Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Moonrise (novel): Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Plot: same
Critical reception: {{done}}. A few edits on the bottom template
Line 62: Line 62:


==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==
''Moonrise'' received mostly positive reviews from critics. ''[[Kirkus Reviews]]'' criticized the novel for mundane writing, easy-to-confuse names, and the use of the words "meowed" and "mewed" instead of "said". The reviewer thought that the plot was "marred by the same preciousness of its predecessor". However, he praised the plot for its "enhanced complexity" and suspenseful writing, saying that "a small plot twist is refreshing and suspense builds steadily towards the final installment".<ref name="reviews">{{cite web|url=http://catalog.dclibrary.org/vufind/Record/ocm57344114/Reviews|title=Reviews: Moonrise BETA|publisher=District of Columbia Public Library|accessdate=August 14, 2010}}</ref> ''[[Booklist]]'' praised ''Moonrise'' for its "cliffhanger" ending "that will leave readers eager for the next installment", as well as the suspenseful possibility of the destruction of the forest.<ref name="reviews"/> ''[[The Horn Book Magazine|Horn Book Review]]'' gave a positive review, praising the plot, characters, and writing. The review stated that "Hunter successfully weaves character, plot, and good writing into another readable story".<ref name="reviews"/> ''BookLoons'' gave ''Moonrise'' a positive review, calling it "exciting" and a "gripping epic".<ref>{{cite web|last=Williamson|first=Hilary|title=BookLoons Review: Moonrise by Erin Hunter|url=http://www.bookloons.com/cgi-bin/Review.ASP?bookid=5561|publisher=BookLoons|accessdate=20 April 2011}}</ref> ''Moonrise'' reached the [[New York Times bestseller list|''New York Times'' bestseller list]], holding the number two spot for two weeks.<ref name=bestseller>{{cite news|title=August 28, 2005 New York Times Children's Bestsellers|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/books/bestseller/0828bestchildren.html|publisher=''New York Times''|accessdate=January 18, 2011|date=August 28, 2005}}</ref>
''Moonrise'' received mostly positive reviews from critics. ''[[Kirkus Reviews]]'' criticized the novel for mundane writing, easy-to-confuse names, and the use of the words "meowed" and "mewed" instead of "said". The reviewer thought that the plot was "marred by the same preciousness of its predecessor". However, he praised the plot for its "enhanced complexity" and suspenseful writing, saying that "a small plot twist is refreshing and suspense builds steadily towards the final installment".<ref name="reviews">{{cite web|url=http://catalog.dclibrary.org/vufind/Record/ocm57344114/Reviews|title=Reviews: Moonrise BETA|publisher=District of Columbia Public Library|accessdate=August 14, 2010}}</ref> ''[[Booklist]]'' praised ''Moonrise'' for its "cliffhanger" ending "that will leave readers eager for the next installment", as well as the suspenseful possibility of the destruction of the forest.<ref name="reviews"/> ''[[The Horn Book Magazine|Horn Book Review]]'' gave a positive review, praising the plot, characters, and writing. The review stated that "Hunter successfully weaves character, plot, and good writing into another readable story".<ref name="reviews"/> ''BookLoons'' gave ''Moonrise'' a positive review, calling it "exciting" and a "gripping epic".<ref>{{cite web|last=Williamson|first=Hilary|title=BookLoons Review: Moonrise by Erin Hunter|url=http://www.bookloons.com/cgi-bin/Review.ASP?bookid=5561|publisher=BookLoons|accessdate=20 April 2011}}</ref> ''Moonrise'' reached the [[The New York Times Best Seller list|''New York Times'' bestseller list]], holding the number two spot for two weeks.<ref name=bestseller>{{cite news|title=August 28, 2005 New York Times Children's Bestsellers|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/books/bestseller/0828bestchildren.html|publisher=''New York Times''|accessdate=January 18, 2011|date=August 28, 2005}}</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:11, 23 May 2011

Moonrise
The cover of Moonrise
First edition cover
AuthorErin Hunter
Cover artistWayne McLoughlin
LanguageEnglish
SeriesWarriors: The New Prophecy
GenreFantasy novel
PublisherHarperCollins
Publication date
July 21, 2005 (Canada)
August 2, 2005 (United States and United Kingdom)
Publication placeCanada
United States
United Kingdom
Media typePrint (Hardback and paperback)
Pages304 (first edition)
ISBN978-0-06-074452-6
LC ClassPZ7.H916625Mo 2005
Preceded byMidnight 
Followed byDawn 

Moonrise is the second book in the Warriors: The New Prophecy series. The book, which follows the adventures of four Clans of wild cats, was written by Erin Hunter, with cover art by Wayne McLoughlin. Moonrise introduces a new group of cats, the Tribe of Rushing Water, who have a different faith than the Clans. Series editor Victoria Holmes drew inspiration from locations such as the New Forest and the Scottish Highlands. Moonrise follows six cats, Brambleclaw, Squirrelpaw, Crowpaw, Feathertail, Stormfur, and Tawnypelt, as they return to their forest home from a journey to the ocean. They travel through the mountains, where they meet the Tribe of Rushing Water. The Tribe cats were being attacked by a savage mountain lion called Sharptooth. Although reluctant at first, the Clan cats agree to help the Tribe get rid of Sharptooth.

Moonrise has been released in hardcover, paperback, and e-book formats. Moonrise has been translated into French, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, and German. The book received mostly positive reviews from reviewers such as Booklist and Horn Book Review, who praised the plot and cliffhanger ending. However, Kirkus Reviews criticized the characters' confusing names and the writing style. Moonrise held the number two spot on The New York Times Best Seller list for two weeks.

Development

Inspirations and influences

The authors of the series drew inspiration from several natural locations in the United Kingdom. The four Clans (WindClan, RiverClan, ThunderClan, and ShadowClan) share a fictional forest based on England's New Forest.[1] Loch Lomond is another location that influenced the setting of Moonrise.[2] Some other sources of inspiration for the series include the works of authors such as J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis.[3]

Cherith Baldry, one of the people who write using the pen name Erin Hunter, said that it was hard to write the death of Feathertail at the end of Moonrise because death is a difficult subject.[3]

Publication history and writing

Moonrise was written by Erin Hunter, a pseudonym used by authors Cherith Baldry, Kate Cary, Tui Sutherland, and series editor Victoria Holmes. The pseudonym is used so that the individual novels in the series would not be shelved in different places in libraries. Series creator Victoria Holmes chose the name Erin because she liked the name, and Hunter because it matched the theme of feral cats. It also ensured that the books were shelved near those of Brian Jacques, an author that the writers, collectively known as "the Erins", liked.[4]

Moonrise was published as a hardcover by HarperCollins on July 25, 2005, in Canada,[5] and August 2, 2005, in the US and UK.[6] The book was released as a paperback on July 25, 2006,[7] and as an e-book on November 6, 2007.[8] Moonrise has been translated into various foreign languages: it was released in Russian on October 18, 2005, by OLMA Media Group,[9] in Japanese on March 18, 2009, by Komine Shoten,[10] and in French on March 5, 2009, by Pocket Jeunesse.[11] The Chinese version of Moonrise was published on April 30, 2009, by Morning Star Group. It was packaged with a 3-D trading card depicting Feathertail, with some biographical information on the reverse side.[12] The German translation was published on February 19, 2011, by Verlagsgruppe Beltz.[13]

Synopsis

Setting and characters

Moonrise takes place in several locations inspired by similar locales in the United Kingdom. The area where the cats live contains a forest, a moor, a marsh, and a disused mine, just west of a town. These, with the exception of the mine, were based largely on the New Forest. Parts of the story take place by the ocean and in a fictitious mountain range, both of which are located west of the forest.

As in the majority of Warriors novels, there are a great number of characters, which has been criticised as confusing.[14][15] In the case of Moonrise, there are 62 characters listed in a section at the beginning of the book; the list does not include members of the Tribe of Rushing Water. The following list includes the most important characters in Moonrise.

  • Brambleclaw: Brambleclaw, a dark brown tabby tom warrior with amber eyes, is from ThunderClan. He is the son of Tigerstar and Goldenflower, and the brother of Tawnypelt. Throughout Moonrise, Brambleclaw often takes charge of the group of travelling cats.
  • Crowpaw: Crowpaw, a dark smoky gray tom apprentice with blue eyes, is from WindClan. He is the son of Ashfoot.[16] Crowpaw is often in conflict with the other travelling cats. He and Feathertail grow close, and Crowpaw is devastated by Feathertail's death at the end of the book.
  • Feathertail: Feathertail, a light-gray she-cat warrior with blue eyes, is from RiverClan. She is the daughter of Graystripe and Silverstream, and sister to Stormfur. She becomes increasingly close to Crowpaw, and sacrifices her life to protect him and her other friends at the end of the novel, which fulfills a Tribe of Rushing Water prophecy that stated that a silver cat would save them from Sharptooth. She is buried at the base of the Cave of Rushing Water's waterfall, where only the most respected Tribe members are buried.
  • Midnight: Midnight is an extremely intelligent female badger who lives by the sea. She is capable of speaking the languages of badgers, cats, rabbits, and foxes. The journeying cats found her at the end of Midnight, the previous book in the series. She told them that humans would destroy the forest to build a new highway. In Moonrise, she sends the travelling cats though the mountains for their return journey, and it is implied that she did this while aware of the Tribe's prophecy regarding the cat who would save them from Sharptooth.
  • Sharptooth: Sharptooth is a large mountain cat (resembling a mountain lion) who terrorises the Tribe of Rushing Water, steals their prey, and kills their members. He is eventually killed when Feathertail causes a stalactite to fall on him, piercing his throat.
  • Squirrelpaw: Squirrelpaw, a ginger she-cat apprentice with green eyes, is from ThunderClan. She is the daughter of Firestar and Sandstorm, and is the sister of Leafpaw. She and Leafpaw have a telepathic relationship and can feel each other's emotions. She comes up with a plan to poison Sharptooth using a hare stuffed with deathberries.
  • Stormfur: Stormfur, a dark gray tom warrior with amber eyes, is from RiverClan. He is the son of Graystripe and Silverstream, and brother to Feathertail. When the Clan cats first encounters the Tribe, it was thought that he was the silver cat in their prophecy. Because of this, the Tribe refuses to let him leave until he has saved them from Sharptooth.
  • Tawnypelt: Tawnypelt, a tortoiseshell she-cat warrior with green eyes, is from ShadowClan. She is the daughter of Tigerstar and Goldenflower, and the sister of Brambleclaw.
  • Teller of the Pointed Stones: Teller of the Pointed Stones, more commonly known as Stoneteller, is a brown tabby tom with amber eyes.[17] He is the Tribe of Rushing Water's Healer, a position similar to the leader and medicine cat positions in the Clan heirarchy, combined. He prophecises that a silver cat from outside the Tribe will kill Sharptooth. When the journeying cats arrive, Stoneteller, believing Stormfur to be the silver cat, forces him to stay until Sharptooth dies.

Plot

In the previous book in the series, Midnight, StarClan, the warrior cats' ancestors, sent four cats (one from each Clan—Brambleclaw, Crowpaw, Feathertail, and Tawnypelt) on a quest. Squirrelpaw and Stormfur went with them. At the end of their journey, they arrived at the ocean and found an unusually intelligent badger named Midnight. Midnight told the cats that the Clans would have to leave their forest home and find a new place to live because humans were going to cut down the forest and build a new highway.

On the return journey, the Clan cats decide, after consultation with Midnight, to go through a mountain range which they had avoided in their initial travels. There, they meet a Clan-like group of cats called the Tribe of Rushing Water, who have their own set of ancestors, the Tribe of Endless Hunting. The friendly Tribe takes the travelling cats in and gives them food and shelter. The Clan cats discover that the Tribe cats have a prophecy: a silver cat will save them from Sharptooth, a savage lion-like creature that has been killing many members of the Tribe. The Tribe thinks that Stormfur is the silver cat from the prophecy, and he is therefore expected to protect the Tribe from Sharptooth. Although reluctant at first, Stormfur eventually agrees to help the Tribe.

Together, the Clan cats succeed in leading Sharptooth into a trap in a cave. However, their plan to poison Sharptooth goes awry, and Feathertail jumps up to the roof of the cave onto a stalactite to save Crowpaw from being killed. She plummets to the floor with the spike, falling on and crushing Sharptooth. Feathertail and Sharptooth are killed by the impact. The Tribe then realizes that Feathertail was the silver cat in their prophecy, not her brother Stormfur, as they had previously thought. Feathertail is buried at the base of the Cave of Rushing Water's waterfall, where only the most honored Tribe cats are buried. The five remaining cats then continue their journey. The book ends with Squirrelpaw noticing Highstones, which is at the edge of WindClan territory; they are almost home. Moonrise is followed by Dawn.

Critical reception

Moonrise received mostly positive reviews from critics. Kirkus Reviews criticized the novel for mundane writing, easy-to-confuse names, and the use of the words "meowed" and "mewed" instead of "said". The reviewer thought that the plot was "marred by the same preciousness of its predecessor". However, he praised the plot for its "enhanced complexity" and suspenseful writing, saying that "a small plot twist is refreshing and suspense builds steadily towards the final installment".[18] Booklist praised Moonrise for its "cliffhanger" ending "that will leave readers eager for the next installment", as well as the suspenseful possibility of the destruction of the forest.[18] Horn Book Review gave a positive review, praising the plot, characters, and writing. The review stated that "Hunter successfully weaves character, plot, and good writing into another readable story".[18] BookLoons gave Moonrise a positive review, calling it "exciting" and a "gripping epic".[19] Moonrise reached the New York Times bestseller list, holding the number two spot for two weeks.[20]

References

  1. ^ "Official Warriors website". HarperCollins.
  2. ^ "Kate Cary's Blog: FAQ". Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  3. ^ a b "Interview: Erin Hunter". Writers Unboxed. Retrieved August 2, 2008.
  4. ^ Mireles III, Nabor S. (May 1, 2009). "10 Questions for Victoria Holmes". Time for Kids. Times, Inc. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  5. ^ "HarperCollins.ca: Warriors: The New Prophecy, Book 2: Moonrise (Hardcover)". Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  6. ^ "HarperCollins: Warriors: The New Prophecy #2: Moonrise by Erin Hunter (Hardcover)". HarperCollins. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  7. ^ "HarperCollins: Warriors: The New Prophecy #2: Moonrise by Erin Hunter (Paperback)". HarperCollins. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  8. ^ "HarperCollins: Warriors: The New Prophecy #2: Moonrise AER by Erin Hunter". HarperCollins. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  9. ^ "New Prophecy Book 2: Moonrise (Восход луны)" (in Russian). Ozon.ru. Retrieved August 21, 2008.
  10. ^ "Komine Shoten: Moonrise (月明り)" (in Japanese). Komine Shoten. Retrieved August 13, 2010.
  11. ^ "Warriors: the New Prophecy 2: Moonrise (Clair de lune)" (in French). Pocket Jeunesse. Retrieved August 13, 2010.
  12. ^ "Warriors: The New Prophecy 2: Moonrise (新月危機)" (in Chinese). Morningstar. Retrieved February 26, 2011.
  13. ^ "Warriors: The New Prophecy 2: Moonrise (Mondschein)" (in German). Verlagsgruppe Beltz. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  14. ^ Prolman, Lisa (September 1, 2003). "School Library Journal review: Fire and Ice". School Library Journal. 49 (9): 214. Retrieved August 21, 2008. Readers not familiar with the first book may find this one hard to follow. [...] The characterizations of the animals are somewhat flat [...] and the plot's twists and turns seem mapped out and predictable.(subscription required)
  15. ^ Alpert, Mary (May 1, 2003). "School Library Journal review: Hunter, Erin. Into the Wild". School Library Journal. Retrieved August 21, 2008. The author has created an intriguing world with an intricate structure and mythology, and an engaging young hero. [...] The supporting cast of players is large and a little confusing [...] This is not as elegantly written as Brian Jacques's "Redwall" series(subscription required)
  16. ^ Hunter, Erin. Warriors Field Guide: Secrets of the Clans. HarperCollins. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-06-123903-8.
  17. ^ Hunter, Erin. Dawn. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-074455-7.
  18. ^ a b c "Reviews: Moonrise BETA". District of Columbia Public Library. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  19. ^ Williamson, Hilary. "BookLoons Review: Moonrise by Erin Hunter". BookLoons. Retrieved 20 April 2011.
  20. ^ "August 28, 2005 New York Times Children's Bestsellers". New York Times. August 28, 2005. Retrieved January 18, 2011. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)