Book Reviews of Lirael: Daughter of the Clayr

Used Book ~ Lirael: Daughter of the Clayr by author Garth Nix
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Lirael: Daughter of the Clayr
Author: Garth Nix

Book Information
Publisher: Eos
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780060005429 - ISBN-10: 0060005424
Publication Date: 4/2002
Pages: 720
Reading Level: Young Adult

12 Book Reviews submitted by our Members

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Jennifer W. (GeniusJen) reviewed on 9/15/2009...


Reviewed by Candace Cunard for TeensReadToo.com

The second book in Garth Nix's ABHORSEN trilogy picks up fourteen years after Sabriel leaves off, and begins to focus on a new generation of characters; for this reason, it's definitely best to read the trilogy in order. Part One is centered on Lirael, a member of a race known as the Clayr, renowned for their ability to See into the future. Unfortunately, Lirael at the age of fourteen still has not received the Sight, something nearly unheard-of in Clayr society. To make matters worse, her dark hair and pale skin mean that she doesn't even look like the other Clayr. Her mother, a Daughter of the Clayr, disappeared in Lirael's childhood, and she never knew the identity of her father. Eventually, Lirael begins to work in the Library in the Glacier where the Clayr live, but even the work she does there cannot distract her from her continued lack of the Sight.

Meanwhile, problems are mounting both in the Old Kingdom and in Ancelstierre. The Abhorsen Sabriel and her husband, Touchstone, restored to his position as King, have been ruling the Old Kingdom and doing the best to keep the Dead from disrupting life, but after twenty years of their rule things are still chaotic. Prince Sameth, their youngest child and widely known as the Abhorsen-in-Waiting, encounters a necromancer while at school in Ancelstierre, there are wars in the far South, and unrest mounts within the Old Kingdom itself. A series of events lead Lirael to leave the Glacier in search of a boy the Clayr have Seen her with, since they have also Seen that this possible future is the only way to avoid the destruction of their world as they know it. Along the way she meets Sameth, with his own personal reason for finding the same young man as Lirael, and the two of them try to work out the secrets of their shared past and uncertain future.

While at first I was disappointed that the story no longer focused on Sabriel, who I'd come to love in the previous book of the trilogy, Lirael quickly grew into a character in whom I was equally interested. Her personal struggle between her desire to belong as Clayr and the nagging knowledge that she was meant for some other purpose in the world was well-written and believable. Her companion, a construct of Free and Charter Magic known only as the Disreputable Dog, was a satisfying enigma of a character. And while Sameth was at times more annoying than regal, there is no denying that his fear of Death and pursuing the calling of the Abhorsen was compelling. I was also glad to see that Sabriel and Touchstone didn't disappear entirely from the narrative. Though they played dramatically smaller roles in the storyline, I enjoyed every scene that they were in together.

The end of this book took me by surprise, as the major external conflict had not been solved by the end of it. It's not a book you want to finish if you don't have the following novel on hand! However, the book does come to an emotional climax and conclusion; although the external threat has not been dealt with, the characters are certainly in a different place at the end of the story than at the beginning, and the development of this book proves necessary for the actions that they undertake in the third and final book of the trilogy. If you're looking for lots of apocalyptic battle sequences, this is not quite the right book, but as a story of emotional and personal growth, the novel sparkles.

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


These were fun books.
Sabriel is pretty much a stand-alone book, but the second two are really one novel - Lirael ends right smack in the middle on a cliffhanger, and Abhorsen starts right where it left off...
The trilogy gives us a dual world - one which very strongly resembles Britain in the early twentieth century - and then, across the Wall, the Old Kingdom, a magical land which is currently in a dire state of anarchy and seriously plagued by the Dead - which rise as zombies and make themselves the sort of nuisance that zombies generally do.
Sabriel has been raised at a girls' school in Ancelstierre (Britain), but has always been aware that her father is the Abhorsen, a powerful individual with magical influence over the Dead. But when her father disappears, and Sabriel sets out to find him, she realizes that she has never been aware of even half of her father's abilities and duties... duties which are now on her shoulders, as she realizes that more is at stake than merely her father's life...
The second story (Lirael/Abhorsen) takes place around 20 years later, and deals mostly with the next generation... of course, things are even worse, plots are afoot to bring about the end of the world, necromancers are causing problems, and our young protagonists, Lirael and Sam, must both discover who they truly are, find their path/calling in life, and, oh, save the world. With the help of the snarky magical cat (?), Mogget, and the Disreputable Dog.

Linda A. (Springfieldreader) reviewed on 9/5/2008...


Good science fiction.

Leticia (bookcraze) reviewed on 12/1/2007...


Book 2 of the Abhorsen Trilogy. This book started off just a tad slow but really picked up towards the middle. Overall, I enjoyed it and looking forward to book 3 The Abhorsen to see what happens next since the ending of this book is pretty much a cliffhanger.

Kathy R. reviewed on 4/4/2007...


Really amazing world building in this, 2nd in the series.

Danny N. (Alameda) - Havelock, NC reviewed on 4/1/2007...


sequel to Sabriel

Kimberly B. (KBEMT) reviewed on 3/24/2007...


Sequel to Sabriel

Lirael has never felt like a true daughter of the Clayr. Now, two years past the time when she should have received the Sight that is the Clayr's birthright, she feels alone, abandoned, unsure of who she is. Nevertheless, the fate of the Old Kingdom lies in her hands. With only her faithful companion, the Disreputable Dog, Lirael must undertake a desperate mission under the growing shadow of an ancient evil.

H M. (anchovy) reviewed on 11/6/2006...


Sequel to Sabriel. Begins the story of Lirael, a girl born and raised among the Clayr, but without their power of Sight. Her search for ways to find this birthright takes her through some strange places in the mysterious Clayr library and onto another path she never expected. Story continues in Abhorsen.

A good read but not as good as Sabriel.

Claire L. reviewed on 9/4/2006...


not as good as the first one. it seems to have been written too fast. the author had trouble getting the characters in and out of rooms, so to speak.

and a warning: it's really only the first part of a two-volume story that ends with "abhorsen", which i'm also posting.

Kathy S. (nana23) reviewed on 7/23/2006...


Fantastic sequel to Sabriel who is waiting to know her destiny...

Damaris D. (Erinyes) reviewed on 6/6/2006...


Great book. If you enjoy sci-fi or fantasy really good. Very accessible and fun to read. I was right with them the entire way rooting for them to win!

Charlotte M. reviewed on 4/9/2006...


LOVED this book

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