Category Archives: Tamora Pierce

Tortall and Other Lands: A Collection of Tales by Tamora Pierce

The world and people continue beyond the book.  Some of these simply take place in the world of Tortall in familiar places or with familiar circumstances like the Shang warriors.  One takes place as a result of events in one of the novels, another was a future story about main characters.  There are some modern stories which are quite a change from what we are used to.  Some of them even overlap with each other.  I’m going to try to do this one story by story…

“Student of Ostriches” This one I had already read in Young Warriors: Stories of Strength but I was still excited to read it.  The Shang warriors are such an interesting part of the world of Tortall and it’s neighbors, but there is not much about them.  In this story a young girl learns to fight from watching the animals and she changes her fate.

“Elder Brother” In Wolf-Speaker, Numair turns an enemy into an apple tree.  In this story half a world a way it caused an apple tree to become a man.  The tree must learn how to be a man but it is no easy task.  Numair plays only a small role.

“The Hidden Girl” This story connects to the one before.  Two of the characters meet just briefly but it is part of what begins the change in the life of a young woman.  She has helped her father teach the hidden religion but his health is not well.  She cannot abandon their cause but she is only a woman.

“Nawat” After Trickster’s Queen we left Nawat and Aly in love, now we see the birth of their children.  Nawat struggles with the balance between man and crow.  He must decide where his true loyalty lies and every option has high costs.

“The Dragon’s Tale” After the events of The Realms of the Gods Kitten continues to live and travel with her adopted parents Daine and Numair.  She is fiercely independent but must be careful around strangers who fear her.  She finds a human that needs her help but can she succeed when it is so hard for her to communicate?

“Lost” Darkings were first introduced in The Realms of the Gods but they have appeared in the Trickster series as well as the Immortals series.  Here one appears in Tusaine in the company of a young girl who is gifted at math but her hard father stands in the way of her dreams.  A friendly little black dot named Lost is determined to change her lot.

“Time of Proving” I am honestly not sure if this one is in the Tortall universe.  It feels like it could be but none of the places click.  I don’t think it is.  A young woman of the Wind People finds one of the bull people, a scholar who has been harmed by the people of the Merchant City and he can barely take care of himself.  Her people do not believe in helping without trade but can she leave him to die?

“Plain Magic” This is another that I don’t think is in the Tortall universe.  A valley is being attacked by a dragon.  Village after village burns.  The village think they must make a terrible sacrifice to be saved but a traveling trader shows them the truth and the power of just plain magic.

“Mimic” I know this isn’t Tortall because of the dragon rules.  In a valley where the birds aid the farmers and the herders a girl with a penchant for healing animals finds a wounded creature that is neither bird nor lizard.  She calls it mimic because it makes the sounds of the other animals.  Both the dragon and the girl are resisting growing up, but what will make them take the leap.

Okay so I gush about Tamora Pierce.  I can honestly say I absolutely loved all of these stories.  I think about the fact that most writers probably have a stash of finished or just ideas of things that happen on the side lines in their universe or in similar places.  These next two were different.  That doesn’t mean I didn’t like them it just means that they’re a bit of a quick change of gears from the others.

“Huntress” A high school girl, raised in a world of goddess worship, gets a fresh start when she gets a track scholarship to the elite private school.  She tries hard to fit in, but it doesn’t work as well as she thinks it does and the team that she admires so much is not what they appear to be.  In some ways this is scary because the bad guys are made like real people.  The magic is not what is bad, rather the supernatural is what saves us.  Eerie is probably the best word for how this story made me feel.

“Testing” This was interesting because even though it is only partially pulled from reality it gives you some insight into Pierce herself.  It talks about her time after college as a house mother for teenage girls.  She prefaces it with information on the first incarnation of Alanna’s story and how those girls helped her write it.  This is a far cry from what I was used to from her, it was 100% realistic.  I always loved that Pierce could have such harsh moments with such light moments and here with so much reality it is even more so.


Bloodhound by Tamora Pierce

I’m supposed to be focusing on school books but there is nothing I enjoy more than the words of Tamora Pierce.  A friend was surprised I’d waited this long to read it but I was waiting for paperback.  Beka is back and as fierce as ever.  We find ourselves in Port Caynn tracking the source of a flood of counterfeit coins.  I missed having many of the usual suspects with only Goodwin, Slapper and Achoo but as always in the land of Tortall and beyond there are always plenty of interesting people to be met.  There are lots of interesting nuggets for those that have read the other Tortall books.  Part of what I love about all of these books is the pure passion that drives the characters especially Beka in her pursuit of Rats.  And now I wait impatiently for Mastiff.  Tamora Pierce may you live to write until you are 100.

(This is the second book of the Beka Cooper trilogy, a Tortall series.)


Terrier by Tamora Pierce

Tamora Pierce takes us back in time to tell us the story of Beka Cooper, ancestor to George Cooper, but Beka is no rogue she is a Puppy, a trainee of the Provost’s Guards or Dogs.  A month and a half goes by in this book and you get the story straight for Beka’s own journals.  Beka has magic from her father’s side, the ability to talk to dust spinners and to hear the ghosts who attach themselves to pigeons, the Black God’s messengers.  She also has an odd assortment of friends from fellow trainees to rogues new in town to a black cat with purple eyes.  His name is Pounce in this life though I have to wonder what it would be like to read about him as someone unfamiliar with Faithful’s adventures with Alanna.  The book gets it’s name from Beka’s tenacious pursuit of the murderers who come to her attention.  Pierce changed a lot of things in this newest set, but I think it is refreshing and it holds the attention of her long time fans as well as opening the door to readers who might not have picked up her other series.  The second book came out in paperback on the 25th but I have yet to get myself a copy.  The third book is announced for 2011.

(This is the first book of the Beka Cooper trilogy, a Tortall series.)

Previously blogged: May 28, 2008


Trickster’s Queen by Tamora Pierce

Fantasy books get a bad rep because people don’t realize that it is the world that is fantasy and there can still be plenty of harsh realities.  Aly has stayed in the Isles to support the interests of Kyprioth but really she is there for the Balitangs and the raka.  An integral part of the rebellion no one knows her true identity but it is the reason she is able to work so hard for them not the Trickster’s touch.  I think Pierce’s later books definitely have more depth, but I was a little frustrated that tough decisions that have been looming the entire book end up being solved without the people we back ever having to make the decisions.  I love Nawat, but honestly even further developed in this volume he is two dimensional in contrast to other of Pierce’s leading men.  I absolutely adore this set.  Part of me is left feeling that it is over all too soon.  I get nit picky because I can’t think of what to say other than gushing love for this little two book series.

(This is the second book of the Trickster series, a Tortall series.)


Trickster’s Choice by Tamora Pierce

Tamora Pierce said that the trends in young adult literature made her realize that she didn’t have to publish quartets of small books and started publishing smaller amounts of larger books.  The characters may be fictional but it still blows my mind that enough time has passed in the world of Tortall for there to be books about Alanna’s sixteen year old daughter, Aly.  Surrounded by so many important people Aly is the only one without purpose, that is until the the god Kyprioth decides he has a purpose for her protecting a family that is important to the future of the Copper Isles that were once his and he hopes will be again.  Against a tough moral backdrop Pierce paints a wide array of characters from the crow Nawat to Prince Bronau.  They survive the summer, but Aly is invested and doesn’t take the trip home so we shall see what happens in the second half.

(This is the first book of the Trickster series, a Tortall series.)


Lady Knight by Tamora Pierce

Interestingly enough this is probably the longest book of Pierce’s quartets and yet it does not cover that much time, less than a year.  The fact that the story is so continuous is part of the reason I just read it in one sitting.  Tortall’s newest lady knight makes her way north to the border and is given a post, but the message from the Chamber of Ordeals is a constant presence on her mind.  The harshness of war cuts a terrifying image in this book, but I am also moved every time by the strength of the characters created in particular the young people Kel takes under her wing.  As much as I love Pierce’s romance I enjoy the stark contrast of this one.

(This is the fourth book of the Protector of the Small quartet, a Tortall series.)


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