- Hardcover: 336 pages
- Publisher: Tor Books (6 Jun 2000)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 031286891X
- ISBN-13: 978-0312868918
- Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 14.2 x 3 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,572,259 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Alex meets his empathic other, Mote a tiny rat, but his search also places the two of them in the middle of a war between two small nations. Along with several traveling companions he met on his pilgrimage, Alex stands in the way of a malevolent being that wants mass destruction. Only Mote manages to keep Alex from blundering to his death as the small troupe struggles to save the lives of humans and animals.
Although the twin themes of a coming of age quest and a psychic link between humans and animals have been done many times in novels and movies, the charming charcaters keep the tale fresh. The story line is entertaining and exciting as the bungling Alex and his cohorts attempt the impossible. Though the humans are fully developed and interesting, Mote steals the show as the most intriguing rat since Ben. Eve Forward succeeds in turning Alex's journey into a genial fantasy that deserves sequels.
Harriet Klausner
Alex is a delightful character, an innocent and rather naive kid who has no concepts of some of the bad things that are out there. His adventure is remarkably funny, and I was laughing aloud at many sections of this poor kid's life. Alex bonds with a rat, Mote, near the beginning of the story, and the tale runs at a decent pace thereafter.
Forward does, however, tend to "over-fantasy" her book. There are races and bits and pieces of the world that at times make you blink in confusion, and it sometimes borders on too much. Raptor-people, rat-people, lemur-people... it starts to confuse.
It's a book I can only describe as "cute," and if you like Tanya Huff's "Summon the Keeper," the tone is similar and you'd likely enjoy "The Animist."
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