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155 Reviews
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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A stunning conclusion,
By Tar-Palantir (Hobbiton, The Shire, Eriador, Middle-Earth) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Hardcover)
Abhorsen starts out with a bang (literally) and only gets better as the story progresses. This book is truly a worthy successor to Sabriel and Lirael. As readers of Lirael will remember, Nicholas Sayre and Hedge the necromancer are digging for the two silver spheres that bind Orannis, the Destroyer. Releasing Orannis will mean, effectively, the end of the world. So, all Lirael, Prince Sameth, and company must do is stop them. Of course, that couldn't be any harder, for they face legions of Dead, Chlorr of the Mask, Hedge, and Orannis himself, who was once the strongest of the Nine Bright Shiners. This volume also finally reveals the true natures of Mogget and the Disreputable Dog, and the gifts of Lirael and Sameth. The whole book is tremendously exciting, building up to a climactic battle that is one of the best I have ever read, reminiscent of the Battle of the Pelennor Fields from The Lord of the Rings. Abhorsen is simply an awesome fantasy book. It is one of the few I deem worthy to be kept on the same shelf as The Lord of the Rings. I highly recommend it to all readers who have read the previous volumes.
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A riverine Underworld,
By E. A. Lovitt "starmoth" (Gladwin, MI USA) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
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This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Library Binding)
As in "Sabriel" and "Lirael," Death is a riverine chasm from which the dead can be called back to the living by powerful necromancers. Only the Abhorsen (Sabriel) or the Abhorsen-in-waiting (Lirael) can pass from life into the river of Death, through the eight Gates of fog, whirlpools, waterfalls, and shadow, and do magical combat with the necromancers in their own dark realm...Well, the Disreputable Dog can splash into Death, too and in "Abhorsen" you'll find out who she really is, along with Mogget the bad-tempered cat (who reminds me of some of the grouchier Jack Lemon characters). "Abhorsen" is a worthy conclusion to Nix's Old Kingdom trilogy. Read "Sabriel" and "Lirael" before undertaking "Abhorsen," so that you can familiarize yourself with the Philosophy and Geography of Death. Nix isn't into summarization or repetition. He plunges his reader right into a whirlpool of death, animated corpses, and Charter magic. If you don't already know such characters as the Disreputable Dog, the necromancer Hedge, or his bone-headed companion, Nick, you might never figure out what's going on. This book is a direct continuation of "Lirael," with the ex-assistant librarian and her companion, Prince Sameth carrying on the battle against Hedge and the evil he is digging up at Red Lake. Although Prince Sameth was meant to be the Abhorsen-in-Waiting, heir to the powers of 'The Book of the Dead' and the seven bells, Lirael now takes up that role, and Sam seeks his destiny as a descendant of the mysterious Wallmakers, who built the barrier between the magical Old Kingdom and the mundane kingdom of Ancelstierre. The two will need all of the magic they can conjure up against an enemy that threatens not only the Charter, but all living beings. The swirl and cross-currents of life gradually ebb as the dead pass through gate after gate on Garth Nix's nameless river--a river like Styx or Lethe that runs through each of our subconscious underworlds as a legacy of our water-bound gestation. It is an eerie experience to remember that journey of birth--only this time in the wake of the dead--in this marvelous fantasy trilogy.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic,
By kat lovur (Knoxville, Tennessee United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Library Binding)
This is a wonderful book that draws you in from the very first words. It is about a young woman named Lirael, not sure about her place in life, until she found her nephew Prince Sameth and she became the Abhorsen-in-Waiting, Prince Sameth inheriting the power of the Wallmakers. Sameth and Lirael, accompanied by the Disreputable Dog and the Free Magic being in the shape of a cat ,Mogget,then set out to travel and save Sam's friend, Nick, who has unconsciously gottten himself mised up in the mess happening near the Red Lake. The necromancer Hedge ,accompanied by Chlorr of the Mask and several thousand Dead Hands, are digging up the silver hemispheres which hold the Ninth Bright Shiner, Orannis, prisoner. Lirael and her companions must get across the Wall to Nick 's LIghting Farm in time to stop the joining of the hemispheres which could mean the end of all life. Sam and Lirael face many difficulties on their way to Edge and even into Ancelstierre. But their strength as Charter Mages helps them along the way, along with the Dog and Mogget.The true identities of the Dog and Mogget are revealed along with several other shocking revelations. This book is fast paced and action packed. I would reccomend this book to everyone. It even leaves a little room at the end for your imagination, or possibly another book.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent conclusion to a fine trilogy,
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Paperback)
Unlike Sabriel, which stands alone as a complete novel, Lirael ends on a cliffhanger, with its completion in Abhorsen. This is not a complaint, since the same can be said of the Lord of the Rings trilogy as a whole. But it is to say that while you might read the last two novels without reading the first, you can't read this one without reading Lirael.
More significantly, though, than the continuity of plot in the last two novels, is that the last two novels complete the cosmological implications of the first novel -- elevating this world and its story to something more than merely a cool or interesting place (more than a fantasy), and into the status of significant myth. What I mean by that, is that the story begins to take on larger dimensions than merely a story of a few interesting characters in an interesting world. It becomes a story of the contrast between order and chaos (a dimension in every founding myth), and of the tension between different kinds of order (a tyranny and a democracy are both ordered states). It also becomes (especially in Abhorsen) a profound meditation on the metaphysical dimensions of freedom: something to be seen, for example, in the contrast between the "Disreputable Dog" and the "cat" Mogget (whereas the cat is a "free magic" creature who is bound against his will by the charter; the dog is apparently a free magic creature who has taken upon herself the charter, submitting herself to its ordering principles). While there is a sense in which this is a classic story of the struggle of good against evil, these underlying tensions make it much more interesting. The story thus raises philosophical questions like: is genuine freedom to be unbound? is mastery the only form of power? is order better than chaos? More than just a great read and a well told story, this trilogy aims to provide subtle and interesting answers to such questions.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WOW!,
By Saraneth (Littleton, CO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Library Binding)
I got this book not expecting much, because though I loved Sabriel, Lireal wasn't as good. Boy was I surprised!!! From the first pages it grabbed me and pulled me along the amazing plot. I found myself falling further in love with my favorite characters and growing fond of even those that I had not liked as much in Lireal. The action was intense and I was reading as fast as I could. At the end, I shocked myself by crying- something I usually never do in books. An amzing story that is greater and more magnificent than both of it's predecessors. A great end to a fantastic series- though I would LOVE to read more about the Old Kingdom. ABHORSEN is one of the best books I have read- right up there with Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter! I reccomend this book to everyone- though they should read it's prequels, SABRIEL and LIREAL before reading it. Cheers Garth Nix!
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A wonderful end to a wonderful series!,
By Sara (Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Library Binding)
Abhorsen by Garth Nix is the third book in a trilogy, starting with Sabriel and then Lirael and finally ending with Abhorsen. If you have not read these books, it would probably be very confusing for you, so I suggest you start at the beggining.I have anxiously awaited 'Abhorsen' for almost a year now. I wasn't disappointed! Lirael, Sam, the Disreputable Dog, Mogget, and other favorite characters come back in this tale of the climatic final battle against whatever it is they are digging up in Red Lake. The story is extremely suspensfull, leaving you on the edge of your seat and unable to put the book down. I found myself missing my book even for the day that I was too busy to read it! Filled with life, death, magic, spectacular characters and a wonderful writing style, Garth Nix has successfully put out another winner. The ending is a little vague (not much of an epilouge), but I think it is more fun that way, letting the reader use their imagination to decide what happens to the characters. If there was ever a series that I wish I could get everyone I knew to read, it would be this series. 6 stars, most definately. Don't pass this up.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read a lot, and the Old World series by Garth Nix is ZE BEST,
By Abraham Vionas (Bozeman, MT USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Paperback)
There's no other way of putting it. It is amazing how clearly this book stands head and shoulders above *every* other book I've ever read (except for the first two of the series). I also love movies, but can't pick out any favorites, since there have been none that are so far superior. This series took my breath away. Both I and my wife read them in single sittings and have both started rereading them... Until he writes another sequel (an interview with him indicated that he *might*) or otherwise returns to the Old World what he has created will just have to do. Truly fantastic stuff. Given the absolute depth and sincerety of his writing and the way it resonates as being true to the harsh realities, and surprising joys of life is truly unique. I haven't read any of Garth Nix's other writings, as I hold him in such high regard for the Old World series and don't want to tarnish that. Anyway, I don't often take the time to write reviews, but I just had to put in my praise of these books! Abe
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another brilliant series by Garth Nix,
By Kevin Thomson (Vancouver BC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Hardcover)
I read Sabriel in a weeks time...
I read Lireal in three days... I read Abhorsen in two days... Nix's books always do this to me. His style is hard to ignore, and his creativity, unsurpassed- at least that's what I think. His latest book was no different. With its heart-pumping action, and a great sense of imagry and plot. This book is easily one of my favourites. Garth Nix never fails to go beyond my expectations when writing his final books -though he's only written two so far-. This MUST-READ cliff-hanger is too good to be literature.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Abhorsen,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Hardcover)
Abhorsen was, simply put-amazing. I loved Sabriel because of the excitement, and I liked Lirael even more because of the amazing characters. But Abhorsen, it tops them both. In this book, Lirael-daughter of the clayr and "remembrancer", the Disreputable Dog, Prince Sameth, Mogget, and the others of the "great charter's" blood line must defeat and bind Orannis, the most powerful of the nine original beings. The ending was breathtaking. I only wish that Nix had shown us the nine stages of Orannis' power, the imagery of the first two was so exciting! Well, anyways, definitely read Abhorsen, it's a far more sophisticated book than that "Harry Potter" series, and it's the only book that (in my opinion) can compare to the His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman.Read On :)
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the most satisfying trilogies ever!,
By
This review is from: Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) (Library Binding)
I teach 7th grade English and Sabriel was first introduced to me in a book report three years ago. I didn't pick it up until a while later, and I instantly fell in love. Lirael was even better and I've been eagerly awaiting Abhorsen for what feels like forever.Abhorsen picks up right where Lirael left off. Lirael and Sameth are fighting Chlorr of the Mask and tragedy has come to King Touchstone and the Queen and Abhorsen Sabriel. The opening chapter stops your heart and the pace flies right until the final words. I highly recommend this series for adolescent girls. Sabriel and Lirael are two of the most amazing young women to be found in young adult literature. I have a circle of girls who have been passing these books around and almost lost their minds when I managed to get an advance copy of Abhorsen for them to review. The boys like the story, too, so if you're looking for a gift, pick up these three books. Wow. Rarely do I feel so satisfied with a book. If you're in sixth grade or any age above, get these books! |
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Abhorsen (The Abhorsen Trilogy) by Garth Nix (Hardcover - December 31, 2002)
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