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Tersias The Oracle
 
 

Tersias The Oracle (Paperback)

by G Taylor (Author)
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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From School Library Journal

Grade 8-11–This sinister tale takes place after the events in Wormwood (Putnam, 2004) and centers on a magical knife stolen from its owner by a young London thief. The theft sets off a chain of events involving a barmaid, a would-be magician, and Tersias, a 12-year-old blind boy who predicts the future with the help of a malevolent, supernatural Wretchkin. Lord Malpas, the rightful owner of the cursed knife, remains a sketchy character and readers never know what drives him. As is usual in Taylor's work, good vs. evil and the quest for ultimate power drive the plot and the characters in a dizzying display of malicious machinations. Violence and cruelty are overcome by the strength of love in a miraculous ending too neat to be entirely believed. Teens who enjoy complex, dark tales would be better served by Marcus Sedgwick's The Book of Dead Days (2004) and The Dark Flight Down (2005, both Random).–Sharon Grover, Hedberg Public Library, Janesville, WI
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

Gr. 8-11. This macabre, old-London tale of corruption and redemption revolves around 12-year-old Tersias, a blind oracle. His is a sorry life, locked in a cage, forced to speak the future to earn coins for an abusive owner. Tersias' prophetic powers come from a Wretchkin, a nefarious otherworldly creature who also uses Tersias for his own gain. Other power-hungry sorts seek to use the boy as well, including Lord Malpas, burdened with a dark family curse, and Solomon, an apocalypse-obsessed cult leader. The boy's only friends are a band of young thieves who have robbed Malpas of two magical objects coveted by most of the story's characters, and which bring them all together in a final confrontation. Though some holes in the backstory and weak characterizations may pose obstacles for less-motivated readers, this is still more accessible than Taylor's Shadowmancer and Wormwood (both 2004), and the story's gritty setting, moody tone, and brisk action will appeal to many. Holly Koelling
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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1.0 out of 5 stars To see the future, Feb 23 2007
By E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Since the beginning of time, people have always wanted to know the future. But wanting to know the future takes a nasty turn in G.P. Taylor's "Tersias the Oracle," his third book set in a grimy, 19th-century London. While it's not as horrendously preachy as his last two, it's still a flaccid adventure with cartoonish characters.

The comet Wormwood has just narrowly missed London, and teen highwayman Jonah is back to robbing -- a cursed knife and mysterious alabaster box. Elsewhere, seedy Magnus Malachi makes money off a blind beggar boy, Tersias. Tersias is accompanied by an invisible imp, the Wretchkin, which lets him see the future. As a result, the sinister Lord Malpas -- whom Jonah robbed -- wants Tersias' help.

But there are other people who want Tersias' visions for themselves, including a cult called the Solomites. Their leader, Solomon, soon kidnaps Tersias and Jonah's friend Tara, and keeps them both prisoner in the Citadel, with the intent of brainwashing them both. To rescue his friends, Jonah will have to shape up and join forces with Malachi.

Yes, this is a sequel of sorts to Taylor's previous two books, "Shadowmancer" and "Wormwood." The good news is, he has eased up on that smack-in-the-face religious content, which dripped from every page of his previous novels. The bad news is, that's the ONLY improvement.

Taylor's books are still riddled with rambling descriptions, pompous dialogue ("She is a woman, flesh and blood!"), and cartoonish action scenes. The plot meanders all over the place, and there are long stretches where it seems like Taylor doesn't have the slightest idea what to do next.

And his taste for melodramatic, powerful bad guys hasn't waned. Just forming a killer cult isn't enough -- Solomon has to have flesh-eating locusts too. And Lord Malpas has a family curse! And Malachi changes from bad to good for no real reason! As hard as he tries to restrain himself, Taylor can't get past the goofy villains, and so whatever shreds of a coherent plot were in there.

And the characters don't help -- it's virtually impossible to like any of them, especially since the hero, Jonah, is a selfish brat; it's hard to see why Tara is so nuts about him. The title character is a pompous bore who doesn't seem to find it disturbing that he has an imp in his head.

While GP Taylor has toned down his unsubtle religious matter, his stories are still amateurish and ridiculously cartoonish. Tersias may see the future, but it's a good thing he didn't foresee "Tersias the Oracle."
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