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Genre
Fantasy
Publisher
Ace Books
Date Published
1984
Review Posted on
11/1/2002
Reviewer Rating

Reader Rating
# of Ratings: 39
Average Rating:
9 out of 10

Ariel: Book of Change, by Steven R. Boyett
Reviewed by Lisa DuMond

If you've read this book, why not

Ariel may have gone out of print after its debut in 1983, but fans have not let it fade away. For years, used copies have been making the rounds, commanding a premium price at auction, and making a tidy profit for used book dealers. Now, you can not only get your own fresh, updated version, you can get it as in the latest technology for ebooks. Given the theme of the novel, the metamorphosis seems particularly ironic.

For two years, Pete Garey wandered through the strange new world that is Earth after the Change, a moment when technology ceased to work and things like planes, trains, and automobiles became useless junk. He was alone until the day he was found by a unicorn who would become his familiar. Ariel is just one of the many mythical, magical creatures to appear after the Change, but the only one with the stunning ability (or, perhaps, the only one with the desire...) to talk. The bond between Pete and Ariel will be like no other he has experienced.

If you know your mythology, you know what anyone who wishes to be close to a unicorn must be. Twenty-year-old virgin Pete is a virgin. In many ways he is more unworldly than expected. Whether the loss of all the technical wonders of the “modern world” has contributed to his naivete, or if it is the result of so many years in the almost empty country, is difficult to say. Could be he would have grown up that way even in the before-Change world. Whatever the reason, it makes him perfectly suited to be Ariel’s friend and foil.

Ariel is pure -- she is a unicorn, after all -- but she’s no pushover. Like Pete, she has steel to balance her softer side. At times, the struggle between the good and bad inside each of them is as great a threat as the unmitigated evil they join to defeat.

Good versus evil... Isn’t that the conflict at the heart of all good literature? In Ariel, readers have many dark/light things to consider, including deciding for themselves whether the world is a better or worse place after the Change. The answer is as ambiguous as most “real life” decisions. Boyett isn’t going to do your thinking for you.

And, maybe, that is the lasting appeal of Ariel. Little is clear cut in this fantasy. Not the motives of the characters. Not the true nature of the mythical beasts that emerge. Not even the why of everything that happened. Such unanswered questions are among the many reasons your thoughts will turn again and again to this book, re-examining these unknowns.

With qualities like that, is it any wonder readers have refused to let this novel slide into obscurity? Or why it’s making a long-awaited return?

Lisa DuMond is an author, reviewer and all around writing machine. Visit her web site at Hikeeba.com or read more of her reviews at Meviews. Don't forget to check out her novel, Darkers.
Buy this book from Amazon!

Comments on Ariel: Book of Change (new to old) Add a Comment
Inappropriate comments will be deleted!!
Posted by Tim on 1/28/2010
I was thoroughly disappointed with the book. There was a story, but I felt there was no plot. The book took its time getting to the climax, then rushed an ending, I feel.
Posted by DeeDee on 12/15/2007
I read this book over 10 yrs ago, and loaned it to my ex-brother-in-law. Never got it back. Must replace it and get at least 2 additional copies for my niece and nephew. That is how good of an impression this book made upon me. It's just one of those books you hate to see end.
Posted by teresa  on 2/3/2005
From the first time I read this incredible work of imagination, I knew I had to have a copy for myself. PLEASE order a reprint of this book!!!
Comments 1 to 3 of 3  
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