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Hounds of the Morrigan
  

Hounds of the Morrigan [Paperback]

Pat O'Shea
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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Paperback CDN $8.95  
Paperback, Jun 9 1988 --  
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From Publishers Weekly

O'Shea makes her debut in this book that one wishes would go on past its spellbinding length, almost 500 pages. Although the writing took 10 years, sure it reads as if it were no trouble at all, at all for the author. As have many of her fellow native Irish storytellers, she finds inspiration in the island's legendary heroes. But her uproariously funny, scarely, suspenseful fairy tale is entirely original. The enchantment begins at once as two evil spirits fly to Galway to await The Morrigan, Great Queen: "All the time invisible; except once, when they swooped down on a basking shark and frightened it silly. . . All the time silent; except when they tapped their teeth with their finger-nails and sent lightning. . . ." In the city, the spirits become two strange women on a motorbike, followed by their hounds. "All this because a boy was about to buy a book in the second-hand bookshop, in the small grey city." The boy is Patrick Joseph (Pidge), urged by something he doesn't understand to own the ancient, tattered pages; it looks very boring. But he takes "A Book of Patrick's Writing" home and it throws him, as well as his five-year-old sister Brigit, into the war on the side of noble Cuchulain against wicked Morrigan. Moving into the house near to the children, the demonic females fail again and again to steal the miraculous volume. Pidge and Brigit escape by a hair's breadth from each deadly trapat times saved by fairies in the guise of tinkers, frequently by the mischief created by silver-tongued Brigit, a genius at telling lies that frustrate the foe. All the while, Cuchulain's valiant army and The Morrigan's forces are rushing to a decisive battle. In an astonishing finale, O'Shea describes a lyrical moment when Pidge and Brigit try to remember who has left gifts for them . . . and why.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From School Library Journal

Grade 5-8 After he unwittingly releases an evil force long imprisoned in an old Irish manuscript, Pidge and his little sister, Brigit, are drawn into a series of adventures to help the good god, the Dagda, destroy this evil before it is found and used against the world by the Morrigan, Celtic tripartite goddess of battle. The Morrigan, in both hilarious and terrifying personae, is seen mostly in mod guise as a pair of motorcycle-riding hags, who set up a command post in Galway to observe and meddle with the action. (In one terrific touch, their fingerprint, suspended in air, becomes elsewhere a maze to entrap the children.) Their mean sense of humor lets them create a "watch frog" (who speaks in bog-Irish malapropisms); comb their blue and red hair with a live hedgehog; and make chess moves by sticking pins into chess pieces given temporary life. And constantly, their shape-changing, flick-tongued, slyand dominatedhounds track the children, but they may not kill unless they see their quarry run. The unfolding quest baffles and challenges the pair as it will readers, as shapes shift and dreams take on independent life. The writing is wonderful, but inventive to distraction; one can lose track of names and allusions to earlier events as episodes multiply, and some of the episodes seem superfluous. (The glossary is for traditional material only.) Large collections should have this book, by a new Irish writer, and those libraries with dedicated readers of fantasy should try it. Ruth M. McConnell, San Antonio Public Library
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Sigh, May 16 2003
This is a masterpiece.
Look, I can rave about as many books as I read (and I will) but in the end, this book is my very favourite. It took ten years to write and is, quite frankly, brilliant.
It has (almost) everything that recommends a book to me. Warm, endearing protagonists (Pidge and Brigit are two of the most delightful heroes to grace children's literature), truly threatening bad guys, humour, suspense, scary bits, happy bits, bits that make your scalp tingle, and bits that make your heart sing. It's about friendship, and love, and courage, and good versus evil. It's about ordinary people doing extraordinary things. It's ostensibly a children's story, but is strengthened by some challenging concepts. Its length, which would normally be limiting, merely prolongs the absolute delight to be found in this book. The plot is engrossing, although slow moving to start off with and references to Irish mythology lend an air of familiarity to the story.
The true strength of the book though, lies in its characters. Everyone in this book has a story. Every character is fully dimensional. You can picture Puddeneen having his life made cheerfully miserable by Miss Fancy just as strongly as you can picture Brigit growing into a vibrant, intelligent young woman and Puddeneen is a talking frog. That is how well O'Shea does her job.
I could never understand why 'His Dark Materials' etc were any more popular than this truly marvellous book. I recommend it above all others. It's beautiful.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars this book has a misleading cover!, April 25 2002
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When you read the back cover and look at the cover art, this book looks extremely macabre and almost satanic. However, I gave this book a chance and it is actually really funny. Also, the cover is graphic but the book is not like that. I mean, a mad earwig! Dressed like Napoleon! Just try and tell me that is not at least a little teensy bit humorous. Sure it has its moments but overall I would recommend it. It is over 500 pages, which to me is no big feat, however would intimidate others. Overall, it has a rich plot and is the perfect mix of humor and excitement.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A good, but the end is a dissapointment, Jan 3 2002
I was really intrigued when I first saw this book and the store. So I bought it, and liked it with the exception of the ending. Pidge and Bridget live in Ireland and go on an amazing adventure for Dagda. They are on a mission to find 1 or both of the blood stones of Morrigan's blood. These are og importance because they will destroy the Olc-glass, which will stop Morrigan from taking over the world. Pidge and Bridget meet many friends who guide them when they get lost, or help them when they are stranded. It may get confusing at times, but it is good none the less. Lots of detail, so that you can imagine all the places and events in your head.Though I must say the end was HIGHLY disappointing. I read the whole thing only to have a sucky ending. That is why I only gave it 4 stars. If you buy this book I'm warning you not to expect a decent ending.
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