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Mountain Echoes

por C. E. Murphy

Series: The Walker Papers (8)

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24511108,502 (4.12)6
Shaman Joanne Walker returns to North Carolina to find her missing father and meet Aidan, the son she left behind long ago. But Aidan has become tainted by an evil reaching forward from the distant past. It will take everything Joanne has to pull the past apart and weave a better future--for her, her son, and the Appalachians.… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 10 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I enjoyed this book much more than the previous one taking place in Ireland. This had a true feel of homecoming to it, because this was the place Jo ran from, and these are the people. I loved, loved, loved her connecting with her father, her son, her son's mother, and her old friends, and I loved her doing it alongside Morrison. She's coming together now, faster than ever, into the person--shaman--she's meant to be. ( )
  tldegray | Sep 21, 2018 |
Not the best amongst the Walker Papers but entertaining ( )
  annarellix | Jan 31, 2018 |
Joanne is back at the Qualla and comes face to face with her 12 year old son Aidan. She was called back to help find her father and Aidan's biological father and fight the thing that is there. Morrison shows up and helps Walker with what is going on. This is the next to the last book in the series. At the end she's called back to Seattle by Gary. Gary has his own book that is out, hope the library gets it soon! ( )
  pnwbookgirl | Feb 7, 2016 |
Mountain Echoes follows Jo as she returns "home" to North Carolina on the heels of her adventures in Ireland. She reconnects with her father, high school friends (acquaintances? enemies?), and her son. As in each of the novels as we move forward, Jo is more in control of her power and herself than the last time we met. The battle against the "Master" continues, here, with a new type of attack. We have a lot more time travel and things start to make sense as the time lines come together. I wasn't a fan of No Dominion, but reading it before Mountain Echoes will make a big difference as you move through the last two books in this series. Overall, I thought this novel was stronger than the previous two in the series. There is a lot more action in this novel than in the early books and a lot more involvement with those not in the know when it comes to magic, etc. ( )
  BJ3568 | Sep 6, 2014 |
Joanne has barely had time to process what happened in Ireland when she receives news her father is missing. She quickly returns to North Carolina, to a place she hasn’t been since a child, to discover not only is her father missing, but so is the man who fathered her child.

He Master is there, seeking to tap into the devastating pain and loss suffered by the Native Americans to power evil beyond imagining; unless they can stop it.

But also there are the people Joanne long left behind, not all of whom are that willing to welcome her back, even if she has finally embraced her legacy of a shaman. There’s also Aida, the son she gave up at birth and a powerful shaman in his own right – and a source of both emotional and mystical turmoil.

Joanne has, in many ways, completely her journey of development in this book and the last book. Last book she confronted so many of the issues she had with her mother – and this book she does the same with her father and with Aidan, the son she gave up for adoption. It’s not easy, there’s some heavy emotional content there, but it’s handled in a very reasonable and mature level – no dramatic angst, not seething rage, no losing their sense of priorities or avoiding the actual plot and disaster they are facing. It also reflects Joanne’s personal growth – she has finally decided to put away her desire for an instruction manual – because she has been doing this for some time now and she’s been managing and achieving great things. Joanne acknowledges her own skill – her own mastery. When her dad does things differently, she accepts that they do things differently, not better or worse. When she does something her dad says is impossible, she doesn’t think she’s doing something wrong, she just knows she does something different from her dad.

Joanne has reached an excellent point where she is willing to learn from others, but not feel inferior for it and not feel like she has to do anything their way – while still being confident in her skills and her achievements and finally settling on the idea that she is strong, she can do things others cannot and there’s no problem with her doing just that. Even if it is unwise at times. It’s a wonderful development after books of denial, books of panic, books of her messing things up epicly through ignorance and confusion and now her finally reaching the end of that path. I love her growth

Not just with magic – but relationships as well, recognising her old problems, her old grudges, when she was often unfair or unthinking or how her perception was skewed. Through a more mature, wiser eye, Joanne looks back at herself and her old home and a fair whack of complex feelings about it

Along with that we have Joanne and Morrison, though I think we will find more in the next book, finally delving into some of the issues and insecurities he has, seeing more of his growing comfort with Joanne’s woo-woo and them really spending some time together and forging a stronger connection. I particularly liked the role that professional ethics played in keeping them apart – because while Joanne worked for Morrison the relationship was impossible and, in turn, that seemed to make Morrison try to keep some more distance between them and, perhaps, not experience the joy of Joanne’s powers as much as he did in this book. Because his relationship with Joanne – and her woo-woo – had to be professional he got all the creepy side of what Joanne could do, all the useful side, but not so much of the amazing, awe-inspiring side.

I still have a major problem with how the magic is written about in this series. It’s been a problem since the first book and though it’s got better, it has never gone away. We can get lost in the description, in following the action of this abstract magic and it can become confusing and get us very very lost. There’s a scene in this book where Joanne first confronts the big bad and it starts epic. It goes on for a while still epic. Then it’s still epic. Then I check my watch and the epic is wearing off, but the scene keeps going and they’re winning no losing no winning no… it goes on and on and then BANG people are dead. And I’m not exactly sure how or why or whether Joanne was awesome or awful or both.

Read More ( )
  FangsfortheFantasy | Jul 11, 2014 |
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for my father-in-law, Gary Lee

(why, yes, Joanne's Gary is named after him, in fact)
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I came home to North Carolina just shy of a decade after promising I'd never go back.
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Shaman Joanne Walker returns to North Carolina to find her missing father and meet Aidan, the son she left behind long ago. But Aidan has become tainted by an evil reaching forward from the distant past. It will take everything Joanne has to pull the past apart and weave a better future--for her, her son, and the Appalachians.

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