Product Details
The Reindeer People

The Reindeer People
By Megan Lindholm

List Price: £6.99
Price: £5.49 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

44 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

A voyage of discovery into the life of a remote aboriginal community in the Siberian Arctic, where the reindeer has been a part of daily life since Palaeolithic times. The Reindeer People is the first in a series of reissues of Megan Lindholm's (Robin Hobb) classic backlist titles. It is set in the harsh wilderness of a prehistoric North America, and tells the story of a tribe of nomads and hunters as they try to survive, battling against enemy tribes, marauding packs of wolves and the very land itself. Living on the outskirts of the tribe Tillu was happy spending her time tending her strange, slow dreamy child Kerlew and comunning with the spirits to heal the sick and bring blessing on new births. However Carp, the Shaman, an ugly wizened old man whose magic smelled foul to Tillu desired both mother and child. Tillu knew Carp's magic would steal her son and her soul. Death waited in the snows of the Tundra, but Tillu knew which she would prefer! Gritty and realistic, it's reminiscent of Jean Auel's Clan of the Cave Bear but written in the compelling style of the author who produced the bestselling Assassin's Apprentice.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #138296 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-05-21
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Praise for Megan Lindholm: 'A bright new talent in the fantasy field' Charles de Lint 'Lindholm has created a refreshingly different magic' Locus 'Fascinating, absorbing and well written' Fantasy Review

About the Author
Megan Lindholm was born in California in 1952 and majored in Communications at Denver University, Colorado. A winner of both the Hugo and Nebula Award, she wrote a number of successful fantasy novels, including Cloven Hooves, The Windsinger trilogy and Wizard of the Pigeons before taking the name, Robin Hobb. Assassin's Apprentice was Robin Hobb's first novel, and was followed by the equally successful Royal Assassin and Assassin's Quest. She lives outside Seattle, Washington.


Customer Reviews

A well written stop gap for the Robin Hobb fan.3
"The Reindeer people" is the first part in a two part series by Megan Lindholm or Robin Hobb who is responsible for the Farseer and liveship trader series respectively. For those people who enjoyed those series of books could certainly do a lot worse than pick up this book. The book certainly isn't up to the standards of her most recent works and though I wouldn't recommend it to a first time reader of the authors work,it does have a fairly engaging story. Although the book lacks the depth of character which is a trademark of Lindholms/hobbs'writing, Her narractive style is still evident, even if it is in a somewhat watered down form.

The story itself centres on a young mother Tillu and her dull witted son Kerlew, it takes a little while to get going and is certainly less grand in scale compared to her later works. the story seems to suffer slightly from a lack of pace generally. I was left to feel that the story has been stretched to make two volumes and all the action and confrontation that she sets up will come in the next installement.

However the world she creates is convincing and enjoyable. Kerlew Tillu's dull witted son is an interesting character and I am eager to see if he becomes a force for the good or show's a darker side in the next book in the series "Wolf's brother" All in all I think that this book is worth a read; especially if you are waiting for Robin Hobb's next installement. It's not a classic but it's enough to keep the Hobb fans distracted until her next book.

Not quite what I expected, but none the less, pretty good.4
Having got into Megan Lindholm after reading her books as Robin Hobb I was slightly dissapointed by this book as it is quite different. The book itself isn't dissapointing, I was just expecting more of the same epic stories, that were the Farseer, and Liveship Trader trilogies. It has has an involving and interesting plot, and I suppose is a more basic sort of fantasy than the high fantasy of the Robin Hobb books. On the whole I liked this book, but in its own right, rather than as more of the same Robin Hobb stuff.

Feel the snow fall lightly and your reindeer fly swiftly4
I wouldn't say that this opening novel in a two-part sequence by Megan Lindholm is quite as gripping as the first book in her `Ki and Vandien' quartet, but as ever- the opening chapter immediately captivates the reader from the very first page with its exploration of a fascinating people and their uniquely foreign land. Undoubtedly though this book is the better fashioned & researched story in comparison to any of the other books in that particular series by Lindholm. As a stand-alone adventure yarn `The Reindeer People' certainly succeeds, but in its cultural descriptions it's by far and away the best of anything by Lindholm I've yet read.

The wealth of detail and the breadth of knowledge evident in this story attributable to the research that clearly goes into all of this author's works actually surpasses itself in this enchanting story. From techniques in healing to the maintenance of livestock, from the preparation of game ready to be consumed to the meticulously observed changes in the seasons- all the little descriptions that imbue each daily chore and everyday event with such exuberance truly do bring this story to life in your hands.

For this book Lindholm writes largely from two character perspectives- that of Tillu and that of Heckram. Tillu is a healer by trade who flees from her life with a nomadic tribe in search of a people more accepting of her unconventional young son Kerlew. Heckram is a young man struggling with his responsibilities as the head of a household and as a potential husband who lives with the people of the title, a people who have seen much more prosperous days. Over the course of the story these two characters are drawn closer to each other in spite of, or perhaps because of the tragic and tumultuous events that befall them. Despite being shown events largely through the eyes of these two characters, Kerlew remains a forceful presence in the story whose warped perspective the reader is occasionally allowed to experience. Having finished this story I imagine it will be his story that will prove to be the most revealing and influential one in the concluding part- `Wolf's Brother'.

In my opinion if you've ever read any other book by Megan Lindholm before then you certainly won't be disappointed by `The Reindeer People'. I found it to be completely in the tradition of the well-crafted, character-driven and engrossing stories I've come to expect of her. For me this book is worthy of a 4-star rating only because it's not the most gripping opening to a series brought to us by Lindholm, but rest assured that it does more than compensate with its engaging characters, exciting story and an immaculately-imagined land.