A gripping upper-middle-grade fantasy set in Bronze-Age Crete from
Nim's Island author Wendy Orr
The girl has had many selves in her short life. The first she remembers
is Aissa, the daughter of Mama and Dada, sister to Zufi who watched the
goats. Then the Bull King's raiders came, and Mama said, "Don't make a
sound till I come back." And when the villagers found her she was silent
as stone, because Mama never came back again.
So the villagers cursed her as back luck and made her No-Name, lowest of
the servants to the Lady, the island's priestess. But there were
whispers, as she grew, of another self: of the Lady's rejected first
daughter, born imperfect with two extra thumbs. The silent girl looks at
the scars on her wrists and wonders, but she has more pressing concerns.
The villagers blame her bad luck for the tribute the Bull King now
demands of them: two youths given each spring to dance with his bulls
and die for his god's glory. And the servants hate and fear the
unnatural way the animals all come to her. For Aissa, though, this bond
with creatures of fur and scale is the first clue in finding the true
self that no one else can give to her, or take away.
Wendy Orr, the author of Nim's Island, introduces a resourceful and
resilient heroine for slightly older readers. Inspired by an
archeological trip to the island of Crete, where frescoes show figures
leaping over the backs of bulls, Orr weaves an intriguing mythological
portrayal of the Bronze Age Minoan civilization. Lyrically written and
refreshingly unpredictable, Dragonfly Song suggests a fascinating
origin for the legend of the Minotaur and his dark tribute.