Search - Piratica: Being a Daring Tale of a SIngular Girl's Adventure Upon the High Seas

Piratica: Being a Daring Tale of a SIngular Girl's Adventure Upon the High Seas
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Piratica: Being a Daring Tale of a SIngular Girl's Adventure Upon the High Seas
Author: Tanith Lee

Book Information
Publisher: Puffin
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780142406441 - ISBN-10: 0142406449
Publication Date: 7/6/2006
Pages: 304
Reading Level: Young Adult

Book Description:

Artemesia --also known as Art --spent her childhood on a pirate ship, and she's sick of practicing deportment at the Angels Academy for Young Maidens. Escaping, she sets out to find her mother's crew and breezily commands them out to sea.

Fiery Art soon shapes her men into the cleverest pirate band afloat. And then they meet the dread ship Enemy and her beautiful, treacherous captain, Goldie Girl.

The Seven Seas aren't large enough for two pirate queens. Art will have to wage the battle of her life to win her mother's title --and the race for the greatest treasure in pirate lore!


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Please Rate these Book Reviews

Val D. (WarMuffin) wrote on 9/22/2008...


Although I can't say I loved the book, I did truly enjoy it. I read it while at sea, and despite not quite being what I expected, it covered the aspects required of a story and is decently wrapped up if you choose not to read more (as it is a series).

I highly recommend for any young woman or girl interested in pirates - its another look into that world. (I do admit to being annoyed about the "parallel" setting which jogged me out of the story every time I read a name like the 'Amer Ricas'.) If you're an adult and are interested in more pirate novels, by all means enjoy this quick read, and then you can pass it on.

Althea M. (althea) wrote on 9/15/2008...


I was really excited when this book came out. I fully expected to totally love it - Lee is one of my favorite authors, so.. Lee and pirates? How could it go wrong?
I'm not quite sure, but somehow it does.
Set in a 'slightly parallel world' in 1802 (which basically means that place names are spelled wrong: the river Thamis flows through Lundun, for example), 'Piratica' gives us a young woman named Artemisia, who, while studying deportment at her girls' school, falls and hits her head. After this blow, Artemisia experiences a rush of memory that convinces her that before her father locked her away in the school, she was a pirate, sailing the seven seas with her captain mother, Piratica. Inspired, she runs away from school and finds her mother's old compatriots - who turn out to be members of an acting company who had put on a successful play about pirates.
Undaunted, Artemisia, taking the name Art Blastside, convinces the actors to steal a ship, and embark on an adventure in search of treasure - which, unfortunately, is already being sought by some 'real' pirates.

Lee usually excels at creating a dreamlike atmosphere in her work, but in this book, the events are more absurdist than dreamlike. It's obviously not supposed to be realistic - but somehow I wanted the narrative to have more internal logic than it did. Maybe it was just my mood.
I was also just rather annoyed by the issue of "Is Artemisia crazy or not...?" It was sort of like I kept wanting the book to just settle down into being the silly adventure romp for teenagers that it's being marketed as - but these quirks and kinks kept coming up distractingly. Which sound like it might be interesting - but I didn't find it so.

Melissa D. (marianas) wrote on 2/24/2007...


Enjoyable pirate adventure with a lovable crew and a true herione.

Gessika R. (myschyf) wrote on 2/10/2007...


A very interesting premise, and ultimately enjoyable, but I didn't really care what happened to the characters till about two-thirds of the way into the book.


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