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Cover of Lord of Cragsclaw

Lord of Cragsclaw

Bill Fawcett;Neil Randall (1989)

SubgenreHigh Fantasy
Age groupYA 12-17
Content ratingPG-13
Pages (Standard (250-400))
SeriesGuardians of the Three #1
Setting
CSM age13
Goodreads3.05

Content levels

ViolenceModerate
Sexual contentNone
LanguageMild

Trigger warnings

WarViolence

Hero archetypes

Outcast / Loner

Heroine archetypes

Royalty / Princess

Synopsis

For years the land of Ar has lived at peace. Here the catlike mrem rule by duty and honor. Now, from the East, their legendary enemies have risen again, and only the outcast, dark-furred Talwe, Princess Sruss and the Council of the Three have the magic to battle the Eastern Lords' evil sorcery.

Is Lord of Cragsclaw appropriate for my child?

Suitable for most readers 13 and up.

This high fantasy features anthropomorphic cat-like warriors (mrem) battling evil sorcery with moderate fantasy violence typical of adventure quests. No sexual content or strong language, appropriate for teen readers who enjoy classic secondary-world fantasy.

What to know going in

This book has moderate violence, no sexual content, and mild language. Content notes include war and violence.

Who'll love this

Teen readers who love unique fantasy worlds with animal-like heroes, magic battles, and classic good-versus-evil quests will enjoy following the outcast warrior and princess.

Tags

Anthropomorphic FantasyCouncil FantasyQuest Fantasy