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Loading... Deerskinby Robin McKinley
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This one was difficult for me to read (and definitely not for children!) I didn't really like it very much. I guess I just didn't see the point in the story, and I didn't like it enough to bother with rereading it, looking for a meaning. I love Robin McKinley's writing, but this book is definitely my least favorite. ( )Princess Lissar is the daughter of the most beautiful woman in seven kingdoms. When her mother falls ill, she extracts a promise from the king that he will remarry again, but only to a woman who matches the queen in beauty. Lissar is mostly forgotten in the kingdom's mourning. However, a neighboring royal family sends their condolences and a puppy for Lissar. Ash, the fleethound puppy, is the only joy in Lissar's life, as she spends the next two years training her dog, learning herbalism, and avoiding her father. On her 17th birthday, when she becomes eligible to be married, Lissar's father decides that his daughter matches her mother's beauty and he will marry her. What follows is a brutal assault that leaves Lissar physically, mentally, and emotionally damaged. She flees the castle and is transformed by the moon goddess, becoming the mysterious Deerskin. As she tries to start a new life in the kingdom where Ash came from, she must grapple with her painful memories. Deerskin is a retelling of Charles Perrault's story "Donkeyskin." I was introduced to a variation of this story through Jim Henson's The Storyteller, where it was called "Sapsorrow." This story is beautiful and heartbreaking. McKinley's language is very traditional, moving at a slow but steady pace, which builds up great amounts of tension in the first part of the book. The relationship between Ash and Lissar will appeal to any dog-person - I gave my dog a lot of squeezes while reading, though she's the farthest thing from a fleethound! I was very caught up in Lissar's transformation from forgotten princess to a strong, almost-mythical woman. This isn't an easy read. I was drawn in by the characters and the language, and I had a pretty good-sized knot in my stomach during the first part of the book (and some of the second)! Lissar's healing process is difficult and worth reading, by those who enjoy retold fairy tales or those looking for a strong female character. One of my favorite books of all time. Someone here said "this book broke my heart, and then healed it" and that's exactly how I feel. I always read it all the way through, even the hardest parts. Somehow I feel that I cannot abandon Lissar in her darkest hours, even though she cannot know I am there, suffering with her. That's okay, it all pays off in the end. Plus the cover of this book is something very special to me, because the woman looks exactly like the ghost of a beloved friend whose hair was very black. The sad eyes, the too-large nose, the sensitive lips... it's a portrait that was never of her. Fitting somehow, since it's a haunted portrait that causes so much grief in this story. This book is fairly rough stuff, exposing the ugly truth at the core of the Donkeyskin tale, as well as that beauty is not the only -- or even the most important -- qualification for a princess. Someone commenting on Robin McKinley's blog said this book broke her heart and then healed it. It is a terrific, strong, emotional book. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 16:02:44 -0500)
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