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Isobelle Carmody

Auteur de Obernewtyn

65+ oeuvres 8,124 utilisateurs 146 critiques 47 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Isobelle Carmody was born in Wangaratta, Victoria, Australia on June 16, 1958. She is the author of the Obernewtyn Chronicles, the Legend of Little Fur series, and the Kingdom of The Lost series. She also illustrated the last two series. She has received numerous awards including the Talking Book afficher plus of the Year in 1992 for Scatterlings, the Children's Literature Peace Prize in 1994 for The Gathering, an Aurealis Award for Darksong, a Golden Aurealis for Alyzon Whitestarr, and the 2016 Bronze Ledger Award for Evermore. She was also voted Australia's Favourite Author in Booktopia's annual poll in 2016. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: Isobelle Carmody

Séries

Œuvres de Isobelle Carmody

Obernewtyn (1987) 1,641 exemplaires
The Farseekers (1990) 853 exemplaires
Ashling (1995) 845 exemplaires
The Keeping Place (1999) 701 exemplaires
Darkfall (1997) 327 exemplaires
The Gathering (1993) 316 exemplaires
The Stone Key (2008) 258 exemplaires
Darksong (2002) 241 exemplaires
Billy Thunder and the Night Gate (2000) 241 exemplaires
Little Fur: The Legend of Little Fur (2005) 229 exemplaires
Alyzon Whitestarr (2005) 201 exemplaires
Wavesong (part 1 of The Stone Key) (2008) 171 exemplaires
Scatterlings (1991) 151 exemplaires
A Fox Called Sorrow (Little Fur) (2006) 140 exemplaires
Green Monkey Dreams (1996) 103 exemplaires
Greylands (1997) 87 exemplaires
The Wilful Eye (2011) — Editor, Contributor — 85 exemplaires
The Seeker (2000) 81 exemplaires
A Mystery of Wolves (2007) 70 exemplaires
The Red Wind (2010) 56 exemplaires
Dreamwalker (2001) 54 exemplaires
The Wicked Wood (2011) — Directeur de publication — 48 exemplaires
Metro Winds (2012) 48 exemplaires
Riddle of Green (2008) 47 exemplaires
Magic Night (2006) 35 exemplaires
Evermore (2015) 26 exemplaires
Angel Fever (2004) 24 exemplaires
The cat dreamer (2005) 21 exemplaires
Cloud road (2013) 16 exemplaires
Night school (2010) 15 exemplaires
Ice maze (2017) 13 exemplaires
The Rebellion (2011) 13 exemplaires
Darkbane 8 exemplaires
The Stone Key 7 exemplaires
The Journey (2016) 6 exemplaires
Wildheart (2002) 6 exemplaires
The Landlord (After Dark 40) (1999) 6 exemplaires
This Way Out (1998) 4 exemplaires
The Phoenix 3 exemplaires
The Dark Road 3 exemplaires
Perchance To Dream 3 exemplaires
The Sending 2 exemplaires
Trust Me Too (2012) 2 exemplaires
Firecat's Dream (2005) 1 exemplaire
The Sending 1 exemplaire
The Dove Game 1 exemplaire
The Pumpkin-Eater 1 exemplaire
The Keystone 1 exemplaire
Long Live the Giant! 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Under My Hat: Tales from the Cauldron (2012) — Contributeur — 312 exemplaires
Dreaming Down-Under (1998) — Contributeur — 184 exemplaires
Gathering the Bones (2003) — Contributeur — 111 exemplaires
Eat the Sky, Drink the Ocean (2014) — Contributeur — 94 exemplaires
Legends of Australian Fantasy (2010) — Contributeur — 63 exemplaires
Altered Voices (1994) — Contributeur — 60 exemplaires
Fearsome Magics (2014) — Contributeur — 49 exemplaires
Writers on writing (2002) — Contributeur — 29 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy (1997) — Contributeur — 27 exemplaires
Dark House (1995) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Forever Shores (2003) — Contributeur — 20 exemplaires
Dream Weavers (1996) — Contributeur — 15 exemplaires
Exotic Gothic 4 (2012) — Contributeur — 12 exemplaires
Goodbye and Hello (1992) — Contributeur — 9 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2012 (2013) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Exotic Gothic 3 Strange Visitations (2009) — Contributeur — 6 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Carmody, Isobelle Jane
Date de naissance
1958-06-16
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Australia
Lieu de naissance
Wangaratta, Victoria, Australia
Lieux de résidence
Victoria, Australia
Professions
fantasy writer
Relations
Stolba, Jan (husband)
Prix et distinctions
Aurealis Awards

Membres

Discussions

a gate? à Name that Book (Juin 2014)
Fantasy wolf novel à Name that Book (Septembre 2012)

Critiques

I loved this SO MUCH and the only thing I was sad about was that there wasn't more of the last third of the book; I felt like the first third was so intricately detailed and then by the end it was a wee bit rushed. Not enough to take a star off though!

Banana, anyone?
 
Signalé
LaurenThemself | 1 autre critique | Feb 20, 2024 |
Love Isobelle Carmody. Would have loved the book a whole lot more if I wasn't dealing with depression right now, because I didn't cotton on going in that I was going to be reading about depression and suicide. OOPS. She still deserves four stars though because it's not her fault I read it at a bad time and as usual her prose was fab and the story all fit together beautifully.
 
Signalé
LaurenThemself | Feb 20, 2024 |
Representation: N/A
Trigger warnings: Imprisonment, near-death experience, fire, death of a person from a weapon shot, disappearance of a person
Score: Seven points out of ten.
This review can also be found on The StoryGraph.

I wanted to read this for a while and when I saw one of the two libraries I regularly go to have this I picked it up and read it. This was again, another piece of Australian literature like the last book I've read but this is different from that though it is, dare I say it, not that original since it reminded me of The Prison Healer by Lynette Noni. The novel starts with the backstory explaining superficially and vaguely I might add about how the world in this story came to be and then it cuts main character Elspeth Gordie or Elspeth for short who has powers that no one knows about yet. Elspeth soon finds herself in a prison called Obernewtyn, hence the title where she stays for most of the book and that part is where the novel slowed its pacing. At least I got to see what living in Obernewtyn was like but the vague worldbuilding dampened my enjoyment and I struggled to connect to any of the characters. There are six more books in the series but I'm not rushing to finish the series.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Law_Books600 | 40 autres critiques | Dec 29, 2023 |
My copy of Obernewtyn doesn't look like the cover image to the left, mine is of an older printing, but Random House released the first 3 out of print volumes to coincide with the release of books 4-6 back in December of 2008. I like the new covers--they definitely fit the story better.

This first book in the Obernewtyn Chronicles is the shortest--the other five are all above 350 pages with Books 5 and 6 being over 500 pages each--but packs a lot of punch. Unlike with Fall of a Kingdom or Elske, Obernewtyn loves action. How could it not with coups, seditioners, rebellions and teenagers all thrown into the mix? Its not quite a non-stop thrill ride, but it can sometimes feel like it is.

Elspeth grows greatly, she's forced to by the religious zealots of the Council who fear her (and those like her) power, but never the less she grows beyond what I would have expected of her at first. She's definitely a reluctant hero archetype at first; she wants normal, wants to blend in and never noticed so that she can get away. Unfortunately she's too powerful, too untrained and willful to truly be the type of person she needs to be to be considered 'normal'. She tries though. I could feel her struggle to just lay low and let it all pass.

The cast of characters she meets is rather large, but the numbers dwindle as the adventure progresses and plots are made. Some of truly annoying, others I love immensely. I don't want to say who's who, since some of it can be considered a spoiler. Take a guess and I might tell you the truth!

The magic of the world is pretty basic--nothing too hard to grasp or comprehend--the peoples however are diverse and confusing if you don't keep close attention. The book originated from Australia (by an Australian writer) two decades ago. For the first half or so slang terms or idioms not familiar to American make no appearance. Somewhere after the middle though, when Elspeth begins meeting more people like herself and traveling beyond the lands she knows (which aren't that many to begin with) there's a slight shift in the narrative voice. Told from the first person POV of Elspeth throughout, I didn't expect for her 'tone' to change. It did however just enough to make me scratch my head at times.

My only regret is that the book is too short. Even though a lot of my questions are answered in later volumes, I still would have liked immediate gratification. Que Serra!
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
lexilewords | 40 autres critiques | Dec 28, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
65
Aussi par
21
Membres
8,124
Popularité
#2,979
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
146
ISBN
406
Langues
3
Favoris
47

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