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enlarge | Author: Terry Brooks Publisher: Del Rey Category: Book
List Price: $13.95 Buy New: $7.44 You Save: $6.51 (47%)
New (34) Collectible (1) from $7.44
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 21007
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 208 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0345494628 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973 EAN: 9780345494627 ASIN: 0345494628
Publication Date: March 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW COPY, NO UGLY REMAINDER MARKS.
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| Customer Reviews:
Different, but still good June 16, 2008 If you are expecting this to be the same as one of Terry's other Shannara novels, you will probably be disappointed. This short graphic novel format is more geared towards a short story, almost like a long comic book. I think of them as something that I could read on the bus or subway on the way to work. I finished this one in less than an hour. It was a good story and I would be interested in seeing more.
I was nervous, but wrongly so - Great Venture! May 2, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I finished reading Dark Wraith a day or two ago. First let me say/acknowledge that I've been a Brooks fan for, wow, about 20 years now. I've read all of his books except two -- First King, which for some reason I just cannot get into -- and Elves of Cintra, which is on my reading list for the summer. Except for First King, I've thoroughly enjoyed them all (the movie adaptations are a little iffy, yes). Terry has a great way of creating worlds and characters that are very believable and accessible. Even though his genre is fantasy, his character's situations and dilemmas are universal which makes his books all that much stronger.
When Terry announced that there was going to be a Shannara graphic novel, I had mixed emotions. I read comics as a kid and have enjoyed some of the graphic novels out there. I'm not a graphic novel die hard by any means. I was worried that the graphic novelization of the Shannara world could taint it or corrupt it somehow. The world seems to be in a graphic novel loving frenzy these days and I'm sure that's part of the reason for the push at this time. I enjoyed the art from the Hildebrandts and I have the art compendium for Shannara. While it's fun to see artists' representations, it can sometimes hurt the imagination.
Still, I was excited to see a new story from the Shannara world. I was also excited to see the sense of movement and excitement visually presented.
As I dove into the pages of Dark Wraith, I was not disappointed. First, it contains a great welcome from Terry in the beginning as well as a great intro to the Shannara world to help make the story accessible to any new readers. It was a good overview since it's been many years since I read the first trilogy (something I plan to do again).
The story begins with Jair working to thwart the powers of darkness and finding a strange new power in the Wishsong (I'm going to try to leave out spoilers without being too vague). The power, like most of Brooks' magics, is powerful to the point of potential consumption and Jair promises his sister he won't use the Wishsong again because it is just too dangerous and she doesn't want to risk losing him to the magic.
The story continues in the same way many/most of the early Shannara books did, with Allanon appearing to give our hero a quest. Naturally, Jair accepts and the adventure begins. We meet up with characters familiar to us from other Shannara tales. It's cool to see how their personalities are slightly different in this time period due to more or less passage of time (depending on which book's version you're comparing them to). It's nice to see the characters progress and develop different traits through different adventures.
One part of the quest is fulfilled and the final portion remains. Jair pushes on to fulfill his quest and is presented with difficult morale choices of keeping his promise to his sistetr or succumbing to the call of the magic, hoping he's strong enough to withstand it's pull.
I would definitely recommend this book to lovers of the Shannara world and fans of fantasy and/or graphic novels. The story is engaging and the artwork is fabulous.
My main criticism is the seeming lack of length/depth. The story itself is only ~160 pages and it travels fairly quickly. I agree with the comments of the adaptor who said this could easily expand into something much larger. If a "picture is worth a thousand words", then we're probably still pretty close to a standard novel size, maybe still a bit shorter. So much of the struggle that goes on in Shannara books is internal to the characters, something that is difficult to bring into a graphic novel and still maintain the pacing created in this form. The adventure itself goes very quickly. The general pacing of the travel and the adventure is good, I just want more of it.
Again, I haven't read the original trilogy for a while, so I may be perhaps dwelling too much on the modern Brooks. I definitely recall that over the years, Terry's plotlines have become much more complex...intricate spiderwebs of motivations and subplots. I think I wanted to see more of that in this book. But that may have been a bit overwhelming for the graphic novel form and it may also be that this style is more true to the original Wishsong.
Overall: **** 4 out of 5 stars
Dark Wraith of Shannara April 24, 2008 3 out of 12 found this review helpful
Be advised this is "graphic novel" more akin to a comic book than to the regular books by Terry Brooks. It may be a great graphic novel but I was expecting one of his regular written novels in text and not one based mainly on illustrations. This is the first one from Terry Brooks for me and I returned it. I have read most all of his novels and he has been my favorite fictional author and I will continue to look forward to his regular "text" books in the future.
A Great Story In Any Medium April 24, 2008 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Ignore the reviews that say they didn't like it "because they thought it was a book." Graphic novels are a perfectly viable storytelling medium. I think no less of stories because they're told with words AND pictures.
Besides, the product description states very clearly "GRAPHIC NOVEL." If people can't read that much, they don't even have any business reading books in the first place.
Dark Wraith of Shannara April 19, 2008 1 out of 12 found this review helpful
I was disappointed with my purchase because it was in the illustrated comic format. I expected a more normal science fantasy novel. I also felt it was overpriced for its type, especially as I also paid for overseas postage. Patricia Bridge
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