Skip to main content

The Tombs of Atuan - Book Review


The Tombs of Atuan is the second book in LeGuin’s Earthsea series of books.  At less than 150 pages in length it is a small yet magical book that is suitable for children and adults.  This is a perfect book for bedtime stories or if you want something light that won’t take a year to finish.

The Tombs of Atuan is the second book in LeGuin’s Earthsea series of books.  At less than 150 pages in length it is a small yet magical book that is suitable for children and adults.  This is a perfect book for bedtime stories or if you want something light that won’t take a year to finish.

The story of this book is pretty straight forward and about a young girl named Tenar who is taken away from her family at the age of five. She has been determined to be a reincarnated priestess and  is brought to the tombs of Atuan to fulfill her role as she has supposedly done for a thousand years.

One very remarkable thing about this story is the immense and complex labyrinth that lies under the temple of Atuan.  This labyrinth is the central part of the story and holds many secrets and many treasures. Tenar spends much of her time wandering the dark corridors of this  labyrinth and as a reader you will find yourself flipping to the map of the labyrinth at the front of the book. You will be drawn into the labyrinth and you will refer to the map often to track Tenar’s progress as she explores the treasure room, the painted room, the room of bones, and much more.

This story starts out gentle and slow and it takes a little time to really get the feel for the main character and for what is happening but after thirty or forty pages you are going to come to the realization that you have come under the influence of quite a remarkable spell of writing that has been cast upon you. This book, and this story is just remarkable in its beauty.  If you love fantasy and are looking for something special to read then I recommend this book highly.

About the World of Earthsea 

The story takes place on one small island in a large world called the Archipelago of Earthsea. It is a vast array of islands that are populated with many different people and cultures. Some of the islands even have dragons.

Does the story stand alone?

Being the second book in a series of books the question comes up as to whether or not the book can be read alone without reading the other books and the answer to that question is yes. It can be thoroughly enjoyed as a sole reading adventure.  Everything in the story ties up very neatly by the last page.  But a character in the first novel of the series (A Wizard of Earthsea) plays a central role in this second novel. I do highly recommend you read the Wizard of Earthsea before you read this novel.

The books have been reprinted many times and you can purchase the first three books as a complete set.  And there are currently six books in the Earthsea cycle. The Other Wind is the sixth book and it was published in 2003. You will be drawn into the world of the archipelago and Earth Sea because things happen in this book that have an effect o the rest of the world and you are going to want to explore more of the world that LeGuin has masterfully crafted.

Theme and the Story within the Story

The book can be characterized as a young girls coming of age story but it is much more than that. It probes into the questions of reincarnation, balance and harmony in the world, and through the metaphor of the labyrinth it peeks into the mystery of everything.  All of this is packed into 150 pages? Yes, and more.   The book itself is a perfect example of a central theme of Earthsea – words and names are important. More words don’t mean much.  What is really important is the right wordsFree Web Content, and the right names of things.  And LeGuin parallels this perfectly in this novel. It does in 150 pages what is often attempted in 800 pages.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Sea Prayer Read Online

Read Sea Prayer Online here on BooksIntel.  The #1  New York Times -bestselling author of  The Kite Runner ,  A Thousand Splendid Suns , and  And the Mountains Echoed  responds to the heartbreak of the current refugee crisis with this deeply moving, beautifully illustrated short work of fiction for people of all ages, all over the world.   A short, powerful, illustrated book written by beloved novelist Khaled Hosseini in response to the current refugee crisis,  Sea Prayer  is composed in the form of a letter, from a father to his son, on the eve of their journey. Watching over his sleeping son, the father reflects on the dangerous sea-crossing that lies before them. It is also a vivid portrait of their life in Homs, Syria, before the war, and of that city's swift transformation from a home into a deadly war zone.  Impelled to write this story by the haunting image of young Alan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian boy whose body washe...

Book Review: A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle

Three years previously Madeleine L'Engle kicked the bucket, ABC butchered and after that communicate an adjustment of her best-known book, " A Wrinkle in Time ," allowing the writer to at long last observe her visionary 1962 story — flooding with characters, animals and thoughts that resist visual portrayal (simply attempt to draw a tesseract, on the off chance that you can) — meant the screen. Solicited by Newsweek what she thought from the made-for-TV variant, L'Engle coolly revealed to her questioner, "I anticipated that it would be awful, and it is." Desires can be an entertaining thing with regards to motion pictures: The more energetically we envision a venture, the more probable it is to disillusion. At the point when Disney set out to revamp "Wrinkle," this time with a substantially greater spending plan, a superior chief (Ava DuVernay, crisp off "Selma") and the advantage of a quantum jump forward in visual impacts innovation, ...

How to Write a Helping Book Review

Composing a quality book reviews sounds basic... until the point that you have to complete one. Figure out how to compose a book review that will truly advance the book you read, from somebody who composes book reviews as a profession. One of my most loved hobbies is perusing. I actually eat up books, up to 6 every month. As I am understanding, I frequently understand that what the author is sharing is a significant truth that should be acknowledged, and actualized, by more individuals in our world.I don't have enough perusing companions (to tell about the book) to feel fulfilled that I had my impact in spreading this fact. The arrangement? I compose reviews online.When you compose a book review on the web, you are spreading the news about it. You are making mindfulness, and advancing the book. https://relistapp.com/author/eddietyson/ As individuals see and read your review, they will most presumably be lured to peruse the book (if it's a decent review) and the message o...