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The Fire Opal
The Fire Opal
Author: Regina McBride
There was a time when Maeve O'Tullagh led a simple life; a time when she and her mother, Nuala, collected kelp on the foreshore near their cottage in Ard Macha; a time when she played among the Celtic ruins with her older brothers and daydreamed about the legendary Holy Isles, an enchanted land ruled in a past age by a beautiful goddess. — But af...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780385906920
ISBN-10: 0385906927
Publication Date: 5/11/2010
Pages: 304
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
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Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Book Type: Library Binding
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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reviewed The Fire Opal on + 168 more book reviews
I thought this book was good. An excellent mix of mythology, folklore, and magic set in Ireland. Also, I found the book to be very female positive - good female characters, strong, intelligent, independent, etc.

My only issue is that the book needed another 50 to 100 pages for the ending. The ending felt fairly rushed, and a lot was not explained. A few issued went unresolved too. I don't know if this is because the author plans a sequel, or if it's because she needed to keep to a page limit for the publisher. Either way, the ending should have really gotten a lot more attention and detail.
GeniusJen avatar reviewed The Fire Opal on + 5322 more book reviews
Reviewed by Ashley B for TeensReadToo.com

Maeve O'Tullagh is a teen living in Ard Macha with her family: Mam, Da, Donal, Fingal, and Ishleen. When still very young, Ishleen suddenly dies, depressing Maeve's mother and father. Once becoming pregnant again, Mam insists that she is pregnant with Ishleen, and she won't let the idea go. A woman at the sea gives Maeve a talisman to protect her mother. But when Mam removes it on the night of the baby's birth, she seems lost and catatonic. Maeve believes something stole her mother's soul and dedicates herself to protecting her new sister.

When Ishleen is four, she suffers the same fate as her Mam. With her Da and brothers off fighting to free Ireland from English rule, nineteen-year-old Maeve embarks on a journey to discover who has stolen their souls and save them before it's too late, encountering an ancient evil along the way.

This story was filled with magical beings and inanimate objects, and a family that thinks the mother and daughter are absolutely mad. At times, I was agreeing with the men of the family. In some parts, some very crazy stuff was happening, and I almost felt like Maeve was on an acid-trip or something. Seriously! It was nuts, but it was interesting!

The climax of the novel began in one of the last few chapters. This caused the novel to drag on for quite a long time, and it seemed to me that there were many insignificant pieces to the storyline. Also, the ending was very abrupt, which bothers me. It was left for me to wonder what happened to Francisco, a Spanish soldier, and also for Maeve's father and brothers. But really, this novel was interesting, and not really the kind of book I normally read, but it kept me interested, even if I got bored in some places. If you're into the fantasy kind of book, you might like it.


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