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I was worried I wouldn't like this one since so many characters were missing (but not the beloved Gurgi) however this has been my favorite book I. The series thus far. I loved the journey Taran took to find himself and the many life lessons he learned, a nice uplifting sweet story.
adventurous
lighthearted
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Plot
adventurous
emotional
reflective
medium-paced
I truly loved these books in middle school. They were my introduction to fantasy, predating Potter, Rings, and even Narnia. Here your ten-year-old reader will find less whiny angst than in the exploits of the Boy Wizard, far fewer subtly-allegorized religious tropes than in C. S. Lewis, and none of the insipid libertarian cynicism that is offered by the likes of The Hunger Games and Divergent.
The best in the series yet. Here Lloyd Alexander far surpasses what might be expected from the relatively simple beginning.
adventurous
emotional
hopeful
reflective
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
adventurous
emotional
funny
hopeful
reflective
medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
Summary: A coming-of-age novel set in a fantasy world.
I do not know when I first picked up the Chronicles of Prydain series. I do not remember why I picked it up or who may have recommended it. It was not my first fantasy series, I would have read the Chronicles of Narnia before this. But it was very early in my reading career, probably around the 4th or 5th grade. I have revisited the series many times, probably reading each book in the series six to ten times over the past forty years or so. One of the advantages of chronicling nearly all of my reading is that I can look back and see what I thought and when it was that I read the book. It has been 12 years. And I did not look at the previous post until drafting this, and I am not sure I can do better. So I am going to link to my post 12 years ago and say "Ditto."
Yesterday, one of my favorite Twitter people had a thread that was really a subtweet. I won't get to the background, but the main point of her thread is that many people, especially white male theologians, like to argue about abstractions. But it is in the particulars that those discussions matter. One of the reasons that I love Taran Wander is that it is a book about gaining wisdom, not theory. Taran expresses the wisdom he gains in particular examples of his life and situation. I responded to the thread, maybe because I had recently read this book, asserting that Christianity is a wisdom tradition more than a tradition of principles and abstractions. To be a follower of Christ is to take what we have internalized about Christ and work out what that means to our situation daily.
As proof of the book's point about wisdom, here is the only line I have highlighted in my kindle edition, "I’d rather see a wise pig-keeper on my throne than a blood prince who’s a fool!”
I am definitely over-promoting the series, but I do think that the series traces Taran being mentored or acting as an apprentice to Dalton and Coll, and the other characters of the book so that he could serve those around him as a mature human. This is what I want for young adult and middle-grade books more than anything else.
_____________
Short review (2011) This is my favorite book of the series. While the whole series is about growing up, this is the book that is really about moving from teen to adult. Taran learns joy in work and about this own weaknesses. I wish more YA books talked about the fact that we are just not good at everything. Taran, like must YA protaganists, can get a bit whiney at times, but he is actually better in this book that the previous ones.
My full review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/taran-wanderer/
I do not know when I first picked up the Chronicles of Prydain series. I do not remember why I picked it up or who may have recommended it. It was not my first fantasy series, I would have read the Chronicles of Narnia before this. But it was very early in my reading career, probably around the 4th or 5th grade. I have revisited the series many times, probably reading each book in the series six to ten times over the past forty years or so. One of the advantages of chronicling nearly all of my reading is that I can look back and see what I thought and when it was that I read the book. It has been 12 years. And I did not look at the previous post until drafting this, and I am not sure I can do better. So I am going to link to my post 12 years ago and say "Ditto."
Yesterday, one of my favorite Twitter people had a thread that was really a subtweet. I won't get to the background, but the main point of her thread is that many people, especially white male theologians, like to argue about abstractions. But it is in the particulars that those discussions matter. One of the reasons that I love Taran Wander is that it is a book about gaining wisdom, not theory. Taran expresses the wisdom he gains in particular examples of his life and situation. I responded to the thread, maybe because I had recently read this book, asserting that Christianity is a wisdom tradition more than a tradition of principles and abstractions. To be a follower of Christ is to take what we have internalized about Christ and work out what that means to our situation daily.
As proof of the book's point about wisdom, here is the only line I have highlighted in my kindle edition, "I’d rather see a wise pig-keeper on my throne than a blood prince who’s a fool!”
I am definitely over-promoting the series, but I do think that the series traces Taran being mentored or acting as an apprentice to Dalton and Coll, and the other characters of the book so that he could serve those around him as a mature human. This is what I want for young adult and middle-grade books more than anything else.
_____________
Short review (2011) This is my favorite book of the series. While the whole series is about growing up, this is the book that is really about moving from teen to adult. Taran learns joy in work and about this own weaknesses. I wish more YA books talked about the fact that we are just not good at everything. Taran, like must YA protaganists, can get a bit whiney at times, but he is actually better in this book that the previous ones.
My full review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/taran-wanderer/
My favorite of the series so far (But I haven’t gotten to 5 yet)