![]() A few weeks away from the book have provided me with the ability to look fondly on the decision, but it still hurt when I read it for the first time.ħ/10 It literally had me on the verge of tears, and bumped Brooks up in my estimation.ġ positive reader review(s) for The Elfstones of Shannara It literally had me on the verge of tears, and bumped Brooks up in my estimation for the courage it took to do it. ![]() One word of warning: if you are a romantic be prepared for a shock somewhere in the book. This book also suffers less of the Tolkien-esque comparisons, and so if you are intent upon not reading Sword of Shannara, you do not lose much in jumping straight into the fray with the Elfstones of Shannara. The siege of Arborlon is magnificent to read, especially as you pull for Ander to rise to the occasion and watch Stee Jans make a mockery of the demons. ![]() His characters draw you in and make you care, and even the elvish cannon fodder elicits sadness upon their demise. ![]() In this, Wil and Amberle's trek is nail biting, as you watch them run slowly out of time.Īs you would expect, book two is much better than book one. Learning from the fact that not everyone loved reading the trek made by the Fellowship of the Ring from Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, Brooks diverts us from Wil and Amberle's own trek through the wilderness by interposing the ever approaching doom of the lands. However I have come to respect the use of it now, and it serves Brooks well here. I thought it was nothing more than a plot device used to irritate me (I was nothing if not self-absorbed). When I was younger I used to find jumping between storylines frustrating. However not only does young Prince Ander have to face up to a father who looked more to his now lost older brother, as well as to an unstoppable force of demons lusting for elven blood, but he's got a demon or two running around inside Arborlon as well. Prince Ander Elessedil becomes our second protagonist, as he readies his people to rebuff the advancing demons from their city of Arborlon. However we are not entirely left at the mercy of a trek through the wilderness. They meet those who will help them, and those who will hinder them, and a few in between. The pair set out, accompanied by elves who are nothing short of cannon fodder to get Wil and Amberle to safety. Their mission is to bring healing to the Ellcrys so that the Forbidden will once again hold the demons. This time Wil Ohmsford, grandson to Shea Ohmsford, is recruited by Allanon to protect Amberle Elessedil, King Eventine's granddaughter. The magical Ellcrys tree is dying, and thus an ancient spell which was kept in check by this tree will soon break, allowing demons once banished return to the Four Lands. ![]() So in both respects, I was pleasantly surprised.įurthermore, this book takes on a different style of “quest” from book one, and splits the cast so well that even when Brooks does jump perspective, you are just as happy to continue on while still hoping to be returned soon.Īllanon once again enters the Four Lands in an attempt to save it from imminent destruction. Additionally, when I picked up book two I had no idea that we would be jumping down a generation. For Brooks, his story is generations long and will, eventually, span millennia.īook two was definitely my favorite of the original trilogy, in that while it was measurably predictable at points, it was predictable in a way that entertained me. More often than not, when a second book in a fantasy series is released, it is a direct continuation of book one. Maybe in an attempt to separate his work from comparisons to Lord of the Rings, Terry Brooks took a step I have rarely seen in a fantasy series in his second installment of the Shannara series, by letting time pass. ![]()
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