Bound To Stay Bound

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 Clariel : the lost Abhorsen (Old Kingdom)
 Author: Nix, Garth

 Publisher:  Harper (2014)

 Classification: Fiction
 Physical Description: 382 p., maps, 23 cm.

 BTSB No: 677280 ISBN: 9780061561559
 Ages: 13-16 Grades: 8-11

 Subjects:
 Magic -- Fiction
 Fantasy fiction

Price: $6.50

Summary:
[Book 4 of series] The story of how Clariel became a Free Magic Sorcerer, set 600 years before the birth of Sabriel.

Audio Prevew:


Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: MG+
   Reading Level: 6.70
   Points: 20.0   Quiz: 169989

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (09/01/14)
   School Library Journal (07/01/14)
   Booklist (+) (09/15/14)
 The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (01/15)
 The Hornbook (00/09/14)

Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 09/15/2014 *Starred Review* Nix’s fans have long awaited more Old Kingdom tales, and this stand-alone prequel, taking place 600 years before Sabriel’s birth, recounts the poignant origin story of sorcerer and necromancer Chlorr of the Mask. Strong-willed, solitary Clariel wishes only to live in the Great Forest as one of its wardens, but her parents move them to the capital of Belisaere when her mother is invited into the Goldsmiths’ High Guild. Clariel is ill suited to city life, where she must attend finishing school and study tedious Charter magic as the Abhorsen’s granddaughter. But it’s the prospect of an arranged marriage to the cruel governor’s son that fuels her desperation. When a dangerous Free Magic creature is released into the city—part of the governor’s plan to depose the king—Clariel sees a way out, though she may lose herself in the escape. Clariel is a deeply sympathetic character faced with complicated choices, the consequences of which are frighteningly uncertain as she is pulled between the wild Free Magic and the disciplined Charter. Nix’s intricate world building reveals more Old Kingdom history and its ever-shifting alliance between the political and magical. Themes of freedom and destiny underpin Clariel’s harrowing, bittersweet story, and readers will delight in the telling (and in fan favorite Mogget’s return). - Copyright 2014 Booklist.

School Library Journal - 07/01/2014 Gr 7 Up—Over a decade has passed since Nix's last Old Kingdom novel, Abhorsen (HarperCollins, 2003), but he has lost none of his skill in depicting this fantasy realm. Nix sets Clariel 600 years before his other Old Kingdom novels, in a time when the king is old and weary and the current Abhorsen prefers to hunt game rather than Free Magic creatures and necromancers. Clariel is a young woman who is close kin to both the King and the Abhorsen but with little knowledge of either. She has reluctantly come to the capital city of Belisaere with her mother, Jaciel, who has been declared a High Goldsmith. Clariel would prefer to roam free amongst the forest near her childhood home of Estwael and seeks any way to escape the odious city with its lifeless streets and political squabbles. Clariel's instructor in Charter Magic, Magister Kargrin, promises his help to leave the city in return for her aid in capturing a Free Magic creature that he believes is in league with Governor Kilp. Little does she realize the effect that the touch of the creature will have on her or the depths to which Kilp will stoop to assuage his ambition. Nix pens a compelling character in Clariel while his skill in rendering both politics and magic is strong. This excellent work can be enjoyed independently of the other Old Kingdom novels, but will certainly draw readers to those works.—Eric Norton, McMillan Memorial Library, Wisconsin Rapids, WI - Copyright 2014 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Bulletin for the Center... - 01/01/2015 Nix fans will surely rejoice at this sharp, gripping prequel to his beloved fantasy trilogy of Lirael (BCCB 5/01), Sabriel (BCCB 12/96), and Abhorsen (BCCB 3/03). Clariel, who later turns up in the trilogy under a different name, chafes under the weight of her parents’ expectations for her, when all she desperately wants is to retreat to the forest and live a solitary life. It is perhaps little wonder, then, that she responds as a trapped animal might, lashing out with berserker fury and short-sighted, impulsive decisions, in her efforts to get out of the endless politics in which her family is involved. While Clariel is not always a likable character, she does inspire deep sympathy, particularly when she only realizes how much deep support and love her parents offered after they have gone. Readers already in the know about the setting and characters will likely get a bit more out of the novel, though the beauty of a prequel is that it will not only present unknown scenarios even to the most intense devotees but also pave a path for new fans to dive into the existing trilogy. Although it’s clear that no true happy ending is possible, given the intense early tragedies and horrifying political structure in place, there is at least a hopeful note that matches the overall tone of the other volumes. AS - Copyright 2015 The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.

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