From the Bookshelf of Beyond Reality…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

9/10
Guy Gavriel Kay is one of my favorite authors and I ended up loving this book. It was poignant and Kay's favorite themes of love, sacrifice, and loss resonate in this contemporary fantasy.
I will say that it took me awhile to get into this book; I think I was a little put off by the main protagonist, Ned, who is a teenager. But the supporting cast is superb and both Ned and Kate felt like real teens, even in the unusual circumstances in which they found themselves.
Not all questions are answer ...more
Guy Gavriel Kay is one of my favorite authors and I ended up loving this book. It was poignant and Kay's favorite themes of love, sacrifice, and loss resonate in this contemporary fantasy.
I will say that it took me awhile to get into this book; I think I was a little put off by the main protagonist, Ned, who is a teenager. But the supporting cast is superb and both Ned and Kate felt like real teens, even in the unusual circumstances in which they found themselves.
Not all questions are answer ...more

I read and loved the Fionavar books when they came out. Part of that was a matter of timing - I read them just as I was really becoming a dedicated fantasy reader and I would have been in my mid to late teens at the time. These were the first "out of our world" type books I'd read that had adult protagonists - before that I'd been reading books about teenagers having adventures - and to meet these university students (or they may even had been graduates, I don't 100% remember now) was like enter
...more

I was really disappointed by this book as I'm quite a fan of Gavriel Kay and usually find his books really interesting. This book however is aimed at a young adult audience, and unfortunately he seems to think that he needs to dumb everything down and over emphasize or repeatedly restate the obvious. I found myself constantly eye-rolling at his over-use of melodramatic declarations. He also seemed to want to play into every 15 year-old boy's fantasy of having both an older woman and a teenage gi
...more

Ysabel, oh Ysabel. One thing, I think this novel is sexy. Despite it is marketed as YA novel, I don't think that it is a YA novel. It is cute, but intelligent at the same time, fresh but also deep, which are the things usually missed in YA novels.
The story is beautifully opened by the landscape of Provence, France, quite photographically, actually. Anyway, the story is told from the point of view of a son of a photographer. And then slowly but surely, the story and mystery creeps in, in a very s ...more
The story is beautifully opened by the landscape of Provence, France, quite photographically, actually. Anyway, the story is told from the point of view of a son of a photographer. And then slowly but surely, the story and mystery creeps in, in a very s ...more

Two chance-met modern teenagers involve themselves in a struggle that has continued for millennia. The beginning is too larded with “with-it” details (in the first few pages, Ned contemplates his iPod, Coldplay, and skate-boarding) that will quickly seem more dated than hip. The story kicks in soon after, though, when Ned and Kate encounter a dangerous looking stranger in the catacombs of Provence. Sheer curiosity gets them sucked into a battle between the Celts and the Romans, a battle that eve
...more

What did I think? It was OK. Probably would have made a better novelette than a novel. Parts of the novel seemed stretched and padded in order to get the pagecount up.

Nov 08, 2007
Chessa
marked it as to-read

Mar 02, 2009
Shellie (Layers of Thought)
marked it as to-read


Jul 24, 2010
Snail in Danger (Sid) Nicolaides
marked it as decided-not-to-read
Shelves:
fantasy-fiction


Jul 09, 2012
Jensownzoo
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
owned-but-unread,
thriftstore

Oct 21, 2013
STEPHANIE STANTON
marked it as to-read


Dec 10, 2017
Carrie
marked it as to-read