Wish e-bog
73,66 DKK
(inkl. moms 92,08 DKK)
The tale is set in an alpine region at no specified time. Depending on age and disposition, humans freely commune with creatures and plants. Valley farming people are haunted by the malice and thieving of Fngler, a cunning, embittered enchanter who abuses an ancient wishing chain of potent stones. All people hope that a hero will cross the high pass into the villains shadowy, fortified valley, ...
E-bog
73,66 DKK
Forlag
Union Bridge Books
Udgivet
1 marts 2013
Længde
124 sider
Genrer
Children’s / Teenage fiction: Fantasy
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9780857282057
The tale is set in an alpine region at no specified time. Depending on age and disposition, humans freely commune with creatures and plants. Valley farming people are haunted by the malice and thieving of Fngler, a cunning, embittered enchanter who abuses an ancient wishing chain of potent stones. All people hope that a hero will cross the high pass into the villains shadowy, fortified valley, seize the chain and realise everyones dreams of wealth and security. Adam the forester typifies this simplistic view. His wife, Maria, is more reflective and cautious. The contrast is reflected in their children, Berwald and Clara.Influenced by Adam, the children leave the shelter of their home and valley unprepared and in secret to take the chain and return triumphant. Their journey through an inhospitable landscape is peopled by plants and creatures who show puzzling extremes of pride, greed and generosity, and who reveal that the colour of wishes determines our outlook and actions. Berwald reacts by becoming more egotistic and ruthless, whereas the experience brings out Claras gentler, more intuitive nature.Once they enter Fnglers realms this difference affects the childrens treatment by the villain, his stunted guards and captive spirits. Claras rose-hearted benevolence instils fear; Berwalds insolence and red wishes redouble their power and enable Fngler to imprison the children in a dead forest, depriving them of all contact with their natural allies. They try to escape only to be pitched into an inaccessible marshy valley among captured herds.Meanwhile, Adam and Maria assume their children have been stolen by Fngler. All else failing, Adam tramps many miles to consult Well-Wisher, an old but ageless seer. Her lightly held yet profound insight and knowledge seem to derive from a preoccupation with dreams. Adam demands a quick solution but he must reject the power of his axe and accept improbable leads.He follows a beetle on a treacherous mountain journey to Fnglers borders. Her forthright but moving narrative of the old thiefs disillusioned life evokes his pity and understanding, rose-heartedness that breaks a spell cast by Fngler. The beetle is transformed to her former glory as Alpenrose, and Adam is inclined to doubt whether violence and vengeance will secure his childrens release, though he has more to learn. They enter the hostile forest and caves unopposed. The benevolent rose-coloured aura shed by Alpenrose frees spirits and guards from gloom and captivity, and reduces the tyrant to a defenceless old cipher. Concern for his children and stolen flock kindles righteous anger in Adam but he forgets the magic necklace as he punishes the thief by locking him in a cloven pine.It is Clara who confronts her father and brother (now quietly ashamed of his role) with Fnglers defencelessness, and makes them agree to his release. In a moment of redemption the cowering villain hands the chain to Clara who makes her father its guardian. Adam looks at the suddenly untarnished and diminished set of stones and wonders what they can achieve now he has won back his children and flock and can restore them all to his anxious wife. The future of the chain and of Fngler is left in abeyance.