![]() ![]() Dressed in her finest robe and her mother's jewelry and dancing at a cousin's wedding, Kezi catches the eye of a startlingly handsome young man, dressed as a slave working at the celebration. Granted thirty days of life before her sacrifice at the hands of the priest, Kezi is determined to make the most of what is left of her youth. Kezi spontaneously interrupts and speaks the fateful congratulations herself to save her aunt, dooming herself to become the death sacrifice instead. As fate would have it, Kezi's beloved great-aunt brusquely pushes her way into the sickroom and begins to voice her heartfelt joy at his wife's return to health. But when her mother suddenly falls gravely ill, her grief-stricken father's spontaneous prayer to the one god, Admat, promises a sacrifice of the first person to congratulate him on the recovery of his wife. ![]() Kezi is a beautiful, talented girl just coming of marriageable age, a promising weaver and graceful dancer. In Ever Levine has, with her usual careful craft, fashioned a tale in a similar genre, a tale of two star-crossed lovers, one beautiful, young, and all-too-human, one beautiful, lonely, and immortal, set like a jewel in two ancient, vaguely middle Eastern lands, Hyte and Akka. With all the hoopla that the final book and the first movie of the Twilight series received, it is important that Gail Carson Levine's new fantasy novel not be overlooked in this obsession with Bella and Edward. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |