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2 Reviews
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Eh.,
By R.E.M. (NJ, United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Tam Lin (Hardcover)
The story, which is rather spare in versions I've read up to now, is nicely fleshed out by Cooper - she's a wonderful story-teller. The art, on the other hand, is absolutely insipid and amateurish, the cover-art being the best of the lot. For me, a picture book is largely about the pictures - if I'd been in a book-store and been able to actually leaf through this book, I would not have purchased it.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Tam Lin" deftly retold for kids,
By Kelly (Fantasy Literature) (Columbia, MO United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Tam Lin (Hardcover)
Anyone who is familiar with the ballad "Tam Lin" knows it's a story that is very much for grown-ups, or at least teenagers. Susan Cooper does a very good job here of adapting the old story so that it's suitable for any age. It requires changing a few plot elements, but the essential spirit of the story remains the same.Margaret is tired of sewing and acting polite and talking about future husbands with the other girls at her father's castle, so she runs away to the woods of Carterhays to pick flowers. She has been expressly forbidden to go there, of course. There, she meets the handsome Tam Lin, and after arguing for a minute over who really owns the forest, they spend a pleasant afternoon talking and becoming friends in the woods. When Margaret gets back home, she's in big trouble--she has actually been gone a week! Her unlikely friendship with Tam Lin leads her to sneak out once again, to rescue him from the faeries during one of their processions. She has to hold on to him as he turns into all sorts of scary animals--and, well, you know the rest. Cooper does a wonderful job of depicting the feisty Margaret, and of adapting the story into something perfect for a little girl's shelf of fairy tale books. I subtracted a star because I don't think the art really captures the magic of the story; it's too "cute" and too simple. But maybe I'm just spoiled by Kinuko Craft's cover for McKillip's _Winter Rose_. It just seems like the land of Faery requires absolutely lush artwork. |
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Tam Lin by Susan Cooper (Hardcover - March 30, 1991)
Used & New from: $6.42
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