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Antar and the Eagles

by William Mayne

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Abducted and raised by eagles, a young boy is sent on a mission to rescue a lost egg and, in the process, save the race of eagles.
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A strange book. It takes place in a vaguely historical and vaguely unplaceable European setting - the sort of countryside that features in the tales of the Brothers Grimm or Hans Christian Andersen - and in some respects it resembles a fairy tale, beginning with a boy whisked from a church steeple by an eagle to fulfil a quest. But despite this fairytale element, the narrative itself is simultaneously realistic and fantastic. What would it actually be like for the fairytale hero dropped into an eagle's nest: vertiginous, smelly, and full of aggressive baby eagles with sharp beaks? If a boy must live with the eagles, what can he do for wings? This semi-realism does require quite of lot of suspension of disbelief, but despite the sheer oddity of the premise, I enjoyed the book.
MB 19-iv-2021 ( )
  MyopicBookworm | Apr 19, 2021 |
This book has a rather unique premise: a young boy refuses to go to school and instead climbs up to the church steeple, where his father is working on the roof. He is snatched by a golden eagle which carries him off to an aerie on the mountainside. There the boy is raised alongside the eagle chicks. It is a very uncomfortable life, needless to say. Several times he fears he will die. But gradually he adapts to his new situation, learns to stand his own against the aggressive eaglets, and starts to understand the eagles' communication. It turns out they abducted him for a very specific purpose: they have a mission only he can carry out, to rescue a special egg that was stolen. But first they have to teach him to fly.

It's rather weird and delightful all at the same time. At first I thought the dialog was rather stiff . . . But further into the story I began to appreciate how real the characters feel, how very human Antar's reactions to everything, and the odd situations just made it more interesting. I was really not at all sure how the story was going to end. It has a few unexpected turns near the end- in part caused by the fact that the eagles nest close to an active volcano... . . .

Aside from the moment when the adult eagles pushed the young ones off the nest to make them fly, the behavior of the wild raptors in this book felt very authentic. Well, overlooking the fact that they talk to each other, and have a leader, and send a boy to save a missing egg... . . . It was quite a nice mix of fantasy and naturalism, and I liked the writing style enough that I will be on the lookout for other books by this author.

from the Dogear Diary ( )
2 vote jeane | Jun 12, 2018 |
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Abducted and raised by eagles, a young boy is sent on a mission to rescue a lost egg and, in the process, save the race of eagles.

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