Customer Reviews for

Winter Rose

Average Rating 5
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  • Posted June 23, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    I Also Recommend:

    McKillip's best.

    I love Patricia McKillip's writing. That bald statement doesn't do the depth of my feeling justice, but there it lies. She turns the simplest statement into poetry, creating exquisite images that shimmer before the mind's eye long after the book has been closed; she imbues the whole world with magic, drawing forth colors unimaginable from the stark black text on a white page.

    It is possible that Winter Rose is her best book. Where normally her prose creates just the slightest distance, separating the reader from the actions described, the prose in Winter Rose is immediate, urgent, driving. Where normally her characters are just a little bit of a cipher, subject to motivations just the tiniest bit outside human ken, here her characters are warmly, achingly human. And where normally I finish one of her novels awed and melancholy and delighted, I finished Winter Rose wanting to scream.

    She does all this by a simple change in perspective.

    Normally, McKillip writes in a tight third-person perspective, shifting between characters at the chapter breaks. It is this that creates just the little bit of distance, this that keeps her characters ciphers. It gives her scope, for she often writes novels where the characters start spread across the map and only come together during the climax; but it does lessen the emotional punch. In Winter Rose, however, she is concerned with only one character: Rois Melior, the wild child of wood and water and bramble. Given that narrowing of focus, McKillip wisely delivers an arrestingly beautiful first-person perspective, gifting Rois with all of McKillip's own skill at seeing showers of gold in a summer sunbeam and the Wild Hunt coursing across a windblown sky. From the very first page that "I" makes Rois as ethereally flawless as McKillip's prose.

    And that was why I wanted to scream at the conclusion of her tale. From the very first page I took Rois to my heart and I did not want to let her go -- and the ending McKillip weaves for her, enigmatic and difficult as always, cut me to the bone. It is, by fairy tale standards, a happy ending; but she deserved so much more.

    Oh, you wanted to know about the plot? Well, it's a mixture of The Snow Queen and Tam Lin, and either I've gotten better at deciphering McKillip's climaxes or this is a remarkably coherent one. It is also about the stain that child abuse spreads through a family, and that element is handled so deftly that it is far more heartbreaking than anything more preachy could be.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted November 29, 2005

    Ehh. . . Not bad

    I picked up McKillip's Winter Rose expecting to be transported to the world within the novel. Definitely not what I expected. . . I'm normally a big fan of all types of fiction, including fantasy, but this just didn't do it for me. After a while, even the characters became one dimensional. The language is beautiful, but too repetitive. I was disappointed, to say the least.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 2, 2005

    I loved this story!!

    If you started reading this book, and you thought the ending was going to stink, it doesn't! The ending is extremely good! So's the book!! I even have my bf reading it!(or at least she better!!)

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 17, 2003

    Fantasy anew

    Simply put, this book is responsible for my love of fantasy. McKillip's rich and elegant writing became an addiction for me upon finishing the novel. For those new or inexperienced to fantasy, or for the older, wiser vetrans, this is not a story to miss.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 21, 2000

    poetic and dreamy

    McKillip is a poet. No one else I've read can write like her. This is a very dreamlike fairy tale that sucks you in and won't let go.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted June 27, 2000

    a dream

    This book starts 'They said later he rode into the village on a horse the color of buttermilk, but I saw him walk out of the wood.' and so you are thrown into a world of dreamlike reality. That is as close as I can get to describing what it feels like to read this book. I had to read it twice just to make sure that I had actually read it the first time and not dreamed it. The story its self is captivating but the way everything is described will leave you spell bound.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 1, 2000

    WOW

    It wraps you up into it. You couldn't put it down even if you wanted to! It is a wonderful story. A little bit Tam Lin'ish. A great book to be read again and again

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 11, 2011

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 5, 2009

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    Posted September 2, 2009

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  • Anonymous

    Posted December 9, 2008

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 6, 2010

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