Thursday, November 16, 2017

Dragonfly Song

by Wendy Orr

Aissa is the firstborn daughter of the Lady, the village priestess, but the extra thumb on each of her hands makes her unworthy in the eyes of the gods. She is supposed to be left to die, but the Lady’s wise woman quietly sneaks her to a family of goatherds across the mountain. When that family is also tragically lost to her, Aissa finds herself back in the Lady’s house, working as a servant and choosing to be mute. Abused, rejected, and knowing nothing of her true parentage, Aissa is eventually cast out of the city by the other servants. Each year, soldiers from Crete come for one boy and one girl tribute to dance with the bulls. If they survive, their community is freed from providing future tributes, but no one has ever come back. Aissa knows she has to try to dance with the bulls…she truly has nothing to lose. The Bronze Age setting makes for a unique backdrop to Aissa’s story, and she is a sympathetic character. Her struggles are heart-wrenching, and made more so by the lyrical storytelling style. The descriptions of the dances are especially vivid.

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