8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fair Exchange, July 21, 2005
Max, you've gone too far this time! Though he doesn't know why, one day Max Trader wakes up and realizes that he's been transported into the body of a homeless derelict, Johnny Devlin, who's now all showered and shaved and living in Max's very nice lifestyle. The two men are at a standstill, and Max realizes how tough it is to be homeless and yet, we all of us can do something to change our life, even if our "trading partner" (Johnny) isn't quite ready to give us back our own life yet. TRADER shines with all of Charles De Lint's trademark magic and color. His town is like one designed by Thomas Kinkade, the "painter of light," if Kinkade had been a Canadian citizen; you will feel you're at home right away, even if your own life has been very different than that of the perplexed, bewitched characters of Ontario.
Do you remember THE IVORY AND THE HORN? In that book Coyote descsibres the mystic little flute player, the trickster, and he says, "He's a fertility symbol, now, very mythopoetic and all, but it wasn't always that way. Used to be a trader, a travelling merchant, hup-two-three. That hunched back was actually his pack of trading goods, the flute his way of approaching a settlement, tootle-toot-toot, it's only me, no danger, except if you were some nubile young thing." I think perhaps for De Lint the concept of the "trader" was percolating in his mind lo, these many years, and only now has he expanded it into novel length. He has drunk deep from the wells of Northrop Frye and Lord Dunsany and he has fermented his own bubbly brew of identity and inspiration.
If you are looking for a place of nature inside the city, come to the world of TRADER and lie back and see the stars through the neon.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I LOVED it., September 7, 2006
Although I can understand the other reviewers' points of view, I have to disagree. I loved this book. This is the first book I have ever read by Charles de Lint, but I thought it was entertaining and a really good read. I would definitely give it a try.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pleasing as always..., February 22, 1999
This review is from: Trader (Paperback)
I like De Lint's work. It's always fresh and fun. The ideas are well handled and the characters (usually just a couple of them) are well honed. Like so many of his other books, this one is set in the semi-Faeriefied "urban folklore" style he's known for. This book is sometimes tedious, but there's so little like it that you'll enjoy yourself (especially if you enjoyed any of his past works).
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