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Extinction or survival? Brooks keeps readers hanging with the hair-raising second installment (after 2006's Armageddon's Children) of a trilogy blending his bestselling Shannara and Void series. A plague-ridden future Earth faces annihilation from Void demons, once-men and other monstrous creatures. What chance do innocent children have? A pretty good chance when Logan Tom and Angel Perez, the last Knights of the Word, have pledged to defend them. Hawk, a child suffused with unpredictable magic, also helps the Seattle street kids called the Ghosts, but when he's whisked away to the magical Gardens of Life to learn of his heroic destiny, the kids come to depend on Logan and Cat, a part-lizard girl. Playing another important role is Kirisin, a Cintra elf hiding in the Oregon woods, who finds the blue Elfstones that can lead him to the powerful, myth-shrouded Loden Stone. Celebrating his 30th year as a professional writer, Brooks provides another fascinating group of characters tackling harrowing and inspiring life and death issues. (Aug.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business Informationadair76
Posted February 7, 2012
every book terry brooks writes is a must read, and this book live up to that.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.In this bridge novel, Brooks ties together the apocalyptic world of the Knights of the Word Series to his distant future world of Shannara with all its magic. With the mysterious disappearance of Hawk, Logan Tom takes on the shepherding role of Owl's street family in response to The Lady's summons. Uncertain of his mission, he must decide how much faith to put into the missing magic of the Gypsy Morph. Meanwhile, Angel Perez is pursued by her nemesis demon to the Elven Home of Cintra where she finds herself embroiled in a dangerous search for the fabled Elfstones. But Cintra is not without its own taint of the Void. Angel Perez soon finds herself caught in a demonic plan she cannot understand. Brooks is a master at weaving storylines together, and here he doesn't disappoint. Connections are made in believable fashion while more mysteries are left to be answered in his concluding novel to this series THE GYPSY MORPH.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Sunrise907
Posted January 14, 2011
Great story line and follow on from the Armageddon's Children...plot flows and you are left wanting more!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.hobbietime
Posted May 23, 2010
I have loved everything I pick up by this writer and this was the same wonderful escape book. I found myself drawn into the book and almost feel like I lived it. Wonderful.
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Posted January 25, 2010
I thoroughly enjoyed this series. The story evolved through three books to a beautiful ending. I didn't want the story to end and now I wonder if any of the other books may be a continuation of this story? Weeks later the story still comes to mind and I may have to read it again! One word of advice...be sure you have all three books before you begin!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Brooks never fails to exceed my highest expectations! The story picks up right at the end of Armageddon's Children. By the ways of the King of the Silver River, Hawk begins to learn his destiny as the gypsy morph, and to discover his magic. He is charged with delivering thousands to a promised land without knowing how. He'll discover it along the way. Logan Tom struggles with traveling with the Ghosts. They come across increasingly life threatening dangers (high tech robots, Croaks, the plague...), one after the other, along their way to the Columbia River. There is a demon hiding in the midst of the elves, as they begin to discover the Elfstones and their magic. Angel is there to help them along the way, but is troubled with the what ifs of what happened to Helen Rice and the group.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.The entire series is great, but this book is the best so far. The action is nonstop and nothing ever quite works out like you think. This book is a must read.
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Posted February 5, 2008
Terry Brooks has been accused of being a writer of formula fiction: DO NOT BELIEVE THEM! For many years now, Terry Brooks has been one of my favorite writers. His Shannara series is absolutely fantastic, from beginning to end. I was a little iffy when this book and its immediate prequel first came out, but I am absolutely blown away by how effortlessly Brooks mends the two series together. Terry Brooks is the greatest writer of contemporary fantasy alive, period. Brooks is able to create a believable world with compelling characters, and his exploration of both scenic description and psychological attitudes is unmatched. If you are a fan, you will not, I guarantee you, be disappointed by his latest work!
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Posted January 31, 2008
i admit: i was rather skeptical when a new shannara trilogy was released. after all, how much more could there be to tell about the elves, druids, dwarves, gnomes, and humans? but i was VERY pleasantly surprised at how brilliantly this new tale unfolds! i would dare say some of the best shannara lore yet. i can't wait for the next one!
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Posted January 8, 2008
The first book was a great read and this one is even better. I am looking forward to reading the next in the series. I am sure it will be just as good!
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Posted September 1, 2007
If you have ever read a Terry Brooks book and enjoyed it. This book is for you. If you enjoy reading fantasy. This book is for you. I've read everything Terry Brooks has ever written. While I've always loved his work... this book goes above and beyond anything he's ever done. There were times where I was literally jumping from my seat with excitement... wiping a tear from my eye... or had my jaw dropped to the floor in utter shock. I won't leave anything remotely spoilerish in here. But this books is a MUST READ!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Five decades into the future earth is a terrible place to live as pollution is everywhere with plague being the norm. Most humans live inside fortifications never venturing outside the walls if they want to live as human predators are everywhere, but along with these ¿once-men¿ are powerfully magical evil Void demons. A few good souls remain with the strength to keep dwindling humanity safe, but these Knights of the Word are realistic as they know they are slowly losing the fight. Still they adhere to their pledge so that the remaining twosome Logan Tom and Angel Perez risk death or worse protect children. However, they are losing the battle of Seattle where they and a child with magic Hawk try to keep the Ghosts children of the street safe from the demons and their once-men minion. Hawk vanishes ending up in the mythical Garden of Life. However, there is no time to worry about the young practitioner as Logan and Angel split up in hopes of saving at least one group. Logan assisted by Cat the lizard girl lead one horde of kids out of the city Angel takes another group into hiding in the nearby woods where they meet Kirisina Cintra elf hiding there also. Hopes are slim, but Kirisin offers an idea, find the blue Elfstones that will lead him to the powerful Loden Stone. --- The second Word and Void fantasy thriller (see ARMAGEDDON'S CHILDREN) is a terrific bleak epic tale of an earth destroyed by human excesses especially the inability to see beyond the immediate bottom line of the ¿it¿s the economy stupid¿ philosophy. The post-apocalyptic world seems genuine even with magic working as the audience will accept Terry Brooks¿ theory that we of today killed the earth. Thus in this nightmarish future, readers quickly understand the courage of Logan and Angel, who could easily walk away to a safer nicer lifestyle. --- Harriet Klausner
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Overview
BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Terry Brooks's The Measure of the Magic.With his groundbreaking New York Times bestseller The Sword of Shannara and its acclaimed sequels, Terry Brooks brought a new audience to epic fantasy. Then he gave the genre a darkly compelling contemporary twist in his trilogy of the Word and the Void. Last year, in Armageddon’s Children, Brooks undertook the stunning chronicle that united two unique worlds. Now that story of clashing forces of darkness and light, of Shannara’s beginnings and the human race’s possible end, marches forward into...