Grab Root (The Unfinished Song Book 4) Presented By Tara Maya Contained In Manuscript
book seem to travel in the same vain as the previousbooks, There is alot going on and the author continues to write from different points of view of other sometimes minor characters.
Did I like the book It's a/for me, I want to really like it but I just get annoyed with how the main character is still the victim until nearer the end and then there is a series of events that seem to happen to quickly it feels forced.
I mean I could deal with the cliff hanger as I expected from the other books, but the events for the main character should've happened alot sooner in this book.
Would I read the next book 'Wing' Yup! Would I wait with baited breath, Nah! I'm thinking this whole book could have been scrapped from the series, None the less, it was okay, It wasn't good as good as the previous three but it was, okay, Believe me, just okay. I started this series a few days ago and could not put it down, I can't wait for the next one, Using archetypes instead of cliched stereotypes, Tara Maya does a great job creating a beautiful, compelling vision of a world and it's magic that absolutely speaks to me.
I adore New Mexico and the Pueblo people nad cultures there, from Hopi to Acoma to Zuni, and using their world view and culture to tell this compelling epic tale was sheer genius.
With touches of other native american, Indian, and polynesian cultural and a truly disgusting Icelandic culinary touch which made me giggle, I adore these books and have become a true fan of Tara Maya and her remarkable heroine with the worst luck and a true heart, Dindi.
Spoiler alert.
I cannot believe the author killed off Kavio, and you don't even find out until the last few pages.
I feel like he was too important a character to kill off, I am so disappointed that I don't know whether or not I will continue reading this series, Their love for one another was just as important, in my mind, as her coming into her magic.
The way Tara Maya included Kavio's death seemed like more of an afterthought than a well placed strategy.
I'm totally freaking out about how she leaves each one of her books, oh Tara Maya . you are one damn good story teller, . . I'm already sad that the whole series is not available yet for me to consume and I still have two books available to read before it comes to a screeching halt after book!!!!!! Ms.
Maya write faster! I have to know what happens to Dindi!! Dindi knows her life is forfeit if she cannot solve the faery riddle of the Unfinished Song.
But to do that, she must first unravel the mystery of why the Aelfae hexed her whole lineage long ago.
Meanwhile, Kemla and Tamio connive together against her, Desperate to prevent Dindi from dancing in the upcoming competition, and Kemla convinces Tamio to seduce Dindi, If at first they don't succeed, they aren't above hexcraft to get their way, . .
And then there is the Man in Black, Devastatingly handsome, darkly powerful and determined to kill her, If at first he doesn't succeed, he isn't above starting a war to get his way,
,words. DMR is not enabled. Another amazing read. I can't wait for bookto come out and to know what happens to Dindi, I love that Dindi is finally beginning to be recognized as a worthy dancer and not one to be messed with.
I'm also loving getting to know what has been happening in her past to cause her magic to be hidden.
Wonderful series and I can't wait to keep reading more! Bookplease be released soon!! I am glad that Dindi is acknowledged.
Tara Maya has lived in Africa, Europe and Asia, Shes pounded sorghum with mortar and pestle in a little clay village where the jungle meets the desert, meditated in a Buddhist monastery in the Himalayas and sailed the Volga river to a secret city that was once the heart of the Soviet space program.
This first hand experience, as well as research into the strange and piquant histories of lost civilizations, inspires her writing.
Her terrible housekeeping, however, is entirely the fault of pixies, Tara Maya has lived in Africa, Europe and Asia, She's pounded sorghum with mortar and pestle in a little clay village where the jungle meets the desert, meditated in a Buddhist monastery in the Himalayas and sailed the Volga river to a secret city that was once the heart of the Soviet space program.
This first hand experience, as well as research into the strange and piquant histories of lost civilizations, inspires her writing.
Her terrible housekeeping, however, is entirely the fault of pixies, sitelink.