Tatiana's Reviews > Daughter of the Forest
Daughter of the Forest (Sevenwaters, #1)
by
by
Tatiana's review
bookshelves: fairy-tales-myths, 2010, locus, historical, 2021
Feb 24, 2010
bookshelves: fairy-tales-myths, 2010, locus, historical, 2021
Read 2 times. Last read June 2, 2021 to June 8, 2021.
This book remains one of the best fairy tale retelling I've ever read. Marillier grounds this familiar story in a tremendously rich historical and cultural context. However, this book is dense, and it is long and gut-wrenching. For me, it needs some lightness to be a 5-star read.
Also, I remembered very little about Daughter of the Forest before this reread. But one thing I did remember - it was Kat's review of it, in which she talked about the need for authors to not only depict traumas and their aftermath in a real way in their books, but the healing process too. Kat is right. Sorcha goes through a lot in this novel to save her brothers, but her "healing by love" was quick and not entirely realistic.
_____
4.7 stars
Aside from a couple of minor qualms, Daughter of the Forest is pretty much an example of an almost perfect debut novel.
This book is a beautiful retelling of the Celtic "Swans" myth, which has been familiar to me since childhood through the Hans Christian Andersen's version - The Wild Swans. Sorcha is the seventh child and the only daughter of Lord Colum of Sevenwaters. When Colum remarries after being widowed for almost 13 years, the evil stepmother (and witch) puts a dreadful spell on Sorcha's six older brothers. The only way to lift the spell is for Sorcha to undertake a difficult task accompanied by a lot of pain, loss, and terror...
The best part about this book is that Juliet Marillier stays pretty close to the source material, not transforming the original into an unrecognizable horror fest as some modern writers often do. Instead, she enhances the myth with a beautiful love story, realistic historical background, admirable characters, skillful infusion of ancient magic, stories of dedicated friendships and unyielding sibling devotion, and a couple of utterly despicable villains.
There are not many flaws to this wonderfully written book. The story is intense, heartbreaking, and passionate. My main complaint is its length. While the book is only 400 pages, at times it felt it was twice that size. No matter how much I read, I couldn't get through more than 50 pages per day. I don't know if the font was small or the narration was a little heavy, but it took me forever to finish this book.
I loved the story and there are some intriguing loose ends left unresolved and therefore I am pretty certain I will read the second book in the series - Son of the Shadows, but I definitely need some time to regroup, because it's even longer than Daughter of the Forest.
Also, I remembered very little about Daughter of the Forest before this reread. But one thing I did remember - it was Kat's review of it, in which she talked about the need for authors to not only depict traumas and their aftermath in a real way in their books, but the healing process too. Kat is right. Sorcha goes through a lot in this novel to save her brothers, but her "healing by love" was quick and not entirely realistic.
_____
4.7 stars
Aside from a couple of minor qualms, Daughter of the Forest is pretty much an example of an almost perfect debut novel.
This book is a beautiful retelling of the Celtic "Swans" myth, which has been familiar to me since childhood through the Hans Christian Andersen's version - The Wild Swans. Sorcha is the seventh child and the only daughter of Lord Colum of Sevenwaters. When Colum remarries after being widowed for almost 13 years, the evil stepmother (and witch) puts a dreadful spell on Sorcha's six older brothers. The only way to lift the spell is for Sorcha to undertake a difficult task accompanied by a lot of pain, loss, and terror...
The best part about this book is that Juliet Marillier stays pretty close to the source material, not transforming the original into an unrecognizable horror fest as some modern writers often do. Instead, she enhances the myth with a beautiful love story, realistic historical background, admirable characters, skillful infusion of ancient magic, stories of dedicated friendships and unyielding sibling devotion, and a couple of utterly despicable villains.
There are not many flaws to this wonderfully written book. The story is intense, heartbreaking, and passionate. My main complaint is its length. While the book is only 400 pages, at times it felt it was twice that size. No matter how much I read, I couldn't get through more than 50 pages per day. I don't know if the font was small or the narration was a little heavy, but it took me forever to finish this book.
I loved the story and there are some intriguing loose ends left unresolved and therefore I am pretty certain I will read the second book in the series - Son of the Shadows, but I definitely need some time to regroup, because it's even longer than Daughter of the Forest.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read
Daughter of the Forest.
Sign In »
Reading Progress
February 24, 2010
– Shelved
May 14, 2010
–
Started Reading
May 22, 2010
– Shelved as:
fairy-tales-myths
May 26, 2010
– Shelved as:
2010
May 26, 2010
–
Finished Reading
June 2, 2021
–
Started Reading
June 8, 2021
– Shelved as:
locus
June 8, 2021
– Shelved as:
historical
June 8, 2021
– Shelved as:
2021
June 8, 2021
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-23 of 23 (23 new)
date
newest »
message 1:
by
Kat Kennedy
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
May 15, 2010 01:57AM
I'm interested to see how you like this book!
reply
|
flag
I am only abut 10 pages in and the only thing I can tell about it that this book is long, the font is very small:)
I like the idea that the story didn't modernize into disturbing. That could be because it was first published 11 years ago, but still refreshing.
I love your review of this boook - it totally matches my own. I too grew up reading The Wild Swans and was very excited to find an adult version of a childhood favorite. (Also, thanks for providing a link to children's book)
If you haven't already, I don't personally recommend reading the other two installments of this trilogy. This book is so good, the next two are disappointments in comparison. While they both had their enjoyable moments, they are terribly slow and formulaic. Without the fairy tale elements to draw from, it seems as though the author falls short of the mark. There are also some awkward stretches of the imagination to make the overall story work.
If you do choose to push forward, I'm very curious to see what your take on the other books will be. Hopefully you will enjoy them much more than I did.
If you haven't already, I don't personally recommend reading the other two installments of this trilogy. This book is so good, the next two are disappointments in comparison. While they both had their enjoyable moments, they are terribly slow and formulaic. Without the fairy tale elements to draw from, it seems as though the author falls short of the mark. There are also some awkward stretches of the imagination to make the overall story work.
If you do choose to push forward, I'm very curious to see what your take on the other books will be. Hopefully you will enjoy them much more than I did.
Marcie,
I have read the 2nd book and enjoyed it enough to give it 4 stars. I am yet to read the rest of the series. The 5th is coming out this winter I think.
I have read the 2nd book and enjoyed it enough to give it 4 stars. I am yet to read the rest of the series. The 5th is coming out this winter I think.
Tatiana wrote: "Marcie,
I have read the 2nd book and enjoyed it enough to give it 4 stars. I am yet to read the rest of the series. The 5th is coming out this winter I think."
There are definitely some things I liked about the 2nd, moreso than the 3rd, but it just didn't feel as complete a story to me. Perhaps my expectations were to high. I only just discovered there were more books in the series today and have to admit I'm curious.
I have read the 2nd book and enjoyed it enough to give it 4 stars. I am yet to read the rest of the series. The 5th is coming out this winter I think."
There are definitely some things I liked about the 2nd, moreso than the 3rd, but it just didn't feel as complete a story to me. Perhaps my expectations were to high. I only just discovered there were more books in the series today and have to admit I'm curious.
No matter how much I read, I couldn't get through more than 50 pages per day.
I'm glad it was not just me! Although I loved it, it did feel long and slow at first. I read a measly 12 pages an hour yesterday! The story picked up for me about a third of the way in. (And I agree something about the formatting was weird. The margins too narrow, the font too small...)
I'm glad it was not just me! Although I loved it, it did feel long and slow at first. I read a measly 12 pages an hour yesterday! The story picked up for me about a third of the way in. (And I agree something about the formatting was weird. The margins too narrow, the font too small...)
Exactly! I remember I really got into it toward the middle. I think all her books are like that. They sort of grow on you.
I think i'm a fast reader, just started reading today and now i'm on page 210. But I understand your complaint. I have the feeling I have read for ever and I should already have finished the book. But now I can enjoy this book for a longer period :)
Nastya wrote: "I'm so relieved this book held up for you! I want to reread it myself."
I don't know how I managed to read it without audio 10 years ago. It's a loong book. Have you read the rest in the series? I did read the second one years ago. If I remember it right, it was good.
I don't know how I managed to read it without audio 10 years ago. It's a loong book. Have you read the rest in the series? I did read the second one years ago. If I remember it right, it was good.
Tatiana wrote: "Nastya wrote: "I'm so relieved this book held up for you! I want to reread it myself."
I don't know how I managed to read it without audio 10 years ago. It's a loong book. Have you read the rest i..."
yeah, I stopped after the 4th. The first one is the best imo. and I loved a slow burn romance and bait-and-switch love interest. :)
I don't know how I managed to read it without audio 10 years ago. It's a loong book. Have you read the rest i..."
yeah, I stopped after the 4th. The first one is the best imo. and I loved a slow burn romance and bait-and-switch love interest. :)
I also read 3 or 4. I remember starting to feel that they all were kind of the same and didn't have the same spark as Daughter of the Forest and Heart's Blood.
Tatiana wrote: "I also read 3 or 4. I remember starting to feel that they all were kind of the same and didn't have the same spark as Daughter of the Forest and Heart's Blood."
I think the first one had the best quest and even though it was slow, it always moved forward, story had a time limit, felt urgent, stakes were high. after that it was more meandering and I really questioned some characters' decisions. The second one is about one of sorcha's daughters and I really wanted to follow the other one. :) Still, Marillier is a gifted writer and she can weave a fairytale mood like no other.
Also there were no other guys in later books who could compare to this one, at least not for me :)
I think the first one had the best quest and even though it was slow, it always moved forward, story had a time limit, felt urgent, stakes were high. after that it was more meandering and I really questioned some characters' decisions. The second one is about one of sorcha's daughters and I really wanted to follow the other one. :) Still, Marillier is a gifted writer and she can weave a fairytale mood like no other.
Also there were no other guys in later books who could compare to this one, at least not for me :)
Nastya wrote: "Tatiana wrote: "I also read 3 or 4. I remember starting to feel that they all were kind of the same and didn't have the same spark as Daughter of the Forest and [book:Heart's Blood|627..."
So, your type is a stoic man who keeps all his feelings deep inside? ;)
I don't remember much about the second book's guy. Tattoos? And that they did "it" in the rain. You know, the most important stuff.
So, your type is a stoic man who keeps all his feelings deep inside? ;)
I don't remember much about the second book's guy. Tattoos? And that they did "it" in the rain. You know, the most important stuff.
Tatiana wrote: "Nastya wrote: "Tatiana wrote: "I also read 3 or 4. I remember starting to feel that they all were kind of the same and didn't have the same spark as Daughter of the Forest and [book:He..."
lol. yeah, tattooed guy was a tortured but whining and throwing tantrums if I remember correctly. I don't even recall what was his problem tbh. I think his shtick was "i'm not a family man, I can't be a father blah blah"
And yeah, I guess I don't like my men whining. Red was keeping to himself because he knew she had trauma and he didn't want to scare her. and they became friendly first. that earns my respect!
lol. yeah, tattooed guy was a tortured but whining and throwing tantrums if I remember correctly. I don't even recall what was his problem tbh. I think his shtick was "i'm not a family man, I can't be a father blah blah"
And yeah, I guess I don't like my men whining. Red was keeping to himself because he knew she had trauma and he didn't want to scare her. and they became friendly first. that earns my respect!