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Kaimira: The Sky Village
 
 
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Kaimira: The Sky Village [Paperback]

Monk and Nigel Ashland
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Walker (7 July 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1406315869
  • ISBN-13: 978-1406315868
  • Product Dimensions: 19.3 x 13 x 3.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 959,154 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Monk Ashland
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Product Description

Book Description

From a village made of hot-air balloons to a subterranean battle arena, two young people struggle to discover who and what they are – and how to use the astonishing powers they share.

Product Description

High over China, the Sky Village – an intricate web of interconnected hot-air balloons – floats over a troubled landscape where animals and machines battle for control. Twelve-year-old Mei has been left in this strange place by her father, who insists on going alone to try and rescue her kidnapped mother. Meanwhile, half a world away, thirteen-year-old Rom struggles to survive in the ruins of Las Vegas. Mei and Rom have never met, but they share a common journal, a book that mysteriously allows them to communicate with each other. It also reveals that they carry the strange and frightening Kaimira gene.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The Sky Village is the soaring debut to Monk and Nigel Ashland's new young adult series, Kaimira. The Ashlands take the reader to a futuristic world where humans, animals and intelligent machines called meks have been fighting for decades.

In China, twelve-year-old Mei Long's mother has been kidnapped by meks. Her father sends her to live in the Sky Village, an intricate web of hot air balloons that flies high above the earth, while he remains on land to search for his wife. He entrusts Mei with the care of the Tree Book. Mei's mother would read to her from the Tree Book each evening, telling her fantastic tales of children with names like Breaker and Lizard Girl. Her father warns her not to open the book, but Mei, desperate for a way to find her mother, disobeys him. She soon discovers that the Tree Book is no ordinary book. The children from the stories are real, and Mei's book allows her to communicate with Breaker, a teenage boy whose real name is Rom. Rom knows Mei as Dragonfly from his own parents' stories.

Rom lives in the ruins of Las Vegas, where the beasts roam freely and humans have been forced into hiding. Rom's younger sister, Riley, has been kidnapped by beast-mek hybrids known as demons. Rom enters the seedy Las Vegas underground where he is forced to learn the art of demonsmithing to save his sister. Rom's father was a master demonsmith, and Rom shares his father's natural abilities. The demonsmiths conjure beast-mek hybrids for elaborate fights to entertain gamblers in the underground.

Mei and Rom discover that they share the mysterious kaimira gene - a gene that mixes beast and mek elements with their human DNA. The gene gives both of them power that they don't fully understand and must struggle to control. Will this power enable them to save their loved ones? What might it cost them in the process?

I loved the imagery of the Sky Village. The colorful hot air balloons seemed so full of life that they made the contrast with the barren Las Vegas even more apparent. At first I was much more drawn to Mei's story, but over the course of the book I really connected with Rom. His devotion to his sister and his determination to do anything to save her was very touching.

I did feel that the book lagged in some parts, while it seemed rushed in others. There is a lot going on in this book, and some elements aren't explained as fully as they could be, which may be confusing to younger readers.

The Sky Village is a solid introduction to the series, and I am definitely going to pick up the next installment. I hope that we'll get to meet some of the other characters mentioned in the Tree Book (particularly Lizard Girl) during the next four books in the series.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  8 reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Soaring Debut for Kaimira 30 July 2008
By Ruth R. King - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Sky Village is the soaring debut to Monk and Nigel Ashland's new young adult series, Kaimira. The Ashlands take the reader to a futuristic world where humans, animals and intelligent machines called meks have been fighting for decades.

In China, twelve-year-old Mei Long's mother has been kidnapped by meks. Her father sends her to live in the Sky Village, an intricate web of hot air balloons that flies high above the earth, while he remains on land to search for his wife. He entrusts Mei with the care of the Tree Book. Mei's mother would read to her from the Tree Book each evening, telling her fantastic tales of children with names like Breaker and Lizard Girl. Her father warns her not to open the book, but Mei, desperate for a way to find her mother, disobeys him. She soon discovers that the Tree Book is no ordinary book. The children from the stories are real, and Mei's book allows her to communicate with Breaker, a teenage boy whose real name is Rom. Rom knows Mei as Dragonfly from his own parents' stories.

Rom lives in the ruins of Las Vegas, where the beasts roam freely and humans have been forced into hiding. Rom's younger sister, Riley, has been kidnapped by beast-mek hybrids known as demons. Rom enters the seedy Las Vegas underground where he is forced to learn the art of demonsmithing to save his sister. Rom's father was a master demonsmith, and Rom shares his father's natural abilities. The demonsmiths conjure beast-mek hybrids for elaborate fights to entertain gamblers in the underground.

Mei and Rom discover that they share the mysterious kaimira gene - a gene that mixes beast and mek elements with their human DNA. The gene gives both of them power that they don't fully understand and must struggle to control. Will this power enable them to save their loved ones? What might it cost them in the process?

I loved the imagery of the Sky Village. The colorful hot air balloons seemed so full of life that they made the contrast with the barren Las Vegas even more apparent. At first I was much more drawn to Mei's story, but over the course of the book I really connected with Rom. His devotion to his sister and his determination to do anything to save her was very touching.

I did feel that the book lagged in some parts, while it seemed rushed in others. There is a lot going on in this book, and some elements aren't explained as fully as they could be, which may be confusing to younger readers.

The Sky Village is a solid introduction to the series, and I am definitely going to pick up the next installment. I hope that we'll get to meet some of the other characters mentioned in the Tree Book (particularly Lizard Girl) during the next four books in the series.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Kaimira Sky Village Book One 8 Sep 2008
By K. Larsen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Kaimira Sky Village is the first in a five part series of young adult fantasy fiction. Set above the skyes of China in the Sky Village, and deep beneath a ruined Las Vegas in the caves, this is a fast paced, energetic story of two kids struggling to survive in a terrible world. Although Mei and Rom have never physically met, they know each other intimately from the stories their parents have read to them in the Tree Books they carry. When Mei is forced to leave her home on the land for a new one in the sky and Rom is forced to participate in brutal fights for money, the two find comfort in each other through their unique genes and their tree books.

The Trianry wars have pitted meks, beasts, and humans against one another. In their struggles to survive and save the people they love, Rom and Mei rely on one another and themselves to make it through.

The imagery in this story was beautiful and terifying both. The story was quick and entertaining. I am excited to see the series blossom over time.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Soaring Debut for Kaimira 23 July 2008
By Ruth R. King - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Sky Village is the soaring debut to Monk and Nigel Ashland's new young adult series, Kaimira. The Ashlands take the reader to a futuristic world where humans, animals and intelligent machines called meks have been fighting for decades.

In China, twelve-year-old Mei Long's mother has been kidnapped by meks. Her father sends her to live in the Sky Village, an intricate web of hot air balloons that flies high above the earth, while he remains on land to search for his wife. He entrusts Mei with the care of the Tree Book. Mei's mother would read to her from the Tree Book each evening, telling her fantastic tales of children with names like Breaker and Lizard Girl. Her father warns her not to open the book, but Mei, desperate for a way to find her mother, disobeys him. She soon discovers that the Tree Book is no ordinary book. The children from the stories are real, and Mei's book allows her to communicate with Breaker, a teenage boy whose real name is Rom. Rom knows Mei as Dragonfly from his own parents' stories.

Rom lives in the ruins of Las Vegas, where the beasts roam freely and humans have been forced into hiding. Rom's younger sister, Riley, has been kidnapped by beast-mek hybrids known as demons. Rom enters the seedy Las Vegas underground where he is forced to learn the art of demonsmithing to save his sister. Rom's father was a master demonsmith, and Rom shares his father's natural abilities. The demonsmiths conjure beast-mek hybrids for elaborate fights to entertain gamblers in the underground.

Mei and Rom discover that they share the mysterious kaimira gene - a gene that mixes beast and mek elements with their human DNA. The gene gives both of them power that they don't fully understand and must struggle to control. Will this power enable them to save their loved ones? What might it cost them in the process?

I loved the imagery of the Sky Village. The colorful hot air balloons seemed so full of life that they made the contrast with the barren Las Vegas even more apparent. At first I was much more drawn to Mei's story, but over the course of the book I really connected with Rom. His devotion to his sister and his determination to do anything to save her was very touching.

I did feel that the book lagged in some parts, while it seemed rushed in others. There is a lot going on in this book, and some elements aren't explained as fully as they could be, which may be confusing to younger readers.

The Sky Village is a solid introduction to the series, and I am definitely going to pick up the next installment. I hope that we'll get to meet some of the other characters mentioned in the Tree Book (particularly Lizard Girl) during the next four books in the series.
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