Book Review: “Shannara” Trilogy and “The Heritage of Shannara” by Terry Brooks
Shannara Trilogy:
“The Sword of Shannara”
“The Elfstones of Shannara”
“The Wishsong of Shannara”
The Heritage of Shannara:
“The Scions of Shannara”
“The Druid of Shannara”
“The Elf Queen of Shannara”
“The Talismans of Shannara”
Finally, I have finished reading the
original Sword of Shannara Trilogy and the followup quadrilogy, “The
Heritage of Shannara”. There is a story behind how I was
introduced to these novels by Terry Brooks. When I was in 4th
grade or so, I was really into the Goosebumps books. I would read
really fast, often reading a whole book in a single night. My aunt
noticed I read really fast and recommended I read the Shannara books,
of which she had the first 7 volumes. At this time, these were the
largest books I had ever tried to read, with the first book “The
Sword of Shannara” being over 700 pages. It took me a long time to
read the first book, and I found that I often would read 20 pages and
not remember anything that had happened in them, and have to
backtrack to concentrate on them. My reading comprehension skills
were very poor for a long time. But these books challenged me,
excited, and inspired me. I read the first three books, doing a book
report on the second one, and my favorite of the series, “The
Elfstones of Shannara” for an 8th grade English paper.
Years later, about a few years ago, I decided to read them again and
try to break into the followup four book series “The Heritage of
Shannara”. I got into the second volume of this series “The
Druid of Shannara” and put it down, having lots of other reading to
do. Once again, a year or so later, I picked them back up, rereading
from the beginning and finally tonight, finishing the last book of
those I am reviewing here.
The Shannara series is a fantasy
series, being something like Tolkien's “Lord of the Rings”,
including elves, dwarves, magic, demons, and swordfighting. While I
enjoy Terry Brooks fantasy world, I find that Tolkien is far better.
But Brooks is very good to read, in my view. I know some people who
do not like his writing, but I enjoy it. The plot is essentially
about the powers of magic, and the use or misuse of magic. That is
the theme that runs throughout the series. Essentially, an order of
Druids who practice and develop magical powers, is split, where one
druid seeks to much power and is corrupted with the power they use
and try to destroy the world and rule it. It is somewhat like the
Darth Vader and Sith storyline from Star Wars, but this is not an
interstellar galactic empire, but a world-bound army where there is
no advanced technology, mostly medieval level society and there is
magic.
But the series follows the adventures
of members of a certain family, the Ohmsfords, who are partially
descended from the race of Elves which has power of magic. Each
volume find the Four Lands of Shannara threatened by some kind of
evil, demonic, destructive force or character, and the druid Allanon
charges a certain descendent of the Ohmsford, to go on a quest to
stop this danger. Often the characters bounce all over the world, of
which there is a map at the beginning of each novel, kind of like
Lord of the Rings, but totally new, seeking out magical items and
weapons and recruiting help along the way as the ever doubtful
protaganists seek to bring peace and harmony back into the threatened
land of Shannara.
Terry Brooks is someone whom I find to
be very eloquent in his descriptions of setting, characters, and
action. Especially in “The Elfstones of Shannara”, his portrayal
and descriptions of battle scenes are very exciting, fast paced and
visually imaginative. Whenever he described the setting or scenery
or action sequences, I have a very vivid idea in my mind of what the
scene looks like, what the characters are doing, and the
psychological state of the characters are. The characters are all
believable. There is a great variety of characters, and they are
easily recongizeable and distinguishable. Many of the characters are
very likeable, and there were feelings of devastation in my soul when
certain very important characters are suddenly slain or die,
sacrificing themselves to save others and keep the quest going until
it is finished. There are some interesting plot twist, and the lore
and background story behind the state of the world and the battle
between the good magic and lust for power through destructive magic
is intriguing.
One thing I would like to gladly note
is that there is a “Shannara” TV series in production, which will
be aired on MTV. The first season is going to cover the second book
“The Elfstones of Shannara”, which I mentioned before, is my
favorite in the series. I expect this will be very good, and I hope
you obtain copies of these books, and enjoy them very much. I liked
it, I hope you like it. You might not, but at least give the first
book a try, and you'll get a good idea soon of whether you like the
book or the author or not. The list at the beginning of this review
is the order in which the books should be read, just so you know.
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