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Wild Angel
  

Wild Angel (Audio CD)

by Pat Murphy (Author), Bernadette Dunne (Narrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

Though Wild Angel, Pat Murphy's frontier fantasy, deals with both wolves and westward expansion, readers of her lycanthrope novel Nadya should not expect a retread. This playful homage to the Tarzan books and American tall tales travels a lighter, more sparkling road.

Set in the California gold country between 1850 and 1863, the novel follows the adventures of Sarah McKensie, orphaned at age 3 by a stagecoach robber. Sarah is adopted and nursed by the she-wolf Wauna (who has lost her litter of pups to the same brutal man) and is accepted into the wolf pack. As she matures, Sarah learns to assist in the pack's well-being by contributing human tools--a found knife, a bow and arrow, and a lariat stolen from a would-be cowpoke--to the hunt.

With her best friend and pack-sister Beka at her side, Sarah becomes a local legend--the Wild Angel of the Sierras, rescuer of imperiled travelers. Sarah's altruism is motivated less by compassion than by curiosity, bafflement by the settlers' inability to perceive the world around them, and a passion for biscuits.

Surrounding Sarah is a kaleidoscopic cast: an artist with a shady past; a young Indian shaman; a mesmerist-cum-temperance crusader; a circus impresario with a pack of poodles and an elephant named Ruby; a young woman on the lam from her strait-laced aunt; the hilarious fraternal order E Clampus Vitus (or "Clampers"); Samuel Clemens (in a brief and thwarted cameo); and, of course, two hiss-worthy villains--one human, one lupine.

Throughout this tale of coincidence, chance reunions, heroism, villainy, romance, revenge, and adventure, Murphy weaves deft comedic touches--including Sarah's unforgettable improvisation during a staging of "The Drunkard." Even the one continuity blip near the end of the novel reads not as authorial carelessness but as a knowing wink to the plot-and-character-juggling serial writers of the past.

Murphy has written Wild Angel as a novel by alter-ego/imaginary friend Max Merriwell written as Mary Maxwell. The conceit isn't necessary for enjoyment of the novel, but the three explanatory afterwords, by Maxwell, Merriwell, and Murphy, are pure jam.

Before embarking upon this delightful novel, readers would be well advised to check their realism at the door and adopt the motto of the Clampers--Credo Quia Absurdum, "I believe because it is absurd." --Eddy Avery --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Murphy's previous novel, There and Back Again, paid homage to Frank L. Baum's Oz books. Her latest volume continues the tradition, this time looking back to Edgar Rice Burroughs's legendary Tarzan series (plus a good dash of Mark Twain). Rachel and William McKenzie are hopeful settlers in the gold fields of 1850 California, but their dreams are cut short when they're murdered in their camp not far from the boomtown of Selby. Avoiding death by hiding in a cave, their three-year-old daughter, Sarah, finds that her survival afterward depends upon the wolf pack that adopts her. Sarah avoids humanity for many years, until a chance encounter and subsequent friendship with a young Indian woman shows her that not all people are to be feared. When she saves a family in winter-shrouded Donner Pass, Sarah earns the name "The Wild Angel," but keeps to the land until she meets journalist and adventurer Max Phillips, who has been haunted by her since the day he discovered her parents' bodies but couldn't find their little girl. Sarah's friendship with Max grows over the seasons in secret, for Max suspects that the man who killed her parents is still nearby. When the secret slips out, Sarah must face her enemy and extract justice as the wolf pack has taught her. In an afterword, Murphy cites Burroughs's "shameless use of coincidence" to "arrange the characters to his liking," which is clearly the case here. This novel, lightweight compared to Murphy's earlier work, functions best as an engaging summer read.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Tarzan - Lady of the Wolves?, April 7 2001
By "kangarex" (Keokuk, IA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wild Angel (Hardcover)
This is a decent light read. However, it didn't come off in my reading as homage to Tarzan, so much as a straight lifting of the plot. While it was somewhat refreshing to see Burroughs-type fiction done from the female perspective, unfortunately most of the Burroughs problems except for the male-dominance remain prevelant; most importantly the essential junvenility of a lot of the plot and perspective. If you basically like fiction written for teenaged boys, except for the strong sexism that such fiction tends to have, you'll probably enjoy this. If you've graduated to sterner fare, you probably won't get past the first half dozen chapters.

In side note though: There have been some fairly modern and well documented cases of feral children - not many to be sure, but enough to make it not completely impossible speculation to have such a child raised by wolves. The difficulty is that by the time such children were found and brought to civilization they were usually beyond the capability of learning true language, and were probably too young at the time they started living in the wild anyway, so there was no way to find out how they had survived.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Unfortunately, a dissenting opinion, Jan 9 2001
By K. Freeman (Apple Valley, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Wild Angel (Hardcover)
This is quite simply a terrible book.

First, it's written in language suitable to, and develops its themes at a level resembling, a child's book. However, it is not being marketed for ten-year-olds, as perhaps it should be, but for adults. (Not that I would recommend it to a ten-year-old either).

I don't quite understand what Murphy thinks she is doing with this Max/Mary Merriwell stuff. Whoever is supposed to have written this book, it isn't any good, and naming a character (Patrick Murphy) after herself is just plain weird.

The plot of Wild Angel is simply impossible. Without wishing to spoil it for anyone who still wants to read it, it involves impossibilities of biology and human physiology. Wolves do not adopt humans and small half-clothed children cannot survive Sierra Nevada winters, period. Granted one role of fantasy is to make us believe the impossible, but Murphy fails to convince me. The characters are shallow and scarcely developed to the point where I kept getting the various women mixed up, and as for the use of language, the Mark Twain quotes dragooned into chapter-heading duty were the only good writing to be found.

The book backs away shyly from any display of sex or violence, not to mention any serious exploration of themes of wilderness, civilization and so forth, which is why it seems like a badly written child's book to me. Clumsy "informative" paragraphs on wolves add to this impression.

It should come as no surprise by this point that I recommend skipping this book.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful adventure!!!!, Sep 28 2000
By Amy Thomson "Amy Thomson" (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Wild Angel (Hardcover)
For those of us who felt shut out because all the really great adventure novels were about men and boys, here's one for you! Pat Murphy does Edgar Rice Burroughs and Jack London one better in this riveting adventure about a young girl raised by wolves in the gold country of California. And those male fans of Burroughs and London will find plenty to like here as well! The setting is beautifully rendered, the characters are warm and believable, and her history is impeccable. Despite all that, you'll like it anyway! This is an adventure novel with a heart!
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful adventure!!!!
For those of us who felt shut out because all the really great adventure novels were about men and boys, here's one for you! Read more
Published on Sep 28 2000 by Amy Thomson

5.0 out of 5 stars The Wild Angel
aharlib@worldnet.att.net The Wild Angel by Pat Murphy (Tor Books, NY, Aug. 2000, $23.95, hardcover, ISBN#: 0-312-86626-7). Read more
Published on Sep 8 2000 by Amy Harlib

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