troisoiseaux (
troisoiseaux) wrote2022-09-24 11:54 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Exiled From Cat-meow-lot
After a discussion of Charith Baldry's role as ghostwriter for the Warrior Cats series took over arose in the comments of
osprey_archer's review of Baldry's "OTT tragic woobie fic" of an Arthurian retelling, Exiled From Camelot, I took one for the team and re-read a couple of the Warriors books: one by Baldry, and one by Kate Cary, one of the other writers who will continue publishing books under the collective pseudonym of Erin Hunter until, presumably, the heat death of the universe.
Confession: I 100% went into this expecting to write a fondly mocking Mystery Science Theater 3000 of a review, because as a concept, the Warriors series is nuts. It's Game of Thrones, about feral cats, for elementary schoolers. It's been published at a rate of 2-4 books a year for almost twenty years; it's apparently currently on its eighth sub-series. It has prophesies coming out of its furry little ears, and in sub-series #3, the protagonists have magic powers. It is COMPLETELY BONKERS and I absolutely devoured these books as a kid (approx. 4th-6th grade).
Turns out, they're actually pretty compelling! I read Moonrise and Dawn, the second and third books of the second subseries (Warriors: The New Prophesy); the tl;dr of the Wikipedia summary of the first book is that six young warriors from the four Clans are told in a dream to go on a quest, to hear a prophesy, which is that the warrior cats' territory is going to be destroyed by humans. There is also another prophesy, which doesn't make a ton of sense without more context than I need to go into to explain the plot of these two books specifically, but it's a thing. Prophesies: 2, not including the "receiving quest instructions in a dream" thing.
In Moonrise, which is Baldry's, the questers head back to warn their Clans, which have already discovered the hard way that their territory has been slated for human land development. There's an interesting juxtaposition between the two plotlines— the questers have bonded despite their differences, and look forward to working together to save their Clans when they return; meanwhile, back home, encroaching starvation and a rash of cats going missing has increased tensions between the Clans. The questers encounter a community of cats who live in the mountains, and there's a brief interlude of cross-cultural discovery, before it turns out that the mountain cats are convinced that one of the questers is prophesied to save them from a dreaded mountain lion and they've decided he's going to save them whether he likes it or not. (Their prophesy turns out to be correct, but as usual, not in the way that everyone thought. We're now at prophesies: 3; dramatic self-sacrifice: 1.) At home, the secret son of the Big Bad of the first sub-series - we'll call him BigBadStar - plots his own rise to cat fascism.
In Dawn, the questers return to an apocalyptic scene: the landscape torn up, trees torn down, the Clans relocated to makeshift camps at the edges of their territory and starving. One of the questers discovers that the missing cats - including her sister - have been trapped by humans, and leads a daring rescue. The four Clans ultimately agree to leave, and find new territory, together; their journey takes them through the mountains again, where they are aided by the mountain cats. One of the original questers - who had fallen in love with a mountain cat in the previous book - decides to stay with them, and another, who was still an apprentice, receives his warrior name. They ultimately reach the place that came to one of the cats in a dream! Yay! BigBadStar's secret son's paternity is revealed, which worries a lot ofpeople cats and makes things complicated for his half-brother, the known son of BigBadStar, who has spent his whole life trying to prove that he's loyal to his Clan/more than his father's son. Total prophesies: 4; dramatic self-sacrifices: 3; otherwise dramatic deaths: at least 3?
(Dawn also features my FAVORITE CHARACTER, Ravenpaw, in a larger-than-cameo role. In the very first book, Ravenpaw is a ThunderClan apprentice, but he's a. generally just too much of a cinnamon roll - too smol, too pure - for the life of a warrior and b. apprenticed to the warrior who becomes BigBadStar, so after he witnesses a murder, his friends help him fake his death so he can go live with his friend Barley, a barn cat who lives outside of the Clan system. I don't think this was intended to be a gay metaphor, but it absolutely feels like a gay metaphor, and whoever wrote this Wikipedia page clearly agrees with me.)
My one nit to pick - I mean, as a grown adult reading a series for children, there are a number of other nits that I have decided aren't my problem, but to pick one - is that there are just so many characters and so much going on, all of the time, that even the POV characters feel very thinly sketched. This isn't necessarily a problem, because the books are action-heavy where they're characterization-light; I guess it's a feature rather than a bug?
Having done some background Googling, I am gobsmacked to discover that the series apparently takes place in England??? I mean, the fact that one of the Clans' territories is moorland probably should have been a clue, but in my defense, I was in the U.S. and ten.
(In retrospect, why was I so eager to tear into something that brought my younger self so much joy?)
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Confession: I 100% went into this expecting to write a fondly mocking Mystery Science Theater 3000 of a review, because as a concept, the Warriors series is nuts. It's Game of Thrones, about feral cats, for elementary schoolers. It's been published at a rate of 2-4 books a year for almost twenty years; it's apparently currently on its eighth sub-series. It has prophesies coming out of its furry little ears, and in sub-series #3, the protagonists have magic powers. It is COMPLETELY BONKERS and I absolutely devoured these books as a kid (approx. 4th-6th grade).
Turns out, they're actually pretty compelling! I read Moonrise and Dawn, the second and third books of the second subseries (Warriors: The New Prophesy); the tl;dr of the Wikipedia summary of the first book is that six young warriors from the four Clans are told in a dream to go on a quest, to hear a prophesy, which is that the warrior cats' territory is going to be destroyed by humans. There is also another prophesy, which doesn't make a ton of sense without more context than I need to go into to explain the plot of these two books specifically, but it's a thing. Prophesies: 2, not including the "receiving quest instructions in a dream" thing.
In Moonrise, which is Baldry's, the questers head back to warn their Clans, which have already discovered the hard way that their territory has been slated for human land development. There's an interesting juxtaposition between the two plotlines— the questers have bonded despite their differences, and look forward to working together to save their Clans when they return; meanwhile, back home, encroaching starvation and a rash of cats going missing has increased tensions between the Clans. The questers encounter a community of cats who live in the mountains, and there's a brief interlude of cross-cultural discovery, before it turns out that the mountain cats are convinced that one of the questers is prophesied to save them from a dreaded mountain lion and they've decided he's going to save them whether he likes it or not. (Their prophesy turns out to be correct, but as usual, not in the way that everyone thought. We're now at prophesies: 3; dramatic self-sacrifice: 1.) At home, the secret son of the Big Bad of the first sub-series - we'll call him BigBadStar - plots his own rise to cat fascism.
In Dawn, the questers return to an apocalyptic scene: the landscape torn up, trees torn down, the Clans relocated to makeshift camps at the edges of their territory and starving. One of the questers discovers that the missing cats - including her sister - have been trapped by humans, and leads a daring rescue. The four Clans ultimately agree to leave, and find new territory, together; their journey takes them through the mountains again, where they are aided by the mountain cats. One of the original questers - who had fallen in love with a mountain cat in the previous book - decides to stay with them, and another, who was still an apprentice, receives his warrior name. They ultimately reach the place that came to one of the cats in a dream! Yay! BigBadStar's secret son's paternity is revealed, which worries a lot of
(Dawn also features my FAVORITE CHARACTER, Ravenpaw, in a larger-than-cameo role. In the very first book, Ravenpaw is a ThunderClan apprentice, but he's a. generally just too much of a cinnamon roll - too smol, too pure - for the life of a warrior and b. apprenticed to the warrior who becomes BigBadStar, so after he witnesses a murder, his friends help him fake his death so he can go live with his friend Barley, a barn cat who lives outside of the Clan system. I don't think this was intended to be a gay metaphor, but it absolutely feels like a gay metaphor, and whoever wrote this Wikipedia page clearly agrees with me.)
My one nit to pick - I mean, as a grown adult reading a series for children, there are a number of other nits that I have decided aren't my problem, but to pick one - is that there are just so many characters and so much going on, all of the time, that even the POV characters feel very thinly sketched. This isn't necessarily a problem, because the books are action-heavy where they're characterization-light; I guess it's a feature rather than a bug?
Having done some background Googling, I am gobsmacked to discover that the series apparently takes place in England??? I mean, the fact that one of the Clans' territories is moorland probably should have been a clue, but in my defense, I was in the U.S. and ten.
(In retrospect, why was I so eager to tear into something that brought my younger self so much joy?)
no subject
The other thing I’ve heard about the Warrior Cats books is that about a decade ago, middle-school kids who weren’t allowed on the internet but were permitted Kindle e-readers apparently set up bulletin boards in the review sections of (I think) the Barnes & Noble website, which could be reached from e-readers so their customers could buy more e-books. And what the kids mostly posted in their improvised chat rooms was Warrior Cats role play and fanfic.
no subject
You're RIGHT. It's so funny, though, I didn't read Watership Down until I was an adult and I felt fairly ??? about it, which I imagine is how anyone would feel trying to read Warriors for the first time as an adult.
Aww, I didn't know about the makeshift fan forum on Barnes & Noble, but I know there WAS an Official Warrior Cats Fan Forum. It was my first internet fandom space, when I was in middle school— I did in fact role play as a Warrior cat. :P There was also a thriving subcommunity of non-Warriors fandom (e.g., Percy Jackson) and original-story RPs.
no subject
Recently confirmed a half-remembered factoid that Bigwig was based on a paratrooper colleague of Adams—specifically Captain Desmond “Paddy” Kavanagh, who was killed in combat during Operation Market Garden; but also that Hazel was based on Adams’ commanding officer, Major John Gifford. Which sort of leaves Fiver as a possible self-portrait.
no subject
The Coraline effect! (Actually, I re-read a couple of P.L. Travers' Mary Poppins books - which I'd loved as a kid - a few years ago, and they are so much weirder than I remembered. One story had a woman made of candy who breaks off her fingers and gives them to the Banks children to eat?? as candy??)
Ohh, what an interesting backstory to Watership Down!
no subject
I read it for the first time in middle school, but I got a lot more out of it on re-read as an adult, especially with a grounding in the Aeneid.