Virginia Ronan ♥ Herondale ♥
602 reviews35.2k followers
I’m on BookTube now! =) ”Don’t hate all humans because of what happened to us. There are both good and evil humans: you need to see that for yourself.” Okay, I’ll be honest here: One of the main reasons why I decided to read this book was the white fox on the cover. =) As you all know I love foxes and they are my spiritual animal so when I saw a book that didn’t only have a fox on the cover but also had the word in the title I just couldn’t resist! And I’m so glad I picked up “White Fox” because it was exactly what I needed. I’ve been constantly fighting against a work- and life-induced reading slump those last couple of months and sometimes you just need a short and enjoyable middle grade book to get away from reality. Well, at least for a little while so you can recharge your batteries and this book was exactly that. ”For the first time, he wondered if he really wanted to be a human at all. How could they be so heartless?” So what is “White Fox” about? Basically it’s a book about Dilah the fox who wants to become human after his parents are killed by a hunter. With her last breath his mother hands him a mysterious moonstone that is supposed to guide him to a place where he can become human. Since nothing holds him anymore Dilah starts his journey with the moonstone but he isn’t the only fox that wants to be human and soon he is followed by a pack of blue foxes that are led by their ruthless leader Carl. On his way Dilah meets humans and other animals and forms many friendships while he tries to solve the mystery of the moonstone. ”Why wouldn’t she give him a chance? He hadn’t done anything wrong. He liked Ankel and he happened to be a fox – what was wrong with that?” On the one hand this was a very sad story. There is a lot of loss and Dilah isn’t always welcome at the places he visits. Many of the animals have prejudices against him and Dilah doesn’t understand why they can’t see past their fear. I really loved this aspect of the book because it doesn’t only address the countless prejudices we have to face in our lives but also provides us with solutions to fight against them. Of course it doesn’t always work, but despite all odds Dilah always makes friends among the different animals because they refuse to be led by their own fear and prejudices. Sometimes the author allows the characters to voice it very clearly and I really loved this about the book. ”She’s done nothing wrong! What’s wrong is your prejudice, your fear of humans and your own cowardice!” I absolutely adored Ankel the weasel and his friendship with Dilah was amazing! Little Bean was a very precious character as well and I felt so sorry for him but at the same time I was glad that he helped Ankel and Dilah when no one else would have. Seriously, despite all the sad parts this was such a lovely and heart-warming story and the beautiful illustrations by Viola Wang only made this an even more enjoyable read. Conclusion: All told this was a really great book and the strong bonds and the friendships between the characters were amazing! Since it was a short read I was through it in no time, but I really appreciated all the life-lessons that were taught in here. =) The ending was pretty open and as it seems there is actually going to be a second book?! I’ll definitely make sure to watch out for it because I’m sure at some point of my life it might once again turn out to be exactly what I need. ;-) __________________________________ This was such a lovely and heart-warming story and I absolutely loved the illustrations by Viola Wang! It’s a sad story though but the strong friendships make up for it. XD Full RTC soon! I’ll make sure to write a little bit more because the book definitely deserves it! <3 __________________________________ Okay, I admit it! I chose this book because of its name and the beautiful cover! <3 Did any of you read this already and if yes, did you like it? =)
I mean if there’s a white fox in it I just can’t resist, especially if the book is from the foxes POV! Like yay! 😊
As far as I can tell from the blurb this is a children’s book so I guess I’ll be done with it in no time.
Athena (OneReadingNurse)
864 reviews124 followers
Thank you so much to the publisher for my advanced copy in exchange for an honest review! All opinions are my own! This is such a great book for middle graders. Dilah, an adolescent fox with no friends, sets off on a quest after his parents die. All he has is a gem and some cryptic instructions, and his mother's last words to send him on his way! Along the journey Dilah meets some unlikely friends - a seal, weasel, horse, and rabbit. Each new friend shows him something about friendship and two of them join the adventure. Ankel is a clever weasel who wants to learn everything and become a scholar, while Little Bean is a rabbit that has a great interest in medicine. The main message of the book seems to be to value your friends and their contributions. Additionally Dilah learns that everything in the world isn't so black and white as he originally thought. Of course he wants to become a human - but there are also very evil humans as well as the good ones. There are also bad animals. The cover art is just beautiful and there are many great illustrations along the way too. Ending on a bit of a cliffhanger, I totally think that middle graders will love this. Content is appropriate but does mention parental death.
Riley
15 reviews
Why was there a cliffhanger just why.
Stephie
390 reviews17 followers
This is a really sweet children’s book that doesn’t shy away from death, prejudice and the terrible impact humans have had on animals. I was initially drawn to this because of its beautiful cover, which was illustrated by Viola Wang, and am glad to say I enjoyed the story as well, even though I am an adult. I think this would be a great book for 9-12 year olds, particularly those who love animals and care about the environment. I am looking forward to part two.
- children-s
Mari-WA160817
73 reviews4 followers
Als Hörbuch zusammen mit meinem Sohn gehört. Wir freuen uns auch schon sehr auf die nächsten zwei Bände. Eine ganz wunderbare Geschichte.
Greg
228 reviews
While I appreciate non-English books being translated for American audiences, there is quickly the issue of how do we translate a novel. Do we go word-for-word or line-by-line crafting the closest possible English version of the Chinese best seller or do we get loosey goosey and try to capture the same rhythm, tone, sentence structure, meaning, feel, etc. White Fox falls too far into the former. Before I even talk about the actual content of the story, I have to point out that this is already an inferior version of Chen Jiatong's book and without learning Chinese, this is all I have to go on. Perhaps Chen wrote a beautiful, elegant series of lines that would have wowed me, but this version didn't. Most of the lines are clunky, stilted, and unnatural and for a story that is trying to be fantastical, the descriptions and adjectives don't have any heart. I never get any long paragraphs painting a wondrous picture of a setting or a character. Again, this is specifically about the version of the story that Jennifer Feeley gives us and I can't speak to Chen's writing. The story, however, I can blame on Chen. It feels like a studio children's movie where a board of directors were constantly saying, "It's a stupid kids' movie, it doesn't need to be good; it's for kids." White Fox feels like a story a mother would tell to a small child, just on paper. Yeah, that sounds good, but those aren't often well planned and crafted stories taking place within a slowly building mythology. This is an incredibly cliche and bare bones story that slowly plots along during what should be down time and then racing through actual plot events. I won't veer into spoiler territory, but White Fox is very much about a journey from Point A to Point B with small scenes in-between to serve as bumps in the road. Much of what happens in-between are little blips that are essentially poorly told, ham-fisted fables that aren't really relevant to the larger story. White Fox is boring, slow, and uneventful and by the time I got to the cliff-hanger ending, I just wanted the story to be over. I guess the strength of the book is its themes, but Chen is so blunt and obvious with them that it's more grating than enlightening. True, this book is marketed for third through seventh grade, so I wasn't expecting anything weighty or complex and we do get some ideas that are interesting for what is essentially a middle school novel, but just because it is for kids, doesn't mean it has to be childish. Everything here is too simplistic: the themes are watered down, the characters are underdeveloped, the plot is hollow and uneventful, the setting is dull, and the scenes that should have gravitas feel unearned because we rushed and skipped through the set-up and establishing bits. Even if we narrow the marketing scope down to the bottom of the range and say this book is specifically for third graders and we then compare White Fox to other novels marketed toward that age (Magic Tree House, Charlotte's Web, James and the Giant Peach, etc) we can see that so much more can be done. Our lead, Dilah, is has no personality other than being a Mary Sue and his companions have even less. Much less important than the story and how it is told is the unnecessary artwork inside the book. The cover is fine, but the art inside is terrible. The distribution of the art is seemingly random as it isn't there at major events nor is it every couple of pages or chapters; it's just a handful throughout the whole book. The few we do get would be impressive if done by the audience of the book, but are, unfortunately, not. They are sloppy, lazy, and remind me of when we did thumbprint art in preschool, where you dip your finger in paint, make a paint fingerprint on the paper, and then turn that spot into a mouse or a turkey or whatever. The art here doesn't enhance the story and it doesn't help us visualize the setting or characters; it's only effect is to take up space. As a whole, White Fox is very disappointing and even if you lower your standards and view it specifically as a book for children, kids can handle (and deserve) a much better novel than this.
On the one hand this is a nice friendship story which tackles important subjects like death, environmental issues, cultural issues, pejudice while showing there is no black and white and including animal folklore, but on the other hand, as many things I want to criticise. 1. While the fox on the cover is definitely authentic and amazing (even though it looks more like a red fox with white fur than a polar fox) the illustrations on the inside are not even close to how a polar fox looks like. A polar bear, more likely. The art was not appealing and looked overly simplified. I am not really impressed, but I might want to continue to know if Dilah can really transform into a human.
2. I have to assume that the book is written beautifully in Chinese. Maybe even in English. But the German translation is clunky, simplistic and not beautiful at all. To worsen it, they changes some names of the characters to make them sound more German, which was a terrible decision in my opinion.
3. The plot iself had big pacing problems and ended up with some big genre tropes.
Worst part? This is only half the story.
Lauralee
532 reviews5 followers
Eine hübsche Idee, die mich in ihrer Umsetzung letztlich aber nicht überzeugen konnte. Der Schreibstil ist Mal sehr märchenhaft und gehoben in der Ausdrucksweise, dann wieder eher kindlich umgangssprachlich (was auch an der Übersetzung liegen könnte), und bleibt eher distanziert beobachtend - für mich hat sich keine enge Bindung zu den Figuren ergeben, kein besonderes Einfühlen oder Mitfiebern. Und auch der Verlauf der Geschichte selbst hat für mich nicht für besondere Spannung gesorgt, weil die Geschichte in Stationen verläuft, die wenig miteinander verknüpft werden. Auf der Reise kommt es zu immer neuen Begegnungen, teilweise durchaus auch zu spannenden Szenen, aber die meisten davon werden danach ohne Einfluss auf die weitere Geschichte zurückgelassen, sodass ich mich oft gefragt habe, warum diese Episode überhaupt erzählt wurde. Hinzukommt, dass ich einen großen Teil der Figuren eher unsympathisch fand. Unter'm Strich für mich leider eher enttäuschend. Ich werde keinen zweiten Teil lesen.
Christina
835 reviews34 followers
Ein nettes Buch für jüngere Leser Die Geschichte des kleinen Polarfuchses Dilah unterteilt sich in verschiedene, kurze Abenteuer. Die Sprache ist relativ einfach und die Entwicklung sehr linear. Es gibt keine großen Überraschungen und es ist sicherlich kein literarisches Meisterwerk, sondern nette Unterhaltung für Kinder. Allerdings könnten die vielen Tode von Eltern für kleinere Kinder zu grausig sein.
Aileen
53 reviews3 followers
Nunja, es war eher so lala. Die Handlung ist zwar gut gemacht und die Grundidee sicher auch, aber es konnte mich dennoch eher schwer "abholen". Aber vielleicht gebe ich dem Ganzen in den folgenden Bänden ja nochmal später eine Chance und wenn es auch nur ist, um zu erfahren wie die Beziehung von Dilah und seinem (hasserfüllten) wiedergefundem Bruder Aljosha weitergeht.
Riley
15 reviews
Read
February 16, 2022i picked the wrong white fox but when alsace betrays dilah i was suprised
Havelah McLat
Author4 books87 followers
❄️Book review for White Fox❄️ I believe it was last year I saw the title and was intrigued by the blurb. I finally got a chance to read it. My heart melted by the time I finished the book. Gosh the cliffhanger. I must read the sequel! I love the wholesome story about friendship, sprinkle of mystery and adventure. It is such a sweet story and yes you will laugh, cry, and melt. I highly recommend it.
Bob H
463 reviews38 followers
This is an exciting read, and a tightly-written and tightly-plotted narrative, about young Arctic fox, Dilah, and his quest: his parents bequeathed him a moonstone that points to a distant, unknown magic treasure, one that might make an animal become human. For all that, the book is mostly a darker journey -- in some ways it reminds me of Bambi, the original novel by Felix Salten, in that he encounters humans, death, enslavement of animals, hunters, human pollution. Animals also represent dangers: predators, rivals, and a band of enemy foxes seeking the moonstone. Dilah does find friends along the way, who help him and in some cases accompany him on this quest. The English translation is a smooth, apt read. There are a few b&w illustrations, sparse but beautiful, and the typeface is slightly larger than normal, so younger readers (or those who read to them) will find it easy going. Also, it's not really a spoiler to say -- given that this is #1 of this saga -- that the book ends in a terrifying climax, and a cliffhanger. More of this series are in the works, apparently, and they will be something to look forward to. (Read in advance-reading copy via Amazon Vine).
- fantasy fiction fiction-kids
Julietta M.
71 reviews2 followers
What an amazing adventure. What a cliffhanger. A next book is definitely needed. I must know!!!!!!!
Carmen
559 reviews57 followers
I received a copy of this book from Scholastic Canada in exchange for an honest review. A young while fox named Dilah is set on an adventure after tragedy strikes his family. Before his mother passes, she gives him a package and a long-secret. If he were to succeed in finding the treasure, he will find a power to make an animal human. Dilah sets off but he soon finds that there are others who are after the moonstone that was in the package left to him by his mother. In his journey to find the treasure, he makes new friends and also discovers the duality of human nature. While I’m always up for a good adventure story, I was a little let down by this particular one. I enjoyed the friendships that Dilah made along the way but parts of the story and plot seemed to drag out unnecessarily. I thought it was strange how desperate Dilah would be to get moving in one chapter, and then for him to just take his time and stay in one location for days. Despite the continued threat of those who were after him and the moonstone. There also seemed to be a lot of parental deaths and betrayals (animals and humans) in this story. Far more than I expected from a middle grade adventure story. I think there were promising elements to the story (friendship, animal folklore) but generally, this story missed its mark for me. Thank you to Scholastic Canada for gifting me a copy of the book.
- location-classroom-shelf-upstairs my-classroom-library review-copies
Camille
488 reviews32 followers
J'ai passé un bon moment. Les chapitres s'enchaînent facilement, l'histoire est bien développée, la fin laisse présager une histoire plus profonde que ce que je pensais au début. Malgré tout j'ai trouvé qu'il n'y avait aucun style dans l'écriture. Beaucoup de facilités dans le scénario. Mais des personnages attachants, une belle histoire d'amitié. La scène au tribunal des lapins m'a vraiment angoissée.
Bref, de bonnes idées mais il aurait peut-être fallut le travailler un peu plus avant de le publier je pense.
Shel
160 reviews31 followers
I’d rate it 2/5 for myself - nothing too exciting and I can’t speak for the original Chinese, but the translation is kind of clunky and doesn’t flow well at all. But, my ten year old LOVED it and begged me to get him the sequel the minute it came out, so anything that gets my kid to read gets an extra star from me!
- childrens middle-grade read-in-2022
MacKenzie Kelley
12 reviews
This book was really great besides it just left on a cliff hanger and there is not another book out that follows this one.
Awhona K.G. Paul
72 reviews
A delightful story filled with wisdom and environmental awareness - White Fox throws its spotlight on the brute savageness and insensitivity of humans as a race amongst various existing living species & this story is narrated from the eyes of an Arctic Fox Cub & his friends as they come together to fulfill a common goal - a treasure hunt which will help them to become the most dangerous being they fear- humans! The plot follows Dilah - a happy Arctic Fox cub who lives happily with his parents in the snow laden Arctic regions however - they are a nuclear family & keep traveling & changing their caves of residence frequently. Besides listening to his mother's stories and basking in the love and warmth of his father & mother Dilah also loves watching humans- their colorful life & ingenious inventions & machines. On a fateful day , when he's a bit late returning home, he finds his mother returning home badly wounded & his father killed by a hunter - a human! Dilah is terrified & confused & his mother narrates a last story about the secret treasure of the Arctic foxes and with that Dilah is instructed to embark on a journey with this secret treasure which he needs to guard with his life till he finds the patron Saint of the Artic Foxes called Ulla. Dilah's mother passes away shortly and Dilah wastes no time in finding the package & darts off to escape the bitter blizzard . As he rushes he is ambushed by another tribe of the Artic foxes ' the blue tribe & their leader Carl demands the treasure from Dilah.Dilah narrowly escapes by plunging down from a cliff top and is almost saved from drowning by an Arctic seal whom Dilah befriends later on.Thus begins the journey of Dilah's many adventures & with each friend he makes on his way - he learns a bit more about himself & the values of friendship, trust, loyalty, steadfastness, wisdom, & pragmatism . My booktube bookreview link is given below :
A lot is mentioned as far as climate change goes, forest tree poaching, animal skin poaching for furs and skins and many more environmental factors glaring at us humans.
Thoroughly enjoyed this book & learnt a lot from Dilah's journey.
https://youtu.be/B7UbM3tl9u4
Julie J.
537 reviews33 followers
2.5 ENGLISH VERSION BELOW ---------------------------- "Der Ruf des Mondsteins" von Chen Jiatong ist ein Kinderroman, der seine Leser:innen in eine Welt voller Abenteuer und Fantasie entführt. Während das Buch mit seinem originellen Setting das Potenzial hat, zu fesseln, hinterlässt es nach dem Zuschlagen der letzten Seite ein Gefühl der Irritation. Es gibt sehr gewaltsame Szenen, bei denen sich mir der Mehrwert der Gewalt nicht erschlossen hat. Zudem mag ich persönlich jene Bücher nicht, in denen die Hauptfigur etappenhaft immer wieder neue Freunde findet, weiterzieht und diese kommen dann nie wieder vor. Der Plot des Buches ist was Neues, der Einband ist wunderschön, leider jedoch gab es diese eine Szene inkl. Mord, deren Zweck sich mir absolut nicht erschließt, außer dass Dilah (der weiße Fuchs in der Hauptfigur) wieder weiterzieht. ---------------------------- "The White Fox" by Chen Jiatong is a children's novel that transports its readers into a world full of adventure and fantasy. While the book has the potential to captivate with its original setting, it leaves a feeling of irritation after turning the last page. There are very violent scenes where the added value of the violence was not clear to me. In addition, I personally don't like books in which the main character gradually makes new friends, moves on and then never meets them again. The plot of the book is something new, the cover is beautiful, but unfortunately there was this one scene including a murder, the purpose of which is absolutely not clear to me, except that Dilah (the white fox in the main character) moves on again.
----------------------------
Jessica
772 reviews5 followers
I read this out loud with my 13 year old son. He liked it, but it was not one that I particularly enjoyed. The writing and style seemed pretty simplistic and below his reading level, but it was definitely too violent to be something my younger daughter would be interested in reading. It bothered me that a lot of questions were raised about whether it would actually be good for any of the animal friends to actually turn human without resolving them (I mean, it was bad enough that it was a story about animals on quest to find a treasure to make them human in the 1st place, but if you can get past the fact that that's the premise of the entire book to begin with, then at least give them a clear stance on it!). I was also really annoyed to find that there was no conclusion to the story.
Davina
4 reviews
Ich frage mich, was mich die Geschichte lehren soll? „Menschen sind böse und grausam, Tiere aber auch!“ Bis auf wenige Ausnahmen unter den Tieren und Menschen zeichnen sich die Figuren durch Brutalität, Grausamkeit und Hinterhältigkeit aus. Warum es als Kinderbuch gehandelt wird, verstehe ich nicht. Viele Szenen empfand ich als Erwachsene eher verstörend, die Tiere gingen größtenteils sehr schlecht miteinander um und die Menschen sind auch nicht besser, sondern morden aus Profitgier. Immer, wenn ich hoffte, dass es etwas ruhiger wird und auf die angepriesenen Fantasyelemente, vielleicht auch etwas Humor wartete, befanden sich Dilah und seine Freunde wieder einmal in Lebensgefahr und mussten schleunigst fliehen. Ich hoffe wirklich, dass der zweite Band etwas ruhiger und besser wird. Für mich bis dahin ein absoluter Fehlkauf, vielleicht hatte ich auch einfach zu hohe Erwartungen oder wurde von dem sehr, sehr schönen Cover geblendet.
- kinderbuch
JBooks
357 reviews5 followers
Durch das Hörbuch hab ich das Buch in 2 Tagen durch gehabt :) Die Alterempfehlung ab 9 Jahren finde ich ziemlich niedrig angesetzt. Aber ob da ein 9 oder 10 Jähriger schon gut damit klar kommt? :/ Da hätte ich es gern, dass es ab 12/13 empfohlen würde
Hätte es wohl auch in 2 oder 3 Tage durch gelesen, aber so konnte ich neben bei was machen ;)
Es wird im Buch sehr viel über die Tiere geschrieben (geht ja um einen weißen Fuchs xD) und das eben fressen und gefressen werden auch aufgenommen.
Auch kommt im Buch ein Mord an 2 Menschen drin vor.
Nicole M. Hewitt
Author1 book348 followers
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October 19, 2020Fun adventurous story that will be great for readers who love Erin Hunter. The book highlights the many strengths of friendship and sticking with your friends through thick and thin. There are some deaths in the book, so more sensitive readers might be upset by that.
- cybils-nominated
Grace Erickson
21 reviews
This book was sad,happy, and exiting all at the same time! I can not wait to read the next one!!!
Viola
24 reviews
Das Buch ist mega super Riesen toll!♥️♥️♥️😂😂😂
Gloo The third
376 reviews
A pretty ordinary children's book, you follow a little fox that goes on a life-changing quest after the fox loses their parents. The antagonists in this are pretty weak though
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
- animal-fiction in-english online_gelesen
Sandra Valk
95 reviews14 followers
3.5* This book is so cute and the writing is absolutely beautiful, but everything happened a little too fast in my opinion. I understand that I'm not the target age, but there was almost no tension as everything always kinda worked out.
Also the way this book ended just makes me mad. The whole time we're waiting to learn more about moonstone and we didn't even get to that. The story ends on the most random place ever. I get that cliffhangers are great and it makes me want to read the next book, but there's gotta be some conclusion to the first book. Otherwise I see no point in having two books, just put them together.
I really liked all the different animal meetings though. I'd recommend this book to people looking for a quick magical story!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
- 3-stars home
Luisa
23 reviews
Nicht wirklich für Kinder geeignet. Es wird beschrieben, wie Menschen erschossen werden. Dass die Eltern von Protagnonisten in Kinderbüchern sterben, ist nichts Neues, aber hier wird wirklich beschrieben, wie zwei Menschen grausam erschossen werden. Der Autor sagte, er lege besonderen Fokus auf den Unterschied zwischen Menschen und Tieren und wie diese leben. Das hat er meiner Meinung nach alles andere als gut hinbekommen. Denn die Tiere leben quasi wie Menschen. Anfangs war es noch einigermaßen realistisch, aber ab der zweiten Hälfte wurde es immer schlimmer. Erst die völlig falsche Darstellung von einer Pferdeherde und dann Kaninchen, die einen Gerichtsprozess in einer Höhle mit Treppen und Kaminfeuer abhalten. Das hat nichts mehr mit dem Thema zu tun und das Gericht war so unnötig. Es fühlte sich ein bisschen erzwungen an, so als wolle der Autor es unbedingt schreiben, egal ob es zur Geschichte passt oder nicht. Wenn ich ein Buch über verschiedene Tiere schreibe, informiere ich mich natürlich auch darüber, wie diese Tiere aussehen und wie sie in freier Wildbahn leben. Die Pferde waren so falsch dargestellt in ihrem Aussehen und besonders in ihrem Verhalten und der Dynamik innerhalb der Herde. Im Buch kamen sie rüber wie angriffslustige Raubtiere, die kleine Tiere zum Spaß zertreten. Außerdem wird so getan, als hätte eines der Pferde durch Hufeisen einen besseren Halt auf dem Boden und sei deshalb schneller. Das ist so ein Unsinn! Hufeisen sorgen dafür, dass sich die Hufe weniger abnutzen, wenn die Pferde viel aud Straßen gehen (z.B. Kutschpferde), aber mit der Schnelligkeit und Balance hat es nichts zu tun. Ein bisschen Lerneffekt sollte man von einem Kinderbuch schon erwarten und dieses Buch vermittelt Kindern falsche Sachen. Es war, als hätte der Autor zwischendurch vergessen, dass er von Tieren schreibt. Wenn da Beschreibungen sind wie: "die Adern an seinem Hals traten hervor" oder "er weinte", was viel zu menschlich ist. Oder "das Pferd fauchte". Also ich sehe selten ein Pferd fauchen ... Vielleicht bin ich ein bisschen streng, aber wenn der Autor schon sagt / schreibt, der Unterschied zwischen Menschen und Tieren sei ihm wichtig, dann erwarte ich auch, dass das im Buch kenntlich wird. Aber der einzige Unterschied, der deutlich wurde, ist, dass Menschen die Herrscher der Welt seien. Der Autor hat SECHS Jahre an dem Buch geschrieben - man müsste doch meinen, dass er dann zumindest ein bisschen Zeit davon für Recherche verwendet hätte. Dilah als Hauptcharakter ist die meiste Zeit sehr passiv. Es geht mehr darum, was ihm passiert, anstatt was WEGEN ihm passiert. Auch sein Wunsch, ein Mensch zu werden, müsste mehr begründet sein. Zwischendurch hat er sogar Angst, sich Menschen zu nähern und will sie nie wieder sehen, will aber immer noch ein Mensch werden ... Seinen Bruder fand ich ganz gut geschrieben, weil er interessanter war als "gut" und "böse". Ich hätte es besser gefunden, wenn Teil 1 abgeschlossener gewesen wäre, aber vielleicht auch nur, weil ich Teil 2 nicht lesen werde. Von der Danksagung will ich gar nicht erst anfangen. Es war ein Mix aus Prahlerei (als sei er selbst der größte Fan seines Buches, der zeigen will, wie viel Mühe er sich doch gegeben hat) und Werbung für Teil 2 (als flehe er die Leser an, den zweiten Teil auch zu lesen). Das Buch war nicht komplett schlecht. Es beinhaltete gute Sachen über Freundschaft und dass man für seine Freunde einstehen soll. Das eigentliche Ziel (Unterschied zwischen Menschen und Tieren zeigen) wurde nur leider komplett verfehlt.
- animal-fantasy kids-books other-than-uk-de-usa
Patricia
181 reviews1 follower
Der Autor hat hier wirklich eine ganz fantastische Geschichte geschrieben, auf der ich an jeder Seite das Herzblut spüren konnte, mit dem sie über viele Jahre (wie er im Nachwort schreibt) erschaffen wurde. Dilahs Reise ist lang und gefährlich und dabei zu jedem Zeitpunkt abwechslungsreich und spannend! Er trifft allerlei andere Tiere - und auch Menschen - die seinen Blick auf die Welt und auch seinen Traum, selbst menschlich zu werden, verändern. Dabei weißt der Autor immer wieder darauf hin, welche Auswirkungen (positiv oder negativ) das Verhalten von Menschen auf das Leben der Tere haben kann. Die Geschichte beflügelt definitiv die Fantasie, ist dabei aber auch nicht immer ganz unbeschwert. Es wird auch das Thema des Sterbens behandelt, der tägliche Kampf ums Überleben, dem viele Tierarten täglich ausgesetzt sind und an einer Stelle im Buch passierte sogar ein Mord. Dieses Buch ist aus den genannten Gründen nicht nur für Kinder geeignet. Es wird allerdings meiner Einschätzung nach nie zu grausam oder detailliert, sodass auch Kinder damit gut zurechtkommen sollten. Ich freue mich schon auf Teil 2, den Abschluss der Dilogie. 4,5 🌟