Welcome, Anonymous Guest! Forum :: Downloads :: Links :: Trivia :: Bookmark

Terry Brooks Review: The Gypsy Morph (The Genesis of Shannara, Book 3)

Terry Brooks won instant acclaim with his phenomenal New York Times bestseller The Sword of Shannara. Its sequels earned Brooks legendary status. Then his darkly enthralling The Word and the Void trilogy revealed new depths and vistas to his mastery of epic fantasy. Armageddon?s Children and The Elves of Cintra took Brooks?s remarkable mythos to a breathtaking new level by delving deep into the history of Shannara. And now, The Gypsy Morph rounds out?with an adventure of unforgettably imaginative scope?the first phase of a new chapter in this classic series.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 06:53 PM
Read more about The Gypsy Morph (The Genesis of Shannara, Book 3) (255 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Elves of Cintra (Genesis of Shannara, Book 2)

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.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 06:50 PM
Read more about The Elves of Cintra (Genesis of Shannara, Book 2) (101 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Armageddon's Children (The Genesis of Shannara, Book 1)

In a postapocalyptic America, legions of demons and mutants known as "once-men" roam the landscape. Two teens, Logan Tom and Angel Perez, are the last surviving Knights of the Word, and may be humanity's last hope against the forces of darkness. Although the characters here are sketchily drawn, and many of the postapocalyptic tropes Brooks employs are either overly familiar or not fully developed, Hill does an admirable job of breathing life into the story and characters. He skillfully gives voice to a panoply of child characters, and alters his voice just enough to indicate their youth without becoming overly cutesy.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 06:47 PM
Read more about Armageddon's Children (The Genesis of Shannara, Book 1) (78 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Straken (High Druid of Shannara, Book 3)

In bestseller Brooks's satisfactory conclusion to his High Druid of Shannara trilogy (after 2004's Tanequil), young Pen Ohmsford retrieves the "darkwand," whose magic will allow him to enter the Forbidding and find his aunt Grianne Ohmsford, the Ard Rhys of the lawful Druids and the Straken queen. Meanwhile, though the elven army has been defeated, Pied Sanderling leads a desperate (and well-depicted) commando-style operation to destroy a secret superweapon of the Federation. Pen's parents are simply trying to find their son.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 01:05 AM
Read more about Straken (High Druid of Shannara, Book 3) (58 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Tanequil (High Druid of Shannara, Book 2)

War threatens the Four Lands, and Shannara's only hope lies in Penderrin Ohmsford, but it's a dreadfully slim hope. To save his world, Pen must restore his aunt, the former Ilse Witch, to her rightful position as High Druid of Shannara. But first Pen must free his aunt Grianne from the Forbidding: the world of the demons. To have the slightest chance of freeing her, he must find the mystical tree called the Tanequil, and somehow craft a talisman from its wood. But Shadea a'Ru, the treacherous usurper of his aunt's position, will do anything to stop Pen--and she has already captured Pen's parents and forced them to reveal their son's whereabouts. Sen Dunsidan, the monstrous Prime Minister of the Federation, has armed his greatest airship with a horrible new weapon. And Pen is just a boy, accompanied on his dangerous quest by only a Dwarf, a young Elf, and a blind Rover girl.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 01:03 AM
Read more about Tanequil (High Druid of Shannara, Book 2) (89 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Jarka Ruus (High Druid of Shannara, Book 1)

With Jarka Ruus Terry Brooks embarks on yet another journey with the legendary Ohmsford family. Beginning 20 years after the conclusion of the The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, the High Druid of Paranor Grianne Ohmsford finds herself struggling to unite the druids amid political morass risen from her prior history as the dreaded Ilse Witch. Her enemies' schemes come to fruition quickly and she is banished behind the wall of the Forbidding, the anti-demon security feature that collapsed so spectacularly in the magnificent Elfstones of Shannara. Her fate falls in the lap of the youngest Ohmsford, Penderrin, who unlike his Aunt Grianne and his parents is without the gift of magic. Pen along with Khyber and her uncle, the Elven Prince Ahren Elessedil, learn they must jump through the usual Brooks' hoops to unlock the door of the Forbidding and free Grianne.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 01:00 AM
Read more about Jarka Ruus (High Druid of Shannara, Book 1) (84 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Morgawr (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 3)

This last installment of the Voyage of the Jerle Shannara trilogy, which chronicles the exploits of the remaining adventurers who set out in Ilse Witch (2000) and staggered through the tribulations of Antrax (2001), may not be up to the standard of bestseller Brooks's early work (Sword of Shannara, etc.), but it proves once again that he puts out books that sell because of their quality, not just because of his name on the cover.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:58 AM
Read more about Morgawr (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 3) (195 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Antrax (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 2)

Antrax is the second book in the Voyage of Jerle Shannara trilogy, part of an epic started by famed fantasy writer Terry Brooks more than two decades ago with The Sword of Shannara. In this installment, we join the Druid Walker Boh and his companions in the search for Antrax--a powerful and malevolent technological guardian. Walker believes Antrax's magic is potent enough to help restore the Druid council to the Four lands, a struggle that has consumed his life. But while the unlikely heroes journey in the Jerle Shannara across the Blue Divide to the city of Castledown, the Druid's archnemesis--the Ilse Witch--and her band of Mwellrets closely follow in an airship of their own. The race is on, and the prize is the power of Antrax. Meanwhile, Bek Rowe discovers that his destiny is inextricably linked with the Ilse Witch herself.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:56 AM
Read more about Antrax (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 2) (54 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Ilse Witch (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 1)

Terry Brooks's new Shannara epic, The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, kicks off its first volume, Ilse Witch, with the discovery of a mad elf drifting on wreckage miles out at sea with his tongue and eyes removed and a map secreted among his possessions. The elf is revealed to be a lost prince who set out decades earlier to find old magics on another continent. Walker Boh, the Druid we last saw in The Talismans of Shannara, persuades the Elf King that both vengeance and prudence dictate a second expedition and assembles the usual crew of talented misfits to travel by airship into unknown territory. The forces of evil are on their way as well--the shadowy figure known as the Ilse Witch and the lizard-like mercenaries forced on her by her untrustworthy ally, the Morgawr, are closing in, with acquisition and murder in their hearts.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:54 AM
Read more about Ilse Witch (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 1) (69 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Angel Fire East (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 3)

Angel Fire East marks the close of Terry Brooks's Nest Freemark-John Ross saga, which began with 1997's Running with the Demon. After a long layover in Seattle for the middle book, Knight of the Word, the fantasy-meets-modernity action returns to Nest's native Hopewell, where once again Nest and John must face off against the Void, this time in the form of ancient demon Findo Gask, who favors a black-clad evil preacher getup for his menacing needs.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:48 AM
Read more about Angel Fire East (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 3) (212 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: A Knight of the Word (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 2)

John Ross, the tortured, conflicted Knight of the Word from Terry Brooks's Running with the Demon, finally gets a good night's sleep in the sequel. He buys this moment's peace at the cost of his sacred oath to be a champion of the Word, renouncing that pledge after failing to prevent the slaughter of a group of schoolchildren. Duty and destiny are difficult to elude, though, and soon his former charge Nest Freemark, now a college student and Olympic hopeful, arrives to warn him of his imminent destruction, or, worse, his unwitting fall into the service of the Void.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:45 AM
Read more about A Knight of the Word (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 2) (119 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Running With the Demon (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 1)

Terry Brooks's Running with the Demon is billed as "A Novel of Good and Evil," but he could've called it "A Novel of Here and Now." The fantasy master behind the Shannara series switches his focus from neo-Tolkien jungles to the woebegone steel town of Hopewell, Illinois. Though Illinois teenager Nest Freemark (where does he get these names?) looks like your average kid, she spends her free time in the woods asking her 6-inch pal Pick for advice in dodging the Demon and his creepy Feeders, spirits who gobble the souls of humans. Nest is also being tailed by John Ross, a shining Knight of the Word who wants to keep her from the Feeders' jaws.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:42 AM
Read more about Running With the Demon (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 1) (229 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: First King of Shannara, Shannara Trilogy Prequel

You can't find the Four Lands on any map of J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle Earth; but, given all the elves, dwarves, warlocks, trolls and gnomes that run rampant in the setting of Brooks's many Shannara novels (The Talismans of Shannara, etc.), readers can be forgiven for trying.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:37 AM
Read more about First King of Shannara, Shannara Trilogy Prequel (175 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Talismans of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara

Having fulfilled the quests imposed upon them by the shade of the druid Allanon, the children of Shannara must now attempt to use their newfound powers and allies to defeat the Shadowen who are ravaging the Four Lands. Drawing together the threads of the three previous series titles, Brooks orchestrates an exciting, though predictable, conclusion to his second Shannara series.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:26 AM
Read more about The Talismans of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara (31 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Elf Queen of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara

Finely tuned and occasionally elegiac, this third volume of Brooks's projected Heritage of Shannara tetralogy follows Wren Ohmsford in her search for the last of the Elves, part of the quest set for her by the shade of the Druid Allanon as her role in saving the world from destruction by the mysterious Shadowen. Wren and her nonspeaking, telepathic Rover mentor Garth find the Elves in their city of Arborlon threatened by monsters they created themselves in an attempt to revive their ancient magic.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:21 AM
Read more about The Elf Queen of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara (117 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Druid of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara

The second installment of Brooks's new series, after The Scions of Shannara , follows Walker Boh as he reluctantly seeks the Black Elfstone, needed to bring back vanished Paranor, a quest laid on him by the shade of the Druid Allanon as part of the effort to save the Four Lands from the wraith-like Shadowen. Walker is rescued from a Shadowen attack by the beautiful and tragic Quickening, daughter of the legendary King of the Silver River. Walker and Quickening, with Morgan Leah and Pe Ell, travel to the land of the Stone King, who has stolen the Elfstone and is determined to turn the world into his own element.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:16 AM
Read more about The Druid of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara (68 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Scions of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara

In the long-awaited continuation of the Shannara fantasy trilogy (Ballantine), Brooks takes readers 300 years beyond the death of Allanon. The Four Lands have sadly changed. The Federation rules with an iron fist, and the land is plagued by horrible creatures known as Shadowen. Par Ohmsford, descendent of the fabled Shea and possessor of the magic of the wishsong, along with two other Scions, is challenged to save the Four Lands.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:08 AM
Read more about The Scions of Shannara, Heritage of Shannara (95 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: Dark Wraith of Shannara, Graphic Novel

Possessing an awesome power he is only beginning to understand, young Jair Ohmsford must summon the devastating yet darkly seductive magic of the wishsong on a fateful mission to save his friends . . . and protect the future from the forces of evil.

Published: Jul 22, 2008 - 12:00 AM
Read more about Dark Wraith of Shannara, Graphic Novel (53 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Wishsong of Shannara

Horror stalked the Four Lands as the Ildatch, ancient source of evil, sent its ghastly Mord Wraiths to destroy Mankind. Only Druid Allanon held the magic power of wishsong that could make plants bloom instantly or turn trees from green to autumn gold. But she, too, was in mortal danger, and Ildatch waited for Brin to fall into his trap....

Published: Jul 19, 2005 - 03:05 PM
Read more about The Wishsong of Shannara (5 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Elfstones of Shannara

Ancient Evil threatens the Elves: The ancient tree created by long-lost Elven magic, is dying. When Wil Ohmsford is summoned to guard the Amberle on a perilous quest to gather a new seed for a new tree, he is faced with the Reaper, the most fearsome of all Demons. And Wil is without power to control them....

Published: Jul 19, 2005 - 02:56 PM
Read more about The Elfstones of Shannara (5 more words)



Terry Brooks Review: The Sword of Shannara

Living in peaceful Shady Vale, Shea Ohmsford knew little of the troubles that plagued the rest of the world. Then the giant, forbidding Allanon revaled that the supposedly dead Warlock Lord was plotting to destory the world. The sole weapon against this Power of Darkness was the Sword of Shannara, which could only be used by a true heir of Shannara - Shea being the last of the bloodline, upon whom all hope rested. Soon a Skull Bearer, dread minion of Evil, flew into the Vale, seeking to destroy Shea. To save the Vale, Shea fled, drawing the Skull Bearer after him....

Published: Jul 19, 2005 - 02:49 PM
Read more about The Sword of Shannara (124 more words)