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Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane: Book Two-in the Underland Chronicles
 
 

Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane: Book Two-in the Underland Chronicles [Hardcover]

Suzanne Collins
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Books in Canada

Eleven-year-old Gregor and his two-year-old sister, Boots, are down-to-earth kids, literally and figuratively. Twice now they’ve tumbled down tunnels beneath New York City, first from their apartment building basement, then from Central Park, into the Underland to pursue adventures, decipher prophecies and defeat evil doers in the guise of giant rats and ancient aquatic reptiles. And in their wake they’ve left reviewers gasping with praise and readers clamouring for more.
In Suzanne Collins’s second novel in the Underland Chronicles, it’s early December and Gregor is in hot pursuit of baby sister Boots who has been spirited away down the Central Park tunnel by humungus but friendly Cockroaches to return her to Regalia and protect her from the evil gnawers led by Gorger. The rats want to kill her to stop Gregor from annihilating them and the rat known as Bane. The forecasts of death and who is to do what to whom and when are spelled out in the Prophecy of Bane, which like the earlier Prophecy of Gray in Book One of the Chronicles is best understood in retrospect when “it seems clear as water.”
With the frightfully prophetic line, “Die the baby” etched in his brain, and with baby sister, Boots, on her way back to Regalia, Gregor sets out to find her, release his “Rager” emotions as a warrior, and track down and kill the Bane. With rapid-fire, page-turning action he catches up with Boots before he and his intrepid friends, new and old (Ares his bat bond; Mareth an Underlander warrior commander; Twitchtip, a friendly rat with a super sensitive nose for trouble; Luxa, Regalia’s 16-year-old Queen in waiting; Harold, her 16-year-old cousin, their bat bonds and two huge comically quarrelsome firefly Shiners, Photos Glow-Glow and Zap) sail across the Waterway. During their travels they encounter a truly nasty squid, survive a whirlpool, subsist on raw fish, and run afoul of a black cloud of bat-eating mites from which Ares barely escapes but another bat doesn’t.
Then in the confusion of a battle Luxa and Boots go missing and Mareth is seriously wounded. Gregor demands that Harold accompany Mareth back to Regalia and determines that in light of the Prophecy it is his responsibility to find and slaughter the Bane. He and Ares continue the deadly quest but when they encounter the white rat, they encounter something unexpected. They resolve a dilemma in a most surprising way and return to Regalia where Boots happily awaits them, having been flown in earlier on an oversized moth. Unfortunately, Luxa is still missing and a trial for conspiracy to commit treason awaits Gregor, Harold and Mareth. The trial’s outcome hinges on the interpretation of the Bane prophecy by Regalia’s interim Queen, Nerissa, a seer of sorts. She interprets in Gregor’s favour but he is nevertheless advised to leave Regalia immediately.
Glad to be back home and reunited with his family for Christmas, Gregor knows he’ll be returning to Regalia in the near future to help find Luxa and unravel another prophecy given to him by Nerissa, The Prophecy of the Blood. And what we know from his previous adventures is that there’ll be a cadre of finely drawn characters, good and bad, to meet him, lots of excitement to get his Rager blood flowing, and an evildoer or two from Gorger’s rat pack to be slain. And he’ll do it all with typical teenage panache and the right mix of humour and humility.
M. Wayne Cunningham (Books in Canada)

From School Library Journal

Grade 5-8–Readers are quickly drawn into this sequel to Gregor the Overlander (Scholastic, 2003), which concluded with Gregor and his toddler sister, Boots, returning from the Underland, an underground realm populated by humans and giant creatures. When Boots is kidnapped and taken back to the Underland, Gregor follows her to the city of Regalia, where he is reunited with Luxa and her wise grandfather. Vikus tells the boy of the "Prophecy of Bane," which foretold of Gregor's return to the land to find and fight a legendary white super-rat. The siblings are joined by Luxa and other humans, as well as giant talking bats and cockroaches, in the quest to find the Bane. As in the first book, the questers face adventure, danger, death, loss, and change on their journey, and the surprising conclusion leaves room for another sequel. Interpersonal conflict and old enmities among the well-developed characters add depth, and the hazards and beauties of the subterranean Underland are fully realized and clearly presented. An urgent mood and a sense of impending danger are conveyed. This is a strong choice for fantasy fans, including reluctant readers, even if they're not familiar with Gregor's first adventure.–Beth L. Meister, Yeshiva of Central Queens, Flushing, NY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible series and book., Sep 29 2011
By 
Steven R. McEvoy "MCWPP" (Canada) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This series is absolutely riveting. The story runs at an amazing pace. The details of the Underland geography, scenery and creatures are amazing. It has only been a few months since Gregor, his sister and father have returned from the Underland to New York City. Christmas is fast approaching and Gregor is doing what he can to help his family out. His father has a strange illness he brought back from the Underland and has not returned to teaching. His mother is working hard to support his family. His grandmother's health is still ailing. Their kind neighbor Mrs. Cormaci has been hiring Gregor to help her out on Saturdays. He always brings home some money, a lot of food and usually some hand-me-downs for the family. But things are still tight and Gregor cannot stop worrying about what will happen next.

Then it does happen. He has taken his littlest sister Boots to Central Park to go tobogganing and he gets distracted thinking about the Underland for a few minutes. And his sister disappears. There are signs that it was the giant roaches from the Underland. Soon Gregor is back in the Underland reunited with his Bond, the bat Ares, and Luxa the soon-to-be Queen. They go on a perilous journey in the Waterways and through a Labyrinth at the far end of the Rat's domain in search for the Bane, a legendary white rat that is prophesied to be able to destroy the whole of Underland. But unlike the Prophecy of Gray, the Prophecy of Bane does not indicate how many and what species should make the quest, and how many they will lose. The prophecy states:

"If Under fell, if Over leaped,
If life was death, if death life reaped,
Something rises from the gloom
To make the Underland a tomb.
Hear it scratching down below,
Rat of long-forgotten snow,
Evil cloaked in coat of white
Will the warrior drain your light?
What could turn the warrior weak?
What do burning gnawers seek?
Just a barely speaking pup
Who holds the land of Under up.
Die the baby, die his heart,
Die his most essential part.
Die the peace that rules the hour.
Gnawers have their key to power."

It is not as clear as the previous and open to more interpretations. All Gregor knows is what is at stake - his life, his sisters and all of Underland. That is a lot to put on the shoulders of a teen-aged boy, but Gregor manages and even seems to thrive under the pressure. This is a great book in an amazing series.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane, Feb 4 2009
By 
Pauline - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
"Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane" by Suzanne Collins continues months after the first book "Gregor the Overlander" ends. Gregor takes his younger sister Boots to Central Park in New York to go sledding. In one moment of distraction Boot is kidnapped and returned to the Underland; Gregor has no choice, but to revisit the Underland. Once in the Underland he sets out on a quest to fulfill the "Prophecy of Bane". It is only by fulfilling the prophecy that he and Boots will be able to return safely home; but the prophecy is tricky and may not appear as straight forward as the Underlanders think, Gregor denies their desires and faces the consequences of his actions.

This is a wonderful, exciting series to read. It is full of many fascinating creatures and it is action packed. The only problem I have, as I mentioned in my review of the first book, is that it is hard to believe that Gregor is only eleven years old. My daughter prefers to think of him as being about fifteen or sixteen, and I tend to think of him of being that age also when I read the books. What a great read, loads of fun.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars (59 customer reviews)

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars one word.. stellar, Aug 25 2004
A Kid's Review - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane: Book Two-in the Underland Chronicles (Hardcover)
This book was by far one of the best books I have read in the past few years. Why you ask, because of the story's richness in creativity. The way Ms. Collins wrote this wonderful tale of adventure, sibling love, and fantasy made it actually seem as if you were in the underland. If Harry Potter made you question if magic really exisited, "Gregor and the Prophesy of Bane" will make you want to get out of where ever you are go to New York with the fastest form of transportation possible and search for hours just to find the portal from reality to a whole new world. I absolutely love this book!

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Can't put it down..., Nov 28 2005
By microjoe - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane: Book Two-in the Underland Chronicles (Hardcover)
A word of caution, you can't put this book down. It is so interesting and exciting, the world that is created underground and its characters just draws you in. This is the sequel to the outstnding book, "Gregor the Overlander", and once again Gregor and his baby sister travel to the Underland to help save Regalia. The evil giant rats are at it again, and have discivered a long lost secret weapon. Gregor learns of a strange new power that he has, useful and frightening at the same time. Suprising allies and bonds form together to protect the warrior on his journey to the labyrinth. The company travels over an underground sea this time before riding on the backs of giant bats, with giant fireflys to light their way. Along their way they face an attack by flesh-eating insects, a huge whirlpool, undersea dinosaurs, stinging giant phosphorescent squids, and other dangers at every turn. After Gregor has again risked his life and everything he owns for the people of the Underland, he is (SPOILER ALERT) .....accused of something shocking! A third book has just been released, "The Curse of the Warmbloods", I can't wait to read it.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars strong followup to good first novel, Dec 12 2004
By B. Capossere - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane: Book Two-in the Underland Chronicles (Hardcover)
The Prophecy of Bane continues the strengths displayed in Collins' first book in the series, Gregor the Overlander. The book moves along quickly and smoothly with few if any slow spots; the major characters, if not minutely detailed, have enough personality and reality to hold one's interest and concern; and the setting, which as in the first is probably the weakest element in terms of vividness, is at least interesting enough in general terms so that its lack of detail is not much of a flaw.
As in book one, Gregor enters the Underworld to save a family member. In book one it was his father; here it is his little sister Boots. One sees the freshness and originality early on in the book as the quest quickly changes from what the reader first assumes it will be--the search for Boots--to a more dark journey: Gregor's quest to hunt down and kill alone the Bane (the prophesied future king of the Rats). Without giving things away, there are other such surprises in store for the reader; not just surprises of plot but also surprises of genre, so one doesn't feel stuck in the same old young adult fantasy quest rut. The book is also darker than most young fantasy, and the darkness runs from start to finish, beginning with the fact that (as opposed to what one would expect in the genre) not all is well since Gregor's "successful" rescue of his father in book one. His father hasn't come close to recovering and the family is paying both an emotional and economic price. This sort of reality, and the attention paid to long-term effects (with his father's illness as well as other events from book one) is one of the ways Gregor is distinguishable from much of what is out there. Another way is how death is not simply an abstract idea in this book but a solid and saddening presence.
The end or near-end is a bit weak in comparison to the rest of the book as it seems to have Gregor acting a bit unbelievably with only a nod to contriving an explanation (more detail would ruin a surprise). That's the only major weakness in the novel. Once again, a few of the characters could be more fully formed, the setting certainly could be more fully detailed, but one understands why Collins may have traded detail for speed and in reality, the flaws are relatively minor in comparison to how the story and main characters hold interest. Some of the lack of detail is also clearly intentional, as at least one more Gregor book is obviously on the way. If the first two are any judge, one can hope for even more. Strongly recommended for "older" young readers. Younger ones can certainly follow the book, but the context and setting (an world at their feet filled with giant mankilling rats) along with the few deaths might be a bit much--parents are the best judge. The parents themselves, however, might be pleasantly surprised by how much they enjoy it if they pick it up.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 59 reviews  4.7 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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