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Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 4:45 am
by Morgoth
Had to do this for school so I thought that I might just as well post it here.




Immerse Yourself Into A World of Death

Genre: Fantasy

Sabriel
By Garth Nix

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While many of us have read classic fantasy stories by well-known authors such as J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, no one has composed a tale that’s similar to the extraordinary world that has been created by Australian author, Garth Nix, in his novel “Sabriel”. In his book, the first of a trilogy, Nix presents the story of a young girl who must confront her destiny in a world where both magic and technology are intertwined as a powerful evil prepares to return.

“Sabriel” takes place in two fictional neighboring countries: Ancelstierre and the Old Kingdom. Ancelstierre is a country very similar to post World War I England where Sabriel, a young girl of 18, has been going to school throughout most of her life. Her real homeland, however, is the Old Kingdom, which lies across a strange border to the north of Ancelstierre - the kind of border where it’s always a different time of the day and a different season of the year. Another difference between these two lands is that lately, dead people in the Old Kingdom refuse to stay dead.

The story starts off one night as Sabriel is waiting in her room at Wyverley College for her Father to show up as he did every year on her birthday. Sabriel’s father was no ordinary man. He was the Abhorsen, “…a necromancer, but not of the common sort, while others of the art raise the dead, I lay them to rest - or try to - and those that will not rest I bind…”. It was his duty, as many others before him, to safeguard the Old Kingdom from the threat of the dead by going into the realm of death itself with the assistance of the 7 bells of power, the tools of a necromancer, which he always carried with him. As both his daughter and the Abhorsen-in- waiting, Sabriel has learned some skills with the use magic and the bells as well as the ability to go into death.

When her Father doesn’t show up that night, Sabriel begins to worry since it was unusual for him to be late. Before she could continue to brood over the subject, she’s alerted to a noise that is heard outside the dormitory by one of the other girls. When Sabriel opens the door to see what the disturbance was, she finds “…an intensely dark…” and indistinguishable figure standing in front of her which she knows to be one of the dead. As the being approached her, Sabriel “…let herself slip over the border into Death…” and she soon found herself standing in a river that “…flowed around her legs, cold as always…”. All around her, “...the light, grey and without warmth, still stretched to an entirely flat horizon…”, and in the distance, “she could hear the roar of the First Gate”. Here Sabriel was able to see the creature for what it was - a dead, humanoid-like servant that was clutching a sack. Sabriel whistled several notes imbued with power that caused the creature to drop the sack as it brought both hands over its ears in agony. Instantly, the creature bent down to retrieve the sack but lost its footing and plunged into the river which pulled it towards the waterfall of the First Gate. As it slid away, the creature’s head broke through the surface and cried out “‘Sabriel! My messenger! Take the sack!’ The voice was Abhorsen's”.

“Sabriel” has been one of the most convincing and well developed fantasy novels that I have read. Nix does an excellent job of creating an atmosphere into which the reader can completely absorb themselves and it keeps one on the edge of their seats and wanting for more. Any fan of fiction or fantasy will find this book appealing as it deals with an eccentric world that they have never encountered before.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 5:29 pm
by Priam
So, you have to do this BR for school, and you automatically assumed we would all be interested. Great call, rly.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 6:46 pm
by Sovereign
Priam wrote:So, you have to do this BR for school, and you automatically assumed we would all be interested. Great call, rly.


Took the words from my mouth +1

Re: Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 7:26 pm
by dom
L2USE Quotes effectively and properly.

A bunch of "...text..." looks ugly and reads worse.

And, in the context of a -report-, keep to a formal rhetoric.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 7:39 pm
by ThatBluePerson
I read that book in 6th grade, but I forgot what it was about... took the AR test and made a 100 even though I read it and understood shit.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Sun Oct 26, 2008 7:48 pm
by XemnasXD
i like Garth Nix, he did The Seventh Tower series...

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 7:43 am
by Priam
dom wrote:L2USE Quotes effectively and properly.

A bunch of "...text..." looks ugly and reads worse.

And, in the context of a -report-, keep to a formal rhetoric.


Who reads on the internet/pc screen, anyways.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:21 am
by dom
Priam wrote:
dom wrote:L2USE Quotes effectively and properly.

A bunch of "...text..." looks ugly and reads worse.

And, in the context of a -report-, keep to a formal rhetoric.


Who reads on the internet/pc screen, anyways.


I'm writing a paper on sugar-cane plantations. More specifically, the impacts of the stillage and bagasse, accrued by the distilling of sugar-cane residue for bio-ethanol, on the biosphere and neighboring ecosystems. Here's a graph from my paper:

Image

Should I post it for you once i'm done baby?

I also have lots of pictures of my sugar-cane - put your lips on my sweet stalk.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:23 am
by Priam
Feel free to do so. But i'm gonna print it out. Which is the backbone of my previous comment, people don't read on the internet, quote's or no quote's. A pc screen is horrible for reading.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:25 am
by dom
Priam wrote:Feel free to do so. But i'm gonna print it out. Which is the backbone of my previous comment, people don't read on the internet, quote's or no quote's. A pc screen is horrible for reading.


That's a lie. When you have to read a couple dozen research papers at 20-100 pages each, you can't afford to print them out.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:27 am
by Priam
Depends, when i'm at work i should be able to. Anyways, we weren't very specific on page numbers were we. We're talking book report here. Usually 3-5 pages.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:29 am
by dom
Priam wrote:Depends, when i'm at work i should be able to. Anyways, we weren't very specific on page numbers were we. We're talking book report here. Usually 3-5 pages.


Lies again!

I don't remember writing a book report past the 6th grade. It's like 1 and half pages max.

Why do you have to lie to me, it hurts so bad.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 9:31 am
by Priam
No lies!

1.5 pages? Damnit. Mine were always like 3-4 pages. Which is what my teacher thought was the bare minimum.

I like hurting you, but i'm not lying ;(

Re: Book Review

Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2008 11:47 pm
by iGod
Book reports - only thing that gets me to read a book nowadays. Cant they just put them all in pdf or something

Re: Book Review

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 7:32 am
by Priam
iGod wrote:Book reports - only thing that gets me to read a book nowadays. Cant they just put them all in pdf or something


That won't get you to read them either :)

Re: Book Review

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 10:05 am
by takolin
That's a book report?

Ours used to a lot longer than that.

BTW reading = fun.

Re: Book Review

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2008 10:21 am
by iGod
takolin wrote:That's a book report?

Ours used to a lot longer than that.

BTW reading = fun.


Not when its about Marcel Prousts work, and not when you need to make a 20 page seminar about it. xD