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9780345439055

The World of Shannara

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780345439055

  • ISBN10:

    0345439058

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2001-10-01
  • Publisher: Del Rey
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List Price: $35.00

Summary

The beloved Shannara series by #1 New York Times bestselling author Terry Brooks is universally acclaimed as a towering achievement, an unquestioned masterpiece in fantasy literature. Now, for the first time, all the wonders of Shannara have been gathered into one single, indispensable volume in which Terry Brooks shares candid views on his creation. Lavishly illustrated with full-color paintings and black-and-white drawings, this comprehensive guide ventures behind the scenes to explore the history, the people, the places, the major events, and of course the magic, of one of the world's greatest fantasy epics. What sets Terry Brooks apart? Is it a knack for creating complex, unforgettable characters like Allanon the Druid, Shea Ohmsford, and Amberle the elven-maidmen and women, gnomes and wizards, who come alive on the page and in our hearts? Is it the haunting and utterly believable evil of his darker creations: the foul Dagda Mor, the insanely murderous Jachyra, the enigmatic Ilse Witch? Or is it the way his adventures effortlessly partake of the timeless quality of myth? Whatever the secret of Brooks's storytelling magic, generations of readers have fallen under its spell, returning again and again to the pages of beloved classics like The Elfstones of Shannara and The Druid of Shannara, and relishing his newest novels in the Voyage of the Jerle Shannara saga. Sure to tantalize and delight old fans and newcomers alike, The World of Shannara is the ultimate gateway into the fantasy realms of Terry Brooksand the perfect companion to take along on the journey of a lifetime.

Table of Contents

Foreword viii
Jerry Brooks
Introduction: The Lost Legacy x
Descent into Darkness: The Old World and the Great Wars
2(5)
Paranor: The Druid's Keep
7(16)
Within the Walls: A Tour of Paranor
16(7)
The Druids: Legacy of Mystery
23(13)
Bremen: First Mystic Druid
24(3)
Allanon: Protector of the Four Lands
27(2)
Walker Boh: Dark Uncle
29(4)
Cogline: The Lapsed Druid
33(3)
Realms of the Dead
36(13)
The Hadeshorn
36(4)
Hall of Kings
40(9)
The Southland: History of the Federation
49(12)
History of the Southland
49(12)
The Southland: Cities of the Southland
61(15)
Arishaig
61(2)
Wayford and Stern
63(1)
Dechtera
64(2)
Highlands of Leah
66(4)
The City of Leah
70(2)
Beyond the Highlands
72(1)
Shady Vale
73(3)
Two Families: A Legacy of Courage
76(15)
The Ohmsfords
81(5)
The Leahs
86(5)
The Borderlands: Crossroads of the Four Lands
91(12)
The Border Legion of Callahorn
98(5)
The Borderlands: Fortresses of Trade
103(14)
Tyrsis
104(7)
Varfleet
111(2)
Kern
113(1)
Beyond the Cities
114(3)
The Northland: Land of Trolls and Warlocks
117(16)
The Skull Kingdom
121(5)
Trolls
126(6)
Urdas
132(1)
The Eastland: Land of Dwarves and Gnomes
133(25)
Dwarves
134(3)
Land of the Dwarves
137(7)
Gnomes
144(6)
Mwellrets
150(8)
The Westland: Land of the Elves
158(19)
History of the Elves
158(10)
Arborlon
168(5)
The Fortress of the Chew Magna
173(1)
The Matted Brakes
174(3)
The Westland: Guardians of the Air
177(16)
Sky Elves
177(6)
Rovers
183(2)
March Brume
185(1)
Airships
185(5)
The Wilderun
190(3)
The Lands Beyond
193(4)
Flay Creech
193(1)
Shatterstone
194(1)
Shrike Island
194(1)
Mephitic
195(1)
Ice Henge
195(1)
Morrowindl
196(1)
A Legacy of Magic: Darkness, and Light
197(1)
The King of the Silver River
198(2)
The Stone King
200(1)
Maw Grint
200(1)
Quickening
201(1)
Morag and Mallenroh
202(1)
The Morgawr
203(1)
The Dagda Mor
204(1)
The Changeling
205(1)
The Reaper
205

Supplemental Materials

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Excerpts

Bremen: First Mystic Druid

The first Druid to actually succeed in promoting the combination of the study of magic with other disciplines was the Druid Bremen. Unfortunately, he succeeded primarily because he and his followers were the only Druids to survive Paranor’s fall during the Second War of the Races. Bremen is best known for his role in creating the legendary Sword of Shannara, a magic-imbued weapon he designed to defeat the Warlock Lord.

Abandoned by his parents shortly after birth, Bremen was raised by his grandfather, a skilled metalworker, who was probably responsible for both the boy’s understanding of metallurgy and his dedication. Always searching for knowledge, Bremen was a student of history and ancient tongues, disciplines that made him an ideal candidate for the Druid Council.

He joined the council as a young man and became active in assisting in the evolution and development of the Races. Over time, he watched as the Druid Council began to pull back from the rest of the world, disillusioned by its failure to re-create the old sciences.

Frustrated by the setbacks, Bremen began to look to magic as a possible alternative. In his early journal entries, now part of the Druid Histories, Bremen wrote: “Magic could provide a more manageable and durable form of power than that found through science. It has untapped potential beyond that of the sciences, even at the levels of scientific advancement found in the Old World.”

At that time, the study of the arcane arts was permissible but discouraged. Magic was to be treated as a curiosity only, not a serious discipline. One group of Druids had already been exiled for their insistence on the use of magic as a tool to make the Druids the masters of all the Races. Bremen was warned against traversing the same path. The fact that magic had been used in the First War of the Races to ill effect did nothing to help his cause. He wrote, “It is quite unnatural to me to discard a possibility simply because it has once failed. Do we discard science because we have failed to re-create the wonders of the Old World? Of course not. Why then discard magic just because it was once blatantly misused? If we discard every possibility that is not immediately successful, we are left with no possibilities at all.” He believed that magic could be harnessed and controlled with enough discipline and training.

A few of his fellows apparently agreed with him, but they were in the minority. Unwilling to risk censure, they backed away from the matter. Bremen did not. Eventually his insistence on considering magic a valid and serious alternative to science earned him banishment from the council.

After his banishment, Bremen traveled to the Westland to study with the Elves, where he lived for many years. He believed the Elven libraries, which had the greatest collection of ancient writings in lost Elven dialects, held the secret to understanding the old magic from the time of Faerie. The Elves embraced Bremen and his search, since they too were interested in rediscovering abilities that had been lost. Certain magics, such as some degree of the Druid Sleep, were skills Bremen already practiced. But with his knowledge of ancient tongues, he was able to uncover treasures of magical lore and decipher otherwise discarded texts that increased his knowledge and abilities far beyond what he would have gained at Paranor.

Inspired from his years of success with the Elves, Bremen left them to travel to other lands, seeking whatever lost bits of magic he could find, in much the same way as the early Druids had searched out the texts and lore related to the Old World sciences. According to his journals, he found an amazing amount of lost magic, though none as greatly concentrated or as highly developed as that within the Westland. In many cases, the magic he found was completely foreign to those who used it.

At some point in his travels, probably while in the Southland, Bremen began to suspect that the First War of the Races had not actually been organized by the Race of Men who appeared to have started it. He found evidence that the leader–referred to only as Brona, which means “master” in Gnome dialect–who had long been thought by the Druids of his order to be a mythic figurehead, was in fact a real being. Bremen suspected he was the leader of the Druids who had broken from the council and renounced their brotherhood over the question of magic many years before. He also found evidence that Brona was still alive, despite the impossible number of years that had passed, and was planning another assault on the Four Lands.

Unlike the rest of the Druids, Bremen had no trouble believing Brona could still be alive, because his own life had been lengthened beyond a natural span by his use of the Druid Sleep. But he knew he would have to have proof before the council would believe him.

He spent the next several years tracking the elusive Brona, going so far as to travel to the Skull Kingdom. Upon his return to Paranor, both Bremen and his information were rejected by the council. He left with only the few who believed his warning of impending attack. Shortly after his visit, Paranor fell to the armies of the Warlock Lord, betrayed from within. Bremen and those who left with him–the Dwarf Warrior Druid Risca, the Elf Tay Trefenwyd, and the apprentice Mareth–were the only survivors of the order.

Before he left, Bremen provided the magic that saved the Druid Histories from the invaders. The opened portion of the Druid Histories also credits him for preventing a long-term occupation by the Warlock Lord by triggering the magic of the Druid’s Well.

By default, the death of the Druids left Bremen as the acting High Druid. But while he did rescue the Elit Druin after Paranor’s fall, he never formally accepted the title. He used the medallion in the forging of the Sword of Shannara, the magical weapon used to end the Second War of the Races and the War of the Warlock Lord.

Of the Druids who followed Bremen from Paranor, only Mareth survived the war. She declined to complete her training as a Druid, leaving Bremen as the last of the Druids, even as he was the first to successfully balance magic with the good of the Races. He adopted a young man known only as Allanon, whom he had befriended during the war, and took him as apprentice, heir, and eventually son.

Paranor vanished only a few years after the war, and some scholars now believe that Bremen, with his knowledge of magics, was responsible for that disappearance.

While many consider Bremen to have died approximately three years after the end of the Second War of the Races, Allanon’s journal records that he did not die, but instead “doomed himself to an existence of half-life that may not end for all eternity” by entering the mysterious Hadeshorn. This interpretation is also found within the diaries of Brin Ohmsford, where she records seeing an apparition that was identified as Bremen while at the Chard Rush, decades after Bremen’s supposed death.

Excerpted from The World of Shannara by Terry Brooks, Teresa Patterson
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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