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These Dark Wings (Ravenmaster Trilogy)

by John Owen Theobald

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1941,147,940 (3.25)None
After her mother is killed in the Blitz and her father in the North Sea, 12-year-old Anna Cooper is sent to live with an uncle she has never met - the Ravenmaster at the Tower of London. Amid the Tower's old secrets and hidden ghosts, the ravens begin to disappear and Anna must brave the war-torn city to find them. With Nazi forces massing on the other side of the Channel, the fate of Britain might be at stake, for an ancient legend foretells that Britain will fall if the ravens ever leave the Tower.… (more)
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Thank you NetGalley and Head of Zeus for providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

WARNING!!

My dear fellow readers DON’T be discouraged by my review!
If you want to read it – do it!
There is a separate public for every book.

Usually I try to avoid reading books about World War II. The Book Thief was the last straw - after that book I swore to read nothing about that period of our history. But as you know oaths can be broken.
I’m not sure if I can write a very informative review for the book without any spoilers. Note one thing – summary misleads you into thinking that it will be one sort of a story, when in truth it is absolutely different.
These Dark Wings was an easy reading – I took me just one day to finish it. But something was not right. I don’t know if it was Anna or those ravens and the legend about them and Tower.
( )
  Shadow_Sandy | Jan 12, 2019 |
I'm just not sure about this one. I think I'm kind of getting used to teenaged (or thereabouts) main characters that I just don't like much – and I don't like that, either. When her mother is killed by German bombing, Anna Cooper, 12, goes to live with her uncle in the Tower of London, where he serves as Ravenmaster – maintaining the legend that if the ravens leave the Tower, England will fall. It's something that seems more critical now than ever, given that the city is suffering under the Blitz, and any small blow to morale would be magnified.

Anna doesn't like her uncle. She doesn't like the Tower. She doesn't like the ravens. She doesn't like the other kids who live with their Beefeater fathers in the Tower, and she doesn't like their fathers (or mothers), either. She never expresses much if any grief over her mother's death, nor worry over her father, who is apparently serving in the North Sea.She does her utmost to make the lives of everyone around her miserable.

Part of the reason for this is obvious – it's also part of why kids don't want to be kids, I think: they are told nothing. She overhears little bits and snatches of things, but when she tries to find out more about just about anything – from why her uncle and mother never saw each other, to what the deal is with the mysterious man she sees lurking about. She begins to suspect that one of the guards is either a spy or a traitor, and I began to very much hope he was neither because I did not want her to be correct.

Another aspect of the story that irritated me was the author's adherence to the he-punched-you-in-the-arm-because-he-likes-you, dipping-pigtails-into-inkwells school of young love. One of the boys sharing the compound is mildly monstrous to her, to a degree that when she went out of the Tower with him I worried for her safety, figuring he'd either do something terrible or abandon her. Yet, pardon what I suppose is a spoiler, by the end when they're separated she finds herself pining for him. It's not exactly a classic love story.

When the revelation comes of who the mysterious stranger is, I might have given up if the book wasn't already almost over. It's based on truth – but the manner of the revelation annoyed me deeply. Overall, not a book I connected with.

The usual disclaimer: I received this book via Netgalley for review. ( )
  Stewartry | Feb 26, 2017 |
This was such a beautifully written book. It centers around a 13 year old girl living in the middle of London during the second World War. She is orphaned and taken in by her Uncle who is a raven master (looks after the ravens) at the Tower of London. She helps him take care of the ravens and tries to navigate her way and understand the world around her in the midst of so much uncertainty-the constant bombings, the threat of invasion, etc..

I am not sure how this book should be categorized really. It is not YA, not Mystery, not Thriller, not Romance (although it has a little of all of these elements)...it's labeled as Children's Fiction, but I feel it is more General Fiction. It also has an open, kind-of-cliffhanger, ending and you are told this is the first book in a series.

I would recommend this to anyone who likes WWII era stories, coming-of-age stories, or just a good, interesting story.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a copy to review. ( )
  CynthiaMR | Aug 31, 2016 |
An intriguing story set in war torn London, about a recently orphaned girl sent to live with her grandfather, who just happens to be Ravenmaster at the Tower of London.
Unfortunately the ravens are going missing and they must be returned before the Germans invade, as the legend says that if the birds leave the Tower, London will fall.
Great read!
I was given a digital copy of this book by the publisher Head of Zeus via Netgalley in return for an honest unbiased review. ( )
  Welsh_eileen2 | Mar 16, 2016 |
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After her mother is killed in the Blitz and her father in the North Sea, 12-year-old Anna Cooper is sent to live with an uncle she has never met - the Ravenmaster at the Tower of London. Amid the Tower's old secrets and hidden ghosts, the ravens begin to disappear and Anna must brave the war-torn city to find them. With Nazi forces massing on the other side of the Channel, the fate of Britain might be at stake, for an ancient legend foretells that Britain will fall if the ravens ever leave the Tower.

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John Owen Theobald is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

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