4 out of 4 people found the following review helpful:
The UnseenThursday, December 23, 2004
May I ask the reviewer who gave this book two stars, why he/she's opening sentence describes the book as being 'great'. I'm just a little confused.
Xandra Hobbs is kind but-to speak truthfully- untalented. Each of her family members have talent, yet she is left out. Her only purpose, it seems, is to help injured animals as she does in the beginning chapter. When she is finished nursing an egret back to normal health, she finds one of it's feathers, which she believes is enchanted. She becomes interested in a classmate who believes in the supernatural and views the world of the Unseen.
Snyder's work is enjoyable as always and The Unseen is destined to follow in the steps of The Egypt Game and her other classics.
R
0 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:
the unseen: a very mysterious bookMonday, November 08, 2004
The Book, The Unseen was a great book. It was a very mysterious book and it dealt with figuring out a mystery to the world. I will not tell you every little detail about the the book but I will tell you some things about this book. Thus book is a great book it is also well written and it makes you feel as though you are there. It makes you feel as though you are going through the same thing that Xandra is going through. Xandra is the main character in this book. She loves animals and cares for every one that she finds that is injured. One animal in particular is a beautiful white swan that she finds in the woods that had been shot. The beautiful bird enede up leaving her a surprise which ended up being a key to the world. But to find out what that is you must read the book and find the key to the world with Xandra.
5 out of 5 people found the following review helpful:
a compelling readTuesday, May 18, 2004
Twelve-year-old Xandra is frustrated, lonely and slightly bitter. She is the ugly duckling in the middle of her large family, and she doesn't have many friends at school either. Her only sources of comfort are her vivid imagination, her massive collection of stuffed animals, and her basement "hospital" where she nurses stray baby animals back to health.
One day, a young egret that she has helped leaves behind a very special white feather. With the help of Belinda, the mysterious oddball at school, Xandra discovers that the feather is actually a Key. The feather allows Xandra to unlock her senses so that she can see the Unseen, creatures that surround us at all times but can't be seen or heard with normal human senses. At first Xandra is eager to explore this new realm, but when the Unseen attack her, she's not so sure. Is it possible that Xandra's own hostility causes the Unseen to be so unfriendly?
The title of THE UNSEEN refers not only to this hidden, sometimes creepy parallel realm that Xandra explores. It also represents how Xandra feels in her family --- everyone else is incredibly attractive, popular and successful, but Xandra feels overlooked and a little bit lost. The truth is, though, that Xandra is the one who doesn't see things all around her --- Xandra's resentment of her siblings and her hostility toward her parents and her nanny make her blind to the love that her family has for her.
Despite the fact that Xandra, who not only shuts out her family but also betrays a new friend, is a sometimes unlikable character, Zilpha Keatley Snyder's imaginative storytelling results in a compelling and rewarding novel.
--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl