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Tam Lin [Paperback]

Pamela Dean , Terri Windling
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 468 pages
  • Publisher: Puffin Books; Reissue edition (3 Aug 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 014240652X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0142406526
  • Product Dimensions: 20.9 x 14.2 x 3.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 121,121 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Pamela Dean
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Almost Famous 17 Nov 2001
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I've read Tam Lin three times now, and enjoyed it very much each time. That's always a good sign, but I still can't puzzle out exactly why I enjoy it so much. Here, then, are the pros and cons!
Pro -
Lovely writing style.
Lots of quotes.
Not afraid of being clever.
Lots of lovely detail.
Complex enough to stand re-reading.
Allusive and elusive.
I enjoyed Janet's character.
Another version of Tam Lin's story - reminding me of other books I enjoyed. These are Diana Wynne Jones' "Fire and Hemlock" and Elizabeth Marie Pope's The Perilous Gard. Both of those are 5 star books.

Cons.
Odd pacing. Not enough detail in the later years.
A few loose ends... such as the ghosts. Or maybe I just haven't got that yet!
The characters don't quite come off for me. I feel that Dean knew them so well she could see and hear them, but didn't pass that on to me. I mean, I know Tina is meant to be annoying, but she seems no worse than a lot of others.
There are some things that seem to have little connection with the story, but *should* have had.
Despite the details, the book read almost like first draft... an editor could and maybe should have had a hand on the reins.

And yet -
Still I like it a lot.

I'd recommend it to anyone who loves words and ideas, who is tolerant of loose structure and who, like me, loves a book that doesn't spill all its secrets at once.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Mass Market Paperback
In the famous ballad, Tam Lin is a young man who lives in the forest of Carterhaugh and takes either a possession or the virginity of any girl who passes through. When Janet is caught by him plucking a rose there, she insists that she owns Carterhaugh as her father has given it to her. When she returns home, as is the way in folk tales, she soon discovers she is pregnant, but will only say that the father is an elf and will not reveal who he is. She goes back to Tam Lin who forbids her to terminate the pregnancy and tells her that he is in fact a human but was claimed by the Fairy Queen after he fell from his horse. Every seven years the fairy court pays a tithe to hell and he fears that this year he will be part of the sacrifice and only Janet can save him. That Halloween, Janet waits at the crossroads and watches as a procession of fairies ride past until finally Tam Lin comes by on a white horse. Janet pulls him from his mount and must keep hold of him as the Fairy Queen transforms him into a succession of different creatures in order to attempt to make Janet let go. Eventually, he is turned into a burning brand, upon which Janet plunges him into the well and he turns back into a man, she wraps him in her green mantle and he is hers.

The story is one that I've always found fascinating, not least because it features a woman rescuing her captured lover for a change, and so I was thrilled to learn that Pamela Dean had written a novel based on the ballad, also called Tam Lin. In Dean's take on the story, Janet is an English student just starting out at Blackstock College. There she not only has to deal with the usual teenage anxieties of studying, getting along with her roommates and discovering sex, but also more mysterious concerns. What exactly is it about the strange and aloof Classics department that makes them stand apart from everyone else? Who is the ghost that haunts their dorm room throwing old books out of the window, and why did she kill herself? Who are the Classics boys who talk in verse and seem to have known each other forever and what makes them so different?

The more I think about this book, the more profoundly it irritates me. This is a book which has 33 five star reviews out of 48 on Amazon and is about a topic I love (clearly I've missed something), so I started reading with high hopes, turning the pages in eager anticipation of spotting a clever, subtle reference to the ballad. And I waited, and waited and waited. With the exception of a rather painfully direct midnight Halloween procession on horseback from the Classics department part way through the book, it isn't until the final fifty pages (a hundred if I'm feeling generous) that the story of the ballad really starts to play a part; in a book which is supposedly based on the ballad, I expected it to have a little more influence than that. For that matter, I'm not sure why an author would spend so long creating a world which is totally different from that of the ballad only to insert large chunks of the original storyline exactly as they happen rather than subtly adapting it. This would have been less of an issue had it not been for the fact that, by the time the book finally got to this point, I couldn't bring myself to care as the story beforehand had been so lacklustre.

Without the prevailing influence of the ballad of Tam Lin, Dean's Tam Lin is mostly just a story of university life. We watch Janet study for exams, spend time in the library and go to classes all of which I unfortunately found rather dull. The characters were so very pretentious that I couldn't sympathise with any of them and the relationships between them all felt shallow and unreal. There isn't even any romance or desperation in Janet's decision to pull Tom Lane (get it?) off his horse and save him (yes, it happens as obviously as that). As these relationships are the driving force behind the book I didn't find much to enjoy, I'm afraid. In addition to the mundane university story, Dean has added a few of her own supernatural subplots, none of which tie in with the original ballad and none of which were explained to my satisfaction by the time the end of the novel rolled tediously round. It was a huge disappointment.

Not only did the characters have unbelievable relationships, they also had unbelievable conversations with one another. It seems that they hardly ever opened their mouths without uttering a line or five of a famous poem or making a clever literary, grammatical or historical pun and at times they speak more or less entirely in quotations from other works. Not only does making your eighteen year old characters speak like this make any form of realism impossible, it's also incredibly abrasive. There were times when I wanted to strangle the next person to say "I cry you mercy" instead of just apologising.

Now, I'm all in favour of making clever literary allusions and judicious use of intertextuality: Chaucer and Shakespeare both did it to great effect, so it's hard to argue that one. Dean, however, is not a Chaucer or a Shakespeare. They wrote works that are brilliant in their own right and the allusions and quotations to other texts serve to illuminate and expand upon the message of their own writing, whereas in this book the clever lines from other people are a substitute for the text doing anything clever itself. In fact, there's no space for any original intelligence, so full is this book of thoughts, ideas and words borrowed from other sources. I felt that it uses other people's brilliance to disguise its own lack thereof, and also as a way for the author to show of how many famous books she's read. It all came across as rather self-indulgent and didn't sit well with me.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A memorable tale 3 Oct 2002
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I'm not entirely sure what I expected when I picked this book up - a tired rehashing of the old ballad, perhaps - but it certainly wasn't the intriguing, heart-wrenching and utterly real tale Pamela Dean spins for us. I have never seen such a perfect synthesis of the "natural" and the "supernatural," if indeed such a division exists. "Tam Lin" made me grateful to be an English Literature student and appreciative of my time as a student - and that time is flying just as it does with Janet and her friends, despite several comments here as to the speed at which the four years of their education pass. There are several loose ends, but life doesn't always tie up neatly and the Otherworld of the story is something that cannot be explained in detail - it is haunting, confusing and powerful, just as this book is.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
She missed the point of the ballad
I absolutely adore the ballad of Tam Lin. I thought that I would adore this book. I didn't. Unlike my husband, I didn't give up after a couple of chapters. Read more
Published 1 month ago by R. Draper
Tam Lin
I enjoyed it on the whole, but it was a bit hard going if you don't know too much about the American educational system. Read more
Published 9 months ago by M. L. Richardson
A modern twist on an old tale
I have to say this is one of the best books ever written. Not only intriging in its own right, every time I read it I find something else I want to read. Read more
Published on 31 Mar 2006 by Ms. Jenifer S. Lavery
A memorable tale
I'm not entirely sure what I expected when I picked this book up - a tired rehashing of the old ballad, perhaps - but it certainly wasn't the intriguing, heart-wrenching and... Read more
Published on 3 Oct 2002 by "witchfinder_general2"
Well written but far too slow
Not much happens in this book until the last 30 pages or so, and by that point it was too late for me. Read more
Published on 27 April 2002
The sheer joy of language
As an English major, and avid and passionate reader, and a lover of all that language has to offer, it's no small matter for me to select a favorite book- but I can, and that book... Read more
Published on 30 Aug 1999
One of my very favorites
This book is so lovely and haunting. It is what I wanted college to be like. I am transported everytime I read it (and read it and read it.) There is much room for a sequel. Read more
Published on 24 Aug 1999
Excellent on its own merits...
A lot of the other reviews that I've read have criticized this book as not devoting enough of it's time to the retelling of the old ballad. Read more
Published on 15 Aug 1999
Tam Lin? Where are you? Come here, boy!
I picked up this book because I was already familiar with the Fairy Tale Series, and especially with the ballad of Tam Lin. So here's my major complaint: Where is the legend? Read more
Published on 2 Aug 1999
Tam Lin? Where are you? Come here, boy!
I picked up this book because I was already familiar with the Fairy Tale Series, and especially with the ballad of Tam Lin. So here's my major complaint: Where is the legend? Read more
Published on 2 Aug 1999
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