By , on June 26th, 2011
Sara Kendell once read somewhere that the tale of the world is like a tree. The tale, she understood, did not so much mean the niggling occurrences of daily life. Rather it encompassed the grand stories that caused some change in the world and were remembered in ensuing years as, if not histories, at . . . → Read More: Charles de Lint’s Tamson House
By , on June 26th, 2011
Grey Walker wrote this review.
Cat Midhir has stopped dreaming. People assure her that it isn’t possible, that she just doesn’t remember her dreams, but Cat knows they’re wrong. Where her dreams have been, there is only heaviness and loss. For Cat, this loss means more than it would to most of us, because . . . → Read More: Charles de Lint: Yarrow: An Autumn Tale
By , on January 9th, 2011
Diane McDonough is the author of this review. Jacks have all the luck, and in this fantasy/adventure tale from the pen of Charles de Lint, Jacky Rowan discovers, much to her surprise, just how lucky she is. With the help of best pal, Kate Hazel, a.k.a. Katie Crackernuts, Jacky battles forces she isn’t . . . → Read More: Charles de Lint: Jack of Kinrowan