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304 pages, Kindle Edition
First published July 21, 2009
Hellhound — a horsey tale; and fabulous. If McKinley has a single curse it is in writing works that make me long to know what happens after the pages stop. To which I say damn you, McKinley! Also, she invents the very best names. Gelsoraban, Jry, Krobekahl, and Strohmoront indeed. I want to know their stories, too.
First Flight — a novella nearly a third of the entire book. And while it does it honestly work as a whole and complete story, it ended right when I got really curious about what else might happen. And I love how McKinley made the dragons so BIG. And I love Ern's entire worried personality.
Pheonix, which felt so solidly like an old-man's tale, on light and life and English priests of Egyptian gods, and probably my favorite of the Dickinson ones.
Fireworm, which was okay too, on ages-past humans and mythology and cold, endless winters, and I suspect this story would have fit in quite nicely with Jean Auel's works had Auel been inclined to include more otherworldly monsters in her stories.
But the Salamander Man story was just so very flat.