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Emma Bull : War for the Oaks
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Author: Emma Bull
Title: War for the Oaks
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Published in: English
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 309
Date: 1987-07-01
ISBN: 0441870732
Publisher: Ace
Weight: 0.4 pounds
Size: 1.0 x 7.0 x 5.0 inches
Edition: 1st
Amazon prices:
$1.85used
$5.99new
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Description: Product Description
An aspiring young rock-and-roll singer's life is astonishingly changed when she is drafted into the war of the faeries, where she is instructed to use her musical talents to defeat an evil enemy. Reissue.


Amazon.com Review
Emma Bull's debut novel, War for the Oaks, placed her in the top tier of urban fantasists and established a new subgenre. Unlike most of the rock & rollin' fantasies that have ripped off Ms. Bull's concept, War for the Oaks is well worth reading. Intelligent and skillfully written, with sharply drawn, sympathetic characters, War for the Oaks is about love and loyalty, life and death, and creativity and sacrifice.

Eddi McCandry has just left her boyfriend and their band when she finds herself running through the Minneapolis night, pursued by a sinister man and a huge, terrifying dog. The two creatures are one and the same: a phouka, a faerie being who has chosen Eddi to be a mortal pawn in the age-old war between the Seelie and Unseelie Courts. Eddi isn't interested--but she doesn't have a choice. Now she struggles to build a new life and new band when she might not even survive till the first rehearsal.

War for the Oaks won the Locus Magazine award for Best First Novel and was a finalist for the Mythopoeic Society Award. Other books by Emma Bull include the novels Falcon, Bone Dance (second honors, Philip K. Dick Award), Finder (a finalist for the Minnesota Book Award), and (with Stephen Brust) Freedom and Necessity; the collection Double Feature (with Will Shetterly); and the picture book The Princess and the Lord of Night. --Cynthia Ward

Reviews: Debbie (Australia) (2009/03/15):
This is one of my all time favourites. It is well written and similar in style to Charles De Lint in that the world of faerie lies hidden within our own very normal world - the main character struggles with accepting what is happening around her just as any of us would in the same situation.

I have read it several times & it is on my "never give away - never even lend out" shelf along with Tim Power "The Anubis Gates" and Tad Williams "Otherworld" series.



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