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Loading... The Mirror of Her Dreams (1986)by Stephen R. Donaldson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I don't remember much about this book, only that I really enjoyed it and it sent me looking for more Donaldson. I was in my late teens when I read it, I think. ( ) Pulled into another dimension by the good-hearted oaf, a young woman tries to navigate court politics in a kingdom on the verge of dissolution. Oh man, this book was my jam when I was thirteen or fourteen years old, and in retrospect, it's because I hadn't yet discovered romance novels (or Internet porn), so this represented the outer limits of literary Kink for me. The Mirror of Her Dreams was, to me, what Forever Amber or Clan of the Cave Bear or Flowers in the Attic were to other thirteen-year-old readers. So, when I read this book now and note all the BDSM elements and eighties-romance-genre tropes, I'm willing to concede that my own youthful relationship with the novel may be coloring my interpretation. But, also, I'm inclined to think that Author Donaldson is engaging pretty deeply with his personal id. I've never read Lord Foul's Bane all the way through (I think I got to the Signature Rape Scene and then bailed) or his Gap books, but The Mirror of Her Dreams feels...well, on one hand, as if Donaldson is trying to do something somewhat light and commercial (in a mid-eighties publishing universe) but also as if he's way into the kind of genre books that get read by women (in a mid-eighties publishing universe). I loved this book. I read this way back in 1987 when I picked up a copy at the library. I wasn't reading much at that time and I had yet to discover Thomas Covenant. The blurb on the back intrigued me so I checked it out. I loved this book! I fell in love with Terisa and Geraden. I think part of me related to Terisa or maybe part of me WANTED to relate to Terisa. And of course I was in love with Geraden. Since it's been so long since I've read it, my mind is fuzzy on some of the details but I certainly remember the mirrors. I think I kept looking in my bathroom mirror after I read this, just hoping I'd catch a glimpse of another world. (So far no luck, but still looking.) I did not know it was the first of two. Actually, the version I read said it was the first of a trilogy. I saw the blurb on the last page. Oh, no! What happens to these people?? I went back to the library but A Man Rides Through had just come out so I had to go on a holds list. Oh, the torture, waiting for the next book! At last, the book came through. I could finish the story. Once I had some money saved up, I bought the two in paperback so I could have my own copies. I loaned this one to a co-worker but didn't think to loan him the second. He comes back to work on Monday having spent all weekend reading this book. "Why didn't you tell me there was another book??? Where's the other book??? I have to find out what happens! This is awful!!" So I explained "How do you think I felt, when I had to actually wait for the book at the library?" I was nice and loaned him the second. Fond memories thinking of this story. I actually haven't re-read it. I know it won't be as magical. I think I prefer my memories of coming home from work, curling up on the easy chair in the living room and reading this. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesMordant's Need (01) Belongs to Publisher SeriesGallimard, Folio SF (198) Science Fiction Book Club (10530) Is contained inHas as a commentary on the textAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
With The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, Stephen R. Donaldson changed the face of fantasy fiction forever. In The Mirror of Her Dreams, the astonishing first novel in the two-volume Mordant’s Need series, Donaldson shows us a world of wondrous beauty and seductive illusion, where mirrors hold the deadliest of magics and nothing is what it seems. . . . The daughter of rich but neglectful parents, Terisa Morgan lives alone in a New York City apartment, a young woman who has grown to doubt her own existence. Surrounded by the flat reassurance of mirrors, she leads an unfulfilled life—until the night a strange man named Geraden comes crashing through one of her mirrors, on a quest to find a champion to save his kingdom of Mordant from a pervasive evil that threatens the land. Terisa is no champion. She wields neither magic nor power. And yet, much to her own surprise, when Geraden begs her to come back with him, she agrees. Now, in a culture where women are little more than the playthings of powerful men, in a castle honeycombed with secret passages and clever traps, in a kingdom threatened from without and within by enemies able to appear and vanish out of thin air, Terisa must become more than the pale reflection of a person. For the way back to Earth is closed to her. And the enemies of Mordant will stop at nothing to see her dead. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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