By William Nicholson
(from The Wind on Fire series)
PLOT
The city of Aramanth is divided in to four sections, the white section, where the Emperor and all the high status men and women work and live, the scarlet section which is of lower status, but still respected, the orange section, where the humble live, and the grey section, which is the scum of the city, the lowest status of all…
This system seems to work well and isn't questioned; people try their hardest to achieve the tests they are given yearly, if they’re lucky and do well and earn enough ‘points’ they are moved up, if they do not so well, they stay where they are. If you do a crime, points are taken off you, and you are moved down.
No one complains, except for the Hath family.
One day, the restricted ranks at school become too much for 10 year-old Kestrel, and she runs to the white section and climbs the old, silent Wind Singer, a huge structure in the heart of the city. She yells and insults Aramanth and it’s leaders, something that is unheard of there, and while trying to escape the guards clutches, she find the Emperor. He is a prisoner in his own city, and he gives Kestrel the task of searching for the heart of the Wind Singer, so it will sing again and give peace to Aramanth once more. So Kestrel, Bowmen (her twin brother), and her new found ‘friend’ Mumpo, go on a quest to save their home.
MY RESPONSE
I like the series. They get more and more depressing as they go on, but the first book is great. It has moments that make you sad, happy, scared, and humble. It’s suprising, because I usually hate books with twins in it that have a psychic
connection, but these books are excused because Bowman can talk to others in his mind as well as his sister.
I doesn’t tell you their age untill the second book, but you can pretty much guess in the first book that they are very young, which I like. The three friends may go through ordeals and hardships that heros would cower at, but the twins sleep holding hands and other things like that that suggest just how young they are, which you wouldn’t be able to guess otherwise.
The characters are very detailed. They are also quite unique in some ways. There’s Kestrel, who has a hot temper and likes to act more than discuss. She’s strong minded, determined, and brave which is good for a hero, but not always commen in girls when you read a fantasy novel. Then there’s Bowmen. He’s quiet, and though brave, he is also very emotional. He can read, not people’s thoughts, but more their hidden feelings in their head. Him and Kess are very close and would die if they were to be parted (defintly emotionally, but I don’t know if they would literally phyically die, probably though). And, the last of the three friends, there’s Mumpo. Mumpo is an unfortunate character, but he grows on you. He’s smelly, dirty, his nose is constantly streaming, and he is quite stupid at first. But the more you learn of him the more you think of him as simple minded, and not in an underminding way. He only has room for one emotion at a time, like happiness, now hunger, now fear etc. I found his character painful at first, but as the twins get to know and like him, you do to.

The books are very creative. Through out the book the three friends come across many towns, all that have completely different ways of living. There’s the mud people who live under Aramanth, and though they live in the sewers of the city, they still live happily and do well. Then there are the two cities on wheels, Omchaka and Baraka. They are actually huge ships, with sails that help the cities glide across the desert on wheels. There is also the old children, who still freak me out every time without fail. The writer paints a very good picture of all these different races, their ways of living, their personalities, their religion etcetera, and he fits them all in one book, but they all still have depth.
The main evil character isn’t one person in these stories, but is evil it’s self. Everyone who is overwhelmed by the lust for power and are prepared to kill, kind of turn into the Morah, Mor meaning evil. The Morah is basically a power, and anyone can contribute to it. It is Bowmen and Kestrels job to defeat this power, but not in the first book. In the first book they meet the current form of the Morah, who has the last piece to the windsinger, but they don’t detroy her. This Morah has an army of ‘Zars’ who are and infinite number of young, smilely youths who sing a chant that goes “Kill, kill, kill, kill. Kill, kill, kill, kill…”. They can’t be stopped, if you kill one, hundreds replace them. They have no thought apart from killing. It’s scary because at one point Bowmen and Mumpo become a Zar and they have no fear, and are purely happy. Because they’re not afraid, I suppose that’s what makes them strong, and that's what make many communtities weak.

I can see how Aramanth would have got to where it is, the way they control people and their status. They needed people to run the place, and they needed wealthy, healthy civilians. But the also needed workers to do the lowly jobs like street cleaners, and whatnot. So by getting people to complete tests all their lives and to follow the rule “We strive harder, and reach higher to make tomorrow better than today” the people who do fine are well off and don’t complain, and the people who don’t do well naturally sink to the bottom, and in the end, feel like they deserve it, so they wont complain. So no one thinks about there being another way to live, and if they did, they would be too scared to say anything. In this way, everything moves smoothly. But really the people are being compressed. They all have to wear their status colours, and there is no room to breath, no freedom of choice. People get graded as soon as they’re two, and after that, every year of the rest of their life. Though the government originally meant well, they are actually not letting people do their best. Lots get tested on things they don’t understand, and though they may be a fantastic seamstress, they are pushed down. People should decide more how they want to live, and then there can be a stronger, kinder community.
‘The Wind Singer’ is a great book, and I like it because not only is it a good and gripping story, it also has a lot of depth and meaning behind the story.
No comments:
Post a Comment