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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I didn't become quite as engrossed in this book as I did in the first, but I still enjoyed this adventure very much. Yolen shows her mastery of the craft as she effectively changes tone as she switches from telling the myth, story, history, legend, tale, song and ballad. She can write anything! I'm looking forward to the last book in the Great Alta Saga. ( )I remember reading Sister Light, Sister Dark and White Jenna when they first came out way back in the late 1980's. I was out of college but reading young adult fiction voraciously. Yes, I read almost everything voraciously but I didn't really have access to modern YA books when I was growing up. We rarely bought books from major bookstores though my family frequented a book exchange several times a year. I always had access to private libraries (I never went to a public library until I was in college) but they were limited by their focus. Several of the libraries belonged to private christian schools and in one there was no science fiction or fantasy other than Tolkein and C.S. Lewis. The books were more reliable for research than for fun reading. Anyway, I loved Light Sister, Dark Sister and the year of waiting for White Jenna seemed impassable. Rereading these books I felt less of the thrill and some chafing at the structure of Myth, Legend, History, Story. I did find the differences in the tellings interesting and let my mind follow how these differences could happen but I felt like they broke the story into less flowing parts. They are complicated books to try to summarize. The worshippers of Alta are set apart communities of women. They practice religion and life that follow the sayings of Great Alta and their warriors are well known and respected. One of their great secrets is their practice of calling shadow sisters from a mirror to join them in this world. Jenna seems to fulfill an ancient prophecy through her unusual birth and mothers but she and her hame leader are not sure and ask for greater signs. When Jenna and her friend unknowingly become tangled in political intrigue, the fury of the reigning king and his 4 lords are brought against the communities of women. Whether or not she wasnts to be involved, Jenna is central to both the beginning and the end. Priestesses keep reminging everyone to read the prophecies "on the slant". An added bonus for those of you who are musically inclined, each book has the words and music for the songs in the story. I recommend this book, I guess to people in 5th grade through high school. Excellent follow-up to "Sister Light, Sister Dark"! In the land of the Dales, conquered by the patriarchial Garunians, women living in communities known as Hames train girls to be warriors. They are able to call up their dark sisters, shadow souls who appear in the flesh with the moon or firelight to fight and work and love as their light sisters do. Jenna and two companions--Petra, a priestess in training, and Catrona, a warrior, plan to warn the other Hames of the danger from the usurping Lord Kalas. This book alternates between a story, a "history", and a bunch of other stuff. I found it to be better than I anticipated, but still not something I feel the need to keep with me. I got pretty into it, but the ending disturbed me. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:08 -0400)
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