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Nancy Springer

1948-

Reviewed by
Rebecca Fisher and Kelly Lasiter
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Nancy Springer
Nancy Springer has been nominated for two Mythopoeic Fantasy Awards, a World Fantasy Award, a Hugo, and a Nebula. Besides fantasy, she also writes mysteries. Learn more about Nancy Springer at her website.




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Book of the Isle — (1979-1983) Young adult. Publisher: Welcome to Isle, a land of fantasy that existed long before there were such things. Surrounded by vast oceans and dotted with thick forests, Isle was a land in which all beings lived together. There were gods and ghosts dwelling with the Old Ones, the wise ancient ancestors. During this period, The Book of Suns began its life, though little was known about its contents. The mighty marriage between Sun and Moon begins an adventure never seen before.

Nancy Springer fantasy book reviews Book of the Isle: 1. The White Hart 2. The Silver Sun 3. The Sable Moon 4. The Black Beast 5. The Golden SwanNancy Springer fantasy book reviews Book of the Isle: 1. The White Hart 2. The Silver Sun 3. The Sable Moon 4. The Black Beast 5. The Golden SwanNancy Springer fantasy book reviews Book of the Isle: 1. The White Hart 2. The Silver Sun 3. The Sable Moon 4. The Black Beast 5. The Golden SwanNancy Springer fantasy book reviews Book of the Isle: 1. The White Hart 2. The Silver Sun 3. The Sable Moon 4. The Black Beast 5. The Golden SwanNancy Springer fantasy book reviews Book of the Isle: 1. The White Hart 2. The Silver Sun 3. The Sable Moon 4. The Black Beast 5. The Golden Swan

Sea King — (1987-1988) Publisher: Dannoc: Red Hart tribe warrior, who had witnessed horror overwhelming enough to steal his memory — and his mind. Rad Korridun: king of the Seal Kindred tribe, who should have taken a crazed killer's life — but gave him new life, instead. Tassida: tribeless wanderer, who had roamed the world of ruins beyond the mountains, and found no one — no one at all. Dark destiny and deadly secrets await them, on a quest from the shattered order of the six tribes to the nightmare mysteries of enchanted blades and vanishing wilds, spellbound shape-shifters and soul-engorged Devourers... for they seek an evil that uses mindless atrocity and nameless terror — to kill an entire world.

Nancy Springer Sea King fantasy book review 1. Madbond 2. Mindbond 3. Godbond Nancy Springer Sea King fantasy book review 1. Madbond 2. Mindbond 3. Godbond Nancy Springer Sea King fantasy book review 1. Madbond 2. Mindbond 3. Godbond

Rowan Hood — (2001-2005) Ages 9-12. Publisher: Rosemary has nowhere to go when her beloved mother dies. She has never met her father — the outlaw Robin Hood — and she's grown up among the woodland creatures her mother loved. So she decides to change her name to Rowan, disguise herself as a boy, and undertake a perilous journey through Sherwood Forest, in search of Robin Hood. But how will she find him? And will he offer her a home?

Nancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsNancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsNancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsNancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsNancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood Returns

fantasy book reviews Nancy Springer Rowan HoodRowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest

Nancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsThirteen year old Rosemary returns home from gathering herbs to find her home burnt to the ground and her mother dead. Not willing to try her luck in a town or on an estate, she decides to disguise herself as a boy and travel to Sherwood Forest in order to find her father: Robin Hood. Rosemary has never met or even seen her father, who is already a famous hero in ballads across England. Unsure why he left her mother or even if he wants a daughter, Rosemary cuts her hair, dons boy's clothes and starts calling herself Rowan.

She makes several new friends on the journey to her father: a dog/wolf hybrid that can catch arrows in the air, a simple-minded giant with a gift for music, and a runaway princess who willingly chooses life in the wilderness over an arranged marriage. When she finally runs into Robin Hood, she decides to keep her paternity a secret as she assesses the man behind the legend and how he operates.

Unfortunately she also manages to cross paths with the cruel bounty hunter Guy of Gisborn, a man who wears a horse-skin hood and wants to see all outlaws dead — especially those that know Robin Hood. Along with struggling with her self-identity (which includes communicating with the mysterious aelfe and coming to terms with the mystical powers inherited from her mother) Rowan musters her own little band of outlaws in order to save her father when he is arrested by the Sheriff of Nottingham.

Many books that are written for children can be enjoyed and appreciated by an older audience — for example, Nancy Springer's previous book I Am Mordred — but Rowan Hood is not one of them. It's a very slender book that moves at a brisk pace, but it has no real emotional weight to it. Most of Rowan's characterization concerns the death of her mother and her concerns about her father, but since Celandine dies off-screen and before the story even starts (the book begins with Rowan sensing her death) we never really get a sense of Rowan's loss. Likewise, Robin himself is a minor character and the idea behind Rowan's conception is... a little strange.

The idea of Robin Hood having a child is certainly not a bad one (I recall a Disney made-for-television movie called Princess of Thieves that had the same premise), but the story is more about Rowan and her own collection of friends rather than what it means to be the daughter of such a great hero. The Merry Men all have cameo appearances, but for the most part this story centers on Rowan's first steps toward adulthood and her newfound friends. (I can't help but feel it would have made a better story to have Rowan integrate herself among the famous outlaws whilst disguised as a boy rather than work on the formation of a "young outlaws" gang.) There is one obvious omission amongst the characters: Marian, of whom there is no mention at all. It's unclear whether she'll turn up in later books, or is simply not a part of this particular continuity, but her absence is a bit of an oddity.

Likewise, Rowan Hood feels very much like the first installment of a series. Everything is introductory without any real payoff, and one character (the protagonist of the fourth book, Wild Boy) is introduced at the end of the story, after the climactic finish. The supporting characters are all lightly sketched, and even Rowan herself is just the standard "plucky girl" with lots of luck, self-determination, and catchphrase. Of course, that's better than being a helpless damsel in distress, but she's still rather generic.

Springer creates an evocative atmosphere in regards to the beauty and mystery of Sherwood Forest, and young readers will find plenty to enjoy in regards to plot and content, particularly if they're fans of the Robin Hood legends. But all in all, this story feels like an appetizer to a main course, and perhaps will stand up better in light of the following installments: Lionclaw, Outlaw Princess of Sherwood, Wild Boy and Rowan Hood Returns. —Rebecca Fisher


fantasy book reviews Nancy Springer LionclawLionclaw

Nancy Springer fantasy book reviews for children Rowan Hood: 1. Rowan Hood: Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest 2. Lionclaw 3. Outlaw Princess of Sherwood 4. Wild Boy 5. Rowan Hood ReturnsThe Rowan Hood series consists of five books that pertain to the four members of a young outlaw gang. Each of the first four books centers on one of these characters, with the fifth book focusing on all five. These are brave, spunky Rowan, the daughter of the legendary Robin Hood; Lionel, an overgrown cowardly minstrel; Rook the wild boy; and Ettarde, a runaway princess. Also with them is Tykell, a wolf-dog hybrid that can catch arrows out of the air. Lionclaw, the second book in the series, tells Lionel's story.

The son of a very disappointed father, Lionel is as tall as a giant and with "feet the size of pony heads." However, despite his size, he has a timid, courtly disposition and would much rather spent his time playing his harp. His gifts as a musician have been known to draw the aelfe from the forests, but such a talent hardly impresses his sadistic father Sir Rogerick Lionclaw.

Lionel's cowardice in combat stems from his fear that he'll injure his fingers (and therefore be unable to play his harp), but when his father comes to Sherwood with a bounty on his son's head, Lionel feels that he's putting his companions at risk. He flees, only to find that they are all in danger from the thuggish Guy of Gisborn, a bounty hunter who wears a horse-head visor and has a score to settle with the young outlaws.

Lionclaw is a very slender book, and voracious readers could finish it in one sitting. As such characterization is still rather slim in regards to the other members of the gang, though I'm sure that following books Outlaw Princess of Sherwood and Wild Boy will give them some much-deserved attention. Lionel himself fluctuates between annoying and endearing, Robin and his outlaws are peripheral characters, and there's still no sign of Marian.

The descriptions of Sherwood Forest are atmospheric and mysterious, with plenty of attention paid to the terrain, flora and fauna of the place, but I'm a little confused about the time period: Nancy Springer mentions a king, but deliberately withholds a name (perhaps to prevent the book from being dated). However, one of the ballads that Lionel sings is "Greensleeves," a song that did not exist until the reign of King Henry the Eighth. Likewise, everyone swears "by the Lady" though I'm not sure who that refers to: the Virgin Mary or a pagan goddess?

I guess the problem is that although it's a quick, entertaining read, there's no real meat to the story in regards to background, character and plot (for the second time in as many books, someone is captured by the bad guys). Younger readers will get the most out of the Rowan Hood series, especially those interested in the Robin Hood mythos. —Rebecca Fisher

 

Tales of Camelot — (1998-2001) Young adult. Publisher: Mordred, son of King Arthur, is fated to kill his father and King. To reduce the threat he is sent adrift at sea. The infant survives, and when of age travels to Camelot. But the King cannot recognize his son and so Mordred tries to change his fate. Despite noble intent, this ends in tragedy.

Nancy Springer Tales of Camelot: 1. I Am Mordred 2. I am Morgan le FayNancy Springer Tales of Camelot: 1. I Am Mordred 2. I am Morgan le Fay

Stand-alone novels:  There are many of these which we’ll get listed here soon.


book review Nancy Springer Fair PerilFair Peril
— (1996) Publisher: When Buffy, a middle-aged divorcee, encounters a talking frog and ignores all the fairy tales, her rebellious daughter Emily kisses the frog, turning him into a handsome prince, and soon Buffy finds herself in the land of Fair Peril to retrieve her daughter.


book review Nancy Springer Fair PerilFair Peril: "We don't have princes here. We don't even have Kennedys."

Both riotously funny and sweetly touching, Nancy Springer's Fair Peril is a fun and wonderful fantasy novel. It's set in modern times, in a sort of "Anytown, USA" — where the shopping mall is a portal into Fairyland, and anything can happen.

It all begins when Buffy Murphy discovers a talking frog who claims to be a prince. Buffy is a divorced and overweight woman, down on her luck, who holds down a practical job in a fake food factory and is a storyteller on the side. Hoping a gimmick will make her storytelling more sought-after, she takes the frog home... and has no plans to kiss it and turn it back into a prince.

Enter her teenage daughter. When the frog prince and 16-year-old Emily run away together, Buffy has to find them and rescue Emily from the story she's been caught up in. Buffy finds herself in a world where a star-spangled nightgown renders you a wizard, where misspelling your spell can have disastrous results, and where the blue ogres lurking around the corner might be mundane cops, ready to haul you off to the local mental health center. I won't summarize the plot from here, because it would make no sense if I tried to recount it in this space. But it's a fun and wild ride. In the end, Buffy learns that no story is set in stone, and it's never too late to start all over with "once upon a time." —Kelly Lasiter


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