Free Download , by Guy Gavriel Kay
Free Download , by Guy Gavriel Kay
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, by Guy Gavriel Kay
Free Download , by Guy Gavriel Kay
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Product details
File Size: 794 KB
Print Length: 436 pages
Publisher: Ace; Reprint edition (February 5, 2008)
Publication Date: February 5, 2008
Language: English
ASIN: B000Q9J0RY
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#104,209 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
Ysabel is rather different from Guy Gavriel Kay's other novels - much more focused on the supernatural premise than his many historical fantasies, but less based in the fantasy world than Fionavar. For me it worked well. As usual, it is Kay's ability to portray, and use, his characters' human choices that creates the real magic. A photography session in Provence gets pulled into an ancient, ever-renewing contest over a woman's choice between two men. The contest somehow influences the fate of cultures, but what matters to us is the fate of the youth who gets involved, with perilous consequences, and the dynamics of his family facing a cultural choice of its own.I have to confess to some impatience as the mystery unfolds, despite Kay's deft exposition, lively character interaction along the way, and generous payoffs to the tensions he is setting up. The story has a teasing feel to it until the title character appears, which I suppose is unavoidable. If not for the solid basis in the interactions between present-day characters it would have dragged, but Kay has also made use of his long experience weaving in place and history to generate dramatic tension with a somewhat thin basis. Don't worry, though - if you have any appetite for Kay's mix of fantasy with ordinary literary workings, you will feel amply rewarded by the book's second half.
Don't know where I heard about this book but it's very, very good. Action, mystery, history, folklore, civics, the south of France, etc. All characters well-developed. Beautiful descriptions. Finally stayed up all night on vacation in a cabin in the Maine woods and finished it. What a ride. Definitely recommend it.Do wish, however, the Mr. Kay's publishing company would let his books go to kindle editions for less money. I'm trying to read his "Under Heaven" but the physical book is waaaaay heavy. Like a ball and chain. Have taken it back to the library three times. But $14.99 kindle version too expensive for a retired lady. Sigh. But that's on my wish list.
Having just read Under Heaven it was hard to believe this was the same author. It read more like a teen novel, the hero is a teen, and the adults were stereotypical. The underlying story pushed the narrative along quickly but there was less descriptive scene setting than in Under Heaven and certain explanatory paragraphs were awkward and needed editing. Nonetheless a good read.
The GGK style is still there, the interesting historical appeal as well, and the Fionavar easter eggs are fun...but very limited plot, and uninteresting characters. The "pop culture" references are extremely off-putting, as his the very very poor characterization of 15 year olds....
I make no apologies ... I am a fan of Guy Gavriel Kay. He writes thoughtful and complete plots with compelling characters, plausible plot lines and fulfilling prose. This guy is good.Ysabel is touted as a Young Adult story, and in that role it satisfies even a very not Young Adult. The principal character is about fifteen and put in a curious situation way over his head and experience level. There are enough twists and off camber edges to this story to make it a good (if fast) read for any level of fans. It is also a good story to get younger readers tantalized with a suspension of disbelief in a historical and romantic setting. Fun read ... great teaser for someone to look up some of his more involved stories.
I read a lot of fantasy and it's rare to find a novel set in modern times that is, simply, *different* from everything out there. This is one of those. Kay avoids drowning the reader in explanation in a way I find very satisfying.
Dammit, I miss them... I finished Ysabel a few days ago now. The overall feeling's an ache, like when you wake from a dream where you liked people in it so much you ache as you wake, knowing you'll never meet them again except in memories.You'll hopefully read some other reviews here to get an idea of plot, but I'll tell you it's not the plot that should grab you. It's wanting the heart and the characters portrayed well. And oh they are, here. They'll either win you over or you're a snob. Some reviewers ought to get off their high seat (or toilet). Stop comparing to whatever their expectations are and just read a book for what the author wants to give you... then ask yourself some deep questions. No, it's not a book intended to grab just "adults," good grief, it's a YA, about transitions into responsibility and self-knowledge, and an appreciation for what was and is, and what must end and yet never will, in the most profound ways. It's about what it takes to get what you love, and to protect it. It's about desire and pride, and about those rare people who know there's something more... It's not about creating a substitute world, it's asking us to wake up and smell Provence.Ask yourself, when reading these reviews -- am I the kind of person who over-analyzes things? How do *you* approach a new book, a new author? If you're like me and willing to take chances to meet great characters, to put yourself in their shoes (and in the author's footprints), to get into stories that transcend place and time, then you'll really like what Ysabel has to offer you. (Now, and in your memories, and if you ever get to Provence...)You might even learn a thing or two... Like, how you could say civilization is hinged upon the outcome of one battle hardly remembered today... Like, how we make myths is maybe more important than the stories they seem to tell... Like, how we literally walk all over the past but pretend its highest value is as entertainment, how we make it so hard to pay attention to the relative significance of things. I'd go back to Provence just to take Ysabel with me to read again. (Penguin books has a great website of Provence/Ysabel photos, etc., by the way.)So, no, it's not like his other novels. Why should it be? GGK seems to be interested in more than repeating himself -- unlike many readers, evidently, whose taste shows they like books to be similar to the state of pop culture music (pop cereal) these days.It's a compelling read. One of those books where there's just enough open space left in it -- enough mystery -- to sink yourself into. There's magic in his story-telling. And when he writes of it, it's not the magic of childish wish-fulfilment you might be used to. It's the mysteries, the magic that surrounds us but that we've given other names to, to disguise our sophistication from (god forbid) "superstition."I really miss those characters, all of them, all of them... They're good people, and I feel privileged to Mr. Kay for introducing me to them. Rarely have I enjoyed being with an author's creations as much as in reading Ysabel. (Not since Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy -- but there's no comparison intended.)
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