Jan Siegel
Autore di Prospero's Children
Sull'Autore
Nota di disambiguazione:
(eng) Amanda Jane Askew Hemingway also writes as Jan Siegel and Jemma Harvey.
Fonte dell'immagine: Danie Ware
Serie
Opere di Jan Siegel
Prospero lapsed 1 copia
Bacchanal 1 copia
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Siegel, Jan
- Nome legale
- Hemingway, Amanda
- Altri nomi
- Hemingway, Amanda
Harvey, Jemma
Siegel, Jan - Data di nascita
- 1955
- Sesso
- female
- Nazionalità
- Groot-Brittannië
- Luogo di nascita
- London, England, UK
- Luogo di residenza
- London, England, UK (Birth)
- Agente
- (Zeno Agency)
- Nota di disambiguazione
- Amanda Jane Askew Hemingway also writes as Jan Siegel and Jemma Harvey.
Utenti
Discussioni
Found: Unknown Title and Author in Name that Book (Febbraio 12)
Fiction. Orphans. Mermaid drowns a man. Huge city like Atlantis. Ends with time loop to beginning of book. in Name that Book (Novembre 2020)
A portal in a rock or barn?? in Name that Book (Gennaio 2016)
Recensioni
Liste
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 18
- Opere correlate
- 8
- Utenti
- 2,138
- Popolarità
- #12,036
- Voto
- 3.7
- Recensioni
- 32
- ISBN
- 82
- Lingue
- 2
- Preferito da
- 3
The beginning is simply captivating. The story begins with a mermaid who makes a bargain with a fisherman, though neither enter into the deal in good faith. The fisherman demands she pay him back for the life she took (she killed his son after her capture) and in turn the mermaid offers a key to a treasure they can never touch. This sets into motion events that encompass Fern and her family centuries later.
I didn't really warm to Fern. She's 16 going on 50 it feels like. Levelheaded, composed and seemingly devoid of the teen characteristics one expects she seems so...remote. Even as she acknowledges that her attitude or behavior is out of character for herself, those moments don't serve to warm the reader to her at all.
This is also a very languid novel. Many things happen that defy reason, but the pace of the book doesn't alter one iota. Siegel determinedly forges forward detailing the Capel children's investigations with very little determent. Their father's sinister girlfriend does creepy things at night--first investigate, ask questions, test the theory, then form a plan.
The writing is very dense though despite the languid pace. So much happens in so little time that's its easy to feel like the book is much longer than it is (barely 350pgs, which is nothing by today's fantasy standards) or that you haven't progressed very far into the book.
Mainly I became engrossed in the story because Siegel ties in the Atlantean mythology with other mythologies. The back of my edition had a glossary and a character list, offering tidbits about how this or that name related to other mythologies. Its very obvious that Siegel spent a lot of time researching and it shows in her writing. Her words shine the best when this or that character is discussing history (or as happens later, the past is brought to life in vivid detail). Siegel really immerses you in the scene.
I plan on reading the next two books (which I am given to understand Fern progresses in age as the books go on so that we end with her as a young woman). I want to see how this plays out and whether Siegel is able to keep the immersive feel going for another 600 pages or not.
… (altro)