Running with the Demon
Terry Brooks  
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Maison d'édition:Orbit
Genre:Fantasy
Série:The Word and the Void
Pages:512
ISBN:9781857236071
Format:Broché
Édition:New edition
Date de parution:1998-07-16
Date de l'ajout:2012-01-28
Prix:EUR 22,70 EUR
Mots-clés: Genre Fiction, Fantasy, Poche et Broché

Résumé: Amazon.com: Terry Brooks's <I>Running with the Demon</I> is billed as A Novel of Good and Evil, but he could've called it A Novel of Here and Now. The fantasy master behind the Shannara series switches his focus from neo-Tolkien jungles to the woebegone steel town of Hopewell, Illinois. Though Illinois teenager Nest Freemark (where does he get these names?) looks like your average kid, she spends her free time in the woods asking her 6-inch pal Pick for advice in dodging the Demon and his creepy Feeders, spirits who gobble the souls of humans. Nest is also being tailed by John Ross, a shining Knight of the Word who wants to keep her from the Feeders' jaws.<p> Meanwhile, in the real world that dominates the novel, Nest Freemark is being stalked by a handsome, evil classmate who she has rejected, and a pack of surly, insurgent striking steelworkers plot a bombing at the company's Fourth of July picnic. The boy and the bombers are unaware that they're being subconsciously manipulated by the Demon. The book's matter-of-fact take on the uncanny is a bit like <I>The X-Files</I>. (And if you want to compare the two, check out Ted Edwards's <I>X-Files Confidential: The Unauthorized X-Philes Compendium</I>.)<p> Brooks's plot has more strands than a plate of pasta, yet his mind is logical to a fault--he used to be a lawyer. There's something for everyone: gory monster attacks, a dread family secret, magical mind-game duels, even a (rather flat) teen-romance subplot. The setting has real grit and the countdown to the Independence Day bombing peps up the tale. Brooks sometimes prosaically explains things a better literary stylist would dramatize, and his minatory visions of environmental apocalypse are more fun than the obvious, nagging, don't-be-a-litterbug message they exist to convey. Brooks will never be as deep as Tolkien, and many readers will find him less awesome as their adolescence recedes. Still, he's the genuine article, and with this book, he raises the stakes he's playing for.<br /><br /><a href=http://www.amazon.fr/Running-Demon-Terry-Brooks/dp/1857236076?SubscriptionId=1W087CHNYGBWE51SK6R2&tag=ws&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=1857236076>Amazon</a>