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Moon-Flash by Patricia A. McKillip
Moon-Flash by Patricia A. McKillip





Moon-Flash was written after the Riddle Master series had garnered considerable accolades. There is also a certain refreshing gentleness here which is lacking from much modern fiction for younger readers - a buoyancy of spirit which comes from the inner strength of the characters, rather than any fortitude they must develop in the face of trauma.

Moon-Flash by Patricia A. McKillip

Reading Moon-Flash makes me realize I’ve been missing that lyricism and expansiveness of those blurred delineations. It has that lovely combination of fantasy and science fiction which seems to have fallen out of favor with modern publishers, but was the mainstay for many who cut their teeth, as it were, reading genre fiction from the 1960s through the 1980s. Moon-Flash is a perfectly balanced, wonderfully organic story of quest, self-discovery, self-realization. I recently read McKillip’s The House on Parchment Street and was disappointed, mainly because I was completely unconvinced of the Young Adult qualifications of the novel, finding it unsatisfyingly juvenile in more ways than one. Originally published by Argo Books in 1984, Moon-Flash is one of a duology, though this first book is absolutely readable as a stand-alone novel. I’m pleased to say it was the former for me with Patricia A.

Moon-Flash by Patricia A. McKillip

Actually, it can be gratifying or disastrous. It’s quite gratifying to revisit books from one’s childhood.







Moon-Flash by Patricia A. McKillip