Pegasus

· Penguin
3.9
29 reviews
Ebook
400
Pages

About this ebook

Because she was a princess, she had a Pegasus…

Princess Sylviianel has always known that on her twelfth birthday she too would be bound to her own Pegasus. All members of the royal family have been thus bound since the Alliance was made almost a thousand years ago; the binding system was created to strengthen the Alliance, because humans and pegasi can only communicate formally, through specially trained Speaker magicians. Sylvi is accustomed to seeing pegasi every day at the palace, but she still finds the idea of her binding very daunting. The official phrase is that your pegasus is your “Excellent Friend.” But how can you be friends with someone you can’t talk to?

But everything is different for Sylvi and Ebon from the moment they meet at her binding—when they discover they can talk to each other. They form so close a bond that it becomes a threat to the status quo—and possibly to the future safety of their two nations. For some of the magicians believe there is a reason humans and pegasi should not fully understand each other…

Ratings and reviews

3.9
29 reviews
A Google user
November 23, 2010
This is part one of two. I wish that someone had told me that before I finished and wondered why the story just cut off like that. I was really enjoying it up to that point; it's a typically Robin McKinley fairy tale and she sucks you right into the story and into the world that she's created. But it does end quite suddenly...
Ysolina Hartzell
March 22, 2017
Confused Okay so I read the book and the book ended on where ebon just disappeared like a war was about to happen and her father said you habe to stop seeing ebon and when she turned around to tell ebon i guess one last good bye he was gone im very confused like is that it
4 people found this review helpful
lost night
May 3, 2018
I've always enjoyed robin's books, and this pulled me in just like The Hero and The Crown!

About the author

Robin McKinley has won various awards and citations for her writing, including the Newbery Medal for The Hero and the Crown and a Newbery Honor for The Blue Sword. Her other books include Sunshine; the New York Times bestseller Spindle's End; two novel-length retellings of the fairy tale Beauty and the Beast, Beauty and Rose Daughter; and a retelling of the Robin Hood legend, The Outlaws of Sherwood. She lives with her husband, the English writer Peter Dickinson.

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