Wednesday, June 16

okay, so i get a little obsessive...

fablehaven: my latest finished fantasy obsession.
i finished the very last book today.  and it was spectacular!  it contained all the good things a perfect fantasy series is supposed to end with.  a little bittersweetness over what was lost, joy at the discovered peace, reflection on the learned lessons, and {of course} the best guy gets the best girl.  really, i'm a little amazed at how quickly brandon mull rapped up the plot.  with 75 pages to go lat night, i was certain he was going to have to break his promise to readers and write another book.  but. to my joyful surprise, he proved worthy of his title as a fantasy author (unlike christopher paolini who {despite his original goal to write a trilogy} extended his last book another thousand pages only to continue the story line and loose more than half his follows by announcing a fourth book in the trilogy {can there be four books in a trilogy?} but. back to the point...).  

one of my favorite elements of brandon mull's stories is the correct portrayal of consequences.  maybe i obsess too much, but i'll never forget when seth was transformed into a walrus for his mistake.  i love the encouragement to look to the older generation for advice and help.  the character development is exquisite, building and solidifying with each book.  with a turn or tug at the end of every chapter, i never once was bored.  i even finished this book during a semester (something i haven't accomplished in years).  AND! it's clean - not a foul word or scene in the entire series, which, especially with fantasy, is rare.

enough with the extended praise, though.  if you haven't read fablehaven, read it.  it's a page-turner. it's an adventure.  it's something you can relate to.  it's something you can escape with.

and it's something i've added to my list of favorite fantasies.  mull now holds a place in the section of my heart's library also containing tolkien, cs lewis, and lloyd alexander.  now, that is praise.

ps. don't get me wrong, paolini started out as a superb author (page-turning creativity), but really? a trilogy just can't contain four books - it's logically impossible.  and. when i set out to read a trilogy, i don't want to be drug (against my will) into the perpetual world of a twenty-year old boy's fifteen book series.  no thank you. 

2 comments:

  1. I'm so glad you enjoyed it! I got to meet Brandon Mull in my publishing class during Winter semester and he was so awesome! It made me want to read Fabelhaven, but I just haven't had the time. And I totally agree with you about Christopher Paolini. I met him right after Eldest came out too. But I gave up on the Eragon not-trilogy. Totally lame!!

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  2. I'm so glad you loved it!! I thought it was the PERFECT ending to the series. Seriously perfect. I want to start over and read them all again sometime!

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