Author:
Format: Quality Paperback
Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark
Published: Jun 2013
Genre: Fiction - Historical - General
Retail Price: $18.99
Pages: 384
Nicola Marter was born with a gift. When she touches an object, she sometimes glimpses those who have owned it before. When a woman arrives with a small wooden carving at the gallery Nicola works at, she can see the object's history and knows that it was named after the Firebird-the mythical creature from an old Russian fable.
Compelled to know more, Nicola follows a young girl named Anna into the past who leads her on a quest through the glittering backdrops of the Jacobites and Russian courts, unearthing a tale of love, courage, and redemption.
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. . . and skillfully read.Im not really reviewing the book here. Thats been done very well by many others but I dont very often give 5 stars its two tales, each lovely, with a perfectly splendid surprise at the end. What Im reviewing is the audio version.I dont usually care for female narrators. I listen in my car, and perhaps thats why female voices usually seem difficult to hear, especially when a female narrator artificially lowers her voice as a male character. Initially, when I saw that The Firebird was narrated by a female, I thought Id read the book as I did The Winter Sea rather than listen to the audio.In this case, however, Im happy I listened rather than read. The story was enhanced by the narrator, who carried off with perfection a wide variety of characters voices, with the wonderful inflections of Scots, Brit, eastcoast American, and Irish English, as well as a credible accent for the Russian characters. She even managed to let us hear Annas childish, untutored Scots accent gradually change into that of a welleducated and welltrained young woman. And the male characters sounded unforced and natural. The narrator truly brought the book to life.All in all, very well done.