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The Crystal City (Tales of Alvin Maker Series)

AUTHOR: Orson Scott Card
ISBN: 1593974868

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         Editorial Review

The Crystal City (Tales of Alvin Maker Series)
- Book Review,
by Orson Scott Card

From Publishers Weekly
If not the best in the series, Card's latest Alvin Maker novel (after 1998's Heartfire: Tales of Alvin Maker V) still enchants. In the author's alternative American frontier world, Indians work the magics of nature, Africans transform themselves with trinkets and whites have knacks-magical talents that allow them to shape metal, find water, win the hearts of followers and more. Alvin, the powerful seventh son of a seventh son, can create things that cannot be destroyed. He also has more than his fair share of knacks as well as some Indian magic. Determined to stop suffering where he finds it, he dreams of building the Crystal City, which will help mankind live in peace. A large part of the appeal lies in the book's homegrown characters using their powers for ordinary purposes. A blacksmith's knack shapes axes that never dull, while a midwife can sense the health of her patients. Even as Alvin performs miracles to lead thousands of slaves out of bondage, he is filled with uncertainty about what to do with his life and self-doubt because he couldn't save his stillborn child. Alvin's fans will be relieved to know that the City is indeed begun in this volume, but those who were expecting the start of the civil war, previously billed as forthcoming, will have longer to wait. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


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         Book Review

The Crystal City (Tales of Alvin Maker Series)
- Book Reviews,
by Orson Scott Card

The Crystal City (Tales of Alvin Maker Series)

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Using the lore and the folk-magic of the men and women who settled North America, Orson Scott Card has created an alternate world where magic works, and where that magic has colored the entire history of the colonies. Charms and beseechings, hexes and potions, all have a place in the lives of the people of this world. Dowsers find water, the second sight warns of dangers to come, and a torch can read a person's future -- or their heart. In this world where "knacks" abound, Alvin, the seventh son of a seventh son, is a very special man indeed. He's a Maker; he has the knack of understanding how things are put together, how to create them, repair them, keep them whole, or tear them down. He can heal hearts as well as bones, he can build a house, he can calm the waters or blow up a storm. And he can teach his knack to others, to the measure of their own talent. Alvin has been trying to avert the terrible war that his wife, Peggy, a torch of extraordinary power, has seen down the life-lines of every American. Now she has sent him down the Mizzippy to the city of New Orleans, or Nueva Barcelona as they call it under Spanish occupation. Alvin doesn't know exactly why he's there, but when he and his brother-in-law, Arthur Stuart, find lodgings with a family of abolitionists who know Peggy, he suspects he'll find out soon. But Nueva Barcelona is about to experience a plague, and Alvin's efforts to protect his friends by keeping them healthy will create more danger than he could ever have suspected. And in saving the poor people of the city, Alvin will be put to the greatest test of his life -- a test that will draw on all his power. For the time has come for him to turn to his old friend Tenskwa-Tawa, the Red Prophet who controls the lands to the west of the Mizzippy. Now Alvin must take the first steps on the road to the Crystal City that was shown to him in a vision so long ago.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

If not the best in the series, Card's latest Alvin Maker novel (after 1998's Heartfire: Tales of Alvin Maker V) still enchants. In the author's alternative American frontier world, Indians work the magics of nature, Africans transform themselves with trinkets and whites have knacks-magical talents that allow them to shape metal, find water, win the hearts of followers and more. Alvin, the powerful seventh son of a seventh son, can create things that cannot be destroyed. He also has more than his fair share of knacks as well as some Indian magic. Determined to stop suffering where he finds it, he dreams of building the Crystal City, which will help mankind live in peace. A large part of the appeal lies in the book's homegrown characters using their powers for ordinary purposes. A blacksmith's knack shapes axes that never dull, while a midwife can sense the health of her patients. Even as Alvin performs miracles to lead thousands of slaves out of bondage, he is filled with uncertainty about what to do with his life and self-doubt because he couldn't save his stillborn child. Alvin's fans will be relieved to know that the City is indeed begun in this volume, but those who were expecting the start of the civil war, previously billed as forthcoming, will have longer to wait. (Nov. 10) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

VOYA - Diane Emge

Fans of The Tales of Alvin Maker are sure to rejoice at the publication of the sixth and final volume in Card's ingenious alternate-reality fantasy series. For the uninitiated, Alvin was born the seventh son of a seventh son, destined to possess the powerful magical gifts of a Maker. His world is a North America divided into countries such as New England, Appalachee, and a greatly reduced United States. Throughout the series, Alvin uses his powers for the force of good, by healing and seeking justice for the oppressed. His wife, Margaret, is a torch, enabling her to see into the future, and a passionate abolitionist. As this volume begins, Margaret has sent Alvin to Nueva Barcelona (a.k.a. New Orleans) on an unspecified mission. Alvin irritably suspects that she has seen his death in another place and has merely sent him there to avoid that fate. Alvin is traveling with teenager Arthur Stuart, a former slave and novice Maker. The pair rescues the slave population of Nueva Barcelona by creating a crystal bridge across the Mizzippi River, leading them toward the legendary Crystal City that has always been Alvin's destiny. As usual, Card's writing is spiced with snappy dialogue and memorable characters, including such historical personalities as Abraham Lincoln and Jim Bowie. The more the reader knows about American history, the more enjoyable is Card's imaginative reworking. Although it is not necessary to have read the earlier books to appreciate this tale, faithful readers will be rewarded by the inclusion of old friends and by the satisfying resolution of ongoing plot twists. The novel is highly recommended, even if the library does not own the first books in the series. VOYA CODES: 4Q4P J S A/YA (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses; Broad general YA appeal; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12; Adult-marketed book recommended for Young Adults). 2003, Tor, 416p., Ages 12 to Adult.


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