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Skin Hunger (A Resurrection of Magic, Book 1)
Kathleen Duey

Atheneum, 2007 - 368 pages

average customer review:based on 9 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Courtesy of Teens Read Too

Despite what the cover may say, Kathleen Duey's SKIN HUNGER, first installment of her fantasy trilogy A RESURRECTION OF MAGIC, is not a novel. It's a third of a novel. Or maybe it's two novels. Maybe it's a sixth. But anyway you slice the cake, it's not enough.

The book alternates chapters narrated by Sadima, a farm girl, and Hahp, a second born son of a cruel merchant. The catch is that they live several generations apart. One in a world that desperately needs magic and the other in one saturated and corrupted by it.

The story opens on the night Sadima is born. Her family is cheated by a fake magician, who instead of assisting in the birth, steals their valuables and lets her mother die. Unsurprisingly, Sadima grows up in a family that hates magic and she is forced to hide her gift of understanding animals. Franklin, a servant of a young nobleman named Somiss, finds her and tells her about his belief that magic will solve all the problems of the world. Together, the three try to rediscover magic. Hahp is sent to an academy of magic. There are nine other boys. Eight of them come from wealthy families and the ninth, Hahp's roommate, is a mysterious peasant named Gerrard. Unlike Franklin's lofty ideals of teaching everyone magic, here everyone must earn the right to learn. And those who do not or cannot will die.

I think this book will appeal to both boys and girls. Initially, each protagonist seems to represent the traditional story of their gender. For Sadima, the girl, it is a love story and for Hahp, the boy, it is an adventure story. At first, I thought the sweetness of Sadima's part was a nice balance to Hahp's grittier and darker part. Over time, the two stories blur together. What Sadima does is now inextricably connected to Hahp's outcome and the future explains the past.

The book is extremely vivid and well thought out. Kathleen Duey creates many unique, strong, and complex major characters. It is undeniably a very dark book, but the main characters are too optimistic and hopeful to make it depressing. Even though it is 357 pages, the font is larger than normal and I finished it in one sitting. And as hinted in the beginning, (and I hope I'm not giving too much away), the story ends with a teeth-gnashing cliffhanger.

I really like how the story is aimed at ages twelve and up, but does not dumb down or gloss over the grittier aspects of life, such as the death of a loved one and the difficulties and consequences of making your own decisions. At the same time, I hesitate to recommend this book to grade school and possibly junior high students. If it were a movie, the violence would probably give it an "R" rating. However, the blood and gore is never gratuitous and always serves to improve the story. I have seen more graphic writing in historical fiction aimed at this age group, such Donna Jo Napoli's STONES IN WATER. It also has the same amount of emotional turmoil in any of the later HARRY POTTER and HIS DARK MATERIALS books. Not for the faint of heart, but still a great first book in what seems to be an addictive trilogy.

Reviewed by: Natalie Tsang


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I read it in one morning

As a high-school librarian, once of my goals each summer is to catch up on my YA reading. I started this book this morning, initially having problems getting into the story and characters. Once I figured out the alternating chapters/time frame organization, however, the novel gripped me quickly and my poor, hungry SO had to wait all morning for me to fix his breakfast, while I finished devouring the book.

I'm a big fantasy fan (and hater of the trite conventionality that is Harry Potter and Eragon); this gem offers something different from the usual YA fantasy genre of magic wands and hairy beasts. It includes another wizard school, but this one comes straight from a Darwinian survival-of-the-fittest nightmare. Duey offers a dark vision and compelling plot line in her world, one many teens will appreciate, and I look forward to suggesting this for my avid readers this fall.

I eagerly (and impatiently!) await the future installments.


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intresting

I wasnt too sure about the storys going back and forth.
I didnt like the way it ended.






Intense, powerful characterization leaves you wanting more

A Resurrection of Magic: Skin Hunger has some of the most vivid imagery and strong, interesting characters of any fantasy I've read. I dreamed of, and as, these characters while reading this; I cared about them and what happened to them from the beginning. This book's only flaw was that it felt incomplete; I wanted the sequel right away, instead of waiting months or years. I will be awaiting it eagerly, Ms. Duey.


Wait for the sequels before you read this

I suggest that you wait for the sequels to be published before you read this. It is a good start for a story but it abandons the reader as if in mid-story. Often the first book in a series has a sense of resolution at the end, even if it makes you eager for the next book. This has no meaningful resolution. It just stops. Perhaps the series will eventually be satisfying but this book is not. It is all (fairly slow) build-up and no payoff. Why it was nominated for a National Book Award is baffling.


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reviews: page 1, 2



Sadima lives in a world where magic has been banned, leaving poor villagers

prey to fakes and charlatans. A "magician" stole her family's few valuables and

left Sadima's mother to die on the day Sadima was born. But vestiges of magic

are hidden in old rhymes and hearth tales and in people like Sadima, who

conceals her silent communication with animals for fear of rejection and

ridicule. When rumors of her gift reach Somiss, a young nobleman obsessed with

restoring magic, he sends Franklin, his lifelong servant, to find her. Sadima's

joy at sharing her secret becomes love for the man she shares it with. But

Franklin's irrevocable bond to the brilliant and dangerous Somiss traps her,

too, and she faces a heartbreaking decision.

Centuries later magic has been restored, but it is available only to the

wealthy and is strictly controlled by wizards within a sequestered academy of

magic. Hahp, the expendable second son of a rich merchant, is forced into the

academy and finds himself paired with Gerrard, a peasant boy inexplicably

admitted with nine sons of privilege and wealth. Only one of the ten students

will graduate -- and the first academic requirement is survival.

Sadima's and Hahp's worlds are separated by generations, but their lives are

connected in surprising and powerful ways in this brilliant first book of

Kathleen Duey's dark, complex, and completely compelling trilogy.




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