Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The most poignant fantasy novel I've ever read, June 30, 1999
By A Customer
Though this story seems to start off as a kind of modern English countryside Jungle Book, it grows by gentle steps into one of the most charming and poignant battles of Good and Evil in fantasy literature. The author's words flow like poetry and create impressions in the mind that do not fade. The book which most comes to mind when reading Faradawn is Wind in the Willows, with the same combination of nearly musical writing and deep, involving characters. However, Faradawn is not a children's novel, but is more like Watership Down or the Plague Dogs. Indeed, the characters in their journeys face dark situations and a descent into the blackest situations possible before the thought-provoking resolution of the story. This is definitely one of the finest books of its kind ever written.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a moving fantasy tale, May 15, 2003
I read this book at age eighteen, and then read it to my younger brothers. It is an animal story, and a quest, complete with elves, but it is more, too. It shows how animals may view us, the supposed Protectors and Keepers of the earth, but the message is not hard to swallow. Filled with humor and sorrow, this book made a lasting impression on me, and will be a permanent part of my library. One drawback, I felt the ending was an odd change of pace. If you like this one, check out The Book of the Dun Cow.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
a book passed on from mother to daughter, June 29, 2004
My mother was given this book as a gift shortly after she gave birth to her first child (me). And she gave it to me to read as my first adult-chapter book when I was around 9. And it was the book that made me love fantasy. Its a fabulous story about a boy raised by forest creatures who is entrusted to save their lives. Contrary to several reviews I have seen that portray this as a book that only show how horrible humans are, in fact I think it just serves as a wake-up call. The humans have only one sort of representative, and that is the hunter, which is naturally evil to a forest of deer and pheasant; because the story is mainly about the animals themselves. My favorite part, still, is the "Author's Note" at the end. When I was a child with a child's active imagination, it only fueled my fantasies. And even now, tho' I view it differently, I cannot help but be captured by the awe of such a possibility. I've lent out our (now battered) copy of the book to many friends, and they have loved it as well. Each character is delightfully written, with personalities that everyone can understand and relate to. It is one of my favorite books of all time, even at 20, when, as an avid reader, I have read thousands of books in between.
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