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The Abhorsen Chronicles
 
 

The Abhorsen Chronicles [Paperback]

Garth Nix
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product Description

Product Description

Sabriel

Every step brings Sabriel closer to a battle that will pit her against the true forces of life and death—and bring her face-to-face with her own destiny.

Lirael

With only her faithful companion, the Disreputable Dog, Lirael must undertake a desperate mission under the growing shadow of an ancient evil, which threatens the fate of the Old Kingdom.

Abhorsen

The Abhorsen Sabriel and King Touchstone are missing, and Lirael must search in both Life and Death for some means to defeat the evil Destroyer—before it is too late.

About the Author

Garth Nix grew up in Canberra, Australia. Besides being a full-time writer, he has worked as a sales rep, publicist, editor, marketing communications consultant, literary agent, and part-time soldier. He is the author of Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen, the books in the internationally bestselling Abhorsen trilogy, as well as Shade's Children and The Ragwitch. He now lives in Sydney, a five-minute walk from Coogee Beach, with his wife, Anna, his sons, Thomas and Edward, and lots of books.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars Into the world of Death, Jan 11 2009
By 
E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Abhorsen Chronicles (Paperback)
Necromancers are usually the bad guys in fantasy. When you can control dead bodies, it's a given that people might not like you.

But Garth Nix turned that little trope on its head with "The Abhorsen Chronicles," three interconnected fantasies about a family of necromancers who lay the dead -- and forces of evil -- to rest. His richly-realized world, elaborate magicks and brilliantly detailed writing give this wry, horrific high-fantasy a special quality that few other fantasy books have. Each of the three books about the Abhorsens is definitely a deserving classic.

"Sabriel" is the story of a teenage girl living happily at a girl's school, while her necromancer father (the Abhorsen) roams around putting the dead to rest. All that changes when a sending brings her father's sword and bells, meaning that he is dead or incapacitated. So Sabriel takes on her father's duties, accompanied by a Free Magic cat and a mysterious young prince, and battles the specter of a horrible evil creature that is reaching out from death to snare her.

"Lirael" takes us to the cold citadel of the Clayr, a race of seers to whom the Sight is everything. Young Lirael is depressed because she doesn't have the gift of Sight yet, even though everybody else her age does. But things take a sinister turn when she sets a horrifying, bloodthirsty creature loose, and must work -- with the help of the mysterious Disreputable Dog -- to get rid of it. But what Lirael doesn't know is that the outside world is in danger too, from a sinister new enemy -- and her destiny may take her out of the Clayr glacier, to where Sabriel's family is struggling to keep their kingdom safe.

"Abhorsen" brings the series to an explosive conclusion. Lirael and her nephew Sameth -- along with "cat" Mogget and the Disreputable Dog -- are in danger from the invading Dead, and the Destroyer Orannis has escaped from his prison and is being assisted by an evil necromancer and the Dead called Chlorr -- and an unfortunate pal of Sameth's, who was mistaken for the young prince and his now be bespelled. Now Lirael must face her true destiny -- not as a Clayr, but as the future Abhorsen.

Garth Nix had only written a couple of books, one of which was an "X-Files" novelization, when the first Abhorsen book burst onto the fantasy scene. Now he's one of the most respected, prolific and well-liked fantasy writers in years -- and his tales of the Old Kingdom are undoubtedly his best work -- they are a perfect example of dark fantasy, with its grotesque dead zombies that occasionally lurch out to attack the heroes, magical bells, and shadowy beasties that can (sometimes) be restrained.

Nix's invented world is a seamless blend of the modern and the medieval, each ruling one side of the Wall -- and he handles this complex world and its magical Charter with the deftness of a master storyteller. He draws everything in exquisite detail, whether it's the labyrinthine Clayr glacier or the slightly eerie house of the Abhorsen, a bombed-out bunker or a sunny boarding school. And his command of atmosphere is great enough that his depiction of Death's gey river is enough to chill.

And he comes up with the brilliant concept of the Abhorsen necromancers -- who have power over dead and/or magical creatures, manipulate magic with little effort, and bind malignant creatures with Charter marks and a series of magical bells. Got it -- binding, not raising.

Virtually all of Nix's characters are likable -- especially the gutsy Sabriel, the strong-willed Touchstone and their nervous teenage son Sameth. Even the annoying Ellimere elicits some smiles. It takes a bit longer to warm up to Lirael, since she spends several chapters in the same-named book moping about her differentness, but once she gets moving she's unstoppable -- and quite likable, once she figures out who she is. And the animal characters are the most brilliant -- Mogget and the Disreputable Dog steal the show with their sharp wit and humorous quirks, although we're constantly reminded that these are magical beings.

Dark fantasy was redefined and reimagined in "The Abhorsen Chronicles," and Garth Nix's trilogy is a clever, action-packed, magical journey through the Old Kingdom.
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Amazon.com: 4.8 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)

19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Into the world of Death, Dec 30 2008
By E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Abhorsen Chronicles (Paperback)
Necromancers are usually the bad guys in fantasy. When you can control dead bodies, it's a given that people might not like you.

But Garth Nix turned that little trope on its head with "The Abhorsen Chronicles," three interconnected fantasies about a family of necromancers who lay the dead -- and forces of evil -- to rest. His richly-realized world, elaborate magicks and brilliantly detailed writing give this wry, horrific high-fantasy a special quality that few other fantasy books have. Each of the three books about the Abhorsens is definitely a deserving classic.

"Sabriel" is the story of a teenage girl living happily at a girl's school, while her necromancer father (the Abhorsen) roams around putting the dead to rest. All that changes when a sending brings her father's sword and bells, meaning that he is dead or incapacitated. So Sabriel takes on her father's duties, accompanied by a Free Magic cat and a mysterious young prince, and battles the specter of a horrible evil creature that is reaching out from death to snare her.

"Lirael" takes us to the cold citadel of the Clayr, a race of seers to whom the Sight is everything. Young Lirael is depressed because she doesn't have the gift of Sight yet, even though everybody else her age does. But things take a sinister turn when she sets a horrifying, bloodthirsty creature loose, and must work -- with the help of the mysterious Disreputable Dog -- to get rid of it. But what Lirael doesn't know is that the outside world is in danger too, from a sinister new enemy -- and her destiny may take her out of the Clayr glacier, to where Sabriel's family is struggling to keep their kingdom safe.

"Abhorsen" brings the series to an explosive conclusion. Lirael and her nephew Sameth -- along with "cat" Mogget and the Disreputable Dog -- are in danger from the invading Dead, and the Destroyer Orannis has escaped from his prison and is being assisted by an evil necromancer and the Dead called Chlorr -- and an unfortunate pal of Sameth's, who was mistaken for the young prince and his now be bespelled. Now Lirael must face her true destiny -- not as a Clayr, but as the future Abhorsen.

And it also has the short story "The Creature in the Case," in which a worn-out Nicholas Sayre is sent to a country house for a weekend party, only to fall afoul of a Free Magic creature and a madman who is determined to bring "her" back to life... with Nick's magic-infused blood.

Garth Nix had only written a couple of books, one of which was an "X-Files" novelization, when the first Abhorsen book burst onto the fantasy scene. Now he's one of the most respected, prolific and well-liked fantasy writers in years -- and his tales of the Old Kingdom are undoubtedly his best work -- they are a perfect example of dark fantasy, with its grotesque dead zombies that occasionally lurch out to attack the heroes, magical bells, and shadowy beasties that can (sometimes) be restrained.

Nix's invented world is a seamless blend of the modern and the medieval, each ruling one side of the Wall -- and he handles this complex world and its magical Charter with the deftness of a master storyteller. He draws everything in exquisite detail, whether it's the labyrinthine Clayr glacier or the slightly eerie house of the Abhorsen, a bombed-out bunker or a sunny boarding school. And his command of atmosphere is great enough that his depiction of Death's gey river is enough to chill.

And he comes up with the brilliant concept of the Abhorsen necromancers -- who have power over dead and/or magical creatures, manipulate magic with little effort, and bind malignant creatures with Charter marks and a series of magical bells. Got it -- binding, not raising.

Virtually all of Nix's characters are likable -- especially the gutsy Sabriel, the strong-willed Touchstone and their nervous teenage son Sameth. Even the annoying Ellimere elicits some smiles. It takes a bit longer to warm up to Lirael, since she spends several chapters in the same-named book moping about her differentness, but once she gets moving she's unstoppable -- and quite likable, once she figures out who she is. And the animal characters are the most brilliant -- Mogget and the Disreputable Dog steal the show with their sharp wit and humorous quirks, although we're constantly reminded that these are magical beings.

Dark fantasy was redefined and reimagined in "The Abhorsen Chronicles," and Garth Nix's trilogy is a clever, action-packed, magical journey through the Old Kingdom.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Great book but difficult to read in this format, Sep 6 2010
By E. Fave "auburn" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Abhorsen Chronicles (Paperback)
Love Garth Nix. The books are wonderful! That being said, while this may be the most economical way to own the whole series, be aware this is one giant bug crusher of a paperback book. It weighs in at over three pounds and is not the kind of book you can snuggle up and read with. Rather, you will find yourself reading it at a table or have it propped on an end table. Just FYI before you buy since it is a YA title, some kids might find it a bit unwieldy.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Really great trilogy and volume of the trilogy, Jan 18 2010
By Amanda Dennis "mandadenn" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Abhorsen Chronicles (Paperback)
I had actually read the trilogy before I got this volume, and had it in three volumes, but two were lost. I loved the series so very much, the world is just SO enthralling and rich, I had to replace them. When I found this volume I was pretty pleased, when I received it I was even happier. It's beautiful! I just love the design and colors. The picture just doesn't do it justice.

So awesome awesome awesome series in a really lovely package, what more could you ask for? :)
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 8 reviews  4.8 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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