Perma-Bound Edition ©2002 | -- |
Paperback ©2007 | -- |
Middle Ages. Fiction.
Love. Fiction.
Wolves. Fiction.
Voyages and travels. Fiction.
Extrasensory perception. Fiction.
Transylvania (Romania). History. To 1500. Fiction.
Starred Review Drawing on legends and tales ranging from Romulus and Remus to Little Red Riding Hood, Clement-Davies follows Fire Bringer , a Booklist Editors' Choice 2000, with a full-bodied, lyrically told, darker tale set in Transylvania and featuring wolves with a history, mythology, and lore. At the heart of the prophecy that sets the action in motion are a courageous, loving wolf pack and two newborn cubs, a black male and a white female. Their nemesis is the cunning outcast Morgra, whose mysterious powers enable her to control a fearsome pack of fighting males and to order other wolves to give their newborn cubs to her. The two cubs mature, but they and others suffer horrifying ordeals as the prophecy inexorably plays itself out. There are a few awkward transitions, particularly when human history is inserted into the story, but this quibble is minor, given the story's compelling ambience and marvelously credible characterizations. A searing ecological warning reaches a crescendo during the dramatic climax, but the poignant denouement offers a ray of hope for the future. Have a box of tissues on hand.
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2002)Following his fantasy about deer (Fire Bringer), the author tells an epic story about wolves. The novel spans more than a year and is dense with detail about the animals, their surroundings, and their mythology. Despite heavy-handed messages and a reliance on eavesdropping to convey information, the wolf culture is fascinating; the physical and historical backdrop adds texture; and the intense writing style sweeps the reader up into the story.
Kirkus ReviewsClement-Davies ( Fire Bringer , 2000) returns with another powerful animal fantasy, in which wolves pit instinct against legend. In medieval Transylvania, scarred by human superstition and violence, a small wolf pack flees the tyranny of Morgra, leader of the Gestapo-like Night Hunters. Their newborn cubs are marked by the prophecy of the Sight, a mysterious power that allows wolves to commune with birds, see the past and the future, and even control the minds of others. Pursued by Morgra's curse, the pack is destroyed one by one, leaving only young Larka. She must endure harsh testing by the elements, elude those seeking her life, and overcome her own despair in order to hone the Sight, and discover the deepest power of all: the secret of Man. In this staggeringly ambitious allegory, wherein myths, history, even the landscape have rich symbolic resonance, Clement-Davies's reach sometimes exceeds his grasp. His huge cast, while complex and vivid, can become confusing; too often he preaches through his characters, rather than allowing them to tell their own stories. Still, the tale possesses an epic grandeur, and the poetic language evokes both lyric mysticism and immediate passionate sensuality. As Larka's messianic destiny unfolds, her journey is filled with tragedy, bitterness, violence, and betrayal; but there is also sacrifice, courage, and a love beyond all loss. Above all, this is a story about stories: how they educate, enrich, and comfort, but also entrap within the dead weight of myth. As much as the reader will learn about wolves, close attention will reveal even more about what it means to be human. A flawed but heartbreaking work of imaginative vision. (Fiction. YA)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)As in his <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">Fire Bringer, Clement-Davies's new fantasy novel features talking animals (Vargs, or wolves, instead of deer), a militant pack with a power-hungry leader, a prophecy involving a newborn that proves gifted (a white wolf who has the Sight, which can be used to see the future, heal and even control others) and the author creates imaginative mythologies (here drawing on everything from Christianity to Little Red Riding Hood). Also, both prophecies speak of a marked one (this time it turns out to be a stolen human child) and the revelation of a secret. But readers may find the creative plotting here even more compelling than in the author's first novel—and the cryptic prophecy's meaning will keep them guessing. Larka, a white wolf, and her family are hunted, initially by Morgra, who strives to become the powerful Man Varg (also foretold in the prophecy); a rebel pack also hunts them (Slavka, its leader, seeks to destroy all that claim to have the Sight). After Larka loses members of her pack, she embarks on a solo journey and finds teachers who help her master the Sight, using it to heal the "human cub" and to prepare to face Morgra. Despite sophisticated language and some complex concepts, such as the origins of evil, the author's clever plot twists (such as which wolf eventually claims to be Wolfbane) make the thick novel well worth the commitment. Strong female characters also provide a refreshing change to the often male-dominated science-fiction/fantasy field. Ages 12-up. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(Mar.)
School Library JournalGr 6 Up-In Transylvania, some time in the past, a she-wolf named Palla gives birth to two cubs, an all-white female named Larka and a male named Fell. These are strange times for the Varg, as the wolves call themselves-Palla's outcast sister Morgra has gained power over a large group of fighting wolves and is determined to gain ultimate power by creating a "Man Varg," mingling the consciousness of a Sighted wolf with that of a human child in order to achieve a Vision of the world. Young Larka has the Sight, a form of ESP, and her pack is torn apart as Morgra attempts to capture her. Roman mythology, Christianlike theology, and supernatural horror all combine to form the legends that lead the Varg toward their destinies. Its members are realistically wolflike; their cold, harsh environment is vividly depicted; and elements of the story are quite exciting. However, much of the tension is lost by a convoluted plot and a multitude of interminable scenes, mostly discussions between characters, that will make many readers either skip ahead or abandon the book entirely. However, this may be a good choice for readers who have outgrown Brian Jacques's "Redwall" series (Philomel) and are ready for a more complicated animal fantasy.-Eva Mitnick, Los Angeles Public Library Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Fri Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2002)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2002)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
Wilson's High School Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Evaluates the carcinogenic risk to humans posed by the consumption of chlorinated drinking-water by two chemicals used in the chlorination of drinking-water by a number of halogenated by-products formed when chlorine interacts with organic matter in water and by a selection of other halogenated compounds found in drinking-water. Chlorination was selected for evaluation because of its widespread use and because potentially carcinogenic by-products have been measured in chlorinated water. The book also includes a separate monograph on cobalt and cobalt compounds. The volume opens with a discussion of the many methodological problems that complicate efforts to assess the carcinogenicity of chlorinated water. Against this background the book evaluates the design and findings of all studies relevant to the carcinogenicity assessment of chlorinated drinking-water two chemicals (sodium chlorite and hypochlorite salts) used in the chlorination of water eight of the by-products most frequently measured in drinking-water and three additional halogenated chemicals detected in drinking-water. Because of the formidable methodological obstacles faced by all investigations only one of these substances could be classified: bromodichloromethane was classified as possibly carcinogenic to humans. The final monograph considers data on metallic cobalt, cobalt alloys including cobalt-containing surgical implants and dental devices and cobalt compounds. In view of the strength of evidence linking cobalt metal powder and cobalt[II] oxide to cancer in experimental animals cobalt and cobalt compounds were classified as possibly carcinogenic to humans.