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Raiders' Ransom
Author:   Diamand, Emily
Category: Fiction - Action  General 


ISBN: 9780545142984  查看亚马逊上的介绍
Pages: 368 页
Age / Level: 10 and Up, Level-7
Type & Binding: 软皮本,Advanced Chapter Book!!
Original Price: $ 7.99
押 金: ¥80
逾期借阅费: ¥12/月


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Overview / 简介:
In 22nd century England, much of the world is flooded and pirates loot the land, and Lilly sets out by sea to save a kidnapped girl and redeem her embattled town. "Something for everyone."—Booklist

From Organization / 国外机构评价:
From School Library Journal Grade 6–8—In the early 23rd century, much of what used to be eastern England is underwater or marshy, Greater Scotland extends down below London, and England consists of the 10 southernmost counties. Lilly is a fishergirl in a small English village, but when the marsh-dwelling raiders kidnap the Prime Minister's small daughter from Lilly's village, the 13-year-old sails off to get her back, along with her mysterious seacat. Zeph is the tough but conflicted son of the raider chieftain whose tribe stole Lexy. Their entwined fates are complicated by Lilly's theft of an ancient "jewel" that turns out to be a gaming computer from the late 21st century and by the bloody war that breaks out between the raiders and England. Readers will be fascinated by the results of environmental calamity upon civilization—Londoners who managed to escape the Collapse of their city have formed into primitive, Viking-like raiders, folks in southern England have reverted to an 18th-century lifestyle, and Greater Scotland still has access to advanced technology—not that they're sharing it with anyone else. The plot, although leisurely and sometimes straining credulity, is suspenseful, and both Lilly and Zeph are complex and interesting characters. Unanswered questions point to a sequel. This is an intriguing postapocalyptic adventure with a dash of Dark Ages spice.—Eva Mitnick, Los Angeles Public Library Copyright ? Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Booklist Much of twenty-second-century England has been flooded by the sea and is in danger of attacks by piratical Raiders. Lilly Melkun lives in the Last Ten Counties of England and is the last in a line of fishermen trying to get by when her village is attacked by Raiders, and the prime minister’s daughter is kidnapped. Hoping to spare her village from the prime minister’s retribution, Lilly steals a mysterious jewel and sets off in her boat in a daring attempt to free the young child. She inadvertently makes friends with the Chief Raider’s son, Zeph, and the two try to unravel the plot behind the kidnapping and the scheme to find the jewel that Lilly wields. Diamand, winner of the first London Times/Chicken House Children’s Fiction Competition, tells her tale in alternating perspectives and delivers a fast-paced adventure with something for everyone. Pirates, fishing, and life on the seas give the novel a historical bent, while talking computers disguised inside jewels show readers a future world where technology and infrastructure have collapsed. Grades 4-8. --Shauna Yusko --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Foreign Customer Review / 国外客户评价:
Sometimes you just want to read a book that starts off with a bang and then proceeds to run its legs off. A book that's able to work realistic emotions and characters into a narrative, while also advertising high-concept plotting. And if that same book just happens to contain preternaturally intelligent felines, snarky computers, futuristic barbarians, and a world underwater, all the better! Debut novelist Emily Diamand comes out swinging with such a book as that. "Raiders' Ransom" is a post-apocalyptic tale of a future Britain, but it eschews moralizing in favor of a slam-bang setting. Better make sure the edge of your seat is nicely padded. You and your kids are going to find yourselves perched there for the majority of this tale. Thirteen-year-old Lilly's day was normal to begin with. She took her seacat (Cat) out for some fishing just as she always did. But on returning to her village, Lilly finds her Granny dead, the boats of her village destroyed, and the prime minister's daughter kidnapped. The culprits? Raiders. The year is 2216. Much of England is underwater with Greater Scotland laying claim to all but the last ten counties of England to the south. Like futuristic Vikings, Raiders haunt the coasts, and one of them is Zeph, son of the Angel Isling chief, heir to his power. When Lilly and Cat set off to find the prime minister's daughter and rescue her, they run into Zeph and the two strike up an unlikely friendship. To trade for the daughter, Lilly has taken a "jewel", a rare artificial intelligence system from the days before the world changed. Now everyone is fighting to get their hands on it, and Lilly and Zeph must outwit their enemies and survive their trials, if they want to get what they want. The real question is, do they even know what they want anymore? The other day I was at a talk about children's literature and the speaker mentioned that what kids remember from book isn't metaphors or even (half the time) the author's name. It's usually characters and plots. It got me to thinking about this book. Diamand splits her point of view between two very different characters. There's Lilly on the one hand, under the distinct impression that she has a quest to fulfill, and there's Zeph on the other, just as certain that his future is as his father's heir. Lilly starts off a pretty upright citizen, but Zeph takes some reforming. He has a heart and a soul, but it's buried under a lot of cruelty taught to him by his pa. To become a man he has to be turned away by his father, and that's painful. You find yourself rooting for both characters, even when they're at odds with one another, because you honestly believe that they'll make the correct choices in the end. Add in one particularly snarky machine (who I hope we'll be seeing a lot more of in future books in the series) and then there are three "people" worth following. The book avoids a lot of the mistakes post-apocalyptic novels usually make. For this story to work, the plot needs to take place not just in our future but also in our future's future. We have to believe that in the future there will come a time when gaming devices with artificial intelligences can create fantastic interactive games in three-dimensions. After that, the world collapses, the sea levels rise, and humanity is thrown into a new dark ages. Now what I particularly dislike is when an author establishes all this and then sets the book a measly 30 years in the future. What good does that do anyone? I suppose the idea is that if you do it only slightly in the future, kids can gasp and go, "Oh no! We better change our ways!" But "Raiders' Ransom" isn't some preachy tome. It's a swashbuckling adventure narrative and as such it makes sense to set it in 2216. The future we see here has some similarities to the one in "The Ear, the Eye and the Arm" by Nancy Farmer. Both books involve clever children using a knowledge of the past to defeat a terrible present. Both involve scenes where old-time goods are recovered and reused. This is tastefully done, with the possible exception of a funny moment where a Mr. Saravanan says, "Be careful! . . . Those are Harry Potters. I have half a dozen historians fighting to get their hands on them." Ditto the mentions of Metallica and Manchester United. And, of course, I like the cat. Cat is just one of a fine series of felines published in 2009 that act like their real-life counterparts. It would not be entirely insane to pair "Raiders' Ransom" with "The Cats of Roxville Station" by Jean Craighead George. In the George book, feral cats act and respond according to their instincts. In the Diamand book, Cat acts like a cat but has a certain intelligence that sets him apart. That intelligence will do you little good if you don't know how to interpret what he does. Example: Apparently when he's twitchy or nervous, that's bad. Best that you do what he indicates. At the same time, you can't read this book thinking that Cat's abilities are all in Lilly's head. At one point she is captured and Cat uses his talents to outwit the guard on duty in a truly inspired manner. It's a good book for cat lovers, really. I'm calling this a book for the 10 and up crowd, but make no mistake that there are some dark elements at work here. The trial by knife where Lilly is questioned in a violent manner never leads to anything much more than psychological terror, but for the squeamish that might be enough. The fact that the poor little prime minister's daughter spends much of the book scared is a toughie too. Still, I've found that things like that tend to upset adult readers far more than children. Kids have tough emotional hides that we sometimes forget about when it comes to literature. Some concern has come up regarding the chief's concubine. Does her presence in the book make it difficult to read this to middle grade kids? I don't think so. She is always referred to as the man's wife. No overt sexual references are made (though there are plenty to read between the lines). Kids won't get what she is, only adults. But it's worth noting. As for the language, it's fine. Apparently while I'm sure that other words have been lost to the waves of time, there is one moment when Zeph refers to a wife as a "skank". So that word, of all terms, proves its longevity. Ditto futuristic sketchy slang like "find your plums" (you can pretty much figure it out within context). I wouldn't say that this is a book for everything as it can prove to be a hard novel. But for any kid interested in action/adventure who isn't afraid of a little sci-fi as well, this is well worth seeking out. Fun, well-written, the whole nine yards. Diamand is a woman to keep your eyes pinned on from here on in. Ages 10 and up.

About the Author / 作者介绍:
Emily Diamand lives in Yorkshire, England and found her way into authoring when her debut novel won the British Times/Chicken House prize for children's fiction in 2008. Prior to that she had various jobs including environmental campaigner, organic farmer, surveyor of trees, brussels sprouts picker and pond digger. Her first novel Raiders Ransom has sold in eighteen languages, was shortlisted for the UK's Branford Boase award, was a Kirkus Reviews Best Children's Book of 2009 and is one of the American Library Association's Best Young Adult Fiction novels for 2011. The sequel, Flood and Fire, was published in the UK in August 2010 and is due for publication in the US and Germany in 2011.


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