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Red Prophet (Tales of Alvin Maker) Audiobook - Fantasy Fiction Series for Adults | Perfect for Commuting, Road Trips & Relaxation at Home
Red Prophet (Tales of Alvin Maker) Audiobook - Fantasy Fiction Series for Adults | Perfect for Commuting, Road Trips & Relaxation at Home

Red Prophet (Tales of Alvin Maker) Audiobook - Fantasy Fiction Series for Adults | Perfect for Commuting, Road Trips & Relaxation at Home

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Description

In the first tale of Alvin Maker, Seventh Son, Orson Scott Card introduced his readers to a very familiar-but just slightly different-pioneer America where magic works. Hex signs are powerful, good and evil presences roam the land, and many people have special talents. In this thrilling sequel, Alvin Maker is awakening to many mysteries: his own strange powers, the magic of the American frontier, and the special virtues of its chosen people, the Native Americans. Young Alvin Maker, the seventh son of a seventh son, has extraordinary talents for a white boy-he can cause stone to split smoothly under his hands, his knots never untie, he can knit bones, and he can call small animals to do his bidding. Stranger still his talents are imperceptible to the Indians, who usually hear the fire-setting of the sparks and the water-finding of the dowsers as an interruption in their music but who cannot hear Alvin at all. Lolla-Wossiky is an Indian whose fate is closely linked with Alvin's. He's been an undignified drunk since he was eleven, when he watched white men murder his father. The black noise in his head since the death shot rang out has drowned out the green music he needs to live well, and his life is a constant search for the right balance of alcohol to still the black noise without silencing the green music-until he meets Alvin. Soon Alvin must summon all his powers to prevent a tragic war between Native Americans and the white settlers of North America.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Individual review: My copy came without a jacket, which disappointed me.?Review of the actual book: Really good, and significantly sadder than the first one. Seventh Son felt like a magical Little House on the Prairie, which amused me, but this one focused on the fish out of water experience of Alvin among the native Americans, and the experience of the Native Americans trying to thrive in a country being mugged away from them by three other nations. In the background you also get a side story about the French marquis Lafayette and a freshly kicked out Napoleon Bonaparte as they all try get something done for their country with their own agendas behind their actions, and poor Comte de Maurepas is caught in the middle. Overall it's an enjoyable book and a good sequel, worth a read if you enjoyed Seventh Son.