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Knockabeg: A Famine Tale by Mary E. Lyons β€” book cover
Children's Fiction, General

Knockabeg: A Famine Tale

by Mary E. Lyons
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Synopsis

The mortals of Knockabeg have suffered through potato famines before, but never one caused by a Destruction Curse. Now the selfish faeries hold the fate of the village in their wee hands. Only they can defeat the silver-winged enemies who laid the curse. Armed with sky-nets and darts, the Trooping Ones gallop through the clouds to do battle. All except Sticky.
The eccentric, unpredictable Sticky has other plans. A member of the Queen’s High Council and faery guardian to an eleven-year-old boy, she stays behind to weave her dreams of luxury and revenge. Yet the truth is, none of us, even faeries, knows what the morrow will bring. We think it is ours to command, then it turns and sticks out its tongue. And isn’t that just the way of it?
Against a wild Celtic background of sea and sky, Mary E. Lyons tells a captivating story of magic, high adventure, and the tricky ways of love.

Publishers Weekly

Lyons's (Dear Ellen Bee: A Civil War Scrapbook of Two Union Spies) story set during the Irish potato famine mixes in fantastic creatures, Gaelic and faery words and a not quite omniscient narrator. These are clever embellishments, but the author develops too many characters, settings and story lines to keep straight. The queen of the Trooping Ones (the faeries that live in Knockabeg) declares war on the ne'er-do-well Nuckelavees when she discovers that they have put a curse on the potato vines of West Isle. Because the Trooping Ones need a mortal to fight beside them (and to feed them), she asks the rebellious Sticky to kidnap the human boy she guards. Sticky mysteriously defies orders, staying with the boy, Eamon, while his family and Sticky starve. Readers will have to pay attention to the clues Lyons plants in the narrative to discover Sticky's secret. The action shifts between (and often intersects) both worlds, detailing the impact of famine on the human community as well as the wounded faeries' war stories when they return to heal the residents of Knockabeg. The chapters frequently end philosophically ("Aye, ofttimes love is more powerful than fear or lost dreams or anything else in the world. Even hunger"), but readers will have to digest so many details about the world Lyons creates that they likely won't develop connections with faeries or mortals. Hence, potentially emotional scenes, such as Eamon's reunion with his dead family members in the faery world, don't deliver much impact. The final battle between the Trooping Ones and the Nuckelavees is equally anticlimactic. Ages 10-14. (Aug.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

About the Author, Mary E. Lyons

The author of fifteen books for young readers, Mary Lyons lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, with her husband, Paul. Her grandfather was born in Ireland in 1869, in a place much like Knockabeg.

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Book Details

Published
August 1, 2001
Publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780618092833

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