Maameren velho

226 páginas

Idioma Finnish

Publicado el 22 de mayo de 1976

ISBN:
978-951-0-07743-6
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Goodreads:
7824682

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(3 reseñas)

Maameren velho on ensimmäinen osa tunnetun amerikkalaisen kirjailijan, moneen kertaan palkittujen nuortenkirjojen ja tieteiskirjojen tekijän satutrilogiasta Maameren tarinat. Se vie lukijansa taianomaiseen Maameren saaristoon, maailmaan, joka on, eikä ole. Maameri on mahtavien taikureiden ja velhojen maa, tummien varjojen, eksyttävien labyrinttien, kadonneiden aarteiden ja suurten seikkailujen maa.

Maameri on Varpushaukan maa, ja Varpushaukka on synnynnäinen velho, joka osoittaa maagiset kykynsä jo pienenä poikana. Velhojen koulussa Varpushaukasta kehittyy vaikutusvaltainen velho Ged, joka nostattaa tuulta, siunaa vettä ja parantaa sairaita. Hän tekee urotöitä, niitä joista tulevat sukupolvet kertovat sankarilauluissaan: lannistaa lohikäärmeistä mahtavimman. Mutta hän tekee myös virheen: päästää irti varjon, pahan, joka uhkaa maailmaa ja on vähällä tappaa Gedin.

Alkaa Gedin pitkä ja armoton kamppailu pahaa vastaan.

62 ediciones

reseñó A Wizard of Earthsea de Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea Cycle, #1)

Slow-paced and enoyable read

I enjoyed reading this. With her thoughtful writing style, the author did a wizardly job in creating the perfect mood for this slow-paced, sombre, yet hopeful adventure. I could feel Ged's unease and determination as if I had been with him.

I was enchanted by the interesting concept of magic in Earthsea. And I also liked that we accompany Ged, of whom we know from the start that he will be a great wizard, from his very beginnings of his magical journey, when he was still inexperienced and short-tempered.

The cherry on top was the world building, which was a real charm! On Ged's voyage, I often could grasp the feeling of being on the open sea, a remote island or at the edge of the world.

Very enjoyable but of its time

I did really enjoy reading this, and will almost certainly go on to read the other Earthsea books.

I came to Earthsea after reading several of Le Guin's Hainish cycle books and short stories, including some of the earliest ones like Rocannon's World. I can see similarities with the earliest Hainish cycle works, from around the same time - an emphasis on male characters, for example - which I am sure would have been handled differently by the same author had she written them later on. But there are still a lot of great ideas here, and it is far more open-minded than most fantasy literature of its era.