Reviews for Sirena

Sirena by Donna Jo Napoli Summary and Reviews

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Book Reviews of Sirena

Book Review: A wonderful Fantasy/Romance Story
Summary: 5 Stars

I read this book in half a day. And not because it is an easy book that one can get through quickly, it is because it such a wonderful story that makes you want to know the ending.

I really loved the idea of the story, and usually I don't go for the terrible romance stories but Sirena was a great tale and I really felt sad for it to end. The story tells of a seventeen year old mermaid named Sirena, who lives with her sisters on an island where they try to sing to the passing ships and win the love of sailors so to bestow upon themselves immortality.

After witnessing the deaths of a crew of men after they crashed they boats upon their island, Sirena swims away to another called Lemnos where she rescues a dying man who has been abandoned by his men. I can't say any more without ruining the story but take my word for it, Sirena is an awesome book and I recommend it for ages 12 and up.


Book Review: Alright but...
Summary: 4 Stars

I enjoyed this novel, I love retellings of fairytales and though I'm not all the big on the immortality idea the plot was fun and generally quite enjoyable. However, Napoli did not take the book and end it in the direction I might have hoped. The mermaids in the story are cursed to live as mortals until they are loved by a human man but what I hoped would have been addressed was that the true curse was not mortality but immortality. This is because before the mermaids have been loved they have no reason not to live forever but once they have found a man that can love them, they must watch his grow old and die while they live forever. I thought it would have been an interesting turn and was disappointed that it was never brought up.

Book Review: Amazing
Summary: 5 Stars

Donna Jo Napoli does it again! Ignore the people that say that this amazing authors' work is inappropriate. I read her work in fourth grade and have been hooked ever since. NOT INNAPROPRIATE. PERFECT IN EVERY WAY! I have read her books innumerable times and I never tire of them. I urge you to read this, Read this, and READ THIS again!

Book Review: An exotic and thought-provoking read
Summary: 4 Stars

Now famous for her ability to take old, familiar tales and present them through new perspectives, Donna Jo Napoli now tackles the subject of Greek mythology and the captivating mermaids of the oceans.

The Sirens were long thought to be deadly women, either humanoid or bird-like, who lured sailors to their deaths on the rocks with their enticing songs. But Napoli presents the Grecian Sirens as mermaids - half-women, half-fish, a hybrid creature who are just as cursed as the men they destroy. Due to a spiteful nymph's curse, the mermaids are mortal until they can cause a man to fall in love with them and be their mate, thereby securing immortality for themselves (quite a change from the usual stories when falling in love means a heroine must *give up* her immortality). Thus, the heroine Sirena and her nine sisters spend each day on the lookout for ships, carrying precious men.

But when their plan of inticing the men to love them goes terribly wrong, and Sirena's younger sister is killed, she vows never to harm a human life in order to gain immortality and swims from her family and all that she's ever known, to the deserted island of Lemnos to live out her mortal life. But Fate it would seem has different ideas for Sirena, and when the Greek soldiers heading for the Trojan War abandon one of their men on the shores of Lemnos, the inevitable happens...

Philoctetes is a handsome young warrior, but the festering serpent wound upon his ankle has caused his fellow companions to discard him. Sirena cares for him, and Philoctetes is enchanted by the marvellous creature. But when warding off a dangerous she-bear with her song, Philoctetes overhears, and Sirena fears that their new-found love is based on nothing more than enchantment on his behalf. Throughout the years of the Trojan War the two live peacefully together, intellectually debating issues such as honour and glory, and sharing many stories together of well-placed Greek mythology. Yet Sirena mourns - Philoctetes love has made her immortal, yet he is not, and she can see the signs of age appear on his day by day. And it would seem he and his poisonous arrows still have a part to play in the far-off raging Trojan War...

It's hard to imagine any fans of Donna Jo Napoli not enjoying this accompaniment to her steadily growing collection of re-told tales. Calling on Greek mythology that she adds in throughout the story, and much of her own ideas, such as the gaining of mermaid mortality, Napoli creates a familiar yet fresh presentation of old ideas. Her language, told in first-person narrative through Sirena's eyes is vivid and atmospheric - her creation of life in the sea, and Sirena's explorations up in the rivers of the island are especially enjoyable. Anyone with fore-knowledge about the Trojan War and Philoctetes' part to play within it may already know how the story ends, and may be already shedding a tear, but either way, this is a powerful, beautiful, tragic story about the giving and receiving of love, life and sacrifice.


Book Review: An exotic and thought-provoking read
Summary: 4 Stars

Now famous for her ability to take old, familiar tales and present them through new perspectives, Donna Jo Napoli now tackles the subject of Greek mythology and the captivating mermaids of the oceans.

The Sirens were long thought to be deadly women, either humanoid or bird-like, who lured sailors to their deaths on the rocks with their enticing songs. But Napoli presents the Grecian Sirens as mermaids - half-women, half-fish, a hybrid creature who are just as cursed as the men they destroy. Due to a spiteful nymph's curse, the mermaids are mortal until they can cause a man to fall in love with them and be their mate, thereby securing immortality for themselves (quite a change from the usual stories when falling in love means a heroine must *give up* her immortality). Thus, the heroine Sirena and her nine sisters spend each day on the lookout for ships, carrying precious men.

But when their plan of inticing the men to love them goes terribly wrong, and Sirena's younger sister is killed, she vows never to harm a human life in order to gain immortality and swims from her family and all that she's ever known, to the deserted island of Lemnos to live out her mortal life. But Fate it would seem has different ideas for Sirena, and when the Greek soldiers heading for the Trojan War abandon one of their men on the shores of Lemnos, the inevitable happens...

Philoctetes is a handsome young warrior, but the festering serpent wound upon his ankle has caused his fellow companions to discard him. Sirena cares for him, and Philoctetes is enchanted by the marvellous creature. But when warding off a dangerous she-bear with her song, Philoctetes overhears, and Sirena fears that their new-found love is based on nothing more than enchantment on his behalf. Throughout the years of the Trojan War the two live peacefully together, intellectually debating issues such as honour and glory, and sharing many stories together of well-placed Greek mythology. Yet Sirena mourns - Philoctetes love has made her immortal, yet he is not, and she can see the signs of age appear on his day by day. And it would seem he and his poisonous arrows still have a part to play in the far-off raging Trojan War...

It's hard to imagine any fans of Donna Jo Napoli not enjoying this accompaniment to her steadily growing collection of re-told tales. Calling on Greek mythology that she adds in throughout the story, and much of her own ideas, such as the gaining of mermaid mortality, Napoli creates a familiar yet fresh presentation of old ideas. Her language, told in first-person narrative through Sirena's eyes is vivid and atmospheric - her creation of life in the sea, and Sirena's explorations up in the rivers of the island are especially enjoyable. Anyone with fore-knowledge about the Trojan War and Philoctetes' part to play within it may already know how the story ends, and may be already shedding a tear, but either way, this is a powerful, beautiful, tragic story about the giving and receiving of love, life and sacrifice.

More Sirena reviews:
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