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Daja's Book (Circle of Magic, No.3) Mass Market Paperback – March 1, 2000
Four elements of power, four mages-in-training learning to control them. In Book 3 of the Circle of Magic Quartet, outcast Trader Daja and her friends journey from Winding Circle to the Gold Ridge Mountains, where drought threatens widespread famine. There, Daja creates an astonishing object: a living metal vine. A caravan of Traders covets the vine, and Daja's dealing with her former people reawaken a longing for familiar ways. Now Daja must choose--should she return to the Traders or remain with the Winding Circle folk who have become her family?
- Reading age12 years and up
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade level7 - 9
- Dimensions4.25 x 0.75 x 7 inches
- PublisherScholastic Paperbacks
- Publication dateMarch 1, 2000
- ISBN-109780590554107
- ISBN-13978-0590554107
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Product details
- ASIN : 0590554107
- Publisher : Scholastic Paperbacks (March 1, 2000)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780590554107
- ISBN-13 : 978-0590554107
- Reading age : 12 years and up
- Grade level : 7 - 9
- Item Weight : 4.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.25 x 0.75 x 7 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,363,912 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #19,185 in Children's Fantasy & Magic Books
- #21,449 in Teen & Young Adult Fantasy
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Tamora Pierce is a bestselling author of young adult fantasy books that break past the traditions of the fantasy genre to feature teenage girls as knights, wizards, and above all: heroes. A #1 New York Times bestseller and the recipient of the 2013 Margaret A. Edwards award, Tamora has written over 30 books, including the newly-released TEMPESTS AND SLAUGHTER.
Tamora was drawn to books from a young age. Raised in rural Pennsylvania, the child of a "long, proud line of hillbillies," her family never had much. "We were poor, but I didn't know it then. We had a garden where my folks grew fruit and vegetables and our water came from a well," she explains. But one thing they did have was plenty of books. So Tamora read.
A self-proclaimed "geek," she devoured fantasy and science fiction novels, and by the age of 12 was mimicking her literary idols and writing her own action-packed stories. It was thanks to her father that Tamora began writing. "He heard me telling myself stories as I did dishes, and he suggested that I try to write some of them down," Pierce says.
But Tamora's novels had one major difference: unlike the books she was reading, her stories featured teenaged girl warriors. "I couldn't understand this lapse of attention on the part of the writers I loved, so until I could talk them into correcting this small problem, I wrote about those girls, the fearless, bold, athletic creatures that I was not, but wanted so badly to be."
Seventeen years later, after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, a brief career in teen social work and some time spent writing for radio, Tamora Pierce held true to her childhood crusade, and published ALANNA: THE FIRST ADVENTURE, the first in a quartet about a valiant, young, female warrior. Pierce's heroine struck a chord with readers across the country and quickly earned her a loyal following.
Now, with over 30 critically-acclaimed books to her name, Pierce lives in upstate New York with her husband Tim and their menagerie of nine cats, two birds, a flock of pigeons, various raccoons and squirrels, and one opossum. "It's a pretty good life, if I do say so myself. Struggling along as a kid and even through my twenties, it's the kind of life I dreamed of but never believed I would get. Yet here I am, after a lot of work, a lot of worry, a lot of care for details, and a massive chunk of luck, the kind that brought me such strong friends and readers. Pretty good for a hillbilly, yes? And I never take it for granted."
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Although this book focuses most heavily on Daja, she shares the stage with Briar, Tris, and Sandry, and we the readers continue to learn more about these great characters. I love the diversity of Pierce's characters: a mix of male and female heroes, coming from an astonishing range of economic and ethnic backgrounds. She does not brush aside the real problems that their differences can create, but she does show how experience and relationships can lead to new, stronger ties.
A worthy number 3 for this series: don't miss it!
It's the 3rd in the series and I'm headed for the 4th one now.
The series follows 4 essentially orphaned children in their teens or early teens. Mages who've suffered hurts of different types - who've found the same nest and are growing together & into their various powers. Together with their mentors & teachers they face a world of pirates, human frailties, natural disasters & discovery.
Off to the north with the Duke, the four are spreading their wings on a new adventure. Daja's outcast status and an interesting bit of magical accident leave her with a living metal plant and a Trader who wants to buy. Of course, she can't talk to Daja, so the fun begins.
Standing up for their foster-sister, Tris, Briar, and Sandry shame the Traders into doing business with Daja and she feels almost at home again. Of course, it can't last, and the dried-up, fireless forest soon turns against them. The four learn what it means to risk everything, even their own lives, to save others from certain death. And Daja gets a new magic out of it, too.
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Review
This 3rd installment of the series finally has it all: first, very well fleshed-out characters and I'm not just talking about the protagonists, but the secondary ones as well. This is the first time, everyone who adds to the story feels not only totally real, but multi faceted, too. There are people who behave badly, but once you get more about their background and the society they come from, you probably still dislike them, but at least you understand them. And our heroes never were just one-dimensional, each of them always was human enough to be jealous, petty, envious, you name it. But it's exactly what made me like them: people are like this.
Aside from the very good depiction of people, the plot is just awesome. The four mages in training are on tour with the duke and their teachers. There is a drought in the northern lands, combined with the danger of grass and forest fire, and the duke needs to figure out, in what way he is able to help. Of course the four kids get in trouble again, magically, and their powers start intermingling in strange ways, so there is a lot to get a hold of. But the “main story”, so to speak, is Daja's meeting with a Trader clan and how she is treated as “transghi”, aka outcast, and most of all, how she finds out, who she is and what she wants out of life. This struggle was great to watch, especially with the way things unfolded.
T. Pierce, as always, showed this inventive world in a way that made me actually feel the smoke in the air whenever the grasslands burn, the heat whenever Daja works fire or the crackle of lightning when Tris is involved. The magical system evolves as the protagonists do, since their magic adds new twists and turns to what was said to be possible before. And I appreciate it that there is still always a logic involved that doesn't budge. Everything in this book just delivered.
Die "Wirok" Polyam, die den Auftrag ausrichten soll, wird jedoch Zeugin, wie Daja einen *eisernen Rebstock* mittels Magie erschafft und informiert umgehend die Karawane. "Magische Dinge" werden immer hoch bezahlt. Daja ist hin- und hergerissen. Einerseits wird ihr durch die Händler bewusst, was sie mit dem Tod ihrer Familie verloren hat, andererseits hat sie im "Winding Circle" eine *neue Familie* gefunden und dort kann sie ihre Schmiedemagie ausüben. Etwas das Händlern verboten ist. "Lugsha-Tätigkeiten" darf ein Händler nicht verrichten.
Die vier Teenager haben jedoch noch ein anderes Problem, ihre Magie springt aufeinander über. Briar röstet *ausversehen* wertvolle Safrankrokusse als er sie sich näher anschauen will. Sandri *schmelzt* ein Jackenmuster, das einem Wächter gehört (Im Geflecht war ein Draht verborgen) und auch bei Tris und Daja ändert sich die Magie.
Darum beschließen Lark und Niko, dass sie endlich eine *magische Karte* von den Kräften der Teenager erstellen müssen. Nur dadurch kann man erkennen, in welche Richtung die Kräfte fließen. Dies geht jedoch nicht ohne Probleme, denn Frostpine wurde nicht darüber informiert, was diesen mächtig verstimmt.
Mehr verrate ich euch nicht, den Rest müsst ihr selber lesen. Viel Vergnügen ;-)
Zur Wertung:
Den ersten Stern gibt es für die Verhandlungen und die Händlersitten, die den Teenager näher gebracht werden. Auch wenn dies schmerzliche Erinnerungen für Daja bedeutet, sie zeigen, wie wichtig dies für die Händler sind, egal ob als Karawane oder als Seefahrer. Es gibt ihnen Halt und Geborgenheit in der Fremde.
Den zweiten Stern gibt es für die *neueren Fähigkeiten* der vier Teenager. Sie haben sich in den zwei Jahren gewaltig weiter entwickelt. Die immer stärker vermixte Magie stellt sie auch vor neue Gefahren und Risiken, dennoch würden dies die vier nicht aufgeben wollen. Sie sind zu einer echten Familie geworden, die füreinander einsteht, wenn man diese benötigt.
Den dritten Stern gibt es für die Lehrer der Teenager: erstmals erfährt man näheres über die Vergangenheit von Frostpine und es erklärt seinen Zorn, den er als Jugendlicher verspürte. Magie ist kein Spielzeug und sollte nur mit äußerster Vorsicht behandlet werden.
Den vierten Stern gibt es für Dajas Mut sich nicht nur ihrer Vergangenheit zu stellen, sondern auch Personen zu helfen, die sie darum verachten könnten.
Alles in allem ein interessanter dritter Band, der jedoch noch Luft nach oben hat.
Am besten selbst lesen und sich dann ein eigenes Urteil dazu bilden.^^





