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Tamsin
 
 

Tamsin (Paperback)

by Peter Beagle (Author) "When I was really young, if there was one thing I wanted in the world, it was to be invisible ..." (more)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
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Peter S. Beagle creates magic in this coming-of-age ghost story, returning to a subgenre he first explored in A Fine and Private Place. When her mother remarries, 13-year-old narrator Jenny Gluckstein moves from New York City to a run-down, haunted, 300-year-old farm in Dorset, England. In slow-moving early chapters, unhappy Jenny's beloved Mister Cat is quarantined for six months and she must attend an English girl's school. Jenny's voice is painfully genuine, her self-description merciless. If early adolescence brings on flashbacks, wait to read this book.

The pace picks up when Mister Cat returns and Jenny meets Meena Chari, whose belief in the supernatural comes from growing up in ghost-ridden India. First Mister Cat finds a new girlfriend, a ghostly Persian Cat only he and Jenny can see. Then she and her younger stepbrother, Julian, confront a boggart who's been playing tricks on the family. The gnome-like boggart is dressed in a Seven Dwarves hat, Robin Hood garb, "and heavy little boots, ankle-high--I'd have taken them for Doc Martens, except I don't think they make them in boggart sizes." The boggart warns her to beware of the ghost cat, her mistress, and "the Other One" most of all. But one afternoon she follows Mister Cat to meet Tamsin Willoughby, ghost of the farm-founder's daughter. Tamsin is friendly, but won't tell Jenny anything about the Other One, or talk about Edric, apparently her lost love. To free Tamsin's ghost, Jenny must relive the tragic history of 17th-century Dorset and face grave danger.

Tamsin is vintage Beagle: there's a shape-shifting Pooka, a ghostly love story, music, the Goddess, and the Wild Hunt. It's beautifully written and can be read on several levels, including as a loving homage to Thomas Hardy's moody novels (Tess of the d'Urbervilles and Far from the Madding Crowd) and poetry (Selected Poems). Or you can lose yourself in the story. Fans of The Last Unicorn will enjoy this one. --Nona Vero --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Like his enchanting The Last Unicorn, Beagle's newest fantasy features characters so real they leap off his pages and into readers' souls. Tamsin Willoughby, dead some 300 years, haunts ramshackle old Stourhead Farm in Dorset, England, an ancient 700-acre estate that 13-year-old Jenny's new, English stepfather is restoring. Thoroughly American Jenny, miserable at being transplanted from New York City to rural Britain, finds a suffering kindred spirit in Tamsin, a ghost who is mourning Edric, a love she lost during Dorset's punitive Bloody Assizes under King James II. Tamsin leads Jenny through an engrossing night world inhabited by an array of British spiritsAthe Black Dog, a braggart Boggart, ominous Oakmen, the shapeshifting Pooka and a marvelous mystical army-booted Earth Mother. To save Tamsin and gentle Edric from eternal torment, Jenny faces evil personified: demonic Judge Jeffries, who sentenced hundreds of people to brutal execution during the Assizes. Slipping effortlessly between Jenny's brash 1999 lingo, the raw primeval dialect of ancient Dorset and Tamsin's exquisite Jacobean English, Beagle has created a stunning tale of good battling evil, of wonder and heartbreak and of a love able to outlast the worst vileness of the human heart. Fantasy rarely dances through the imagination in more radiant garb than this. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
When I was really young, if there was one thing I wanted in the world, it was to be invisible. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
 (16)
4 star:
 (8)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Mister Cat!, Sep 27 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Tamsin (Paperback)
I wanted a fun read and I had loved The Last Unicorn, so I was happy to find this book (in the Young Adult section, although it really should have been in Fantasy).

I couldn't put it down. I finished it in less than 24 hours, which was both good and bad - good because I really really wanted to see how it was going to end, but bad because the book is so slow and I got frustrated with it.

I would have adored this book when I was in jr high or high school. This would have been my favorite book then. I enjoyed it a lot now, but I did have some problems with it. For one thing, I see lots of reviewers here saying that it's not cliche. Well maybe you didn't read the same books I did, but I read a lot of young adult ghost stories back in the day, and this book follows the formula. It does it very well, yes, but it still follows the formula. Teenager forced against their will to move into a haunted house because a parent remarries, difficult time adjusting to new family, discovers a ghost with a tragic past, get information about the ghost from older, local people, etc. Wait Till Helen Comes for example (which is also a great young adult ghost story) has all of these cliches. So does The Headless Cupid (also excellent). Tamsin is excellent and worth reading, but the formula is there and is obvious if you've seen it before.

I don't want to be too negative, because this really is a good book, and I enjoyed it a lot. I adored Mister Cat! The house itself was creepy and I would have enjoyed more time spent to exploring it (and perhaps less time devoted to Tamsin almost - but then not - telling Jenny things). I got little flashes of The Last Unicorn here and there, such as Tamsin forgetting herself the way Amalthea did, and the Wild Hunt reminded me of the Red Bull (only scarier), especially in the way the Jenny would hear it now and then the way the characters heard the Red Bull moving under the castle. I wanted to know more about the Oakmen too, and that was never really explained.

Where was Tamsin's character? Why was Mister Cat so much more interesting and developed than the title character of the book? I thought it was wonderful that Jenny had a little crush on Tamsin - thank you Mr Beagle for including something which is common for girls but never discussed! However, I just never got that interested in Tamsin because she was boring and not very different from other ghost girls with a tragic past. Julian was much more interesting than Tamsin too. He was really a fun character (even though he acted younger than 10).

Final word: I'm being a little harsh on this book because it's so close to being perfect and because I expected more from the author. This is a great book - if you like the author, or ghost stories, or fantasy, then get this book and enjoy a good (and scary) read! Tamsin is a great book for young adult readers too, and it's so much better than most of the books in that genre. Just make sure you have a day or two free before you start reading it though.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Eerily realistic, Aug 4 2003
This review is from: Tamsin (Paperback)
Jenny delivers an account of her move to Dorset England after her mother's remarriage to a farming soil expert, which results in her acquaintence of many supernatural creatures such as bogarts, pookas and a billy. She slowly becomes friends with the ghost of their residence, a 300 year old apparition named Tamsin, who can't remember what she has to do to be freed from this earth. Jenny picks up her story in bits and pieces, revealling that the ghostly Wild Hunt passes over frequently.

Although the start is slow, the writing is tantalizing -- Jenny, now 19, is writing down the events and talking to herself and the reader as she goes along, and as she tries to set the stage and not get ahead of herself, the reader is hooked, trying to figure out exactly what is going on. This lends a disturbingly realistic feel to the plot, and makes the reader believe that those long ago myths are entirely possible today.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully Written but Flawed, May 31 2003
By Jenny Hanniver "medieval_student" (Philadelphia, PA, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tamsin (Paperback)
I am a long-time fantasy lover -- adore the novels of Ursula Le Guin and Terry Pratchett -- but the people in TAMSIN are more gullible than intelligent, falling too quickly into belief in boggarts, ghosts, and billy-blinds. You can forgive the children, but the adults, too? They probably believe in Santa and the Easter Bunny. Their stupidity eroded the novel's verisimilitude and is personally irritating to me. Gullible sympathetic chacters are unwelcome in our sad era of New Age and Fundamentalist nonsense, when far too many people...have lost the commonsense ability to be skeptical.

That cavil aside, once you accept that the characters aren't really very bright, this is a truly well-written and sensitive fantasy, with astonishing insights into the concerns and teenage girls...Furthermore, TAMSIN warmed the heart of this old medievalist. It deals intimately with one of the crucial periods in history, the English Seventeenth Century--and reminds us why England had its Glorious Revolution and Bill of Rights, and why we must stalwartly defend our Constitution and our even better American Bill of Rights...

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Believe!
I think this could be a true story. Really, I wouldn't be shocked at all is Beagle told me that he'd simply written down a story he overheard one day. Read more
Published on Mar 11 2003 by grograman

5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Read!!
This is the first book I've read by Beagle. It won't be the last. This story is like a train, starting off slowly...building...building...continually gaining momentum. Read more
Published on Feb 25 2003 by S. Waters

4.0 out of 5 stars Another wonder from Beagle
First of all, Peter S. Beagle is one of my absolutely favorite authors, so I am predisposed to like his works. That, being said, I really enjoyed this book. Read more
Published on Dec 4 2002 by Jody

5.0 out of 5 stars Two thumbs up
I loved this book. I like ghost storys ,and what I liked best about this one is the true friendship that came to be between girl and ghost. Read more
Published on Oct 26 2002

4.0 out of 5 stars GOoD STORY ABOUT GHOSTS
this book was great. it tells the story of a 13 year old girl who moves to doreset. she dosent want to go but ends up have the adventure of a lifetime when see meets a ghost... Read more
Published on Aug 1 2002 by YVETTE MOHILL

5.0 out of 5 stars A hauntingly good read
I remember giving up "The Last Unicorn" after 3 chapters because of the somewhat ponderous prose. But I still picked up Beagle's "Tamsin" at a book sale because I was intrigued by... Read more
Published on April 28 2002 by debeagle

5.0 out of 5 stars BELIEVABLE BEYOND COMPARE . . .
Peter Beagle's most recent book creates characters that are so well-rounded and defined that you can't NOT believe in them. Read more
Published on Mar 10 2002 by bookelfe

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Ghost Story
I'm a big fan of Peter Beagle's work and this is one of my favorites. The charaters are well written and the story really moves along. Read more
Published on Oct 20 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars What a Mixture!
Peter S. Beagle's novel is a great mixture of teenage angst and fantasy. I enjoyed Jenny Gluckstein's transformation from "a sullen little hemorrhoid with feet" into an... Read more
Published on Sep 5 2001 by Sandra Voegtlen

4.0 out of 5 stars memories of being 13 years old brought back!
I borrowed this book because I wanted to read a ghost story and because of the setting--Dorset, England. Read more
Published on Dec 25 2000 by Pauline Woodfin

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