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Loading... The Dungeonby Lynne Reid Banks
None. After becoming a laird in Scotland, a large man is wronged by another laird and becomes cold hearted with nothing but revenge on his mind. He builds a castle and during its construction travels the world where he purchases a young Chinese girl. He treats her poorly and is regarded as cruel. Finally he prepares for the final step to his master plan of revenge, which doesn’t go as planned. As a reader I had a hard time putting this book down. It was written so as to give the reader subtle hints as to what might happen but kept you intrigued enough to keep reading further. ‘One more chapter before bed’ quickly became 4 and before I knew it I had finished the entire book. I was somewhat disappointed with the ending as it seemed abrupt, but found it to be a good read. This novel flowed together nicely and did a great job of building complex characters and descriptive scenes. As a teacher this would be an ideal book for students who enjoy history and medieval times. I love this type of historical fiction. Bruce McLennan, a Scottish laird in the 15th c, orders a huge castle built with a terrible dungeon in which he plans to keep his mortal enemy. It takes years for this to happen and so he travels – hitching rides with traders until he ends in China where he buys Peony ( a girl who has had her feet bound) to be his tea slave. He returns to Scotland with P (no-one there has ever seen a Chinese person before) & P must endure stares and a new language & culture until McLennan’s need for revenge on McInnes ( the man who killed his wife & children) drives him to madness. p.103 – 108The laird comes home & P meets Fin (her true friend) for the first time. no reviews | add a review
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Some dialogue and vocabulary is in Scots dialect, e.g. "Have ye no clothes but these?", the meaning is obvious from context mostly.
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