This one was good, but not as good as some of the others, I thought. Or maybe it was but I just didn't like it as much?
This was the one with Barbie and Wanda and Hazel and Foxglove and Thessaly, and Wilkinson and Luz and the Cuckoo. Very weird, but you go into these books expecting weird, of course. I was upset that Wanda and Wilkinson died. And I wanted to know what Barbie was going to do next. And I don't know whether I'm annoyed or interested by the connections between Foxglove/Donna and Judy (who died several books ago) and Rose Walker. Maybe the books wouldn't be as fascinating if all the characters didn't link together in this web. Anyway, I hope the next one has more of Dream. I like him. (note to Dann: Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream!)
From the short description in the back of Endless Nights (for future reference): "Barbie, from The Doll's House, used to dream of being a princess in a lush, private kingdom with strage animals as her subjects. But Barbie has stopped dreaming. Now her imaginary world and her real world entwine in a riveting story about gender and identity."
This was the one with Barbie and Wanda and Hazel and Foxglove and Thessaly, and Wilkinson and Luz and the Cuckoo. Very weird, but you go into these books expecting weird, of course. I was upset that Wanda and Wilkinson died. And I wanted to know what Barbie was going to do next. And I don't know whether I'm annoyed or interested by the connections between Foxglove/Donna and Judy (who died several books ago) and Rose Walker. Maybe the books wouldn't be as fascinating if all the characters didn't link together in this web. Anyway, I hope the next one has more of Dream. I like him. (note to Dann: Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream, Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream Dream!)
From the short description in the back of Endless Nights (for future reference): "Barbie, from The Doll's House, used to dream of being a princess in a lush, private kingdom with strage animals as her subjects. But Barbie has stopped dreaming. Now her imaginary world and her real world entwine in a riveting story about gender and identity."