by Tamora Pierce
|
| List Price: | $6.99 |
| Amazon Price: | $6.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. |
| Average Rating: |  |
| Lowest New Price: | $2.25 |
| Availablitiy: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
|
 |
|
Product Description BOOK THREE IN THE CIRCLE OF MAGIC QUARTET Outcast Trader Daja, along with her fellow mages-in-training, journeys from Winding Circle to the Gold Ridge Mountains, where drought threatens widespread famine. There, Daja creates an astonishing object: a living metal vine. A caravan of Traders covets the vine, and Daja's dealings with her former people reawaken a longing for familiar ways. Daja must choose -- should she return to the Traders, or remain with the Winding Circle folk who have become her family?
Customers who bought this item also bought
Average Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
"It's Quite a Story. And It Grows Everyday...", 2008-03-14 This is the third book in Tamora Pierce's "Circle of Magic" series, which has also been published as The Fire In The Forging. The quartet of books centre around the trials and tribulations of four teenage mages, separated for a variety of reasons from their families and brought to live together at Winding Circle in order to control their magic and hone their crafts. With each one roughly collaborating with an element (obviously fire, in this case), the four students form a strong bond together when they find that their unique magics can be combined and unleashed in unexpected ways. It is this extraordinary friendship that emerges between the four impossibly different young people that forms the backbone and major theme of the series.
Sandry, Briar, Tris and Daja (who by now are referring to each other as foster-siblings) have traveled with their teachers to the Gold Ridge Mountains, accompanying Sandry's uncle Duke Vedris in order to lend aid to the drought-ridden community. As the title suggests, this volume is concerned with Daja (one of the few dark-skinned protagonists to be found in fantasy-fiction - the only other that comes to mind are the characters of Ursula le Guin's Earthsea Quartet, the (Roc)) and her unenviable position as an outcast from her nomadic and tribe-like people. Before coming to live at Winding Circle, Daja was a member of the Trader people; a community-based but extremely superstitious race of people who shunned Daja as unlucky after her ship sank at sea, leaving her the sole survivor. Since then, Daja has found a new home for herself among her friends and their teachers, but she cannot help but feel a longing for her own people and customs.
This longing is sharpened once Daja accidentally makes a beautiful living tree out of iron, one which is soon coveted by visiting Traders. Feeling homesick for her people, and yet disgusted by their treatment of her, Daja is torn as to how to deal with their attempts to barter with her for the precious tree. Pierce is at her best in presenting Daja's inner conflict - her desire to return to her own people, her frustration at her friends for not understanding her culture, and her resentment at the way she's being treated by the Traders. Unfortunately, I felt that the character of Polyam (the gruff Trader who is sent to deal with Daja) goes through a rather abrupt change in terms of her treatment of Daja, but Pierce is on stronger ground when it comes to the relationships between the four students and their teachers.
It is the strongest portrayal of a non-related "family" that you'll find outside of a Joss Whedon show, and all eight characters (four students, four teachers) bounce off each other so beautifully that you can only wish you were a part of it. Although each student has a particular bond with their own teacher (Daja and Frostpine are given especial attention here), there is plenty of warmth and affection between all the members of this unusual family to make you smile. Of particular note is the way in which the teenagers know how to deal with one another: whether it's defending Daja against her own people whilst simultaneously trying to adapt to her beliefs, or goading Daja with insults in order to bring her back to the land of the living. Prepare for a lot of warm-fuzzies when reading this, or any of the other "Circle of Magic" series.
But Daja's internal crisis is not the only conflict at work throughout the book, as the main problem revolves around the danger of bush fires that are threatening the community. Although a somewhat pompous mage believes that he has it all under control, the Winding Circle adults (particularly Rosethorn) are not at all convinced that nature can be held back by a single individual. Pierce has an interesting grasp of the workings of magic in this series, comparing the studies and lessons of a magical university with what is known as "the Living Cycle" which relies on the rhythms of nature in order to regulate a person's control of magical forces. In saying that though, many of the "outer body experiences" and instances in which the teenagers' magics are intertwined are described somewhat vaguely and are difficult to grasp - I'm never really sure how Pierce wants us to imagine magic within this world: as energy or spiritualism or something completely different. But also worthy of note is Pierce's emphasis on discipline when it comes to the students' grasp of magic, and the importance of working within the rules of etiquette: when the four students are caught eavesdropping they are severely reprimanded and punished. I couldn't help but compare it favourably to the Harry Potter trio, who get away with endless rule-breaking when it comes to using their magic for unorthodox means.
The "Circle of Magic" books aren't quite as action-packed as Pierce's previous quartets, The Song of the Lioness Quartet: Alanna: The First Adventure / In the Hand of the Goddess / The Woman Who Rides Like a Man / Lioness Rampant and Set of The Immortals by Tamora Pierce (The Immortals), concentrating instead on the themes of hard work and friendship. If you're in the mood for a more easy-going and character-driven book, then this series is perfect.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
The four travel to the Gold Ridged Mountains, 2007-04-02 Daja and the other mages in training; Briar, Sandry and Tris travel to the Gold Ridged Mountains with their teachers. In this place drought is starting a famine.
Before Daja knows it she's created something new and extrordinary; it's a living, metal vine which grows gold and silver pedals. In the town Daja runs into a woman who is a trader, the type of person Daja used to be. She wants Daja's vine but Daja wants to be a trader again...hmmm?
This is an awesome book! Hope you read it!
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
A Strong Female Character, 2006-08-03 We got to know Daja outside of her Trader or Circle identities. She emerged as very powerful, smart and capable. This book and Tris's book were the best of this series.
66 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
About the title..., 2006-08-01 This is just a re-titled copy of Daja's Book in the Circle of Magic quartet - don't get confused by the title!
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Spectacular Book, 2005-03-05 I absoluteley adore this book along with all the other books in this series. I love this one most of all. It is great!

Price is accurate as of the date/time indicated. Prices and product availability are subject to change. Any price displayed on the Amazon website at the time of purchase will govern the sale of this product.
|
Store Categories
|