REVIEW

Book Review: Dream Angus by Alexander McCall Smith

Written by Richard Marcus
Published December 20, 2006

Myths are the tales that existed long before the stories of once-upon-a-time took place. They are the stories that explained the unexplainable and gave us the means to comprehend the world around us in terms that were relevant to our awareness. As Christianity, Islam, Judea, Hinduism, Shinto, and Buddhism all explain the world to us today, Zeus, Odin, Thor, Isis, Ra, The Dagda, Anansi, Sky Woman, Coyote, and Bran explained, and still do for some people, the world in eons gone by.

Now they only exist as pleasant stories, quaint reminders of ancient civilizations and a means of separating our modern monotheistic culture from the primitive times of the past. But there is something about them, their means of explaining things that our religions don't dwell on, or perhaps the essence lies in their magical qualities that can still inspire flights of fancy.

The Myths series of books was created to celebrate that fact with authors from all over the world writing about a mythological being of their choice. The stories created are either tales associated with the god/goddess or the influence of their attributes in contemporary life. In Dream Angus author Alexander McCall Smith has taken the Celtic god of dreams and love and interwoven his story with modern tales of dreams, love, and dreams touched by love.
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Dreams are the places where our hidden secrets come to life. They can be dark and fearful experiences that shake up our world, leaving us agitated and afraid. The dreams that Angus leaves us with may not be the most frightening, but dealing with love as they do can make them as unsettling as any nightmare. But instead of turning this into an exercise in the macabre or some sort of psychological study, he creates a tone that carries the same bittersweet wonder and joy of the myth.

Angus is the illegitimate son of the head of the Celtic gods, The Dagda (referred to in this story as just plain Dagda). Like Zeus, Dagda has a wandering eye for women, and the river spirit Boann catches his eye one day and he proceeds to set up a successful seduction. From the moment Angus is born it is obvious that he is a gentle spirit and will be universally loved. Songbirds circle his head to serenade him to sleep as he rocks in his cradle, and the wildest hunting dog calms when in his presence.
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Dagda steals Angus away from his mother when he is still an infant. Shortly after Angus comes to live with him he dreams of a day when his son will supplant him on the throne and cast him away. The following day Angus is sent to live with one of his stepbrothers as Dagda hopes that this will prevent his dream from coming to pass. (We all know what happens in those instances don't we, how the thing we do to prevent something actually causes our worst fears to be realized.)

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Book Review: Dream Angus by Alexander McCall Smith
Published: December 20, 2006
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Spirituality, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: Fantasy, Books: Classics
Writer: Richard Marcus
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#1 — December 21, 2006 @ 16:39PM — Natalie Bennett [URL]

This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!

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