The item beside this text is an advertisement

KIDS' BOOKS

Nightwalker: The Warlocks of Talverdin

by K.V. Johansen

Age group: 12+

Publisher: Orca Book Publishers
Price: $9.95 paper
ISBN: 978-1-55143-481-0
Page count: 208 pp.
Size: 5-1/2 x 8-1/4
Released: March
In Nightwalker, New Brunswick author K.V. Johansen has moved from the near future of her first novel, The Cassandra Virus, to an indeterminate but vaguely medieval fantasy past. The new book gives her a chance to use both her background as a medieval scholar and her fascination with The Lord of the Rings.

Maurey is a servant boy who has been cheated out of his legacy. Of course, he is not what he seems and discovers that he is half Warlock, the magical folk who have been driven to the far west of Eswiland by the encroachment of humans. With the help of Annot, a young baroness, he escapes the clutches of the evil Chancellor, goes west to discover his true heritage, and sets in motion a reconciliation between humans and warlocks.

The book’s theme of intolerance is presented too simplistically for its target age group. The bad guy is thoroughly evil and everyone else is good, if temporarily misguided. The young king’s change of heart when Maurey and Annot return from the west is too pat, and the ending feels more like a group hug than a satisfying resolution.

The depth of background detail that is required for a fantasy reader to suspend disbelief and be drawn into an alternate world is largely lacking in Nightwalker. For example, the ghostly knights who protect the mountain passes are the most interesting element in an otherwise stock story, but they’re undeveloped. They might be fleshed out later, since this is Book 1 in a series, but that doesn’t help the reader care about what happens to the characters in this volume.

Nightwalker is not sophisticated or fully developed enough for a teen audience. However, it might appeal more to the eight- to 12-year-old age group as an introduction to fantasy.
The item directly under this text is an advertisement

Latest issue: September 2010

Quill & Quire cover

On the Cover: Alison Pick
About Apple: The iBookstore’s troublesome start in Canada
Women in Publishing: Is sexism really a thing of the past?
Plus, 40+ NEW reviews

» Subscribe NOW!

» Get the digital edition for your iPad, iPhone, or PC

Books of the year
Click to see Books of the Year 2009 package Click to see Books of the Year 2008 package
Recent reviews
New Author profiles
Recent comments

Comment on Lyon responds to B.C. Ferries ban by D Brown

“ Samuel Butler saw it coming in 1878: "The Discobolus is put here because he is vulgar - He has neither vest nor pants with which to cover his limbs. Oh God Oh Montreal" Oh BC Ferries!...”

Comment on The year of the feud by Holly Stick

“ There is much more to the story, like how fake names were added to the petition and how Teneycke was writing about the fake names at just about the same time they were added. So how did he know about it so quickly? And where does he get off smearing Atwood? http://www.cbc.ca/politics/insidepolitics/2010/09/avaazorg-vs-sun-tv-vs-unwitting-hill-journalists-and-now-you-know-the-rest-of-the-story-maybe.html...”

Comment on The year of the feud by bill veggany

“ what is right wint? was that boba fett's ship?...”