site hit counter

[TPF]⋙ Download Free Abarat Clive Barker Books

Abarat Clive Barker Books



Download As PDF : Abarat Clive Barker Books

Download PDF Abarat Clive Barker Books


Abarat Clive Barker Books

The book is good. However, it is hugely lost in this format because none of the beautiful images created for this story are included. There's well over 100 images in the book that are not in the kindle version Buy a hard copy. It's worth it.

Read Abarat Clive Barker Books

Tags : Amazon.com: Abarat (9780064407335): Clive Barker: Books,Clive Barker,Abarat,HarperCollins,0064407330,Fantasy - General,Fantasy.,Space and time;Fiction.,Action & Adventure - General,Children's Books - Young Adult Fiction,Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9),Fantasy,Fantasy & Magic,Fiction,Fiction Action & Adventure,Fiction-Fantasy,JUVENILE,Juvenile Fiction,Juvenile Grades 7-9 Ages 12-14,Space and time,TEEN'S FICTION - GENERAL,United States,YOUNG ADULT FICTION,YOUNG ADULT FICTION Action & Adventure General,Young Adult Fiction Fantasy General,Young Adult Fiction Humorous General

Abarat Clive Barker Books Reviews


Abarat is Clive Barker's version of Alice in Wonderland. A little girl follows a strange man to a new world and encounters crazy characters while learning how to grow up.
I appreciated the imaginative characters and I liked the plucky main character. Unfortunately, the story sometimes felt a little flat. I got to the end and I didn't care that it ended in a cliffhanger. I had no desire to know what happens.
I can't put my finger on the problem, maybe the story was dragged out? Maybe there wasn't enough back history on all of the characters that were introduced? Something was just missing.
You might be better off sticking with Alice in Wonderland.
I can appreciate what Clive Barker has done. This book contains an original world, at once dark and menacing and yet vibrantly beautiful. The first half of the book was especially gripping, as I felt very in-tune with the characters.

The second half of the book seemed to peter out. I felt like Barker lost focus on the plot. What began as strange and fantastical slowly dissolved into absurdity. There weren't enough concrete goals to keep my attention. It's not made clear what Candy's "key" is for, what any of the characters are really plotting, nor what's at stake. These things are mentioned in passing, but not fully explained, so there didn't seem to be any sense of urgency after a while.

At times Barker's descriptions of places and events were confusing, and I had to re-read the descriptions several times to get a feel of a place. I was most gripped by the character of Carrion, and yet we see so little of him. I found myself skimming over the story of Mischief, not truly interested in his struggles. It seemed that after Candy reaches the Abarat, her character begins to fluctuate rapidly, until she feels more like a puppet than a person. First she gives half of her money to a random stranger without asking anything in return. Then the woman kicks her out of her house, yet Candy doesn't seem to have any second thought about being taken advantage of and then discarded. She travels from one island to the next, doing whatever a situation demands with hardly any personal struggle. I wanted to see more emotional turmoil from her--more uncertainty, more doubt, more transformation, but instead she responds to each new situation with unconcerned practicality. Where is her growth as a character? What IS her character? What is she afraid of? What does she want? I really can't say.

Carrion is the only other character in the book that seemed to have any depth. Despite the dark dark world he lives in, he shows small moments of confusion, impracticality and a strange propriety that had me smiling at the page. The other characters are all very two-dimensional. Mischief, Malingo, Shape and the myriad of other minor characters don't really have anything unique about them, besides their bizarre appearance.

Candy realizes late in the game that Carrion is after her, yet she doesn't seem particularly afraid of Carrion, even though he is the big bad Lord of Midnight. I think this is where the conflict began to dissolve for me. Random people come to her aid in every situation for apparently no reason or purpose. She is suddenly extremely good at wielding magic and doesn't seem to think twice about it. I realize this is tied into her past somehow, but I would have enjoyed this book a lot more if Candy had more personal struggles and triumphs. About 2/3 of the way through, Candy finds out that word of her has spread throughout the islands and she has become somewhat famous. Her response? "Oh." She doesn't seem particularly overwhelmed, excited or worried about this. I feel like the girl she was in Chickentown is much more interesting than the girl she is becoming in Abarat. We don't see Abarat through her eyes, but through a lens of third-person narration, which somehow makes all the beautiful descriptions and fantastical places less interesting.

I might buy the second book. I don't know yet. But I was very disappointed by the ending of this one. 3 solid stars.
I never thought I would like this book. Look at the cover. Feels like something from an old folklore to me. I'm not really much of a fan of those you see...

But then again, I should never judge a book by it's cover (I can't help it! XD)

Abarat is simply a story of a girl (which I dunno how old is she) who wants to escape her current life that when a door of opportunity had magically appeared, she smashed her way into it. Supposed a start of her new life on another realm, she found out that there's more to her than what she thought. With friends on her side and enemies on her tail, she was now determined to find out the secret of her past, the purpose of her present, and the mystery of her future.

So..... I forgot what I really want to say.

Welp, anyways! This had been an enjoyable journey to Abarat. The heroine's not your typical damsel in distress. She got a rebellious streak into her and had an adventurous soul. Though you'll feel you want to hit her sometimes. You'll find yourself rooting for her, gets amazed on the wonders she was seeing, and gets excited on the upcoming journeys, and secrets to unfold in the whole new world she found herself into.

Also, the author did a great job on the story telling. Though even if this is not my typical kinda story telling I'm used to, but I can still understand it. There's some words I don't understand but meh, maybe it's cuz I'm not a native speaker, but I can live with it, 'no problemo'.

Overall, great book! I'm excited for the next one!

PS Once again, special thanks to the owner of this account. I never thought I can construct this long review. And I never ever thought I'll like this book even.

PPS Don't forget "ALOSHA TRILOGY!"
Introduction
I purchased this book because a friend recommended it to me. It has a Harry Potter feel to it, but they are not that similar. To explain the title a little bit, the Abarat is really a cluster of islands in the story, 25 in total. Each island represents an hour of the day, so 700 pm would always be right after sunset, and the island would always be dark in the sky (the sun never moves). There is an extra island beyond those 24, as well, which you will read about in the book.

Pros
Has a lot of interesting characters and ideas.
Good for young adults or children.
400 pages long which is not too short and not too long.
Fairly inexpensive to purchase ($8 at time of purchase for mass market paperback).

Cons
Basically ends on a cliffhanger.
The character names are fairly contrived.

Conclusion
I am satisfied with this book as an introduction to the series. The character names stuck out as contrived, but I think that's OK since it's a children's to young adult's novel. I did not like the fact that it ended on a cliffhanger, but I don't think that's enough of a reason to dock a star.
The book is good. However, it is hugely lost in this format because none of the beautiful images created for this story are included. There's well over 100 images in the book that are not in the kindle version Buy a hard copy. It's worth it.
Ebook PDF Abarat Clive Barker Books

0 Response to "[TPF]⋙ Download Free Abarat Clive Barker Books"

Post a Comment