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War Of The Flowers
 
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War Of The Flowers (Paperback)

by Tad Williams (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 10.99
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Travel into another dimension is a popular fantasy ploy, but rarely accomplished with such humor, terror and even logic as in this stand-alone by bestseller Williams (Tailchaser's Song, etc.). After losing his girlfriend, Theo Vilmos, a singer in a humdrum northern California rock band, finds in his late mother's remote cabin an amazing if incomplete manuscript left by his eccentric great-uncle, Eamonn Dowd, about a fairy world purportedly visited by its author. Unsurprisingly, Faerie turns out to be a real place. Applecore, a short-tempered, red-haired sprite, abruptly appears before Theo just as a horrifying monster starts banging on the door. At Applecore's command, Theo swoops her up and pops through "the Gate" into a magical realm that proves initially beguiling, later strange and finally deadly. Ironically, Faerie is a distorted image of our own world, ruled by cruel fairy tyrants. The powerful classes, each named for a flower, wage war against each other, using colossal dragons as the equivalents of nuclear bombs. Theo discovers love as well as unsuspected secrets of his own birth and family. Williams's imagination is boundless, and if this big book could have been shorter, it could just as easily have been longer. The incorrigible Applecore continually delights, as in her comment on a famous J.M. Barrie character: "`If you believe in fairies, clap your hands'? If you believe in fairies, kiss my rosy pink arse is more like it."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Booklist

Williams' latest is unsurprisingly large but is billed as a single-volume work, which is pretty flabbergasting coming from a writer addicted to series of massive tomes. The story begins with the fairly conventional device of a mundane (i.e., a person from our world) stumbling into Faerie. Marginal California rocker Theo Vilmos has just lost his pregnant girlfriend when he discovers an old, handwritten book in a rural cottage. The gritty and even rather grim faerie world to which it leads him is hardly a refuge from reality; indeed, it is so full of depressing details that those who are already somewhat down should consider reading the book only in bite-size chunks. The war of the title is one of numerous factions fighting among themselves, and with it, Williams darkly satirizes every sort and condition of politics, ideology, religion, and other human foibles, much as he did in the Otherland saga. Reader and hero alike remain in some confusion for some while, because Theo's Faerie guide, an obnoxious entity named Applecore, seems to have an agenda of his own and certainly has a stevedore's tongue. Williams has a supremely powerful, if not altogether disciplined, imagination, so that, like Theo, readers may feel they are encountering much that is dreary and dull on the way to the good parts. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

51 Reviews
5 star:
 (21)
4 star:
 (13)
3 star:
 (12)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (51 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
3.0 out of 5 stars I love Tad Williams, but not this book, Jul 15 2004
By P. T. Hill (Northern California) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: War Of The Flowers (Hardcover)
Tad Williams creates fabulous worlds, writes beautifully, and does everything right as far as I'm concerned -- until he wrote War of the Flowers. His vision of Faerie is interesting and has vitality. His concepts are great. The story had massive potential. But the execution was limp. It could have been 25% shorter and not lost much. While Williams repeatedly tells readers that Theo (the protagonist) is ineffectual, I never got a clear sense of the guy. The character arc was merely a bump, and unfulfilling. At one point, Theo jams with some other musicians and Williams does a great job of describing how Theo connects with and then riffs on the strange music. Later in the book, when he uses this ability where it really matters, Williams descriptions are abstract and vague. That was a letdown. I'm really bummed because (a) I bought the hardback retail, and (b) Tad Williams is one of my favorite authors. On the plus side, he delighted me with the tiny sprite with the huge 'tude, Applecore. And being familiar with San Francisco and the Santa Cruz Mountains, I enjoyed the beginning of the book because I knew where the story was. I also felt Theo was a stronger character here than in Faerie. My disappointment with War of the Flowers will not keep me from devouring whatever he writes next, though.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Civilised Faeryland worse than our world?, Jul 13 2004
By sdeb (Italy) - See all my reviews
The faerie lords are at war, one of them has a pretty mischevious plan regarding the parallel world of humans and Theo, our unwilling human hero, is at the centre of the plot.

He finds himself suddenly plunged into faerie world where different laws rule and where technologie and science are so incomprehensible to human eyes that they can only be catalogued as "magic"... but then faeries think just the same of our physics and mechanics!

The faerie world Williams depicts is very different from the setting we are used to: their society is similar to ours, with a big city, trains, buses, class racism. It is exactly a mirror of our society diseases: it is unjust, corrupted, fouled by political scheming and ambitions, but it also is energic, powerful, with hidden layers of unseemingly resourceful people.

The characters are quite well described, all along the book you come to know Theo Vilmos as well as yourself! The irony and cynism of the reluctant hero, and his sagacious comparisons with our world's assumptions about faerie world make this book very enjoyable, also thanks to the action, fast and well developed.

I've fallen in love with Theo Vilmos! He is so handsome and has such a humour, what a guy!
He is so realistic: I think the initial chapters are wonderful! Mr. Williams has suceeded in describing perfectly Theo's sorrows and loneliness, his struggle to find a path and build a new life, the difficulties of his mental wanderings and his existential doubts, so common among real people but so rarely put in such a linear way in a book (let alone a fantasy one!).
When I read this book I was in a very very difficult moment of my life and I found in Theo's dolorous eventful life a mirror of my own problems, a resonance with my own life so totally unexpected that it was almost unbelievable but also of great comfort.

My thanks to Mr. Williams for his great job of putting in words our real lives in a fantasy world.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Beautifu Flowers Sometimes Wilt, Jul 9 2004
By A Customer
The book reads like two different novels. I enjoyed it overall, but I was never once sucked in to the world. The first 100 pages or so deal with Theo's unfortunate life. They were well-written and engaging. However, once he gets transported to the fantasy world, things just go crazy and I never feel as though I am reading about the same character. The world is like a mix of Who Framed Roger Rabbit/Neverending Story/Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The world is creative, interesting and dark. The characters are pretty interesting as well (especially Applecore, Tinkerbell gone dirty).
I was never engaged enough to keep the pages turning hour on hour. But it was good. It, at times, got bogged down on too many details. And for this type of book, it would have been better served being around 500 pages instead of 800. He could have done it. In between the lines it is a good story filled with great, satyrical imagination.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Solid story that eventually grabs you.
In typical Tad Williams style, the first two hundred pages are very hard to get through. The story flows nicely, but it starts off slow. Read more
Published on Jun 28 2004 by Edge Martinez

3.0 out of 5 stars Tad Williams is an amazing writer
This is the first Tad Williams book I picked up, so I initially didn't know what to expect.

The first thing I noticed was that Tad Williams is an amazing writer. Read more

Published on Jun 27 2004 by Antoine Tardif

4.0 out of 5 stars fizz, fizz, fizz, BANG!
It seems to have gotten mixed reviews... I certainly don't think the book merits a bad review, and certainly not a full 5 stars unless, perhaps, you are only just discovering the... Read more
Published on Jun 25 2004 by -avidreader-

4.0 out of 5 stars War of the Flowers
Theo Vilmos' life was falling apart: his live-in girlfriend had a miscarriage and left him, he broke away from his going-nowhere band, and then his mother (his only living... Read more
Published on Jun 24 2004 by wayzygoose

3.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Faerie Tale
Caught in a war between the noble houses of Faerie, relentlessly hunted by something out of a nightmare, down on his luck musician, Theo Vilmos is having a singularly bad day. Read more
Published on Jun 19 2004 by Shanshad

2.0 out of 5 stars Two hundred pages in...
... and I still didn't care about anyone in this book. I put it down and haven't picked it up again.

All of the characters just felt flat. Read more

Published on Jun 3 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars A rip-roaring delight!
There are so many good things to say about this, my first Tad Williams experience. It's a stand-alone fantasy, astoundingly rich in minute detail, that kept me hanging on pretty... Read more
Published on May 4 2004 by aiylyn

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing & utterly conventional
It is with some regret that I pan this book. I've enjoyed Williams' previous work (notably _Memory, Sorrow & Thorn_), and his ideas here do have potential. Read more
Published on Mar 21 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Mature Fantasy
Tad Williams is an extraordinary writer. His latest novel gives ample prove of that. THE WAR OF THE FLOWERS is a complex, dark exploration of some of the most popular fairy tropes... Read more
Published on Jan 19 2004

4.0 out of 5 stars No Lilly-livered Flowers here!
The War of the Flowers resonated with me on several levels. I personally could identify with Theo. I am a musician(guitar), thus the screenname. Read more
Published on Dec 25 2003 by troubadour

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