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The Dubious Hills (1995)

The Dubious Hills (1995)

Book Info

Author
Rating
3.65 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0812523628 (ISBN13: 9780812523621)
Language
English
Publisher
tor books

About book The Dubious Hills (1995)

The bookshelves of young fantasy are overcrowded, with increasingly fierce competetion, but The Secret Country deserves a far better place than it currently has. I remember when I last reread the trilogy, the name "The Dubious Hills" cracked me up. It was such a deliberate name and went along with Dean's mythology so well. Little did I know she had written a companion book to the series about the place and that the two of them even have a sequel stuck in publishing limbo somewhere!The Dubious Hills takes some getting used to. Early on in the book Dean subjects the reader to a barrage of an inner-monologue that makes little sense until you read on (Myles says). The Dubious Hills area under a centuries old spell that was intended to prevent war. The results of the spell is to remove doubt and divide knowledge amongst the inhabitants. There is only one person who knows how to fix people or objects, one person who can teach, one person to identify plants, and so on. Nothing is certain to an individual unless it is their own Knowledge and everything else must be attributed to the indivdual who, after all, knows. There is magic, but unless you are the person whose Knowledge is magic your ability is lost sometime before you reach puberty and attain your Knowledge.Arry is Physici, the individual who knows pain. At 14 she has been left in charge of her two younger siblings after the disappearance of her parents. Life is simple, requiring a great deal of bartering and trips to consult neighbors about everything. Tea is consumed, cats are abundant and if the situation isn't perfect it is at least peaceful. Complications arrive in the form of wolves who don't act the way they are Known to act. With some debate it falls on Arry to figure out the threat to their community and she comes to understand new forms of hurt along the way."That's all very good, Myles, but what the hell did you think of the book?"I liked it. It was different and a well thought out 'if, then' kind of book. It makes me think of a Diana Wynne Jones on Ritalin. English pastoral fantasy without the need for messy chaos. Arry and the other villagers walk back and forth across the hills, ask questions, give, lend and borrow necessities from one another and plant the crops, and lots of details that could be seen as meaningless. There's purpose to everything here though and The Dubious Hills circles around to an inevitable conclusion.

I shelved this under fantasy rather than science fantasy or sci-fi because the premise...doesn't make sense. Which, okay, I can totally roll with that, it's not like my adored Arthurian legends have much resemblance to reality.But this doesn't hold together. I feel like I was handed a bowl, and when I tried to take the dough out of the bowl to knead and bake, it turned out to be batter. This doesn't hold together, I don't understand how this world functions, I don't understand the laws of magic here, I don't understand what Arry is trying to do half the time, and I am therefore not happy.copperbadge says that the line in Doctor Who 5.01, "Believe me for twenty minutes," is Steven Moffat as the writer talking — just believe me for twenty minutes. Just suspend your disbelief for twenty minutes and let me tell you this story. But the thing is, if I do you that favor, if I agree to believe for those twenty minutes, because I do not owe you the author my suspension of disbelief, you have to give me something in return, and I don't think Dean did. Her writing seems purposefully opaque here, intentionally dense. I would have been grateful for an info dump or two, because this makes no fucking sense.

Do You like book The Dubious Hills (1995)?

This is a very peculiar book. The Dubious Hills are a place deliberately set aside from the rest of the fantasy world they are part of by a great spell performed by wizards long ago. There is no traffic to speak of in and out and weird rules govern the workings of the inhabitants' lives. For one, each area of human knowledge can only be the province of one adult at a time, and for another, even though magic is very useful to their simple way of life, it is only possessed by very young children. All the spells in the book, by the way, are quotations from English poets, mostly Romantics, which is a nice touch. The main character is an adolescent girl whose area of knowledge is pain. She is struggling to raise her small siblings after the disappearance of her parents, and her confusion about life is easily sympathized with. Then there start to be scary rumors of werewolves plaguing the village, and that some member of their community is in league with them. But scariest of all is what the children of the village are capable of getting up to, if no one can guide them otherwise. The ending is a complete surprise.
—Ruby Hollyberry

I think I understood it this time!The Dubious Hills are a place in which there is no doubt; a wizard or wizards, sometime in the past, seem to have decided that doubt is what leads to conflict which leads to people getting killed. Avoiding doubt means that people have to absolutely Know whatever it is they know, and thus knowledge is divided into different functional groups and parcelled out amongst the members of a community. The heroine of the book, Arry, Knows pain; she feels it when other people are experiencing it and helpfully tells them what to do in order to feel better, whether it's drinking some tea or going and talking to her uncle who Knows medicine. The community works, and works well; people rely upon their own knowledge for a small slice of the world, and trust everyone else to keep them straight on the other slices. Arry's life isn't perfect -- her parents disappeared a while back, leaving her to raise her two younger siblings without either knowledge or life experience to guide her -- but she's content enough.Then, of course, things change. In some ways there wouldn't be a novel otherwise. But the changes, the challenges, aren't why I liked the book, although they were interesting and unexpected; I like the ordinariness of it, the details of life in an unusual functional community, and I liked Arry a lot. A lot of the book is about thought and knowledge, experience and doubt, what it means to trust another person and what to do when that trust may be misplaced. It's a very talky book, a very thinky book, and not one to read in a hurry; I suggest a warm chair, a nice cup of tea, and a long afternoon to think about the ramifications of the cosmology Dean has set up.I think I actually like this one more than Juniper, Gentian & Rosemary, although that may be because the ending of JG&R continues to dismay me.
—Cera

Beyond question, one of the strangest fantasy novels I've ever read that was still good. In the Dubious Hills, everyone has one specialty of knowledge -- and no one knows anything outside his or her speciality. For example, if your speciality is plantlife, then you know without being taught and with absolute certainty about the properties and uses of plants. But having that kind of inborn certainty about one thing makes you unsure of everything else. So you are aware that fire will burn you if you touch it, because the person who knows has explained this to you, but you don't feel you really know it. The slow pacing in this reminds me of a drawing-room novel. There's a lot of visiting and discussing with other characters as the heroine, Arry, tries to solve the mystery of her parents' disappearance. If you need quick action (or any action), give it a miss, but if you like a lot of conversation between sensible people -- oh man I am making this sound duller than it is, sorry -- then give it a try."According to Halver, today was the first day of May in the four-hundredth year since doubt descended. According to Wim, it was the second hour after dawn. But since dawn in its wandering way moved about, back and forth over the same small span of hours like a child looking for a dropped button, some of the leisured scholars at Heathwill Library (according to Mally they were leisured, according to Halver they were scholars, according to Sune there was indeed a structure called Heathwill Library) had named all the hours of the day from their own heads without regard to the shifting of the sun."
—Kris Larson

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