Present Containing Books The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1)
Title | : | The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1) |
Author | : | Clare B. Dunkle |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 230 pages |
Published | : | September 19th 2006 by Henry Holt & Company (first published October 1st 2003) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Young Adult. Romance. Magic. Fiction. Fairy Tales |
Clare B. Dunkle
Paperback | Pages: 230 pages Rating: 4.08 | 9785 Users | 820 Reviews
Explanation As Books The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1)
This book is exactly the type of fairy tale that I love the most. Now, I know that I have been outspoken in the past about my dislike of fantasies featuring caveman, bad-boy type hero characters. However, I think that I know and respect dozens of women who melt in the presence of these guys. Do I look down on my friends for their fantasy preferences? Absolutely not, because guess what? We all have a fantasy weakness. We all have that certain fairy tale that bypasses every logical part of our brains and just makes us feel giddy and excited. So, you can safely assume that mine is decidedly not the perfect specimen, territorial, alpha male. This book keys into the fairy tale that’s always turned me into a puddle of goo:

Mention Books Toward The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1)
Original Title: | The Hollow Kingdom |
ISBN: | 0805081089 (ISBN13: 9780805081084) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1 |
Literary Awards: | Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children's Literature (2004) |
Rating Containing Books The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1)
Ratings: 4.08 From 9785 Users | 820 ReviewsDiscuss Containing Books The Hollow Kingdom (The Hollow Kingdom Trilogy #1)
I first read this book when I was younger, and I absolutely loved it. It was one of those books that I enjoyed reading over and over. There are a lot of things I hate about this book now, which really breaks my heart, because I used to love it so much. When I was young, naïve, and blind toor at the very least ignoringall of the disturbing elements. But first to the positives. I absolutely adore the world Dunkle creates. The goblins are really cool, and its kind of fun to watch Kate go fromApparently it is romantic to be imprisoned underground by goblins and forced to bear their children. At least she had her self-centered sister to keep her company till the Stockholm Syndrome kicked in.
This is what Stolen Songbird should have been. I'm so glad I chose to read this one. It almost makes the other one more tolerable. This book shares the goblin mythology and kidnapped bride, but there the comparisons end. The Hollow Kingdom is the story of a very beautiful, clever young woman determined to outwit the Goblin King. I thoroughly enjoyed every moment of it. Kate is witty and strong. She does break down occasionally, but it always feels natural. The Goblin King is properly hideous and

I really really really wanted to like this book. In fact, there were parts of it that I enjoyed immensely. Kate was my favorite kind of heroine, someone who was clever, determined, and a little fiesty. So what went wrong? Well, the whole captive bride thing. I know they went over it a lot, how important it was for the goblin race and how it was necessary for survival, but the wedding ceremony was honestly the most disturbing thing I'd ever read. They made a big deal of Kate doing it "of her own
I really wanted to like this book and everything I read for the first 100 pages convinced me that I would. Unfortunately the story never developed into anything more than a case study on Stockholm syndrome. Kate was a strong protagonist, bright and courageous and Marak was terrifying as the villainous Goblin King. I was honestly scared during his scenes with Kate. Marak was a true monster, unpredictable and inhuman. He laughed at Kates fear and toyed with her until finally winning her surrender.
I... well. The beginning is creepy in a good way. The end is creepy in a bad way.The beginning has a sense of danger from a goblin menace. The end is some sort of apologia for rape, abduction, and Stockholm Syndrome.This book just kinda grosses me out.
This book is truly special! I love reading, but this was the first time I was so excited with a book that I started sharing what I've read with my family. By the time I've reached half of it, my mother was nudging me to read it faster so I could tell her more of Kate and Emily's adventures. Unfortunately, The Hollow Kingdom is not available in Bulgarian and I am surprised that the book hasn't been translated in more languages! A pity, because I am certain that people from all over the world will
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