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It may be categorized better as MG than YA, but that really didn't bother me. I love the stories. It's well-written too; Yolen changes the style in which each story is told depending on who the narrator is. For instance Mama Gone is told from the perspective of a little girl from the backwoods. Sea Dragon of Fife has the flavor of a fisherman's tale. Wilding is narrated by a teenage who is always trying to use 'coolish' slang from her time.
Some of the stories are set in worlds we already know like Tough Alice (Wonderland) and Lost Girls (Neverland).
My favorite ones would have to Mama Gone, Phoenix Farm (that one almost made me cry), The Baby-Sitter (rather creepy), Bolundeers, and The Bridge's Complaint.
It's a fun easy read. Nothing too complicated. I enjoyed it a lot.
I also encourage you to read the Introduction. I don't always introductions, but this one is short. Yolen talks about Alice in Wonderland and how fantasy played a role in her life. I especially love what she has to say about writing fantasy.
And all the while you talk about the fantastic, you are actually writing about the real world and real emotions, the right-here and the right-now. - Jane Yolen
Oh, this sounds awesome! I LOVE the quotes of six impossible things before breakfast. (There's a book called Six Impossible Things by Fiona Wood...and it's not about AiW at all, but it's about the quotes, and I do looove that quote.)
ReplyDeleteIt's a good read. :) Hm, I must have to look for this book by Fiona Wood. It sounds very interesting.
DeleteI have a magnet on my fridge with the White Queen's quote about six impossible things before breakfast - one of my favorite quotes of all time! So the title of this blog post makes me grin, and I'll have to see if I can find this book.
ReplyDeleteI love that quote too! That's what made me pick up the book. I love Alice in Wonderland quotes. :)
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