Bloodfire Quest: The Dark Legacy of Shannara
Bloodfire Quest: The Dark Legacy of Shannara book cover

Bloodfire Quest: The Dark Legacy of Shannara

Hardcover – Deckle Edge, March 12, 2013

Price
$21.18
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Del Rey
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345523501
Dimensions
6.54 x 1.2 x 9.52 inches
Weight
1.35 pounds

Description

From Booklist *Starred Review* “She” selected Arling among all the Chosen to take the seedling to Bloodfire. However, in the face of this much-needed sacrifice, Arling ran away, turning her back on the peace and prosperity her land has known. For taking the seedling to Bloodfire will result in Arling’s death, a death that would come far too soon in such a young life. By running away, Arling guarantees the eventual fall of the Forbidding, the magical barriers that lock away dangerous and evil creatures. From the first pages to the harrowing ending, Bloodfire Quest, the second installment of Brooks’ newest trilogy, is a thrill ride that will leave readers wanting more. Librarians can only expect major demand from their sf fans, and this volume, paired with the first, might be just the right place to introduce new readers to this fine writer. High-Demand Backstory: For the first time in Brooks career, he will publish a novel every six months until the end of this new series; librarians need to get on the bandwagon and hang on as every new one appears. --Alison Downs Praise for Bloodfire Quest “Explodes from the first page . . . and the action doesn’t stop until the novel’s cliffhanger ending. . . . Intense and exhilarating . . . The author balances character development with intense action, and he has a gift for creating characters the reader cares about. Brooks is one of the best fantasy writers in the business, and Bloodfire Quest is better than its predecessor.”—Associated Press xa0 “Shannara fans will delight in Brooks’s sorcerous action, skilled characterizations, and rapid-fire storytelling twists.”— Publishers Weekly “Brooks mixes things up here with several sharp battle scenes, for which he brings his distinct talent, giving a true grandeur to clashes involving terrifying creatures and powerful magic. . . . A fine middle chapter to Brooks’ latest Shannara adventure.”— Kirkus Reviews “From the first pages to the harrowing ending, Bloodfire Quest . . . is a thrill ride that will leave readers wanting more. . . . This volume, paired with the first, might be just the right place to introduce new readers to this fine writer.”— Booklist (starred review) Praise for Terry Brooks “I can’t even begin to count how many of Terry Brooks’s books I’ve read (and reread) over the years. From Shannara to Landover, his work was a huge part of my childhood.”—Patrick Rothfuss, New York Times bestselling author of The Name of the Wind “Terry Brooks has been my constant companion over a lifetime of exploring my beloved fantasy genre. I say with all honesty I would not be writing epic fantasy today if not for Shannara. If Tolkien is the grandfather of modern fantasy, Terry Brooks is its favorite uncle.”—Peter V. Brett, New York Times bestselling author of The Desert Spear “Terry Brooks is a master of the craft and a trailblazer who established fantasy as a viable genre. Not only do I owe him for many hours of reading pleasure, I owe him my job. He is required reading.”—Brent Weeks, New York Times bestselling author of The Night Angel Trilogy Terry Brooks has thrilled readers for decades with his powers of imagination and storytelling. He is the author of more than thirty books, most of which have been New York Times bestsellers. He lives with his wife, Judine, in the Pacific Northwest. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1Arlingfant Elessedil sat frozen beneath the broad canopy of the Ellcrys, the words a whisper echoing in her mind.Child, I have need of you.Had she actually heard that, or only imagined it? Whose voice was she hearing? Her eyes were still closed, and her presence in the Gardens of Life carried little more impact than the space she occupied and the soft sound of her breathing. Sunrise approached, bringing the new day to life. The world was mostly asleep, and the Elves of Arborlon were just beginning to stir. Dreams still held sway.She felt again the soft touch and opened her eyes to find its source. A slender silver branch adorned with scarlet leaves rested gently upon her shoulder. It moved slightly, a feather’s touch she could feel through her clothing, strange and reassuring.–xadChild, do you hear me–xadHeart hammering, a flush of fear and expectation rushing through her, Arling rose to her knees to face the ancient tree, rocking back on her heels and looking up. She was aware of the branch that lay across her shoulder moving with her, maintaining contact as she shifted her position.“I am here, Mistress,” she whispered.All around her, the light was changing, darkness giving way to daybreak, blackness turning silvery with the brightening of the eastern sky. And in that strange, in-xadbetween time the world seemed to hold still around her.–xadLong years have I kept the faith of my calling, strong against the elements and the whimsies and vicissitudes of nature and Man. Long years have I been true to all expectations and challenges, never once regretting what I gave up to be so. But time wears down all living things, and so it is with me–xadIt was not her imagination, Arling thought. The tree was speaking to her. The voice she was hearing belonged to the Ellcrys. She could feel a connection between the voice and the branch resting on her shoulder. She could feel the link between them.Could feel the link to herself.Arling tried to parse this out, to understand what was happening, but now the tree was speaking again.–xadIt happens slowly, but there is no mistaking its direction. There remains time to do what is needed, but for that to happen I need you first to understand. You are a Chosen in service to me. Many others have been so. Others besides yourself are so now. But you are special to me, child. You bear the blood markings that tell me no other will serve my purpose so well or so long–xadArling blinked rapidly, aware that the Ellcrys was praising her for something the tree found in her that she had not found in others. But Arling had no idea what that something was. Blood markings?“I don’t understand, Mistress,” she blurted.She felt a wash of shame when she admitted this. She wanted to be helpful, was anxious to serve in whatever way she could. But the Ellcrys was telling her she was failing, that time was taking its toll, and Arling did not know what it was she was expected to do.–xadI am dying–xadThere it was. The truth of things, the words clear and unmistakable. The Ellcrys was coming to the end of her life. Arlingfant felt tears spring to her eyes and found it suddenly hard to breathe. How could this be happening? The Ellcrys was showing no signs of deterioration—xadno wilt, no shedding, no loss of color or form. All looked to be as it should, yet the tree was telling her otherwise. Telling her! Arlingfant didn’t want to be the one made responsible by knowing. She had done everything she had been asked to do and more in the course of her time as a Chosen. She did not deserve this!–xadChild, you are precious to me–xad“Don’t tell me that!” Arling cried out. “I have failed you! I did everything I could, but it wasn’t enough. Could you be mistaken? Could you be given medicines and special care to keep you from . . . ?”She couldn’t finish, her words dying away into a series of hiccuping gasps. She was crying uncontrollably, and she couldn’t seem to make herself stop.Then the branch shifted against her body, and she felt a strange peace settle through her, bringing an end to the tears. She went still, the sounds of her lamentation ceasing. All around her the air turned soft with the scents of flowers and grasses and leaves, smoothing away the hurt and fear.–xadThere is much you can do to help me, Arlingfant. My service has been long and successful, and that service must continue. All of the Chosen must care for me in my final days, and you must tell them so. All must band together to keep me safe and comfortable during the time of my passing, but pass I must. Back to where we all one day will go. Back to our birthroots, to our pre-xadlife, to where we await our next appointing. Try to understand–xadArling did not understand. Asking her to bring word of this to the others was unbearable. Why choose her as opposed to another? Why ask this of her when so much else was happening?But this was selfish thinking, and she would not speak it aloud to her mistress. She was a Chosen, and the Chosen did not complain—ever—xadof what was asked of them during the time of their service.“I will tell the others,” she agreed. Then she hesitated. “And we will do much more than you ask. We will find a way to stave this off, to cure you of what afflicts you and make you well and strong again!”There was a long pause.–xadOh, child, no. You ignore the truth at your peril. Hear me once again. I have need of you. I have need of your strength and your dedixadcation. I have need of what you are and what you will be when I am gone. Do you not see–xadArling shook her head in despair. “I see only that you need help and I don’t know how to give it.”–xadYou will give it in the same way that I once did, a long time ago—xadwhen I was a girl no older than you are now. When I was one of the Chosen. You will carry my seed to the Bloodfire and immerse it and then return to me, and through you I will be renewed and the Forbidding will hold–xad“I will . . . carry . . .”That was as much as she could manage to repeat before the enormity of what the Ellcrys was saying tightened her throat in such an iron grip of fear that she choked on the rest. She saw it now. She saw what she was being asked to do.–xadYou are my Chosen one. You are . . . –xadInstantly Arlingfant was up and running, her dark hair flying out behind her in a tangle. She had broken away from the touch of the Ellcrys, from the voice in her head, from the realization of what was being asked of her and how her life would be altered forever. She felt cold and hot all at once.She knew the story. All of the Chosen had known since the time of Amberle Elessedil, who was the last to be called. The tree was said to live forever, and some believed it was so. But the truth was a different matter. The tree had a finite life—centuries long, yes, but finite. When its time was up, the tree always selected one among the Chosen to take from it a seedling, to carry that seedling to the Bloodfire, to immerse it in the flames, and then return to become . . .No, I cannot do this! It is too much to ask! I will lose everything. I will have to give up my life!. . . to become the next Ellcrys, reborn into the world at the death of the old, and linked forever in an endless line of talismans that would keep the Forbidding intact and the demons imprisoned.I cannot do this! I am only a girl and nothing special. I was not meant to bear this burden!She exploded past Freershan and a couple of the other Chosen coming into the gardens, not even slowing to acknowledge them but racing for the concealment of the trees and the waning darkness, anxious to hide and not emerge again for weeks or months or however long it took for this impossibility to vanish. She ran for her cottage and the comfort of home, trying to regain something that was already lost. She refused to acknowledge it, but she knew it anyway in her heart.Then, abruptly, she remembered Aphenglow. She needed her sister—xadthe one person who had always been able to make things right.But Aphenglow was leaving for the deep Westland, off on her expedition with Cymrian to find the other Druids and to tell them what had become of abandoned Paranor, following the Federation attack, and of poor Bombax.Had she already departed?Changing directions in midstride, Arling turned toward the airfield, fighting down the panic surging through her, her face streaked with tears, her breathing ragged. Don’t let this be! Don’t make it so! She darted through the trees—xada slight, almost ephemeral figure in the growing light of dawn—xadtaking paths and byways that shaved seconds off the time required to reach her sister.Aphen! Please be there, please!Then she burst onto the grassy flats where the airships were anchored, their dark hulls glistening with early-xadmorning dew—xadgreat tethered birds hovering in the windless morning light, their sleek curved shadows cast earthward. She gasped in relief as she caught sight of Wend-xadA-xadWay, her mooring lines still fastened in place.“Aphen!” she screamed, closing the distance as swiftly as she could, desperation providing her with fresh strength.Then her sister was running to meet her, flying across the open fields beneath the canopy of airship hulls, tall and strong and safe. Arling threw herself against Aphen, crying out her name, her face buried in Aphen’s shoulder.“She’s dying, Aphen, she’s dying, and she wants me to take her place and I can’t do it, Aphen, I can’t!”Arling sank to the grass, pulling Aphen down with her. Aphen held her sister close, soothing her. Hushing her, saying it was all right, that she was safe.Arling drew back, her face stricken. “She touched me on the shoulder with her branches and spoke to me. She said she had need of me. She said . . .”It all poured out of her, a jumble of words riven with emotions that she could barely control, all of it released in a torrent of need and despair.“Arling, stop now,” her sister said at last, taking her firmly by the shoulders and turning her so that they faced each other again. “I understand. But we don’t know enough yet to be certain of anything. There are Chosen records of the history of the Ellcrys and those who have served her. We should look at those, read what has been written of their history.”Arling shook her head in denial. “What difference will that make? I know what she expects of me. I heard her speak the words.”“And then you fled, right in the middle of her explanation.” Aphenglow pulled her close, hugging her anew. “You need to go back to her. You need to hear the rest. But before you do that, we’ll read the records of the Chosen. We may find something of value that will turn things around. Stop crying. I am here with you. I won’t leave you to face this alone.”Cymrian appeared, rushing up. “What’s happened? I didn’t even realize Arling was here.” He knelt beside them, his eyes finding Arling’s. “What’s wrong? Tell me what it is.”But it was Aphen who repeated the story, keeping alive the possibility of more than one interpretation of the Ellcrys’s words. Cymrian listened without interrupting, his eyes never leaving Arling.Then he reached out and took her from Aphen and held her against him. “Do not fear, Arling,” he whispered. “I will be your protector now. I will stand with you as I have with Aphen, and I will give up my life before I let anything hurt you.”Arling shook her head. “But you were leaving to find the Ard Rhys. Both of you. You can’t stay because of me. Finding the Druids and telling them of Paranor’s fate—xad”“—xadcan wait,” Aphen finished. “What matters now is discovering what is needed to help you, and what can be done about the Ellcrys. If she is truly dying, then we face a far more important task than seeking the missing Elfstones.”Cymrian nodded, his features somber. “If the Ellcrys fails, it doesn’t matter whether or not we find them.”Arling looked from one to the other. She had ceased crying, and her wilder emotions had quieted. She felt better having reached her sister and Cymrian. Maybe Aphen was right and things would turn out differently than she had feared when she fled the Ellcrys. She experienced a momentary shame for having acted so foolishly, for responding in such a childish way.“Thank you both,” she said to them.“We will face this together,” Aphen assured her. “Starting right now.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLERThe adventure that started in
  • Wards of Faerie
  • takes a thrilling new turn, in the second novel of Terry Brooks’s brand-new trilogy—The Dark Legacy of Shannara!
  • The quest for the long-lost Elfstones has drawn the leader of the Druid order and her followers into the hellish dimension known as the Forbidding, where the most dangerous creatures banished from the Four Lands are imprisoned. Now the hunt for the powerful talismans that can save their world has become a series of great challenges: a desperate search for kidnapped comrades, a relentless battle against unspeakable predators, and a grim race to escape the Forbidding alive. But though freedom is closer than they know, it may come at a terrifying price.   Back in the village of Arborlon, the mystical, sentient tree that maintains the barrier between the Four Lands and the Forbidding is dying. And with each passing day, as the breach between the two worlds grows larger, the threat of the evil eager to spill forth and wreak havoc grows more dire. The only hope lies with a young Druid, faced with a staggering choice: cling to the life she cherishes or combat an army of darkness by making the ultimate sacrifice.
  • Includes a preview of the next book in the Dark Legacy of Shannara series,
  • Witch Wraith
  • Praise for
  • Bloodfire Quest
  • “Explodes from the first page . . . and the action doesn’t stop until the novel’s cliffhanger ending. . . . Intense and exhilarating . . . The author balances character development with intense action, and he has a gift for creating characters the reader cares about. Brooks is one of the best fantasy writers in the business, and
  • Bloodfire Quest
  • is better than its predecessor.”—Associated Press   “Shannara fans will delight in Brooks’s sorcerous action, skilled characterizations, and rapid-fire storytelling twists.”—
  • Publishers Weekly
  • “Brooks mixes things up here with several sharp battle scenes, for which he brings his distinct talent, giving a true grandeur to clashes involving terrifying creatures and powerful magic. . . . A fine middle chapter to Brooks’ latest Shannara adventure.”—
  • Kirkus Reviews
  • “From the first pages to the harrowing ending,
  • Bloodfire Quest
  • . . . is a thrill ride that will leave readers wanting more. . . . This volume, paired with the first, might be just the right place to introduce new readers to this fine writer.”—
  • Booklist
  • (starred review)
  • Praise for Terry Brooks
  • “I can’t even begin to count how many of Terry Brooks’s books I’ve read (and reread) over the years. From Shannara to Landover, his work was a huge part of my childhood.”—Patrick Rothfuss,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • The Name of the Wind
  • “Terry Brooks has been my constant companion over a lifetime of exploring my beloved fantasy genre. I say with all honesty I would not be writing epic fantasy today if not for Shannara. If Tolkien is the grandfather of modern fantasy, Terry Brooks is its favorite uncle.”—Peter V. Brett,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • The Desert Spear
  • “Terry Brooks is a master of the craft and a trailblazer who established fantasy as a viable genre. Not only do I owe him for many hours of reading pleasure, I owe him my job. He is required reading.”—Brent Weeks,
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of The Night Angel Trilogy

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.2K)
★★★★
25%
(489)
★★★
15%
(293)
★★
7%
(137)
-7%
(-137)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A very exciting series by Brooks - his best in a while

This book picks up right after the first book "Wards of Faerie" and it just gets worse for the group of heroes. The Ard Rhys and party are still in the Forbidding and that is bad, very bad, and Aphenglow Elessedil has taken her sister to the Bloodfire to renew the Ellcrys, but the idiot humans are pursuing them thinking there is magic to be found. And the elves are starting to get ready for the failing of the Forbidding. And another quest to bring back a former druid is underway (which I won't spoil). There are a lot of storylines going on, and some get skipped for a while, but its all good, because its like chaos is going on in The Four Lands, and that's how the story flows.

Brooks is not being nice here, it's one of his darkest series (and this book specifically) that he has ever written, and I like it. It remind me of his earlier work like The Elfstones of Shannara" which is his best work, in my opinion, and so far these first two books are as good as anything he has written. You know somehow this is going to end up fine in the end, but right now after reading this second book in the series I don't know how, as he's just decimated everyone that was introduced in the first book in this series. It's very exciting, and it's been making me turn the pages as fast as I can read wanting more. Great stuff; the best Brooks in a long while, and highly recommended!
11 people found this helpful
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Rehashed Plot Lines - A Poor Showing by Brooks

First, I've read EVERY book and story written by Brooks, including his writing memoirs. He is indeed one of my favorite authors.

This book however, and this trilogy to this point, is a tired rehash of old plot points and reused narratives. I haven't been this disappointed since re-reading Sword of Shannara a couple of years back and realizing just what a terribly poor, badly written adaptation of Tolkien it really was. His writing certainty improved after that - and today I consider him to be a phenomenal story-teller... Assuming there's a story to tell that is.

Quite simply, it's boring. Every time I turned the page, I found myself wondering aloud 'haven't I already read this story?' My hope is that the next one will present newer and better material; with a dose of something other than lost elf stones and dying trees. Some of the earlier books introduced exciting new characters and challenges that stood well on their own - it's time to reawaken that spirit of imagination.
8 people found this helpful
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Unfinished journey...

The good news is that Terry Brooks will be releasing each book within a six month span of the last one, so over the course of a year you will be able to read all three books in the series. The bad news, for me at least, is that I won't want to.

I had attempted to begin to read the Shannarah series before, but found myself bored and gave up. Then about 7 months ago I decided to give it another go and read Wards of Faerie. Wards was very slow to start, but finally at the very end the story picked up and I was on board. I thought this the second book in The Dark Legacy of Shannara trilogy would pick right up where the last one left off. While the story did, the action did not. The story picks up with Alring still trying to whine her way out of being the the next Ellcrys. Finally we get to Ard Rhys and crew where the real action should be, and are literally given two pages of action before those character's return to discussing everything too. Once again I got bored and abandoned the book.

I am still huge fan of Terry Brooks Magic Kingdom of Landover series, but I can not connect with Shannarah. The story moves to slow for me, there is a lack of action, and the characters are not endearing to me. I will not be reading the last book in the trilogy, and I will not be attempting to read any of the other books past or future in the Shannarah series.
2 people found this helpful
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A Failing Quest

Bloodfire Quest (2013) is the second Fantasy novel in the Dark Legacy subseries of the Shannara series, following [[ASIN:0345523482 Wards of Faerie]]. The initial volume in this sequence is [[ASIN:0345314255 The Sword of Shannara]].

In the previous volume, the action returned to the time of the Four Lands a century after the Third Druid Order. The elves no longer had much use for their magic. Yet Aphen was looking within the ancient Elf archives for information about lost or discarded talismans and spells.

Almost a year to the day after starting her search, Aphen found a diary from thousands of years past. It related the loss of most of the Elfstones. A Darkling boy had stolen them all except the blue seeking-stones.

That evening, an assassin tried to strangle her. Arling intervened and saved her life, but the assassin escaped. later, Aphen learned the assassin was not alone.

Another attempt was made against her the next day. This time Aphen was fully alert and successfully resisted him. Despite her efforts to catch him alive, she used too much force and killed the assassin. He was a human.

Aphen returned to Paranor and reported her findings. She suggested that the Ard Rhys be awakened. Only Pleysia argued against the wakening.

In this novel, Aphenglow Elessedil is a young Druid. Aphen is the granddaughter of the King of the Elves.

Emperowen Elessedil is King of the Elven people. He has ruled for eighty years and has health problems. He is looking forward to relinquishing the throne.

Ellich Elessedil is the brother of Emperowen and the great-uncle of Aphen. She calls him Uncle, but he has been more like a father to her. He is married to Vera.

Arlingfant is Aphen's sister. Arling is a Chosen tending to the Ellcrys, the magical tree of the elves.

Khyber Elessedil is the Ard Rhys of the Druids. She is resting in Druid sleep while waiting for the others to need her. The magic keeps her informed of events.

Pleysia Ariana is an Elf. She is also a member of the Fourth Druid Order.

Seersha is a Dwarf. She is also a Druid.

Carrick is a Human. He is also a Druid.

Carce Coram is a Dwarf. He was formerly a king of the dwarves.

Orintha is a half breed. She is the daughter of Pleysia and a shapeshifter.

Woostra is a Human. He is not a Druid, but is trusted with their records at Paranor.

Cymrian is an Elf. He serves as Aphen's protector.

Redden and Railing Ohmsford are young twins with a human father and an elven mother. Insofar as anyone knows, they are the last living males in the Ohmsford family. Their father died while helping the Druids and now their mother Sarys hates magic and Druids.

Mirai Leah is a Rover. Redden and Railing are in love with her, but she treats them both equally.

Drust Chazul was the Minister of the Treasury within the Federation. Then he was the compromise selection as Prime Minister.

Edinja Orle is a sorceress from a magical family. She had lost her bid for the post of Prime Minister and then she disappeared.

Stoon is a very talented assassin. He had an exclusive contract with Chazul.

Tesla Dart is an Ulk Bog. She is the niece of Weka Dart. She is always moving around.

In this story, the Ellcrys mindspeaks to Arling and tells her that the tree needs her assistance. The Ellcrys is dying and Arling is chosen to take a seed to the Bloodfire to quicken it. Arling wants to help, but is terrified of the consequences. She runs home and tells Aphen that she cannot become the next Ellcrys.

Aphen calms her sister and suggests explaining to the Ellcrys that she is not the proper candidate for the task. She accompanies Arling to the Ellcrys and watches her try to refuse the task. The Ellcrys knows how Arling feels, but insists that Arling is the only Chosen who can perform the task.

Aphen and Arling return to Paranor with Woostra and Cymrian. Woostra and Aphen enter the keep though an escape tunnel and climb to the records room. They discover the general area of the Bloodfire and then return to Arborlon.

Aphen and Arling confer with Emperowen and Ellich about the dying of the Ellcrys. Aphen asks for, and gets, the blue Elfstones to find the Bloodfire. Then Aphen and Arling prepare to leave on their quest.

A changeling spy of Edinja hears their plans and attacks Aphen on their way to the airport. Cambrian foils the attack and they hurriedly take off on the quest. The spy observes their departure and sends a message to Edinja.

Chazul was killed by Stoon after the failed assault on Paranor. Now Stoon works for Edinja and usually meets her in the bedroom of the Prime Minister's official suite.. One day, she summons him to her private quarters.

Edinja is celebrating the year of their association. She also wants him to discover more about Aphen's quest. Stoon tries to refuse the orders, but she insists. She also gives him three magically mutated creatures to protect him from Aphen.

Meanwhile, the Ard Rhys is searching for the missing Orintha and Carce. She and the others follow the path of the dragon that had flown off with the two. As they travel, they meet Tesla and she accompanies them.

The Ulk Bog warns them not to follow the dragon. Pleysia surges ahead to find her daughter. Soon, only Redden and the Ard Rhys are left.

Seersha has remained behind with the weak and wounded. They are attacked by Goblins, killing Carrick and others and breaking Railing's leg. Then Carce returns from the Forbidding.

Carce reports that Khyber and Redden have taken been taken by the Jarka Ruus and Pleysia was killed. Orintha and Tesla have stayed behind to try to rescue the captives. Seersha breaks the coin to signal Mirai to come pick them up.

Mirai tries to rescue them, but a storm disrupts the rescue attempt. The airship is wrecked and Mirai is left hanging in a tree. Mirai is rescued by Seersha.

This tale leaves the Druids missing their leader. Mirai and Railing return without Redden, but vow to rescue him from the Forbidding. Yet first they have another task.

Most of the questers looking for the Elfstones are lost. Aphen and Arling are still looking for the Bloodfire. Stoon soon follows Aphen in the search for the Bloodfire.

The author has learned how to terminate characters. The next installment in this sequence is [[ASIN:0345523539 Witch Wraith]].

Highly recommended for Brooks fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of various magics, political intrigue, and a bit of romance. Read and enjoy!

-Arthur W. Jordin
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The Trilogy Continues to Intrigue

Brooks has been described as several things, but two descriptions that plague him regularly are "One-Trick Pony" and "...that guy who writes soft fantasy" in description of his seeming inability to write bittersweet endings. With [[ASIN:0345484223 The Measure of the Magic: Legends of Shannara]] he proved that he can do bittersweet, but with this new novel he proves he can do brutal.

Between heads on spikes, underlying sexual tones, and a Straken Lord wanting to kidnap a former witch, turn her into his slave queen, and sire heirs on her with or without her permission with a very rape-y vibe this is Brooks writing for adults. The plot is more complicated, the characters are a shade darker in terms of personality, and the story itself contains just enough light-hearted and familiar elements pertaining to older Brooks novels that its recognizable as his work.

Some elements of this one would be off putting to fans of his former work (the implied rape above is one of them, the brutality of the heads on spikes is also something that is slightly farther than he's gone before) and his style (that requires a lot of former world knowledge and reading) would be off putting to new fans, but in the end this is simply Brooks writing for himself and you can tell he's having more fun than he's had in awhile. He has latched on to a specific set of characters (Grianne Ohmsford in particular) who have dominated the last few stories in this era and he's still in love with them enough to make them shine.

Buy it after buying the first one, you won't be disappointed.
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The Dark Legacy Series Keeps Getting Better

At the end of "Wards of Faerie", it is discovered that Arling Elessedil was touched by the dying Ellcrys and given the task of taking the Ellcrys seed to the Bloodfire, immersing it, and bringing it back. But, there's more: Arling must take the place of the dying Ellcrys herself, for if the Ellcrys should die, the Forbidding would fail, and all of the creatures trapped within would invade the Four Lands. In "Bloodfire Quest", Terry Brooks continues with the excellent Dark Legacy series.

Aside from Arling's situation with the Ellcrys, there are other events happening as well. Khyber Elessedil and her companions are still searching for the missing elfstones, but they have become trapped within the Forbidding and now must face off against the evil Straken Lord, who has mistaken Khyber for Grianne Ohmsford, who was herself imprisoned there a century earlier. Many members of the expedition have been killed and soon, only Khyber and Redden Ohmsford are left to confront the Straken Lord.

Railing Ohmsford, Woostra, and Mirai have returned to Paranor to search the druid histories concerning the disappearance of Grianne Ohmsford and have set out to search for her to see if she is still alive. Their hope is to bring her into the Forbidding to help defeat the Straken Lord.

Arling, Aphen, and Cymrian have set off in search of the Bloodfire, but the Federation is tracking them as well. Soon, Arling ends up in the hands of the Federation, being whisked away from her friends.

I've read all of Terry Brooks' previous books, and I am really enjoying the Dark Legacy series. The characters are well-developed and the action is fast-paced throughout. I enjoy reading epic fantasy series, and Terry Brooks is at the top of the list.

I recommend this book and series very highly. If you enjoy good books about conflicts between good and evil, then don't miss "Bloodfire Quest".
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Recycled....

As others have noted, much of the plot is recycled and dialogue is stunted. I remember the original books being so much better than the last few series. A lot of running around for no apparent reason or sudden deaths of characters. (Some minor characters (trolls, elven hunters, etc.) just end up missing or quickly dismissed as dead and major characters seem to lack common sense resisting their own deaths). If you are looking for more complexity, try the Malazan Books of the Fallen.
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Publisher Defect… missing pages

Been reading Terry Brooks for many years and have purchased all books from Amazon. Problem with this book is that 16 pages are missing. Pg 281-296 are just missing. Obvious publishing problem.
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Awesome series!

Awesome writer!
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Ordered what I wanted, got what I ordered.

This edition seems like a library version replete with clear plastic enclosed dust cover and missing the library of congress information on the reverse of the title page. I'll keep looking for another new version.