This is another book that my kid fell in love with when I would have thought they were too young for it, because I was listening to it in the car. With hindsight, I can see that they loved the heroine's strong sense of justice and her refusal to fit into prescribed gender roles.
Plus Tamora Pierce has done a great job of world-building here. If you're a fan of fantasy but you haven't read any of her books yet, you should—and this one would be a great place to start. It comes after the Song of the Lioness series and makes numerous references to storylines and characters from it, but someone who hasn't read that first (as I hadn't!) won't be at all lost.
As this novel begins, because of the pioneering work of the great Lady Knight, Alanna the Lioness, girls have won the right to go into service as
pages and become knights. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy. Keladry of Mindelan is the first one
to attempt it, and she learns very quickly
just how stacked against her the deck is.
Not only is the system itself unfair, but on top of that, she immediately ends up on probation because of the actions of a bully. She has to work so
much harder and overcome so many more obstacles than any boy… it would be so easy to give up.
But she’s always wanted this, and it seems at least one person in the world
believes she can really do it: a mysterious benefactor keeps sending her expensive gifts that are exactly what a page needs. Plus, Kel
has never been able to abide a bully. Something has to be done about
this one, or he’ll be able to get away with hurting her friends, too.
This is basically the story of the first girl
going to a West Point-type military academy, only in a fantasy setting. Keladry
lives out the maxim that a woman has to be twice as good as a man to be
considered half as good. It’s a good introduction for middle-grade kids and younger teens to this
sort of story, and Kel is a compelling character—she makes mistakes and has bad
days but her determination and her unwavering protectiveness of those who are
taken advantage of by others who are stronger keep her going.
The author, Tamora Pierce, originally studied
psychology with an eye toward doing social work with teenagers. But she became a
full-time writer instead in 1992, and I'm glad—I'm sure she has reached a lot more teens with her writing than she could have as a social worker.
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