3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Last But Certainly Not Least, April 11 2007
By Adam Hawkins "His Excellency" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Warcraft Volume 3: Ghostlands (Paperback)
The third and final installment in the sunwell trilogy was everything I had come to expect from famed author Richard A. Knaak. The story was not only compelling and completely entrenched and flowing with the warcraft universe but the twists and surprises were a pleasant jolt to the story as well. And the Amazing artistic abilities of Kim Jae-Hwan were nothing short of Breath taking and incredible. If I could give them more than 5 out of 5 I would. I hope this isn't the last team up of this amazing duo in the warcraft universe in manga.
5.0 out of 5 stars
book review, Feb 8 2012
By scott - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Warcraft Volume 3: Ghostlands (Paperback)
world of war craft the sunwell triogly is a whiz bang awesome graphic novel it has an good plot and the art is good
3.0 out of 5 stars
Ok ending, I guess, Nov 1 2009
By Ian E. Mcgonigal "MaunderingCabal" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Warcraft Volume 3: Ghostlands (Paperback)
even though I didn't really like the first two books that much I bought it anyways because I'm slightly obsessive compulsive about completing sets (damn you Poke'mon, and damn you video game based achievements). Now you all know how I trick myself into buying manga I don't even want. I took all three books on the train in Tokyo to read while we traveled 3 hours to Japan's Ikea. The third book was actually a pretty good conclusion to s simple hockey storyline. The art was a little less detailed than the first two books, I guess the artist was getting bored. The summary at the beginning of the third book was a copy of the second book, nothing new. I felt like I paid for the same thing twice. My favorite part of this book is a single frame with a zombie with him saying "Hurr" with googiley eyes. I laughed on the train and Japanese people stared at me.
Overall, I think unless you play war craft you will think this is a pretty lame manga. You might like the art, but you will seek to read the novels or play the games to get a better idea why their are giant cow people, which they don't even say he is a Tauren. There is a lack of Gnomes, and the orcs are displayed in about 10 frames of the whole series. You would think the orcs would have a bigger role in any Warcraft books, because they were one of the main races of the series from the beginning. Overall, I didn't like the storyline, but the art and my nerdy interest in Warcraft kept me going.