Immagine dell'autore.

Cliff McNish

Autore di Breathe: A Ghost Story

21 opere 1,749 membri 68 recensioni 2 preferito

Sull'Autore

Comprende i nomi: Cliff McNish, Cliff MacNish

Fonte dell'immagine: Photo courtesy of author.

Serie

Opere di Cliff McNish

Breathe: A Ghost Story (2006) 399 copie
The Doomspell (2000) 268 copie
The Scent of Magic (2001) — Autore — 188 copie
The Silver Child (2003) 164 copie
Angel (2007) 163 copie
The Wizard's Promise (2002) 156 copie
Silver City (2004) 90 copie
Savannah Grey (2010) 83 copie
The Doomspell Trilogy (2004) 82 copie
Hunting Ground (2011) 71 copie
Silver World (2005) 63 copie
Going Home (2014) 7 copie
L'Alliance magique (2003) 3 copie
My friend twigs (2015) 2 copie
The Periphery (2021) 2 copie
Dommedagsmagi (2009) 1 copia
Promessa Do Mago, A (2007) 1 copia
Espectros (2010) 1 copia
Sortilegio, O (2005) 1 copia
Snowdrops 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Discussioni

YA book, kids save earth, kids develop powers in Name that Book (Mag 2019)

Recensioni

i would of liked just more chater after the fight.
 
Segnalato
Ann3alaya | 14 altre recensioni | Jan 7, 2024 |
The Doomspell series was a collection of books I was hoping to dive into to and really enjoy as it sounded like such a promising change to the current books on the market at the moment.

Its opening chapter was incredibly gripping, and at first made for a promising story about an evil witch dominating a world and kidnapping children in hope of finding extra strength.

However, I found myself thinking it was just a remake of the snow queen, which I don't overly like anyway. As the story progresses it loses my interest. I put the book down and left it for ages without a second thought hence why it took me so long to read.
The characters were likable but if any of them died in the story I would just shrug it off as an 'Oh well sh** happens' moment.

Overall this book let me down, its opening was the most gripping point and I think i'll politely pass on the second.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Enchanten | 7 altre recensioni | Mar 12, 2023 |
This review covers the entire trilogy:

I like to read children’s books, especially ones that are fantasy based. As a friend of mine put it once, “I have a thing for Portal fantasy”. And this is exactly that!

With a dash of other-world-fantasy too.

The Doomspell Trilogy has very clear influences coming from Tolkien and C S Lewis, with elements such as witches who love winter, animals that can talk, and children’s innocence being very prominent in the stories. The trilogy follows Rachel and Eric, siblings who are among the first of a new race of humans who can control magic. The main villains of the series are witches – beings coming from another planet who can control magic, beings who can change their shape and fly and control the elements and certain animals. Each book in the trilogy takes on a different witch, or race of witches, at a time. From a singular witch, to an entire planet of them, to the witches’ ex-slaves who have now risen up, Rachel and Eric are subject to battle after battle against forces that two pre-teens really shouldn’t be able to battle. But they do.

What I really want to discuss about this series, however, isn’t the plot or the characters, but its themes, which are very prevalent once you look a little deeper into the novels.

Theme One: Innocence

In this universe, adults cannot use magic, but anybody under a certain age (let’s assume 16, for the sake of argument) can. By the third book, magic is a widespread phenomenon across the world, with every single child and young teenager being able to use magic. Adults are left behind, sometimes terrorized in certain parts of the world. Children have free reign, flying everywhere, stealing whatever they want, and doing whatever they please. The world has changed and the kids are in control. But once they start to become adults, it’s over for them, and they lose their magic. Why? What could possibly lead to this?

If you read the header above, then you definitely can see that I think it’s because of innocence. Now whether this be innocence in the term of sex, or maybe cynicism, or maybe even just people starting to become more aware of the world around them. The fact is that children start to lose their powers once they become ‘young adults’, and suddenly they’re no longer allowed into this world that they used to inhabit and enjoy. I think that McNish here is trying to show how magical innocence is, with the magic that they use being pure and wonderful. While there are magical users who are evil (see: witches), their magic is significantly rougher and more dangerous; it is a different brand of magic. The wizards, who control magic that is much stronger and brighter than the children do, can be seen as adults who have retained their innocence and faith in the world, and never became jaded; they are the best magic users because they never let themselves become hardened by the world.

Theme Two: Diversity and Tolerance

There are a group of children within the series who cannot use magic. They have abnormally large ears, do not speak much, and have to be carried around by a faithful magic user at all times if they want to go anywhere. These children can be seen as a reference, name and all, to children on the autism spectrum, who are seen as not being as 100% capable as their peers (although this is definitely not a hard truth). There is also an element of preaching tolerance in the trilogy.

All in all, I would definitely recommend this book to anybody who wants to read something not-so-well-known and good. It does have it’s brilliant moments, and it also does fit in with what people who look for fantasy like. It’s a light, summer read that you can swallow in a week, and it’s also one of the only books I know of where magic is treated in a different way than in other literary universes, which can be a breath of fresh air!

Final rating: 3/5. It is for children after all, so the writing style isn’t the best. But it is a good read for the summer!
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
viiemzee | 7 altre recensioni | Feb 20, 2023 |

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Autori correlati

Geoff Taylor Cover artist, Illustrator
Wiebe Buddingh' Translator
Erwin van Wanrooy Cover designer

Statistiche

Opere
21
Utenti
1,749
Popolarità
#14,706
Voto
½ 3.5
Recensioni
68
ISBN
135
Lingue
9
Preferito da
2

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