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K**E
Intriguing start, but goes downhill.
I wanted to love this book - Ravens and Riddles! Marvellous! I bought it having read and enjoyed p.1 online, and started with high hopes. Despite an iffy premise (see below), which I managed to lay aside, I found the first few chapters compelling. Here, we alternate between the story of Paladin the baby raven, who will turn out to be the hero Gabriel’s Amicus (aka familar), and main character Gabriel. Over all, Paladin was my favorite character: I cared about him and his survival.But as Gabriel’s story took over, Paladin got lost behind other characters who were far less interesting or endearing, with whom I felt little connection besides quirky Abby (whose quirks however are mostly characterized by her wearing ill-matching clothes, rather than having greater significance). From there, it went downhill. The parallels with certain Potter tricks became a little too obvious; for me, in two main respects: 1. a writing desk that walks and talks, and shows moving pictures wherein Gabriel can see the past (sound familiar?); and 2. Gabriel’s clutch of plucky friends (though he has one more gal pal than HP). But where Rowling manages the interplay between her characters so brilliantly, and all have depth and development, none of these, including the hero, really change from start to finish. One character who does change is minor player Aunt Trudy, who starts out being the mean cow from hell, but at the end, out of the blue, is inexplicably jollying around the kitchen.Back to that initial premise, which explains how the evil valravens came into existence. (It’s on p. 3, so hardly a spoiler). It goes something like this: Ravens have always been paired with beloved humans, and one day, one faithful raven loses his “master” in battle. In his sorrow, this raven is somehow tempted by a mysterious phantom-like bird to attain immortality by eating his master’s flesh, thereby breaking the raven/man bond and - ta-da - valravens are born. There’s no explanation as to what’s in it for evil phantom bird to have valravens exist, but far more pertinent, why, when the raven was mourning his master, would he at that moment crave immortality? “I’m so heartbroken, I want to live forever”….? So these were 2 major motivations that could have been interesting and added depth, but were totally missing.Over all: story line okay, and probably works for middle grade readers, as might the riddle aspect (which I still love the idea of). But for me, the more I read, the harder it became to go back to it. The writing, having started out well, deteriorated, and too much shifting POV took my focus. Had the characters compelled, I could have overlooked the writing more; had the writing compelled, I could have overlooked the lack of characterization more. But as well as a good story line, I want insight into, and from, the characters and their motivations (yes, even in middle grade!) and this just didn’t deliver.3 stars because of the bits I did like (raven lore, Paladin), and to give benefit of my adult doubt, because the book is probably better for kids than for me.
B**R
Kids Love This Book
This book seems to really speak to kids, especially boys. This is typical of the notes I've seen: "[My son] read the book and really enjoyed it. It's rare that he ever has anything positive to say about a book so it must be really good." So, to the adult reviewers here who acknowledge that the book wasn't really targeted for their age group but wanted to review it anyway, let me just suggest this: give it to a kid between the ages of 7 and 12 and see what he or she says. My guess is that he or she will love it.(Disclosure: I am a biased but honest reviewer -- I've seen the dozens of notes from kids and they're amazing.)
N**Y
Very good book!
My 9 year old grandson got the book for xmas and he finished pretty quick and said he loved it!
E**E
Not Worth It
A few moments of imagination and a nice message about the power of believing in others can't save this predictable, contrived storyline. Characters' choices are almost always serve as set-up for future dilemnas rather than authentic choices that grow from character development. The little character development that there is, seems only to serve the restrictions of the predictable plot. Motivation rarely, if ever, feels natural or even logical in many places. (i.e. Oh, I better bring my violin to the underground villain's lair. . .you know. . .just in case. . .?!!?!?)I usually love a kids book with plenty of puzzles or riddles. It's kind of like a two for one. You get the adventure/mystery of the entire plot with a lot of little entertaining mini-puzzles along the way. Still, the riddles in this book were just too much. I mean, it was a neat idea, but really? Telling a riddle is the ONLY way to identify a valraven? Not so, we're told plenty of times about how different they look, and many times they even have yellow glowing eyes that set them apart.The major problem with this book though, was buy-in. I just couldn't accept the premise. Now, I've accepted way crazier premises than this one, but if you're going to set up a crazy premise, you HAVE to have solid characters for me to hold on to. These characters were nothing, forgettable, flat. I didn't care about them, and they weren't interesting. None of the characters seemed to behave in a way that made sense. I still don't understand what Gabriel's aunt was supposed to be all about? I mean, she gives him this book and just sends him off into certain danger. HE'S TWELVE! What the heck? And Trudy and her daughter? Why are they even in this book? trope trope trope .. . .Give this book to a kid who is either obsessed with riddles or ravens/birds, but otherwise. . . .not worth it.for parents who want to know: there is some violence/gore. . .birds pecking out eyes, eating the flesh of humans, etc
P**N
Five Stars
I love this book, fascinating characters and a great inventive story. I love riddles!
J**D
GREAT BOOK FOR PRE-TEENS
QUALITY READ FOR PRE-TEENS.
E**N
Rave review for Gabriel Finley
Funny, intriguing and irresistible! Can't wait for the sequel.
L**B
Easy to read.
A good coming of age story. My children enjoy it and I think it is age appropriate.
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