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real6
23-10-2009, 11:50 PM
Girl found in NY claims no memory of name, home, family

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/10/23/teen.jane.doe/index.html

At least she has imagination ;)



NEW YORK (CNN) -- Authorities are seeking the public's assistance in identifying a teenage girl who mysteriously turned up in Manhattan two weeks ago, claiming to have no memory of her family, her home -- or even her own name.
The teen has recalled an excerpt from the fantasy novel "Fool's Fate" by Robin Hobb.

The teen has recalled an excerpt from the fantasy novel "Fool's Fate" by Robin Hobb.

"I just want to know who I am," the girl says in a statement released by the New York City Administration for Children's Services. The teen, who is being referred to as Jane Doe, continues, "I want to know who I am and what happened to me."

The Caucasian young woman, described by New York ACS as "very soft-spoken," is 5 feet, 6 inches tall, light-skinned, with short, straight, cropped blond hair and blue eyes. Doctors are estimating her age to be between 14 and 17.

ACS Commissioner John B. Mattingly appealed to the public in a statement, "asking anyone who may know this young woman to help us locate her family as quickly as possible, so we can safely reunite her with those who love her."

The girl was found in midtown Manhattan around 12:30 a.m. October 9 outside the Covenant House youth shelter, although the organization tells CNN that she was not a resident at the time and did not appear as if she intended to seek refuge at the facility.

According to its Web site, with nearly 7,000 youths seeking shelter per year, "Covenant House New York is the nation's largest adolescent care agency serving homeless, runaway and at-risk youth."

A security guard for the shelter noticed the girl walking around on the sidewalk near Covenant House and approached her. Finding her unresponsive, he called the New York City Police Department.
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Police officers interviewed the young woman, but it became clear that she couldn't provide authorities with any information about herself. The NYPD said she was wearing military green camouflage pants, a black shirt and a pair of black sneakers when she was discovered.

Children's Services says the girl recently wrote down the name "Amber" and has responded to it on one occasion, but she has no idea whether it's her name.

On another occasion, she is said to have recalled certain words, which turned out to be an excerpt from the fantasy novel "Fool's Fate" by Robin Hobb. The girl is also apparently writing a fantasy story of her own that features a heroine named Rian "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasy kingdom," the young woman said.

While the girl is confused and her story remains vague, Mattingly said, "she is safe with us, and we are doing all we can to help her, but she needs to find her family."

She is apparently reviewing materials for a high school GED exam, saying that she is able to do the math but has no recollection of studying the history and science portions. However, according to the Children's Services statement, the young woman "can easily retain the information."

New York City Administration for Children's Services and police are asking anyone with information about the young woman or her family to contact the NYPD Missing Persons Squad at 212-694-7781 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS.

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 12:51 AM
"The girl is also apparently writing a fantasy story of her own that features a heroine named Rian "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasy kingdom," the young woman said."

That line grabs my attention. I've read and re-read this and hmm something dodgy.

firstlook
24-10-2009, 12:55 AM
"The girl is also apparently writing a fantasy story of her own that features a heroine named Rian "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasy kingdom," the young woman said."

That line grabs my attention. I've read and re-read this and hmm something dodgy.

Perhaps a description of life on a base mixed in with advanced technology?

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 12:57 AM
Perhaps a description of life on a base mixed in with advanced technology?

hmm, dunno
heroine named Rian[Iran] "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasy kingdom
:confused:

firstlook
24-10-2009, 01:02 AM
hmm, dunno
heroine named Rian[Iran] "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasy kingdom
:confused:

yep, that too. :confused: probably will never read the rest of the story she is writing.

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 01:03 AM
hmm, dunno
heroine named Rian[Iran] "who's been raised by the commander of the guard post on the edge of a fantasykingdom
:confused:


in fact,

heroin Afghanistan, Iran. W.H.O.'s raised command of the guardpost.

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 01:04 AM
yep, that too. :confused: probably will never read the rest of the story she is writing.

if there even is such a person ;)

firstlook
24-10-2009, 01:06 AM
if there even is such a person ;)

The article is fake.;) gotcha ya.:)

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 01:21 AM
lol so I had to go look :cool:
found this review

Robin Hobb
Title Fool's Fate
Series Tawny Man, The
Volume 3
Year 2004
Genre Fantasy


Spoiler Alert!



Being an avid reader such as I am, I had never expected The Farseer Trilogy and The Tawny Man to compare to many of the other novels I've read, never mind engage me more than any of them. After having read them, I feel now as much a part of that world as I do the real world, and I prefer the former! The talent Robin Hobb possesses is unquestionably brilliant and I would recommend her work in a heartbeat.

Fool's Fate, for the most part, is a work of genius. My only reservation about it is the ending, but we'll get to that later. As the novel progresses, you fall even deeper into that world, it drags you in and you become addicted, much like the Skill river! I personally felt, that although parts of the book are quite slow, it is the beauty of the detail that makes it so incredible. Perhaps it is even the detail building up that allows you to find a deeper level of emotion in the more memorable parts. I, for one, felt the death of the Fool almost as keenly as FitzChivalry himself. And when he was brought back, I knew that joy not just as a happiness when a book takes a turn you wanted it to, but as personally as if I had known and loved the Fool myself. That is the power of Robin Hobb's writing, and it isn't to be underestimated.

So although this book touched me deeply and has given me a strange type of wisdom, the ending just didn't fit, not for me at least. I can see why many people were happy to have Fitz and Molly find each other again, but it grated on me. He had come too far from the boy who loved her, that sixteen years apart had changed him in many ways and it didn't seem plausible that they could come back from that. I would have liked for them to find peace with each other, but as people who had settled their past but knew they had come too long a way from who they had been.

As for the Fool and Fitz, I could see how that was going to turn out, and I hated it. I felt the author had made a grievous mistake in how she ended their relationship after having been through so much together. I had hoped, though I knew different, that if they had to part they would at least have a resolution, not Fitz missing the Fool's trip to Buckkeep by a week or so. Naturally I would have much preferred that they didn't part at all. This is the main reason I didn't give the novel a higher rating.

Another reason the rating suffered was the way that Fitz was not written true to his character. He seemed to only care about Burrich's death in how he felt it would affect him and Molly. Not only that, but the sheer passivity and lack of emotion he felt in knowing he had missed the Fool's trip to Buckkeep and would never see him again, was horrifying. It seems to me that after a story of this length has started to be written, it takes on a life of it's own, and the author doesn't so much devise it anymore as the story tells itself through the author's hands, and this felt like a sort of betrayal of that story, a betrayal of the character we've come to know as well as we know ourselves. I can only hope that she'll fix it with another book, though I doubt it.

Despite the ending, it's still a wonderful and beautiful story that I would recommend to anyone, fantasy lover or not. It's more a story of real people living their lives, in a world not so different from ours, than the magic and surrealism of it. It carries wisdom in it's words that everyone should have.


In that last dance of chances
I shall partner you no more.
I shall watch another turn you
As you move across the floor.

In that last dance of chances
When I bid your life good-bye
I will hope she treats you kindly.
I will hope you learn to fly.

In that last dance of chances
When I know you'll not be mine
I will let you go with longing
And the hope that you'll be fine.

In that last dance of chances
We shall know each other's minds.
We shall part with our regrets
When the tie no longer binds.

redskywalker
24-10-2009, 01:23 AM
Amazon.com Review
Fool's Fate is the third book of Robin Hobb's Tawny Man trilogy, and the ninth and concluding volume of the Fitzchivalry Farseer saga, one of the best high-fantasy series of the turn of the millennium. Fitz is the bastard son of the royal family of the Six Duchies, which he serves as assassin, guardsman, and Skill-magician. Fitz also serves the White Prophet as "Catalyst," the unique person who may enable the White Prophet to change human destiny for the better. In Fool's Fate, Fitz must accompany his kinsman, Prince Dutiful Farseer, to a distant northern island, where the prince must slay the world's last male dragon to win the hand of the Out Islands princess Elliania, the woman he loves. However, not even Elliania wants the dragon dead; why, then, does she require Dutiful to kill Icefyre? Are darker forces manipulating Elliania? Even worse, if Icefyre dies, the White Prophet foresees not only his own death, but a grim future for humankind. The prophet's only hope of changing the future is his Catalyst. --Cynthia Ward --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

firstlook
24-10-2009, 01:34 AM
[B]


In that last dance of chances
I shall partner you no more.
I shall watch another turn you
As you move across the floor.

In that last dance of chances
When I bid your life good-bye
I will hope she treats you kindly.
I will hope you learn to fly.

In that last dance of chances
When I know you'll not be mine
I will let you go with longing
And the hope that you'll be fine.

In that last dance of chances
We shall know each other's minds.
We shall part with our regrets
When the tie no longer binds.[/I]

Thats very nice.:) Interesting plot. I read a fantasy book once. "Through the Ice" by peirces compton, I think. Anyways very cool.:D

supertzar
24-10-2009, 01:59 AM
I knew an eighteen year old girl who had no memory of her past.

ivorywire
24-10-2009, 03:34 AM
She is living the dream.

dude111
24-10-2009, 03:49 AM
I hope she somehow remembers something,poor girl........

It was nice of the shelter to take her in :)

skyfish
24-10-2009, 02:09 PM
I have read all of Robin Hobb's books and the character 'Amber' appears in her books The Liveship Trilogy. Incidentally, Amber is the same character as the Fool in the Tawny Man and Farseer trilogies. She/he is a white prophet of indeterminate gender who gradually changes colour from white through to amber and tawny and who has the gift of precognition, with the fate of the world in his/her hands.

1eyeopen
24-10-2009, 03:55 PM
There was a documentary I saw about 3 years ago on channel 4 about a guy who "woke up" on a train in new york with no memory of his life at all. I forget his name now but eventualy he was recognised and met up with his old friends but couldn't get on with them or even remember them.