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The Dust of 100 Dogs by A.S. King
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The Dust of 100 Dogs (edition 2009)

by A.S. King

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4685052,783 (3.81)27
Cursed to live the lives of 100 dogs, a seventeenth-century pirate finally returns to life as a human being and has only one thing on her mind--to recover the treasure she had buried in Jamaica three hundred years before.
Member:TheDreamerReader
Title:The Dust of 100 Dogs
Authors:A.S. King
Info:Flux (2009), Paperback, 336 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
Tags:None

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The Dust of 100 Dogs by A. S. King

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» See also 27 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 50 (next | show all)
Picked up this book because I've enjoyed the authors books before and the concept sounded interesting, but overall reading this just made me feel kinda gross. There's graphic descriptions of rape, animal abuse, and gore. Even though the book doesn't condone any of this it's still upsetting to read about, and many of the scenes felt needlessly explicit. ( )
  mutantpudding | Dec 26, 2021 |
Pirate fun. This book switches among three different narrators, two of which are the same person in different lifetimes: Emer Morrisey, a displaced Irish girl, who becomes a dreaded pirate following her escape from poverty, and Saffron Adams, the last hope for her dysfunctional family, who does not want to become the college kid/doctor and goes to find the treasure she buried in the Caribbean centuries ago. In between, she suffered the curse of living as 100 dogs. Sometimes entertaining, sometimes not: extra points for originality. ( )
  skipstern | Jul 11, 2021 |
This is the third or fourth time around I've tried to read this, but at about halfway through, I think I have to officially thrown in the towel. It's interesting how King's style has developed, but there is little of that elan here. The plot is a little too predictable for my tastes and the characters simplistic. Ah well... ( )
  LibroLindsay | Jun 18, 2021 |
Pirates are nothing if not adventure prone (Swords! Rum! Cannons!), and I suppose I can see how someone could really enjoy this book. I didn't like it because I didn't connect with any of the characters, except little girl Emer and maybe her mother. The writing was vivid and there was plenty of action, but I had to force myself onward because I just found the story a downer, and without a character I felt invested in to pull me through the darker bits it got very tedious indeed. Nice cover art though. ( )
  bookbrig | Aug 5, 2020 |
n the 1600s, Emer Morrissey was a frightful pirate marauding the Caribbean seas in search of treasure to steal and hoping to once again meet her long-lost love. That is, until the night she is cursed to one hundred lives as a dog. One hundred dog lifetimes later, Emer is back in the body of Saffron Adams, the hope of her lower middle-class family. Unfortunately for the Adams family, Emer has no interest in lifting the family out of poverty through higher education, but she may just know where to find the buried treasure she left behind.

I really thought that The Dust of a 100 Dogs had a really fun concept that I would enjoy, but nearly the whole thing didn’t work for me. The characters are woefully one dimensional. The good characters are too good, the evil characters too evil, the conflicts too easily begun and resolved, and the reincarnation portrayed poorly. At the beginning of the novel, Saffron’s thoughts and actions are nearly entirely Emer’s. If they are not the same person, then Saffron is utterly controlled by Emer, driven by Emer’s desire to have back the treasure denied to her and filled with Emer’s violent pirate thoughts. By the end of the book, however, it was like King made a last-minute decision that Saffron ought to have a voice too, but it was too little too late to be anything short of a tack on.

Flashbacks to Emer’s early life in an Ireland being destroyed by Oliver Cromwell’s armies are the best and most compelling part of this book, perhaps because it’s the only part that feels genuine. Once Emer flees the husband her uncle has sold her to in the aftermath of the war, Emer, desperate, decides she’ll board a ship bound for the Caribbean, where other men are looking for wives or worse. This is where things fell apart for me. For one, if you ran away from a lousy, rotten husband to be impoverished on the streets of Paris, why would you think you’d make out any better rolling the dice on a mystery husband in the Caribbean? For two, I just never really managed to buy Emer as a proper pirate. She kind of dithers her way into the whole thing after fleeing the next d-bag husband in line, and using her pent-up loathing for all the men who took what wasn’t theirs in a battle. All the sudden, she’s a sea captain with pirate fleet robbing Spanish treasure ships. There doesn’t seem to be any real reason for it other than she doesn’t want to get married to a French d-bag and she need something to do while she moons over the lost love her of her Irish youth that she hopes against hope to meet again. She’s supposed to be this feared killer, but it all seems to be a bit of an act, and a poor one.

Maybe I’m expecting too much. This is, after all, a swashbuckling YA tale of reincarnation and piracy. I’m probably not supposed to read so much into it. I’m supposed to appreciate Emer as a strong female character and enjoy her adventures at sea. However, despite her murderous abilities, she somehow never stopped seeming like victim to me, and The Dust of a 100 Dogs, with its many lifetimes’ worth of stories to tell never came together into the more multi-dimensional story I was hoping for. ( )
  yourotherleft | Jul 7, 2019 |
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Live it up, live it up, live it up, live it up! Robert Nesta Marley
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To Topher. Until the end of time.
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With one last, almighty roar, the Frenchmen fell to his knees and died.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Cursed to live the lives of 100 dogs, a seventeenth-century pirate finally returns to life as a human being and has only one thing on her mind--to recover the treasure she had buried in Jamaica three hundred years before.

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In the late 17th century, famed pirate Emer Morrisey was on the cusp of escaping pirate life with her one true love and unfathomable riches when she was slain and cursed with the dust of 100 dogs, dooming her to one hundred lives as a dog before returning to a human body—with her memories intact. Now she's a contemporary American teenager, and all she needs is a shovel and a ride to Jamaica.
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