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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Culture clash, August 26, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Transformation (Hardcover)
An interesting novel about the clash between Christian and Pagan ideologies and cultures, this time with a happy ending for once. Is it possible for people of very different backgrounds to "just get along"?- this story suggests that they might, given the right personalities and circumstances and of course, the influence of love. The descriptions of Inuit and European Medieval life are well drawn, the settings are realistic, the main weakness is that the Inuit heroine is a bit too "empowered" to be completely believable- Inuit culture tends to be very male dominated, and in many cases women were not allowed to hunt.
Still, I thoroughly enjoyed the story, and would recommend it to people interested in the historical clash between Christian and non Christian belief systems -this is kind of a historical "what if" that I found inspiring if not 100% accurate.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Transformation, July 29, 2004
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This review is from: The Transformation (Hardcover)
"In the beginning, when Human Beings came, there was only darkness. At that time a young woman was living with her father by the seashore. Once, when she was going to fetch some water, she saw a feather floating toward her from the sea. She opened her mouth and the feather floated in. She swallowed it and was with child. The child was born with a raven's beak... No one knows for certain whether the Raven created the first light, but all know that he loves the sun and that he steals it when he can."

Navarana is a young Inuit woman living in Greenland. After losing both of her parents to famine during the long cold winter that has taken over the land, she becomes a hunter and a shaman. Navarana's people, who call themselves the Human Beings, are hanging on by only a flickering flame of life as the endless winter wears on. Now Navarana's wings must touch the sun in order to end winter's awful grip on their land.

Brendan is a young Irish monk who came to Greenland to convert the "heathens." He is like a newborn babe in the Human Being's land, and Navarana wonders how this stranger will fit in after she saves him from starvation --- a decision she must justify to the Old One. Having taken the sow as her spirit guide when it gave its life so her people could have food, Navarana tells the Old One, "He has hair the same color as the sow's coat."

"Do you know what path you have chosen?" the Old One asks. "You've saved a life and you've set something in motion, something you alone can't control. You've no idea where this will lead you." And she, who always listened carefully to the Old One, turns a deaf ear to him.

Now she knows it was not common sense that led her to taking the stranger with her. She has no idea what her decision will lead to, for him or for her, as together they start on Navarana's quest to bring back the sun. She only knows that in order to survive, they must draw on each other's strengths.

"We must journey to the edge of the world, where once upon a time the sun was born," she began. "There the sun will be resurrected if my power is strong enough. The rest of the Human Beings can manage for themselves. Human Beings will adjust to nature's changes, just as we always have had to do. But," she continued slowly, "no one can adjust to a world without sun, for she is the absolute sovereign of all life."

As they travel together, Navarana admires Brendan's courage as he tries to heal the raw and bleeding wounds from his childhood by finding his spirit light. Will he be able to reconcile his dedication to his Great God with his love for Navarana and her devotion to the Great Mother of the Sea? They live in two different worlds; can they become one?

THE TRANSFORMATION is filled with Mette Newth's vivid and beautiful word pictures and metaphors describing a breathtaking land of legend and folklore.

Mette Newth is an illustrator, translator and the author of THE ABDUCTION, an ALA Best Book for Young Adults, and THE DARK LIGHT. She is the head of the National College of Art in Oslo.

--- Reviewed by Audrey Marie Danielson
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a good book for a person who likes adventure stories, May 13, 2001
This review is from: The Transformation (Hardcover)
This book is very good. I got it as a recommendation from my librarian and it was interesting. It reminds me of "Dogsong" by Gary Paulson. It has a great prt but is written in a style I am not used to and it was confusing for me. If you liked "Dogsong" give this book a look. (Hey! I rhymed!)
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The Transformation
The Transformation by Mette Newth (Hardcover - October 19, 2000)
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