Sunlight and Shadow Once upon a Time Cameron Dokey Mahlon F Craft Books

Sunlight and Shadow Once upon a Time Cameron Dokey Mahlon F Craft Books
I found Sunlight and Shadow by chance. I read it in a day, I was so captivated. Of course, it's not very long, so that isn't difficult. But I literally could not put it down. The writing is strong and simple and elegant. The characters are believable, which is sometimes hard to pull off in a fantasy/fairy tale. I recommend this charming book to anyone who is in the mood for good reading and excellent writing. Cameron Dokey has quickly become my favorite writer, and Sunlight and Shadow is one of my favorite books.
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Sunlight and Shadow Once upon a Time Cameron Dokey Mahlon F Craft Books Reviews
This is a retelling of “The Magic Flute.” I haven’t listened to the opera this is based on since I was in grade school (and then it was in German), so I won’t be able to comment on the parallels between as I don’t remember them too clearly.
Pamina, Queen of the Night, and Sarastro, Mage of the Day, have an agreement. Until their daughter Mina is sixteen, she will live with her mother. On her sixteenth birthday Mina will go to live with her father who will choose her husband. Sarastro, however, does not honor that agreement and steals his daughter the night before her birthday.
Mina’s mother asks a man named Lapin for help. Lapin has grown up with Mina and has a set of magical bells that has been in his family for generations. These bells allow the player to call their true love to them if that can play the song of their heart upon the bells. Lapin’s task is to play the bells for Mina to call her true love to rescue her.
Tern is a prince from a distant land. His father sets a task to his sons to carve something from a fallen tree. Tern’s younger brother carves a spear while Tern carves a flute. Tern, sensing that he is meant for something more, gives up his birthright as the eldest son to his younger brother. Tern then follows the sound of bells which he alone hears.
The story is a nice retelling of a relatively unknown story. I enjoyed it and it is a nice, short retelling.
This review first appeared at Orandi et Legendi (...).
Deep and fluffy, not a bad thing at all. A bit confusing with the narration, bug still a very good book. A must read for fans of Cameron Dokey.
Quick read, good storyline but lack substance and character development. May be a good book for a middle school age student
When I first heard about this young adult novel, my interest was immediately caught. The Magic Flute or to give it the proper name, Die Zauberflote, was one of the first operas that I came to know and truly enjoy -- the premise is the rescue mission of a young princess, a test for a young prince and his companion, and terrific music as well.
As part of the ongoing series, Once Upon a Time... author Cameron Dokey gives her own spin on the story. She's changed quite a few of the names and elements, adding some, and throwing out others, to mixed effect. Sunlight and Shadow starts with a backstory of the marriage of Pamina's parents, as told through Pamina's eyes.
Pamina has a very lonely life, with only her mother, the Queen of the Night, and the servants for company. They live together on the side of a mountain, the greatest mountain in the world, and watch the west. Their routine is set by the setting of the sun every day, and the glories of the evening sky. Pamina -- who thinks of herself as Mina -- has learned not to trust her father very much, knowing that one day she is to go and live with him on her sixteenth birthday, and that he will one day chose a husband for her, a situation that she dreads. All she can remember of him is that he left her mother and herself years ago, to live on his side of the mountain, the one facing east and the rising sun.
To say the least, Pamina dreads that day, and as it nears, she and her mother ask for a meeting with her father, treachery occurs, and Pamina is forcibly seperated from her mother, and taken to Sarastro's side of the mountain. The Queen then brings in other players into the story, to rescue her daughter.
The first of them, Lapin, we meet fairly early on in the book. A set of magical bells have been passed down from his grandmother and mother to him, with the ability to summons one's own perfect mate, and it is Lapin who has the most magical power of them all -- he can summon birds. When he meets the Queen, with her infant daughter Pamina, it turns out that his music is the only thing that can pacify a restless baby. And so he ends up as part of her household, and Pamina's only friend from the outside world. When Pamina is kidnapped, the Queen asks Lapin to summon Pamina's one true match with the bells.
A suitable young prince appears, bearing a flute, and so the story unfolds through the traditional quest and requisite happy ending. All of this is accomplished in less than two hundred pages, and with multiple points of view -- all told in first person, no less -- this was a novel that was downright painful to read.
There are glimpses of the original opera by Mozart, but the author here has not only taken the liberty of changing names, -- Paganeno is Lapin, Paganena is Gayna, Tamino is Tern -- most of the original humour and message has been stripped away. Sarastro is no longer a benevolent but stern priest of the Sun, but a bad tempered, controlling patriarch of the most vile sort, Lapin is turned into a mere accessory and looses his vital part in the final quest, we don't get to see the Three Ladies, the Three Spirits or the Dragon, and in sort, what was left behind was a mere whisp of the original story.
The worst thing about this was the constant use of 'I' narration throughout -- as the point of view of the story changes, the author has each one tells it in first person. Sadly, she also neglects to give any hints as to who in this overblown tale is speaking, creating a great deal of confusion for the reader.
Fortunately, this is a brief novel, and easily reads within an hour or two. Geared for a young adult audience, I can happily say, don't bother. The various players are all pretty much stock characters, and there is very little of the original's magic or delight. Everything is taken very seriously and it just doesn't work.
Two stars for this joyless tripe. Not recommended.
Dokey is a wonderful author, and I love to see her fun spin of fairy tales. None of them quite exactly like the originals, but all taking a place in my heart.
This particular story I love for it's bidding one to know themself. It is simply written, an yet has much depth to it. I recommend it to any and all.
I love the Once Upon a Time series of books. They always give you fresh insight into old fairy tales. I reread them all the time and especially fond of the one Dokey writes. You should give them chance.
I found Sunlight and Shadow by chance. I read it in a day, I was so captivated. Of course, it's not very long, so that isn't difficult. But I literally could not put it down. The writing is strong and simple and elegant. The characters are believable, which is sometimes hard to pull off in a fantasy/fairy tale. I recommend this charming book to anyone who is in the mood for good reading and excellent writing. Cameron Dokey has quickly become my favorite writer, and Sunlight and Shadow is one of my favorite books.

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