Archive for January, 2010

Hush: An Irish Princess Tale

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Hush by Donna Jo Napoli is a young adult novel inspired by the Icelandic Saga of the People of Laxardal. Napoli creates an intricate story from a single line that reveals the character to be an Irish princess. The resulting story of princess Melkorka is vividly imagined, well-researched, and beautifully written

Set in early medieval times, around the year 900, Melkorka’s father is looking for revenge over the Norse because a Norse boy cut off his son’s hand. He makes plans in the case things go should go wrong, by sending his two daughters away. It’s ironic that instead of safety the two girls are captured by wandering slave traders. Melkorka doesn’t want her captors to know she is royal, so she chooses not to speak.

“You are right to keep your voice to yourself, Aist,” she says into my ear. “Hush. You’re the one who started this silence–you have to keep it up. Or you lose yourself. He’ll just snuff you out.” She makes a puff of hot air that warms my brain. “Like that, like a lamp flame. A slave life counts for nothing unless the slave finds a trick. You’ve found yours. Stick to it. Hush.”

I don’t understand, But I will hold my tongue. The last person who told me to hush was Mother.

The story is told in Melkorka’s voice, giving a firsthand view of her perceptions, feelings, confusion, and grief — and of her developing wisdom in the face of horrendous circumstances that lead her into a life completely unlike the one she expected as the daughter of an Irish king and queen.

As a spoiled princess, Melkorka held much contempt for slaves.  The Abbott preaches in the cathedral that the practice of slavery should be banned, but Melkorka’s father insists that slaves are necessary to the Irish way of life.  We learn that her brother, whose hand was cut, is opposed to slavery by his comments such as, “civilized people don’t own other people.”

Melkorka believes that most slaves are stupid, or they would not be slaves in the first place.  She does not consider that they are people in their own right, no different from herself

Historically, it’s a fascinating description of the time and people and the conflict between the Vikings and everyone else. The idea that this people just came in and took whomever they wanted–men, women, and especially children–and sold them as slaves is shocking.

She doesn’t speak during her entire ordeal and this failure, or refusal, to communicate is of great interest to her captors.

“I have very little power. But I have no doubt anymore: What power I have comes from my silence.”

This is a mature story.  Although told delicately and with little graphic detail, it is apparent that the crew misuses some of the women and that Melkorka becomes a man’s mistress.  Napoli does not cheapen her tail but wrapping up the details or providing an unrealistic happy ending.  It was not a happy book, but I cannot help my recommend it for its masterful writing and new twist to the issue of slavery.

GENRE: Historical Fiction

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The Cupcake Queen

Monday, January 25th, 2010

“If someone found out they only had one day to live, they should totally move to Hog’s Hollow, because here every day feels like an eternity”

cupcakequeenThe Cupcake Queen by Heather Hepler, is narrated by Penny Lane (her father was a Beatles fan), a fourteen-year-old who has just moved from New York City to the tiny town of Hog’s Head with her mother. Her father, has remains in New York while her parents are separated.

Hog’s Hollow is one of those small towns where everyone knows each others business, and your ancestor’s pictures are posted around town, which is complete with a festival, parade and a Hog Queen.

As Penny negotiates her new school and works in her mother’s new cupcake bakery, she meets a cast of characters that are both quirky and familiar: the school bully, the outcast with crazy fashion sense, the cute boy, and the spunky grandmother.

Originally, Penny doesn’t seem to know how to confront her problems, whether it is in regards to bullies or talking to her mom. Her confusion about her parents seperation, the challenges of a small town compared to the big city, and how a family copes with the death of a parent are just  a few of the themes within the story. Along the way, the reader sees as she works through her own problems and those of her friends.  Ultimately, she must make a choice: does she stay in Hog’s Hollow with her mom, or does she return to New York and the life she loved with her dad?

“…I think about the problem with running from your trouble. The problem is in the stopping. The whole time you think you’re getting away from everything, the trouble is running like mad, too, trying to catch up with you. And it doesn’t slow down when you do–it keeps on sprinting. So when trouble finally reaches you, it hits you hard”

The book is as cute and sweet as the cupcakes on the cover, but strives to have substance.  The story’s moral being that life is always going to throw out unexpected and often unwelcome, surprises. And that it matters how you work through them and the people you surround yourself with. Penny discovers that when you give things a chance, it can all work out much sweeter than you ever expected.  Appropriate for girls, ten and up.

GENRE: Realistic Fiction

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Posted in Realistic Fiction |

Nefertiti

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

nefertitiNefertiti is one of ancient Egypt’s most legendary rulers and renowned for her extraordinary beauty. The novel, Nefertiti by Michelle Moran, tells the story of a powerful woman’s rise and fall in Ancient Egypt through the eyes of her younger sister, Mutnodjmet. Their family has always provided wives to the royal family and the story begins with Nefertiti being married to Prince Akhenaten, who has come into line for the throne with the suspicious death of his older brother. The book charts her sister’s rise from teenage Queen to Egyptian goddess.

The sisters at times appear as pawns for their father’s ambitions and power. Nefertiti captivates her king-husband and essentially steals him from his first wife, and comes to command as much power as he as she struggles to birth him an heir. Their reign is most known for how they break from and outlaw the traditional religion of Egypt and elevate a minor deity, Aten, the sun god, to the sole religion of. Nefertiti and her family are constantly scheming against Kiya, the king’s second wife and the mother of his male heir.

Nefertiti and Amunhotep’s ambition and insecurity make them eager to enjoy unparalleled adoration from the people of Egypt. What follows after the marriage is an intense and often harrowing struggle for power among Egypt’s viziers, military leaders, and royalty, with the royal couple set on changing the course of Egyptian politics and worship for eternity.

Mutnodjmet meanwhile is trapped in the role of being the sister of Nefertiti. Known as “Mutny,” she is expected to remain by her sister’s side, assuaging her heated jealousy toward Kiya, supporting her relationship with the arrogant and reckless Akhenaten, and generally serving as confidante and comfort. Mutny, a talented herbalist, cannot deny her sister, and yet longs for her own family and a return to the gods they have abandoned.

Full of palace secrets, court banter, and struggles for power, Nefertiti really comes alive on the page. The characters are well rounded; three dimensional beings and you are pulled into their lives from the first sentence.

The novel provides an interesting solution to some puzzles in Egyptian history. There is much confusion about the Amarna heresy and its aftermath, not least because subsequent rulers tried to expunge the ‘heretic Pharaoh’ from the records. For example, the identity of the Pharaoh Smenkhare who succeeded Akhenaten is unclear, and in the novel Smenkhare is explained as a coronation name taken by Nefertiti on her accession as Pharaoh. The author provides many useful historical notes on her website which you can link to here.

GENRE: Historical Fiction

Link to discussion questions here

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