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Book Of Atrix Wolfe
 
 

Book Of Atrix Wolfe (Hardcover)

by Patricia Mcphillip (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

In what is probably her best-known work, The Riddlemasters of Hed, McKillip combined shape-shifting, riddle-solving and the desire for wild and unbridled power into a richly fantastic tale. Here, she returns to those themes, adding a strand of the fairy world to her rich web of enchantment. Prince Talis, heir to the Pelucir throne, has been away from his homeland studying magecraft. At the wizards' college, he discovers a mysterious book of spells whose words carry hidden meanings. Returning to Pelucir, Talis encounters the Queen of the Woods, who is looking for her daughter, Sorrow, lost ever since the mage Atrix Wolfe misused his magic to divert a war. Now Talis and Atrix must solve the riddle of Sorrow's existence, and rid the world of the evil that Atrix conjured. Though McKillip's latest is less strongly plotted than some of her earlier novels, her words and images remain masterfully evocative as she manages to invoke great beauty using the simplest language. Connoisseurs of fine fantasy will delight in this expertly wrought tale.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

Driven by a formless fury when the prince of Kardeth refuses to halt his invasion of the kingdom of Pelucir, the great mage Atrix Wolfe creates a fearful hunter, "a warrior with no allegiance but to death." But the ensuing massacre of both armies and the king of Pelucir appalls the mage, and he flees to the mountains to live in wolf form among wolves until, 20 years later, the queen of the Woods demands that he seek out her daughter, who disappeared at the time of the great bloodbath. The ensuing story involves aspiring mage Talis Pelucir, son of the slain king, and Saro, a young, mute scullery maid in the castle of Pelucir whose background is unknown. Steeped in medieval legends of the wild huntsman, living trees, and shape changers, McKillip's tale is decidedly atmospheric, complex, compelling, and filled with rich imagery. Sally Estes

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21 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars On Hunter's Field, the Dark Moon Rises..., Aug 22 2002
This review is from: Book Of Atrix Wolfe (Paperback)
This is one of the most original books I've ever read! McKillip writes in a style all her own which lends to the story, making it almost impossible to put down! Though some of the descriptions are told in an almost surreal style, the story flows easily and the characters and locations are presented in the utmost colour and detail. A must-read for those who enjoyed her other books, or fans of fantasy in general!

The story follows the chain of events that occur one cold winter night during the bitter siege on the castle of Pelucir, the night that the Great Mage Atrix Wolfe breaks the laws set down by the Mages of Chaumenard and in his attempts to end the war creates a creature of the darkest emotions and most destructive magic...the legendary Hunter. That is the same night when the mysterious being known as the Queen of the Wood's consort and their daughter disappears into the human world by the rent in the realms the Hunter's creation has caused. Now years later, both the horrors of that night and the mage seem to have disappeared into the realm of legend and bitter memory...until the discovery by the Prince-mage Talis Pelducir of a book whose words are not what they appear to be and the attempts of the Queen of the Wood to find her long-lost daughter Saro cause the return of the Hunter and the final confrontation between Atrix Wolfe and the nightmare he has been running from for the last twenty years...

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cinderella versus the Wild Hunt, Mar 5 2001
By E. A. Lovitt "starmoth" (Gladwin, MI USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Book Of Atrix Wolfe (Paperback)
A bare outline of the plot and characters of "The Book of Atrix Wolfe" might deceive you into thinking that this book is yet another modern retelling of an old fairy tale. Here is the beautiful princess, forced into a life as a scullery maid by a powerful mage, who also turns her father into a deadly were-stag with a "black moon rising from his burning horns". Here also is the mage-prince who eventually recognizes the princess for what she is in spite of her formidable disguise, and returns her to her loving mother.

The sleeping beauty on the Kinuko Craft cover may do justice to the loveliness of the princess-turned-scullery-maid (at least prior to her transformation by the mage), but it doesn't capture her incredible will to survive after she is torn from her parents and dumped, naked and alone, into an alien universe. Yes, she ends up as a scullery maid, thought to be mute and retarded by her fellow kitchen workers. Yes, she scrubs pots from dawn to midnight. But the prince's kitchen turns out to be lively and warm, and filled with an eccentric hierarchy of cooks, sauce makers, plate washers, mincers, pluckers, boners, choppers, and spit-boys. McKillip goes into loving detail over the making and serving of food fit for a King's table, and when the princess Saro finally leaves the washing cauldron to fulfill her destiny, I for one felt a faint tinge of regret.

Who would have thought that a medieval kitchen could be a more interesting place to linger than a fairy forest where "water flowed, silver and sweet as honey among ancient roots"?

"The Book of Atrix Wolfe" stands many fairy tale truisms on their heads, including the character of the evil, all-powerful mage. In this story, the mage Atrix Wolfe creates the deadly Hunter that almost destroys the prince's family, but he does so with the intention of stopping a war. The Hunter himself is Death, but even he is not precisely evil. The prince rescues the princess, but only after she steals his book of spells in an attempt to teach herself how to read.

Patricia McKillip may have started out with a fairy tale in mind, but what she wrote was ornate, fascinating, and completely her own.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Not for Me, Jul 4 2003
This review is from: Book Of Atrix Wolfe (Paperback)
Patricia A. McKillip, famed author of The Riddle Master Trilogy, comes into her own in this more mature work. In my opinion, the epic style of Riddle Master didn't mesh well with McKillip's dreamy prose. But here, in Atrix Wolfe, it becomes clear that McKillip has found her niche: the short, modern fairytale. But wait!...I never said I liked it.

First, let me say that this book is simply not my type; it didn't capture my interest. But I still feel obliged to give an opinion because there are undoubtedly others out there who share my own interests. I pretty much agree with the review above entitled "Charming but not engaging." The writing here is top notch and the imagery is evocative, but the whole thing seems a little vacuous. I can't seem to get into the story because when I look behind all of McKillip's beautiful prose there really isn't much there. It's a very nice story about mages and princes and enchanted forests, but when all is said and done I didn't feel any real connection with the characters of Talis, Atrix or anyone else.

When I read a book I want my characters to be grounded in some sort of solid reality. In other words I want the reality-the framework and internal logic of the world-to control the characters, not vice versa. The characters should be at the mercy of their environment (even if fanciful, it still has rules!) and they should react and struggle against it. In Atrix Wolfe (as well as in Riddle Master), however, I find myself in scene after scene where the characters themselves are the center of the universe. They possess magical powers far too immense in comparison to their rather puny environment and they control their surroundings seemingly at will. For an example, see the description on page 217 where Atrix Wolfe (via his shape shifting abilities) goes into a pebble and down into the Earth and into an underground stream and pops out of a tree some distance away in order to avoid the enemy. Now I know this is fantasy and fairytale but doesn't that sound a little ridiculous? When characters start popping out of holes in the ground is when I come to the conclusion that an Earth-like setting is a little too small for these guys: there need to be more restrictions. Toward the end of the book I began to think to myself "Well, since apparently ABSOLUTELY ANYTHING can happen in this book, I really don't care what is going to happen."

Overall, I enjoyed this book more than Riddle Master (I have to admit though, not least of all because it is shorter). But its biggest fault is a lack of logical development. There are too many unexplained magical powers and mystical descriptions. When McKillip is given the opportunity in the story to explain certain developments she invariably resorts to a sort of mystical-psycho-babble answer that sounds nice but leaves me feeling empty inside. At least I can say I've given her books a try. Don't get me wrong, I think she is a fine writer. She's just not quite my style.

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful story, told in a beautiful way
you know the feeling, when falling really great fantasy book, when you know that you fall on some true words?! Read more
Published on Mar 2 2003 by A. Dan

2.0 out of 5 stars Well...
I thought it was moving too slowly. The constant change of character narrations every few chapters, I didn't mind, but the story didn't seem to be going anywhere for awhile.
Published on Jan 2 2002 by J. Richards

5.0 out of 5 stars You MUST buy this book!
One morning I began reading this book for the first time, over breakfast, I woke from the dream after 247 enchanting pages and felt like crying because the book was over. Read more
Published on Mar 6 2001 by dava_ellinger

5.0 out of 5 stars The War of the Words
Combining several "thought" elements together in a single, beautiful tapestery, McKillip takes on the power of words and naming, the meaning of sorrow, man's capability... Read more
Published on Jan 10 2001 by Emily Snyder

3.0 out of 5 stars Charming but not engaging
Character development and plot take second place to the creation of a mood of magic and mystery. There are all the elements of classic fantasy: a great mage, a novice, an... Read more
Published on Jan 4 2001 by enmac

5.0 out of 5 stars Fantasy Doesn't Get Any Better Than This!
What a wonderful book! Weaving, retelling and redefining the classic faerie tale in a style at once simple and elegant, McKillip brings a sense of wonder and magic to every page,... Read more
Published on Nov 2 2000 by Elyon

3.0 out of 5 stars Certainly does drag a bit, doesn't it?
I loved the ending, but maybe that's just because it took me months to read the middle. I was very excited that it was almost over. Read more
Published on Sep 6 2000 by Elaine Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars An intelligent, sensitive fantasy.
This is McKillip at her poetic best. Her favorite themes of self-discovery, atonement, and forgiveness are worked out in an ingenious and suspenseful plot written in beautiful,... Read more
Published on Jul 13 2000 by Pauline J. Alama

4.0 out of 5 stars Worlds Collide
This book presents a fascinating picture of what happens when worlds in different dimensions or on different planes collide. Read more
Published on Jul 11 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring Journey
As always with McKillip's work, I found her descriptions wonderful. She always manages to get all of the way into her character's worlds. Read more
Published on Jun 14 2000 by Steve Eldredge

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