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Keturah And Lord Death
Martine Leavitt

Front Street, 2006 - 216 pages

average customer review:based on 24 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Great Quick Read by a New Author

Keturah gets lost in the woods and, after days of wandering around, is found by Death. She manages to convince him to give her a little extra time to live by striking a deal. The rest of the book focuses on how she tries to get around her bargain and live.

I really, really liked this book. I thought that the plot and resulting resolution were creative and satisfying. Keturah and her friends in the village were interesting, memorable characters, and the romance was great. Definitely read this if you want some great "light fantasy".


I could not stop death, so he kindly stopped for me.

I love this book! It was slow for about the first 4 chaptors, but i had been waiting to read this book, and i wanted it finshed. So, i stuck with it and was greatly rewared. It was a beautitul story, that made me laugh, and made me bite my nails, and turn the pages as fast as i could to get to the ending, because i had to know what happens.


When 16-year-old Keturah, follows the legendary Hart into the woods, she is lost. And so lord Death comes to claim her, but she isn't ready, so she tells him a story, but refuses to tell the ending until the next night. So they make a deal. If she will come back and finsh the story then he will let her have another day. Soon, she finds herself on a journey to save her village, stay alive, and find her true love.

I loved it! What a beautiful story, with a beautiful ending!!


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Beautiful Love Story

We have seen similar stories before: "Death Takes a Holiday", "Meet Joe Black" and the story of Persephone are several examples that come to mind. But Leavitt's version, "Keturah and Lord Death", is a gentle retelling, suitable for young adults (it was chosen as a Junior Library Guild selection). Set during Medieval times, with all of its squalor and disease, beautiful 16-year-old Keturah lives in a small village with her grandmother. After being lost in the forest for 3 days, she has resigned herself to death. When it comes, she is surprised to find that Death is a lordly and darkly handsome man. When he grudgingly agrees that she is too young to die, he offers to spare her life in exchange for the life of one of her fellow villagers. Not wishing to condemn another, she is able to forestall Death, much like Scheherazade, by telling him a love story. She refuses to end her story, promising that if he allows her one more day, she will come back the next evening to finish her tale, and remain with him. Lord Death grants her request, even going so far as to tell her that if she can find her one true love before day's end, a love that is greater than death, he will relinquish his claim on her. What follows details Keturah's ingenious methods to continue putting off Lord Death, as she comes to realize who her true love really is.

This fast-paced story can easily be read in an afternoon. Leavitt peoples her story with the literary archetypes found in classical fairy tales: the village "witch" with 7 sons, the Lord and Lady of the castle with a son of marriageable age, the beautiful commoner who must perform tasks to gain her freedom and the happiness of those she loves, a magic charm with the power to reveal the man who will make her happy, and the mysterious man desperate for her love. I would highly recommend this book for both young adults and adults; it is a mythological story appropriate for all ages.



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Enchanting romance/fairy tale

The poetic style of this book reminded me of a fable or fairy tale. It was beautifully written and conceived. I loved the character Lord Death. His lonliness and longing for connection with someone who doesn't fear him makes him such a sympathetic and relatable character. He is powerful and intimidating, yet vulnerable. Keturah is kind and brave; someone easy to support and root for. And I enjoyed the descriptions of the village and villagers who gave the story so much color.

I appreciated the idea that death is what makes life so poignant, meaningful, and bittersweet. It reminded me of a Castenada book I read as a teenager that suggested using death as an advisor. That death hovers behind us at all times and if you ever need to question the significance of something, ask it. Most of what we think is important really isn't.

I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in a tender romance and sweet story with a touching premise. The author deftly wove together fantasy and reality, seamlessly blending the two into a beautiful and enchanting narrative. It deals with the subject of death artfully, leaving you appreciative of all that life offers.



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Unique and enchanting

An original fairy tale told with a unique and beautiful voice. Leavitt's language sucked me in from the first sentence, and I was enchanted throughout. This novel includes a somewhat unlikely heroine, romance, danger, darkness, and a totally unexpected triumphant ending. I loved it and have added it to my wish list to reread and share with my children. Absolutely recommended.


reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5




U.S. National Book Award 2006 nominee for Young People's Literature!

2007 Saskatchewan Young Readers' Choice Willow Awards nominee

Manitoba Young Readers' Choice Award shortlist 2008

Canadian Children's Book Centre Our Choice Starred Selection, 2007

Sunburst Award for Canadian Literature of the Fantastic shortlist

Booklist's Top 10 Youth Romances, 2007

White Pine nominee, 2008

I will tell you . . . a story of magic and love, of daring and death, and one to comfort your heart. It will be the truest story I have ever told. Now listen, and tell me if it is not so."

Keturah Reeve is a beautiful young woman of sixteen who lives with her grandmother in a cottage near the forest owned by Lord Temsland. Keturah is renowned in the village for her captivating storytelling, and this beautifully woven novel is a response to a request from Keturah's eager audience for yet another of her fascinating tales. She tells of her experience of being lost in the forest, her eventual meeting with a dark figure on horseback who is Lord Death and her bargaining with him for her life-and for the lives of the villagers who are threatened by an onset of the plague.

With its richly textured medieval setting, Keturah's story exposes the tensions and desires of the villagers, the dangers that loom in their future and how they place Keturah's life in jeopardy. Keturah's escalating bargains with Lord Death allow her to protect her friends and reveal to them their true talents and destinies. But even as she negotiates with Death, she becomes more isolated from the people she is seeking to protect and seems less and less likely to achieve the dreams of her own heart.

The startling resolution of the novel confirms Martine Leavitt's reputation as a treasure of a writer, a storyteller who can weave magnificent spells. Leavitt confronts readers with issues and revelations that, while they occur in a setting far from their own experience, bear the intimacy of next door.


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