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Sabriel

Sabriel cover artAuthor: Garth Nix
ISBN: 0-06-447183-7
Words: 87,400

I like this book quite a lot. I’ve read it twice, and seeing it sitting on my bookshelf, I’m tempted to read it again, even though there are dozens of unread books next to it.

The plot seemed one-dimensional for a lot of the book - it’s like the author is throwing new challenges at the main character just for the sake of needing something for her to do; stuff that isn’t entirely connected to the rest of the plot. But I think the one-demensional plot is actually a good thing, in this case, in a weird way.

And there are some bits that I can’t help but call bad writing. For example:

It took shape as it moved, becoming a large, disgustingly elongated sort of rat. Quicker than any natural rat, it scuttled toward a hole in the wall and escape!

I mean, what the hell? “Disgustingly elongated”? Saying “rat” twice so close together? Using an exclimation point at the end to… add excitement, or something? It’s hard to imagine writing that, and it’s hard to imagine not changing it in the second draft after writing it. And it’s hard to imagine an editor letting it stay.

In another section, there’s an exchange where the dialogue is mewed (by Mogget, a cat), replied, mused, asked, replied, and finally said automatically, in that order.

I don’t know why this book can get away with things that I’d hate in other novels, but it might have something to do with a main character that I actually like, which doesn’t happen all that often. That may also explain why the somewhat simplistic plot works, actually - I’m interested enough in the character that I’m happy to read about her adventures, however unimportant to the overall story they may be.

But Lloyd Alexander and Philip Pullman both liked it, too, and wrote positive blurbs for the back. So I must not be completely crazy.

4 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. I thought I loved Sabriel when I first read it, but then I read Lirael and realized that my love for Sabriel was a mere shadow of what True Love is. (And of course my love for Lirael is dwarfed by my Really, Truly True Love for a few other books. But that is not relevant here.) Abhorsen and Lirael are really just two volumes of one book, so I guess I love Abhorsen as well. But the novella Across the Wall gets no love from me. It was stupid and awful.

  2. Thorn

    I certainly think Lirael was an excellent book, but for some reason - at least looking back, having read them several years ago - I liked Sabriel more. Maybe there was something appealing in the straightforwardness of it, the lack of jumping between characters? Hmmm. But I can certainly understand why others wouldn’t agree.

    And yeah, there are others books (completely different ones, mostly) that I love a lot more, too.

  3. I think I was drawn more to Lirael’s personality than to Sabriel’s. But it’s been a while since I read either, so I couldn’t say for sure.

  4. Thorn

    Ah - see, it’s been a while since I read either one of them, too.

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