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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brooks is Back on Track!!!
I have been a fan of Terry Brooks and the various Shannara books for 20 years, anxiously awaiting each new series in the ongoing tale. However, I must admit the last trilogy, The Voyage of the Jerele Shannara (TVotJS), was not up to par with the high expectations I have for Terry Brooks writings. While the trilogy did have new settings and characters I thought that many...
Published on September 2, 2003 by AbeStreet

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Is the Shannara magic is fading? Maybe...
The writing style and readability of this book are not in question--they are both great. What has left me disappointed is that, for the first time in ANY Shannara book, we are left with NO intriguing characters. Each book in this extensive series has been colored with the personality and special abilities of very interesting side characters that accompany the Shannara...
Published on September 29, 2003 by W. Stacey


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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brooks is Back on Track!!!, September 2, 2003
By 
AbeStreet (Mayfield Heights, OH United States) - See all my reviews
I have been a fan of Terry Brooks and the various Shannara books for 20 years, anxiously awaiting each new series in the ongoing tale. However, I must admit the last trilogy, The Voyage of the Jerele Shannara (TVotJS), was not up to par with the high expectations I have for Terry Brooks writings. While the trilogy did have new settings and characters I thought that many of the story plots and themes had been written about before and just redressed for this trilogy. I awaited the release of the High Druid of Shannara (THDoS) series with caution.

Just a few days ago my wife purchased the first book on THDoS series for me JARKA RUUS (JR) and I found that Brooks had recaptured what I originally so liked about the Shannara series. In this book Brooks brings back some familiar people and places. Several characters from the TVotJS have returned. Most importantly Grianne Ohmsford, the former Ilse Witch, in her current role as Ard Rhys the current leader of the third druid council. Grianne Ohmsford was one of my favorite characters from the TVotJS and I think she makes a great druid, much better than Walker Boh.

Aside from the characters and magic that marks all his books this series has a great story, just as good as THE FIRST KING OF SHANNARA (TFKoS) and right behind THE ELFSTONES OF SHANNARA (TEoS). I have always like TEoS and there are strong links to TEoS in JR. If you have read TEoS and enjoyed reading about the different demons and wondered just what the Forbidding that held them back was about then this story will answer a lot of those questions. Also, the Warlock Lord makes a cameo appearance of sorts in this book. The only thing I did not care for in this book was the abrupt ending. I know its part of a series but I feel that each book in a series should have some kind of closure or resolve at least for some of the minor sub-plots. Not this book!! It actually increases the suspense and then ends abruptly leaving the reader somewhat upset at being left to dangle for an entire year.

Lastly, Brooks seems to be back on the right track with the Shannara series. I can not wait until summer 2004 to pick up TANEQUIL and continue with this great story.

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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating and suspenseful story!, October 2, 2003
In this first of the series, author Terry Brooks brings us back to his world of the Shannara series. Having fulfilled Walker Boh's dream of rebuilding the Druid Council, High Druid Grianne Ohmsford (erstwhile the Ilse Witch) finds that the Council has developed into a nest of vipers. When a cabal of power-seeking druids uses foul magic to banish Grianne to a different dimension, their attention turns to Bek Ohmsford and his son Penderrin, the only ones who might be able to bring her back. With Bek off on a voyage, Pen must run from the druids and towards a place where he is told that he can find the magic to return Grianne, and along the way he must do everything he can to keep himself alive.

Even though this is the first book in a series, Terry Brooks succeeds in building a fascinating and suspenseful story. Unlike the first book of the The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara series, this one is much more than mere introduction and character development. I found this to be a gripping and fascinating story, one that I highly recommend to all fans of fantasy literature!

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Exciting Beginning to a New Series, October 14, 2003
In this first installment of the High Druid of Shannara series, author Terry Brooks picks up where the events of the "Voyage" series ended. It is now twenty years after the survivors of the battle with the Morgawr have returned, and Grianne Ohmsford, the former Ilse Witch, is now the Ard Rhys, or High Druid. However, not everyone at the Druid's keep at Paranor is supportive of her. Shadea a'Ru, a rival druid, has devised a scheme to remove Grianne from Paranor and place her in another dimension. Using a potion called liquid night, Shadea manages to sneak into the Ard Rhys' chambers and administer it to her. When Grianne awakens, she is no longer at Paranor, but trapped inside the Forbidding.

Tagwen, Grianne's faithful dwarf assistant, realizes she is missing and immediately suspects Shadea and her accomplices. Immediately, he decides to find Grianne's brother Bek Ohmsford, because his use of the wishsong may help in finding Grianne. Unfortunately upon arriving, Tagwen discovers that Bek has gone away on an expedition and Pen, Beck's son, is the only one home.

However, the druids have also thought of it to search for Bek and arrive almost at the same time as Tagwen. Pen and Tagwen flee and begin a journey to Emberen in search of Ahren Elessedil, the Elven Druid who survived the battle against the Morgawr twenty years earlier. With information given to them by the King of the Silver River, the companions begin their journey to find the Tanequil, a tree which has branches that will enable Pen to cross over into the Forbidding and bring Grianne back to the Four Lands. Will the companions make it to the Tanequil? Will Grianne survive inside the Forbidding?

Brooks has written another fine book which is surely to become a fantasy classic. As with each of Brooks' preceeding books, this one immediately draws the reader in with characters that the reader genuinely cares about and a plot that will definitely keep the pages turning. I'm only sorry that I'll have to wait until next year for book two to be released. I highly recommend this book. Its a great beginning to a new and exciting Brooks series.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW. That pretty well sums it up., April 17, 2006
By 
I've loved Terry Brooks since 1979 when I first read The Sword of Shannara. Was it essentially the same plot outline as Lord of the Rings? Yes. But I was 11, and had just finished reading LOTR for the first time. Shannara worked well for me, and I was quickly hooked.

As I've gotten older and (hopefully) matured, the series has matured as well. We've learned the costs of the magic weilded by the characters. We've learned that those with great power aren't always the happiest, and are often quite troubled. We've learned that heroism comes with a price.

High Druid of Shannara promises to be a series about redemption. 20 years after the return of the Jerle Shannara expedition, Grianne Ohmsford, the Ilse Witch, has taken her place as the High Druid at Paranor. But there are many who cannot forgive her, who won't forget her past life, and want her dead. And there are others who seek the power of the Druid Council for their own purposes.

Grianne disappears, and it falls to another Ohmsford to rescue her - her nephew. Pendarrin Ohmsford is not the unwilling hero that his ancestors were - at least not at first. He is so ready for adventure and excitement that it's clear he isn't a full-blooded Ohmsford; the Rover blood is deep in him, and at times he acts like a prince of Leah rather than an Ohmsford. He quickly learns that adventures are far more frightening than anyone has ever told him. Especially when he is told that he is the only one who can save his aunt, buy finding a legendary tree, the Tanequil, and obtaining a talisman that only he can get.

It has been enjoyable watching Brooks' writing mature. His works have gone from a formulaic fantasy quest book to a deeper exploration of human emotion and failings. His characters tend to be slightly stock, but they're his stock of characters. I often find myself wondering what previous character each newcomer is related to, or what mold they have been cast from. Fortunately, Brooks most often combines qualities of several characters when creating a new one, so they seem fresh.

I devoured this book. I had planned on reading this at the beach this year on vacation - it didn't last long enough for me to even take with me. The books are addictive.

But it's a good addiction. Really.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good, but too short, October 6, 2003
By 
I love Brooks writing. I've never been disappointed...well, some of that Wizard at Large series was a bit silly, but I digress. My disappointment lies in the length of the books in his latest endevours. All three installments of the VJS trilogy were fairly short, by fantasy novel standards. I fear that this latest series will be the same. So, my review is, "It's a fun read, and a good set-up for the next couple of books, but I finished it in like three days!" Whatever happened to the big fat stories like "Sword of Shannara" that you started us out on? Surely, it's not a money issue?! Hmmm....
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Revisit the amazing world of Shannara!, April 29, 2006
By 
Paul Weiss (Dundas, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
Grianne Ohmsford, struggling with the inner demons of her former evil life as the Ilse Witch, also wrestles with the politics of her new role as Ard Rhys, High Druid of Paranor, responsible for the unification of the third Druid Council. Peace and harmony among the races of the four lands seems a distant, faint hope as her enemies on the council, the dissenting druids led by Shadea a'Rhu, refuse to accept the reality of Grianne's redemption and plot to bring her down, each striving to achieve their own ends and bring their own agenda to completion. When Grianne vanishes, seemingly defeated by the circle of treasonous plotters surrounding her and locked behind impenetrable magic walls in the land of the Forbidding, her trusted servant and aide, Tagwen, realizes that his own life hangs in the balance and narrowly escapes Paranor himself. Relentlessly pursued by Terek Molt, another rebellious Druid on the Council and Aphasia Wye, a deadly assassin, Tagwen seeks help from the only people he can think of - Pen Ohmsford, Grianne's resourceful, young nephew and Ahren Ellesdil, a self-exiled elf Druid and master of no small amount of magic himself!

The thrilling chase is on as the Druid Council seeks to eliminate the only loose ends that can spoil their nefarious plans and Pen and Ahren seek to release Grianne from her hellish prison in The Forbidding and seal what appears to be a hole in the magic wall that might well see the re-appearance of the evil warlock in the Four Lands!

With The High Druid of Shannara, Brooks has once again burst onto the fantasy scene and re-established himself as a master of the genre! As a reader who first fell in love with The Sword of Shannara over twenty years, I felt like Brooks was making me the gift of that experience all over again - good vs evil; battles; treachery; magic of a bewildering array of flavours and strengths; love and loyalty; a beautifully crafted landscape replete with its dazzling population of fantasy inhabitants; and the imaginative, unique device of a cruelly, twisted "copy" of the Four Lands called The Forbidding that serves as a magical prison for the banished shade of Brona, the dreaded warlock lord.

While Jarka Ruus is primarily a plot-driven book that moves headlong at the pace of the finest thriller, Brooks has not neglected to provide a richly detailed cast with a fully developed range of emotions, strengths, failings, foibles and habits. I smiled as I watched Pen struggle with the conflict between his first young love for Cinnaminson, daughter of the Rover Captain, Gar Hatch, and the duties he knew he had assumed in the search for his aunt. Barely out of girlhood, Khyber Ellesdil, granted the genetic gift of magic and control over the Elfstones, seems overcome with typical teenage doubt and angst over her abilities and her place in the world. Tagwen, brave, loyal and well-intentioned, seems ... well ... simply overwhelmed, over-matched and out of his league!

The choice of endings for this novel, the first installment in a trilogy, is unfortunate and ill-conceived! In fact, it is no ending at all and every sub-plot and narrative thread is simply abandoned in mid-stream because, I expect, Brooks and the publishers wanted this novel to be a particular length. A minor aggravation in the overall scheme of things, I expect, because I've already pick up the next part - Tanequil - and started to eagerly read on!

Two thumbs up - more if I had `em!

Paul Weiss
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Is the Shannara magic is fading? Maybe..., September 29, 2003
By 
W. Stacey "SF/fantasy fan" (Ann Arbor, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The writing style and readability of this book are not in question--they are both great. What has left me disappointed is that, for the first time in ANY Shannara book, we are left with NO intriguing characters. Each book in this extensive series has been colored with the personality and special abilities of very interesting side characters that accompany the Shannara kin. And it has been a necessary part because the Shannara kin are usually cut out of the same mold, worrying about their ability to perform the task. But having airship captains, weapons masters, good trolls, daughters of the King of the Silver River (haven't we seen this guy in every book so far?), or villains walking along their side has been the best part of the series, in my opinion. Here we are left with nothing. There are simply not enough protagonists to be very exciting because the few we have are really somewhat boring. Grianne is interesting, and her journey is quite gripping. But while the events elsewhere are exciting to read, the characters are not.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars renewed my interest in the Shannara series, September 11, 2003
By 
High Druid of Shannara: Book 1

Jarka Ruus is set 20 years after the conclusion of Morgawr (The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara trilogy). Grianne Ohmsford, formerly the Ilse Witch is now the High Druid (Ard Rhys) of the Third Druid Council at Paranor. Grianne faces the problem of how to make the Druid Council relevant and effective in the Four Lands. She faces skepticism from the Elves and some men, and worse, she faces schemes from some of the Druids who still do not trust her because of her past. These schemes get the best of Grianne early in the book as she is trapped in some alternate realm similar to her own world (I refuse to name it because it is a massive spoiler and there is some joy in discovering where exactly Grianne ended up).

This sets up the main thrust of the novel which is the beginning of the quest to rescue Grianne. We are introduced to the hero of the novel, Pen Ohmsford. Brooks follows the formula of the Shannara series in that a new scion of the Ohmsford clan is tapped to undertake a quest of some sort. While Pen's father, Bek Ohmsford (from the Voyage trilogy) is alive and able, The King of the Silver River maintains that it is young Pen who must venture out to rescue his aunt (Grianne is Bek's sister). While Bek and Grianne have the magic of the Wishsong, Pen is a generation that has been skipped (though he wonders if the magic is just dying out). He does have his own magic, one that he does not think is as important or powerful as the Wishsong. He can empathetically understand animals. Helping Pen out in this quest are Ahren Elessedil (an elf Prince and Druid), his niece and apprentice Khyber Elessedil, and Grianne's dwarf assistant. This first volume in the High Druid trilogy sets up the main thrust of the series and offers an excellent continuation of the Voyage trilogy.

This is the best work Brooks has done in years (at least in the Shannara series) and is far better than any of the three books in the Voyage trilogy. The most interesting parts of the book deal with Grianne (which is a little unfortunate since the main focus is on Pen). She is more of an interesting character, more developed, and her circumstances are fascinating for any long time fan of Shannara. This book kept me turning the pages faster and faster because I wanted to know what happened next and I found myself eagerly awaiting Book 2 in the High Druid series. I didn't feel that way about the Voyage trilogy at all. Very good stuff from Terry Brooks.

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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars no spoilers please, March 21, 2004
By A Customer
Hey "reader from florida" thanks for telling everyone what happens in the story!Idiot!
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fine addition to the series, September 16, 2003
Grianne Ohmsford, the former Isle Witch and now High Druid, has problems. The new druid order she founded is in rebellion and her efforts to secure peace between the Federation and the Free-born have resulted in nothing. Still, when the attack comes, it catches her by surprise. Rather than simply kill her, her enemies banish her to Jarka Ruus, the forbidden land where the evil enemies were banished after the great wars. In a land where the ancient dragons, harpies, and furies hold sway, Grianne will have her hands full merely staying alive. What chance has she to return to her own world when the greatest mages of evil have failed for hundreds of years?

With Pen Ohlmsford, the spellsong magic has faded to nothing. What little magic he possesses relates to communications with non-humanoid life forms--plants and animals. His own parents don't trust him to join them in their quests. But when the rebelling druids seize control after banishing Grianne, they decide to be complete and ensure that none of the Ohlmsfords are free to challenge their rule or help Grianne. Their efforts send young Pen on an epic voyage. Guided by the elf-druid Ahren Elessedil, Pen must find a path to his aunt Grianne. First, however, the small band must escape the hunting druids. Pen's growing love for the daughter of the skyship they charter quickly complicates their life.

Author Terry Brooks extends his Shannara cycle with a new tale featuring many of the characters from the Jerle Shannara series, but introducing a new generation of explorers. JARKA RUUS will appeal especially to young adult readers with Pen battling self-doubt, limited magical abilities, and first-love in addition to the evil druids. JARKA RUUS is the first in a new series and leaves both Pen and Grianne in worse trouble than when they started, but getting there is definitely half the fun. Brooks's strong writing kept me involved and has me waiting for the next installment in the series.

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Jarka Ruus (High Druid of Shannara, Book 1)
Jarka Ruus (High Druid of Shannara, Book 1) by Terry Brooks (Mass Market Paperback - August 31, 2004)
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