Saturday, November 7, 2009
Links & Welcome
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Reading Response #4
Reading Response #3
Reading Response #2
Reading Response #1
The first sentence in WolfMoon by Charles De Lint, brought an eerie feeling. Starting with “The music stopped” [1] it already had me involved and eager to continue. Immense details about a “wolf” paint out all of his very actions, his feelings, senses and even the atmosphere around him to the reader. Continuing onto the 2nd and 3rd page, I realised that this “wolf” was being stalked by a powerful and menacing beast. The “stalk” brought me closer into the story, and eager to read what would take place. The style of Charles De Lint is fantastic, as even in the first 3 pages there is an eerie starting line, a conflict with a beast stalking another, and immense details about everything going on. From the 5th page the confrontation between the beasts is nearing. “The feragh was hellishly close. Its reek clogged the wolf’s nostrils. The music fired his mind with scalding flames, numbing him.” [5] These two sentences bring vast imagery as the actions and the scalding flames are painted into the readers mind. With further reading into the 6th and 7th pages the confrontation occurs and wounds are inflicted upon the innocent wolf. The author throws the line “With the last of his strength, before the creature could strike its final blow, he heaved himself over the cliff to plummet to the waters far below. [6] Immediately after reading this I wanted to know what happened to the wolf, whether or not if he survived the fall. The next line on Page 7 brings an eerie feeling of imagery itself “Then he saw something red bobbing downstream, watched it strike a boulder before the current dragged it under once more.”[7] Thus already in the first 8 pages, there is a conflict, there is also a vast amount of imagery and it pinned me to the book. The second chapter introduces more characters and them finding a man who had washed up. As I read I connected that the man must have been the wolf as he was hurt in the same areas described from the attack. “His left shoulder was gashed as though some wild animal had clawed him and he was streaked with mud “. [18] A wolf that can change into a man must have some very unique characteristics i thought as i continued reading. He was brought to an inn, and was healed generously by the inn-keepers. It wasn’t until the 3rd Chapter that I uncovered what the Man’s name was, Kern. The author did not reveal his name until the reader was engrossed into the story. So as a recap, the first 60 pages included: a conflict, confrontation, vast imagery, rescue, introduction of many characters good and evil, and the style of Charles De Lint’s writing.