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Fables, Vol. 17: Inherit the Wind [Paperback]

Bill Willingham , Mark Buckingham
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 10, 2012
A #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

The tights and capes have been stored away forever, but it remains to be seen if Haven and its refugee inhabitants have survived the onslaught of. Where do the Fables go from here? Bigby and Snow White's cubs try to move forward after learning a hard lesson about life and death. And the loveable, fan-favorite hero Bufkin the Flying Monkey gets into more trouble when he finally reaches his homeland of Oz.

This Fables volume includes issues 108-113 of the original series.


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Fables, Vol. 17: Inherit the Wind + Fables, Vol. 18: Cubs in Toyland + Fables Vol. 16: Super Team
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"One of the best damn series ever written!" (Ain't it Cool)" --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Bill Willingham is the award-winning writer and creator of FABLES. He has been writing, and sometimes drawing, comics for more than twenty years on titles including Elementals, Coventry, PROPOSITION PLAYER and FABLES. With Matthew Sturges, Bill co-wrote the FABLES spinoff JACK OF FABLES, as well as HOUSE OF MYSTERY and JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA. His work has been nominated for many awards, including the Eisner, Harvey and Ignatz comic industry awards, plus the International Horror Guild award.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Vertigo; First Edition edition (July 10, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1401235166
  • ISBN-13: 978-1401235161
  • Product Dimensions: 7 x 0.6 x 10 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #26,371 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Bill Willingham never fought a desperate and losing battle in a good cause, never contributed to society in a meaningful way, and hasn't lived a life of adventure, but he's had a few moments of near adventure. At some point in his life Bill learned how to get paid for telling scurrilous lies to good people, and he's been doing it ever since. He lives in the wild and frosty woods of Minnesota.

Customer Reviews

Bill Willingham has created an amazing story with great characters! Gregory Melvin  |  8 reviewers made a similar statement
I hope that this story arc is the last one. M  |  4 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Great Plotlines Emerge! August 25, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
**This review contains spoilers**

I found the seventeenth volume of the Fables series to be a fascinating entry to the series. I loved all of the new plot lines that have come up in the trade. The cubs inheriting the North Wind's Kingship was an interesting storyline, as is the prophecy Ozma told little Ambrose. One thing that bothered me was not hearing anything about Ghost regarding the prophecy or the contest for the heir to the North Wind's title. I know he's a secret to everyone but Snow, Bigby, and his siblings but surely THEY would have mentioned him, and how does he feel about all of this? We know what all of his siblings think but not Ghost yet. I'm not naive enough to think that it won't come up later in this storyline BUT it'd be nice to hear him get acknowledged in this Cub-centric arc.

The storyline with Bufkin in Oz is also really fun, he and his crew of friends grew on me fast. I was afraid at first that I'd think of Bufkin's adventures as the B-plot but it actually managed to keep my attention just as much as the other stories.

I'm really enjoying the parts with Mrs. Spratt shedding her old image (and a lot of weight) and wanting revenge on the Fables she grew to resent is an inspired idea. I cannot say how much I love that new plotline! I always just thought of Mrs. Spratt as being a background character who was only as hateful as she was because she was just a miserable person (or the fact that she was a widow after Ghost accidentally killed her husband) but seeing what she had to go through being one of the few unattractive fable women among plenty of gorgeous ones who are more well known and regarded highly for their beauty in the stories they hail from, yeah, I see why she treated people the way she did in the past. It had to have been rough on her. I was really looking forward to reading more about what she plans to do after the last TPB, but here there was really not much of anything advanced in regards to her story, just a little bait to keep us all intrigued. It's good but I'd have liked to have learned more.

One of my favorite parts in this TPB would have to be Rose Red becoming a paladin of hope. I really loved how Willingham used the stories of The Little Match Girl, the Goose Girl (The False Bride), and Santa Claus. I'm really impressed that he picked such good characters for the agents of hope. I guess I should point out that it does bug me a little that The False Bride made it sound as if in her story that her punishment (being put in a barrel with iron nails in it and then having the barrel rolled down the cobbles, killing her) was done just as a regular punishment... but in the actual story she was asked what punishment was deserving for what she did to the true bride. She said that such a person deserved nothing less than being killed in that manner. So she set HER OWN punishment. I thought if Bill Willingham had her say that part it would have added a greater level to her being the Spirit of Hope for Revenge.

Other than that plotline, we get a bit more side stories involving the lustful Porky Pine the porcupine who is horny for human women. I'm pretty sure he showed up in some other arc but it's interesting to see how he gained the unusual fetish he has. Also an interesting side story involving a powerful sorcerer Abra Kadabara who has been the unspoken reason the Adversary's forces hadn't struck in Fabletown (until he is killed by Dorothy in a tie-in to the 2nd Cinderella miniseries). Fascinating stuff! Also there's a pretty fantastic backstory of the turtle with the cup on its shell from the background of the Rose Red trade.

Suspense seems to be the theme with this volume. As other reviewers have pointed out Bill Willingham has really been setting many new and interesting twists in the Fables universe. Like a lot of the other reviewers on here, I do also wish that he would give some stories proper resolution before doing so many, but having been a Fables fan since I was 13 (way back when the first trades came out) I can already tell that when he resolves each of these, he's going to make them amaze his readers.

The art is fantastic in this trade by the way. As always Mark Buckingham is phenomenal. He just keeps getting better and better, I adore the way he draws his characters and the expressiveness in his drawings has been even more pronounced now. The guest artists do a fantastic job as well. I always love when P. Craig Russell lens his art to a Fables story.

All together I'd highly recommend this trade. It's a great continuation of current story arcs and has a lot of crucial suspense building moments that will leave the reader begging for more.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Merely the Prelude to a Greater Story July 25, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Since its inception back in 2002, Bill Willingham's Fables has captivated readers with its sharp, imaginative writing, implausible but believable plots (if that makes any sense), and truly multifaceted, fascinating characters. The basic premise, of course, is brilliant--take the famous fairy tale and fable figures of yore and set them inside the "real" world, where they live, roam, and otherwise behave like regular human beings, unless, of course, circumstances dictate otherwise. And with outside dangers and peril always afoot, circumstances often do.

This latest volume, Inherit the Wind, continues Willingham's complicated yarn, with the focus now set on which of Snow White and Bigby's seven cubs will become the new North Wind. Bufkin's ongoing adventures in Oz also continue to unfold, as does Miss Sprat's evil plan to exact revenge on the Fable community. Unfortunately, each tale crawls at lethargic speed, and almost smacks of being filler in parts. Only a foreboding prophesy involving the cubs, and the North Wind's eventual selection, redeem the rather uneventful plot.

Surprisingly, the final two chapters fare better, despite having only a cursory connection to the other storylines. The first follows Rose Red on Christmas Eve as she learns the true meaning of hope, providing a quintessential Fables tale full of philosophical musings, tantalizing questions, and heartfelt sentimentality. The second is a collection of whimsical short stories of varying quality, but each is entertaining in its own right and one even provides a hint or two of what awaits the Fable people in the future.

As for the art, Mark Buckingham's pencil work is merely adequate here, feeling uncharacteristically rushed in parts. A notable exception is Rose Red's story in chapter five, which features the sharp, lush illustrations for which he's famous. The final chapter also features solid work by a number of guest artists, but the final piece by Adam Hughes is easily the most striking, with his depictions of Bellflower (and a voluptuous farm girl) being absolutely stunning.

Ultimately, Inherit the Wind feels more like a middling prelude to what one hopes will be a weightier story in the next installment. Readers will probably enjoy what's here, but like eating an appetizer, will still hunger for the main course. Let's hope the next one delivers.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Very nice, but not as strong as other volumes August 1, 2012
Format:Paperback
First things first, if you haven't read the previous volumes then this one isn't a good place to start. It's not impossible to catch up with what you might have missed, but if you aren't aware of certain recent happenings then you'll be left a little lost at times.

That said, this was a decent enough volume. It just wasn't great. The artwork is the obvious strong point of the volume and is why I awarded it 4 stars instead of 3. A good many authors contributed in this volume and as such, you get a wide variety of styles, particularly in the last few chapters. The short with the porcupine had to be my favorite and I keep flipping back to it in order to view the gorgeous artwork and colors. Everything in the porcupine short was pretty much perfectly done. Artwork-wise, this is a five.

Story-wise, this was just OK. We do get a little progression with the discovery of the new North Wind and more foreshadowing of the other aspects of Ozma's prediction, but much of this is spent treading water and building up to the next big arc. Since this is Willingham the read is still a good one, but it sort of reminded me how long this series has been and that it's still far from over. The story here is solidly a three.

Collectors of the series will snap this up regardless, but if you're one of those people who sort of slowly lost interest in the series as a whole (great artwork or no) then this probably won't be the volume that brings you back.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Another success in the series
Not as awesome as some of the rest of the series - this one felt like the issues were merely serving as a transition from the last arc to the next one. Read more
Published 8 days ago by T. Dotts
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Series
Fables is a great series! Bill Willingham has created an amazing story with great characters! Always eagerly awaiting the next Volume to see how the plot unfolds, revealing new... Read more
Published 23 days ago by Gregory Melvin
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent conclusion to story
A nice addition to the Fables story. Wraps up the Northwind story nicely. Story and artwork up the the best of the previous collections.
Published 1 month ago by Timothy K. Morris
4.0 out of 5 stars A long time reader reflects
I've been reading Fables for about five years now, and that has given me some perspective. This volume is stronger than the low point of the Great Fables Crossover (which almost... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Matthew Yasuoka
3.0 out of 5 stars Just playing for time
The hey day of Fables is over. Without the connective tissue of the great adversary holding the stories together, the comic has floundered and flopped around trying to find things... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Tim Lieder
4.0 out of 5 stars "Fables: Inherit the Wind"
A new storyline continues in the unique world of Fables, as we focus on our main story at hand: that of Bigby and his family. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Alexandro C. Telander
5.0 out of 5 stars The pure return to form.
Honestly, Fables was losing some steam for me since Fabletown was destroyed. Mister Dark was a character too powerful to be taken on like the Adversary or any other evil being... Read more
Published 3 months ago by mbrassil
5.0 out of 5 stars Great as always!
This book do not stop surprising me! Bill Willingham is one of the best writers of our times! Great Book!
Published 3 months ago by Juan Rodriguez Fernandez
5.0 out of 5 stars Favorite series
This entire series has surpassed all my expectations and continues to do so with each new installment that comes in the mail.
Published 4 months ago by rinabee
4.0 out of 5 stars A bit piecemeal but still entertaining
This is the 17th book in the Fables series and picks up after the battle with Mister Dark. It was a decent installment in the series and I enjoyed it. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Karissa Eckert
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