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In this captivating sequel to AutumnQuest , Donavah is learning to control her vast maejic powers under the tutelage of Yallick, a revered mage. Maejic is outlawed in Alloway, and dreadful news of the Royal Guard drives the majes―along with Xyla the red dragon―from their hidden forest sanctuary. No one realizes the traitor in their midst until it’s too late and Donavah is brutally attacked. Stripped of her voice, the use of her hands, and her maejic, she is utterly helpless until rescued by a handsome and mysterious young man. Evil forces are scheming to dispose of the mages and overthrow the king. Their fate rests on Donavah―perhaps their only hope for restoring the rightful rule of the dragons. Crippled physically and spiritually, can the young mage break free from the terrible spell before all is lost?

192 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 2007

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Terie Garrison

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
1,451 reviews26 followers
December 7, 2014
Donavah's training in maejic has hardly begun when her life is uprooted yet again. The Royal Guard is going after the mages, and everyone with maejic has to flee or risk death. But even their flight is full of hazard after hazard. Donavah ends up alone, stricken of power and the use of her hands. And even if she can rejoin the others, she doesn't know if she can recover.

This book was leaps and bounds ahead of AutumnQuest. The beginning explains a great deal about the end of AutumnQuest, particularly how the rescue at the end had actually worked. The description of maejic is only slightly better than AutumnQuest, but at least it comes up front.

The real meat of the book comes after Donavah has been cursed and abandoned in the forest. Her power gone, her voice silent, her hands nearly useless, she struggles to come to grips with her fear, her helplessness, and her rescuer. Grey is patient and kind, and nurses her to as much of a recovery as she can make. He's a big part of what makes the book enjoyable.

The story flows much better here than in AutumnQuest, although the beginning and end are still awkward. Donavah is overpowered when she has use of maejic; nothing seems to be a struggle for her, and she keeps accidently doing things that blow away everyone else. Maejic still seems to be mostly used for sensing the moods of people and talking to animals, but at least there was an attempt to show other ways it can be used. Maybe someday I'll figure out more of the things it can and can't do.

The between-chapter scenes have gotten more cohesive as well, but they've also gotten disturbing. Donavah is 15, and many of the inter-chapter sequences were about 80-year-old Yallik's agonizing over how much he's in love with her. Including the first one.

There were also places where the prose was jumpy; Grey's explanation of how he'd been abandoned shortly after birth felt very random. He could have told it in pieces, or in a way that didn't feel so awkward. And since most of Grey's section was so good, it stood out especially.

Overall this was head and shoulders above AutumnQuest, but still not something I would recommend friends pick up and read. For one, it won't stand alone very well, so that means reading AutumnQuest first. For another, I only particularly cared for the middle; the beginning and end didn't work so well. I would give this book a Neutral.
Profile Image for Misty-wings.
23 reviews
April 6, 2011
Se lis très rapidement et tres agéable pour passer le temps
Profile Image for Denise.
7,500 reviews136 followers
June 7, 2011
A highly enjoyable second part of what promises to be a consistently good series.
28 reviews
March 6, 2012
The Journey continues with the same style set-up as the first but takes on a new direction. Could not put the book down.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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