When Kaela, youngest daughter of the King of Visin, defies her father and runs away, the king sends a Fytrian wizard to bring her home. This description may be from another edition of this product.
This is one of the best fantasies I've ever read, and believe me I've read quite a lot of fantasies, (that's my favorite genre). This book is so unique. I love Kaela and Kippen. But the supporting characters Melina and Lord Talbot are also fascinating, I'd love to know more about them. This is a book I've read repeatedly, and would do so again. Although little known, this story is engaging and decidedly beautiful. Beth's writing is so descriptive in a way that's not dry but rather excites your mind, kindling your imagination. I love her writing style. If you enjoyed this story you would also enjoy The Storyteller's Daughter.
'Stars' just short of brilliance
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
As many fantasy novels have documented, being a princess is no guarantee of perfect happiness in life. Quite the contrary: most seem to suffer from a spate of tyrannical fathers, odious suitors, dastardly wizards, and unpleasant (step)sisters, all of it topped off with rounds of mind-numbing embroidery. What distinguishes Beth Hilgartner's Princess Kaela from hoards of other sixteen year old, rebellious, runaway princesses is the quality and quantity of the stories she tells throughout the novel while fleeing from her oppressive father. Storytelling is Kaela's gift; not a magical, convenient one like telekinesis or shapeshifting, but one that, like Scheherazade's, allows her to save her own life and freedom in a dangerous situation. With her story, she also rescues a young minstrel named Kippen, gaining a travel companion and ally against the unscrupulus wizard sent to fetch her home. Escaping to the neighboring country of Cymyl, she poses as a simple storyteller, captivating a diverse audience with her magical tales. But they are not just stories. More personal than Scheherazade's, Kaela's stories, while entertaining and well told, are also thoughtful explorations and subtle refractions of her own preoccupations. The relationship between the frame story and its embedded stories is intriguingly complex. Cruel kings, corrupt wizards and jealous lovers parade through her stories in an increasingly close relationship to her external reality. Kaela's final, most personal tale, "A Necklace of Fallen Stars," can only be ended by the actions of the two people involved in telling and listening to the story. All of the stories are unique in tone, intent, and subject matter and are compulsively readable in themselves and as reflections of Kaela's tale. "Bottled Palindrome" is a humorous, rather Lloyd Alexander-esque story in which an evil wizard intent upon capturing a boy named Muffum for a special spell is faced with a mysterious and crabby cat that may (or may not) be more than it seems. "The Knave and the Player," told to Kippen, the robber baron's court, and his beautiful daughter Alyi, is a slightly edgy romance that has considerable bearing on Kaela's relationship to Kippen. More solemn is "The Colors of the Wind," a contemplation on the consequences of intolerance and misunderstanding that just skirts the annoyance of outright didacticism. Unfortunately, the frame story just isn't quite as good as the stories that comment upon and engage with it. Perhaps the consequence of devoting so much of the book to these stories is that the characters, relationships, and actions in the frame story sometimes feel rushed and incompletely explored. A number of repentances and rescues pivotal to the admittedly slight plot come a bit too easily. And while it is refreshing to have characters who are neither wholly good or bad, few of these many characters are actually thoroughly developed. Some, like the sharp tongued Lord Talmot and the robber
Stories within stories: haunting, lyrical, and entertaining.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Kaela: youngest of the three daughters of the overbearing and grief-ridden king of Visin, an adept storyteller who flees the stifling prospect of marriage to a man she does not want. Kippen: a young minstrel from neighboring Cymyl who wanders the back roads of the kingdoms and earns his keep with lilting melodies from his flute. Together they journey from Visin to Cymyl, pursued by the dark wizard Stafgrym who is not so much interested in Kaela's well-being as in the hold her return will give him over her father. Even as Kaela and Kippen travel through the kingdoms, Kaela's two sisters struggle with their father's growing unreason and a power play arising within the Court. The resulting complications are spellbinding."A Necklace of Fallen Stars" is a collection of stories within a story, all told to various people by Kaela as she and Kippen travel; they range from surreal to humorous, sad and witty, beautifully crafted all. Some are adventure stories, some are love stories--encompassing the lives of cats, dragons, and palindromes, each has a certain point and relevance to Kaela and Kippen's story. Magic runs constantly through the book, from Stafgrym's cruel sorceries to the mystic power of the moon-beautiful White Lady: magic, and the lives of the ordinary, everyday people who make up the kingdoms of Visin and Cymyl. Written in a lyrical, detail-rich style, "A Necklace of Fallen Stars" finds room for humor, suspense, tragedy, romance, and a whopping dose of sheer good storytelling into the bargain. The characters are fully human, faults and strengths, easy to like (or dislike, in the case of Stafgrym or Kaela's intended husband): Kaela is a strong, resourceful character who can talk her way out of anything she can't fight free of; Kippen is gentler, more thoughtful, but no less intelligent. The world they live in is believable and enjoyable, with rainbows of mystery dancing at the edges. A beautiful book to read!
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