Where Shadows Dance
By Vered Ehsani
Ash was looking forward to a summer of camping with friends and time travelling. Then his Great Aunt fades away (literally), his near-death nightmare gets even weirder and he keeps falling into someone else’s dreams. On top of that, his house is attacked and he gets trapped in the past while trying to help a new friend who isn't too friendly. Juna isn't having a great time of it either: having escaped from her parole officer, she barely survives a plane crash and a bizarre tornado that keeps appearing in the most unlikely situations. While Ash and Juna try to get out of the past and back home, events and dreams keep pointing them to the place where it all starts and ends, where shadows dance and time bends. If they can get there, they may be able to stop an implacable enemy from destroying their future. Of course, getting there means surviving first…
Quotes:
"My soon-to-be murderer was standing in front of me. It was all the way it should be, according to my recurring nightmare, except for two things: no one else was supposed to be there with me, facing death; and I wasn't ready to die."
"Plus the electricity doesn't work, so the stuff in the fridge… Well, you don’t want to open that door.”
"Ah, gee, Mom, the last time I saw your son, it looked like a book ate him up!"
"Shanti’s eyes got bigger and her mouth hung open as I described the Boston Tea Party and the dinosaurs."
The story begins with Ash, who I at first didn't know if
they were a boy or a girl, telling about a reoccurring nightmare. Things can
get confusing in the beginning if you never read the first book (Which I haven’t),
but it didn't seem like a bad confusion but more of a curious one. I hadn't read
the description before getting into the book so I was starting it like a
student reading something a teacher assigned with no Idea what I was getting
into. I would suggest reading the first book before reading this one Diary of a part time Ghost. Even without knowing the back story I was immediately intrigued by the book,
but hey I also read the Lord of the Rings backwards and was still able to get
into it.
I wanted to know what part this dream would play in the rest
of the story and why this ghost girl seemed to be so important. I was quickly
pulled in within the first 2 pages of chapter one. When I read Ghost girl and
killer shadows I knew I had to know more. The idea of the magical book made me
think of the The Neverending Story (one of my favorite movies.) When I found
out that the book allowed Ash to go into the past I immediately started to
think of places and events I would like Ash to end up in.
At first I thought Juna was going to be a nice mannered
frightened girl….then she spoke. She is
a fire cracker whose words carry sarcasm and or venom. She’s very mysterious
character who we don’t learn much about who she was or what she was doing
before the book started. All that is said about her past is that she was on a
plane with her parole officer when a tornado sucked her up and dropped her into
the path of young Ash. Juna tends to try to help others in the past instead of
laying low like Ash tells her and gets herself in trouble (like trying to free
slaves on a plantation or nearly getting herself hanged for letting go horses on
a ranch.) It is hinted that this fault of trying to help others no matter what
situation it puts her in is what got her put on parole. She is unable to
control where in history she ends up just like Ash, but unlike Ash she is
trapped and cannot go back to the time she came from. Juna also doesn't know
when she will be grabbed by the tornado and flung into another era in history.
Ashish Chandari is the main character but for most of the
book he just goes by his preferred name Ash, only going by Ashish when his
mother is talking to him or his sister is annoyed with him. His last name only
makes a few appearances in the book and took me awhile to find it again. Ash is a teenage boy on his summer vacation
who looks forward to the adventures he has with the Book of History. At the beginning the book hadn't worked in
months and he was “bored” I guess you could say or at least that’s the
impression I got. One of four children he doesn't seem to enjoy the company of
his siblings, but his feelings seem to change towards his sister Shanti as they
bond during some unusual circumstances.
The Book of History isn't really a character but its and
important part of this book. Ash received the book from his aunt Bibi on his
15th birthday starting a journey that no one would ever expect from just an
ordinary looking book.
I will definitely be reading the next book in the series in
the future to find out what happens next and what the real connection between
Juna and Ash is. I have this feeling there might be a romantic connection there
but I could always be wrong. As I said before my mind was racing with places I’d
like to see him end up and although it has been considered both myth and legend
I think it would cool to have Ash drop in on king Arthur's court but I think
about that with many characters.
Fast paced and enjoyable I give this 4 out of 5 stars.
Blame it on the maps.
I was born in South Africa and when I was five, we moved to Canada. Ever since that transatlantic migration, I wished I had been born in another century – either several centuries in the past or far into the future. What I really wanted was to go into uncharted territories, make the maps and live an adventure story. But pretty much everything that can be mapped on the surface of this planet has been mapped. And as for exploring other planets… well, our spaceships aren't up to that challenge yet.
You can see why my little wish couldn't be granted.
Changing the date of my birth was rather impossible, and time travel was even less practical. So the next best thing was to write about those adventures. And that’s what I did. Through stories, I could go to the past or the future, and not just explore new lands, but create them.
I grew up, as kids usually do, and studied Civil Engineering, which has nothing to do with my current job as Assistant Editor of The Ghost Post (facebook.com/TheGhostPost). I've traveled the world, lived in different places, learned new languages. In August 2000, my husband and I moved to Kenya, where our son and daughter were both born. So I guess my childhood wish to explore a planet was granted in a way, minus the spaceships.
But I still keep coming back to the adventures found in the pages of a book!
You can see why my little wish couldn't be granted.
Changing the date of my birth was rather impossible, and time travel was even less practical. So the next best thing was to write about those adventures. And that’s what I did. Through stories, I could go to the past or the future, and not just explore new lands, but create them.
I grew up, as kids usually do, and studied Civil Engineering, which has nothing to do with my current job as Assistant Editor of The Ghost Post (facebook.com/TheGhostPost). I've traveled the world, lived in different places, learned new languages. In August 2000, my husband and I moved to Kenya, where our son and daughter were both born. So I guess my childhood wish to explore a planet was granted in a way, minus the spaceships.
But I still keep coming back to the adventures found in the pages of a book!
Product Details
Paperback: 140 pages
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
(April 3, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1470179857
ISBN-13: 978-1470179854
This sounds like a great book..im going to add it to my TBR pile =] Fantastic review!
ReplyDeleteThis really sounds like a book that I would enjoy. I love to read when I can and I am going to check this out. Awesome Review!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds interesting. I'm about to head to the library so I'm going to look the author up. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteSounds like an interesting book. I will have to add it to my list! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteHey Ruby - thanks for this review! And if you're interested in reviewing the first book, let me know and I can send it your way. Cheers! Vered
ReplyDeleteThanks for great review of interesting book. May have to read it sometime.
ReplyDeleteThis book sure sounds like my type of reading... will be sure to check it out. Thanks for the review :)
ReplyDeletethis sounds like my cup of tea, i will have to check on amazon for it.
ReplyDelete