

Carregando... Spiritwalk (Tor Fantasy) (original: 1992; edição: 1995)de Charles De Lint
Detalhes da ObraSpiritwalk de Charles de Lint (1992)
![]() Best Urban Fantasy (45) Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Following up on the events that unfolded in Moonheart de Lint returns to Tamson House, allbeit with a slightly new cast of characters. We have some old staples in the form of Blue (a reformed biker) and Sara (the current owner of the house), but this new story revolves much more about Emma and Esmerelda, who are new players. Like the chaos that Taliesin and Kieran wrought in the previous story, these new characters with connections to the supernatural throw the denizens of Tamson House (and the house itself) into a frenzy of action - many seem to enjoy the protections and sense of creative calm that the house inspires, but like all magic its benefits can come at a dear cost. I was quite surprised at just how much drama unfolded in these 400-off pages, as de Lint has actually combined a multitude of stories into one long narrative that culminates in major life changes for all of the characters. At times this disenfranchised method got to be a bit overwhelming, as the reader has to recall a larger casdt of characters than is normally present in de Lint's work, but I guess that's the charm of having a massive and populated stage like Tamson House. When there's that much to play withm then why not go for it! By the finale we see most of the characters settle, or begin new journies, so de Lint has left readers in a good place all while leaving many of the characters open to more writing in the future. ( ![]() As I have said before, I love Charles de Lint, but this is a relatively early work, a sequel to "Moonheart", but not directly written as such, being made up of pieces written for various books and magazines, only related through the house which is at the centre of both books. Unsurprisingly therefore it is not wholly coherent, but the main story is still fairly typical de Lint, albeit at the darker .end of his spectrum of work. I like Charles de Lint`s writing, usually, and I like Tamson House a great deal, but this was such a hard book to get into. Every time I started to get a little bit involved in a storyline, the author would skip to a new one, and when he suddenly introduced two new characters in a scene with nobody we'd met before, and left one of the two nameless for several pages to conceal the fact that we'd heard of her in a previous storyline, and then it turned out that we had skipped months into the future on the same storyline and a whole lot of stuff had happened that we had to hear about secondhand... I decided it wasn't worth the trouble. *note to self. (copy from Al). Sequel to Moonheart; not quite as good, I don't think, but a great book nonetheless. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
At the heart of Tamson House is the Wood. And in that Wood is the Mystery Tamson House, in modern, urban Ottawa, is a rambling, eccentric curiosity of a house--and a place of hidden Power. Built at a point where the leylines meet, upon land that was once a sacred site, it is the gateway to a spirit world where Celtic and Native American magicks mingle and leak into our own. In the overgrown garden of Tamson House, a Coyote Man waits, green children walk, and music rises to greet the moon. From the garden, a vast and primal wood is just one spirit-step away... and in that wood is something that threatens the very existence of Tamson House, and all who dwell within. Charles de Lint returns to the spirit-world of his bestsellingMoonheartin a splendid work of urban fantasy, bringing myth, music, and magic into our modern world. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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