coming, too. It's not a bad read--it's good for a study of technique alone--but I don't feel it's worth keeping. ( )
2 abstimmen ladycato | Nov 13, 2010 |
What this reminded me of, more than anything, was 'Dark Angel', although it actually precedes it (no one ever accused 'Dark Angel' of any degree of originality): waifish young woman living in an asylum is chucked out onto the streets, finds refuge with a street gang that models itself on 'The Jungle Book' (er, as you would), gradually, with help from her friends, uncovers the Dark Secret of her, as it turns out, bioengineered past. Ever-so-slightly bizarre. ( )
  phoebesmum | Aug 31, 2009 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Jane LindskoldHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Arrasmith, PatrickUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Morrill, RowenaUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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The Magic That Doesn't Go Away Cutbacks have forced Sarah out of the asylum in which she was raised--and into a strange new place where the Head Wolf rules the beautiful and the doomed. But Sarah can never truly assimilate, for she possesses wild talents. Walls tell her their secrets. Safes tell her their combinations. And a favorite toy dragon whispers dire warnings about those who would exploit her for their own malevolent purposes. There's no place Sarah can hide, from her pursuers or from her past...

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