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The White Wolf's Son

The Albino Underground

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
- Aspect published the previous novel in the series, The Skrayling Tree, in hardcover (0-446-53104-9) in 2003 and in mass market (0-446-61340-1) in 7/04. The prior novel. The Dreamthief's Daughter (Aspect hardcover, 2001, 0-446-52618-5; mass market, 2002, 0-446-61120-4) received praise from the Washington Post, Denver Post, and Locus, where it was featured on the 2001 Recommended Reading list. - Aspect reissued Moorcock's classic Gloriana, or the Unfulfill'd Queen in trade paperback in 8/04. Gloriana won Moorcock the World Fantasy Award, the John W. Campbell Award, and the British Fantasy Award. - Moorcock's Elric the Eternal Champion saga has been optioned by Universal Pictures, with Chris and Paul Weitz (American Pie) producing. - Michael Moorcock is a vanguard author, editor, journalist, critic, and rock musician, who is editor of the controversial magazine New Worlds. A member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame, Moorcock has won the Guardian Fiction Prize, the Nebula Award, the World Fantasy Award, and the British Fantasy Award, among others.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 23, 2005
      In British author Moorcock's latest installment in an epic fantasy saga that began in 1965, Prince Gaynor the Damned and his sidekick, Klosterheim, plot the end of the created universe and try to capture a 12-year-old English girl, Oonagh von Bek, to attain their ends. The Dreamthief's daughter, Oona (who's Oonagh's grandmother); Elric of Melniboné; and others who constantly fight to restore, maintain and sometimes destroy the Cosmic Balance seek to protect the girl and, eventually, another youngster kin to Elric and Oona. Told from the viewpoint of young Oonagh and filtered through her later adult perspective, the adventure starts in Yorkshire then spans the multiverse and several versions of Mirenburg to reach its climax in the Dark Empire of Granbretan. Informative philosophizing by various characters adds to, rather than impedes, the complex and entertaining plot. In lesser hands such intrusions as Una Persson's spiel on Elric's Dream of a Thousand Years probably wouldn't work, but from the ever original, vastly influential Moorcock (The Dreamthief's Daughter
      ), they only enhance a triumph of mature talent and imagination. Agent, Howard Morhaim
      .

    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2005
      Oona von Bek, grandchild of the Dreamthief's Daughter, finds her peaceful existence in Yorkshire interrupted as two murderous men break into the world from another realm and chase her into the lands of the Middle March. Joined by her grandmother and Elric, the Eternal Champion -her grandfather -Oona attempts to escape capture by the villainous Gaynor the Damned, who plans to remake the multiverse and seize control of its many lands. The latest novel in the popular Elric saga brings together many threads from previous books featuring the various aspects of the Eternal Champion and hints of more tales to come. Moorcock's many fans should enjoy this new outing for the last sorcerer of Melniboné . Recommended for most fantasy collections.

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • School Library Journal

      November 1, 2005
      Adult/High School -In the 1960s, Moorcock created Elric of Melniboné , an albino elf who is as much a blood-lusting villain as a hero. Over the years, he has created other eternal champions, each of whom fights to maintain the delicate balance between good and evil. This story belongs primarily to Oonaugh, a distant relative of Elric's who lives in modern-day England. The 12-year-old's normal lifestyle shatters when Prince Gaynor the Damned and his assistant, Klosterheim, attempt to kidnap her. She avoids their plots but falls into a Lewis Carroll-inspired alternate reality populated by sentient houses and foxes that quote Robespierre. As she travels through different realities, readers learn that Gaynor and Klosterheim believe she is an essential piece of their plot to destroy the multiverse and re-create it in their own horrible image. Elric, his daughter, and a host of others who protect the Cosmic Balance seek to defend her. Numerous eternal champions, references to Moorcock's works, and no small bit of philosophy make this a detailed and deeply involved book. While these aspects will appeal to fans, they create a barrier for newcomers. The author does an admirable job trying to clue those readers in to the backstory, but it gets a little overbearing if one is reading for pure action. Not to fear. Moorcock develops political plots aplenty, and the climactic scene spins more thrills than almost anything else the author has penned. This fresh, fabulous book shows what an artist dedicated to his vision can create in the often worn-out epic fantasy genre." -Matthew L. Moffett, Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale"

      Copyright 2005 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2005
      Having given us the adventures of Oona, daughter of the Dreamthief's daughter and the sorcerer Elric, Moorcock now provides a very exciting tale of Oonaugh, the Dreamthief's granddaughter, and introduces Jack D'Acre, Elric's son and Oona's twin. One summer day in Yorkshire, Oonaugh's grandparents' old enemy, Gaynor the Damned, chases Oonaugh into the underground realms of Middle March and abducts her. Oona and a band of avatars of the Eternal Champion follow, to rescue her and find Elric's son. In the cruel empire of Granbretan, four of the foulest sorcerers in all the worlds plan to destroy the Cosmic Balance and become the eternal overlords of the Multiverse. Lots of excellently described action, and Moorcook handles the adolescent viewpoint of Oonagh beautifully. Moorcock fans and plenty of other fantasy readers should consider this a must read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)

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