Fetch The Immortals (The Edge Chronicles, #10) Executed By Paul Stewart Accessible In Publication

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Book Hoarder here, Sorry for the lack of review, It's beenweek since my last review and finally here's a new one,
Its the last book for the Edge Chronicles, If you don't know this book then where were you all this time nah just joking, The Edge Chonicles is very unique story which transcends time and connects the faith ofyoung lads, The Immortals is the last book for the Edge and the story revolves around young Nate Quarter and his adventure on the Third Age of Flight,

The book is a bit lengthy compared to the books before it and it is divided mainly intoparts, This four parts are situated towards the main places in the land of Edge, The Great Glade, The Hive, The Riverrise and The Edge, If I have not said it in my previous reviews this genre of "Other World" is my favorite type of story and Edge is one of the best, One thing that might get you into reading this series is that it has very high quality illustrations made my Chris Riddell,


Now for the review part of the book,

Honestly for a long time I really wanted to read this last part but due to it being released in my busiest time when I was in college it is only now that I managed to grab a copy.
i think it is rare now So forweek this was the book I was reading and it did not disappoint me,
It was still well written, It still gives you the time to imagine this fantastic land with rich details and description of the places, animals, people that exists within the story, And with illustrations placed on a regular basis you will never get lost in imagining the story,

Nate Quarter's personality still has the same "heroic but innocent" quality as Rook, Twig, and Quint had in the previous books they were the main protagonists in the previousbooks You will easily like him as a person and as the story goes you will sympathize with him with every emotion that he feels.
Its as if you are an additional companion to his group,

The art is still superb as always, Very detailed. It is like the mangas I am reading so no disappointment for that area,

If you know Kamen Rider Decade and also Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger, in some way this book is similar to that, you get the feeling of nostalgia since a lot of past characters are mentioned,

Storywise, I really prefer the lastparts, My big problem with thest part is that it focuses too much on the politics of the land, And also the air of mystery and adventure is somewhat lost in the pages, But Im really glad when they finally got to the Riverrise Part, It feels like they are back on track,

This turned out to be a great book, I started reading it with very high expectations, and I must say I was a little disappointed at first, It seems to me that in The Edge Chronicles the ending is the best part, and in The Immortals it just took too long to get there, But once you do get to it, the end is so spectacular all the critism is hard to remember, This epic is longer than the others and allows for much more development of Characters and stories,

A wonderful instalment in this series!! I love the world, plot and side characters, bur my only complaint is that the main characters are getting really samey read this for the first time when I wasand now again at.
. . this book and series for sure had a formative impact on my creative style and it's so much more complex and lovely than I could've appreciated back then, I'm just glad it exists I think FINIALLY THE BANDERBEAR LIVVVVEEEDDD!!!!!!!!!!!! Suspenseful and surprising, too violent at times, but really engaging, It gives conclusion to some story threads not surprising, since this was supposed to be the end of the series, A really good one from the series after a few mediocre ones, A bit longish, but full of wonderful and sometimes awful things, Can't wait to start the last trilogy, A great ending. A dramatic installment in the Edge Chronicles I did not see the ending coming in true Edge style! A charming and particularly rewarding read after finishing the Twig and Rook trilogies The Immortals The Edge Chronicles, Paul Stewart, Chris Riddell Its five hundred years into the third age of flight and mighty phraxships steam across the immensity of the Deepwoods, plying their lucrative trade between the three great cities.
But all across the Edge, trouble is brewing, The goblin clans are preparing for war, And a storm is gathering, unlike any that has been seen before,

When the life of Nate Quarter, a young lamplighter, is threatened, he is forced to flee from the phraxmines of the Eastern Woods to the mighty city of Great Glade.
He is propelled on an epic journey of selfdiscovery that encompasses tournaments, battles, revolutions, And a final encounter with the Immortals themselves, Can he and the friends he makes along the way discover the truth about the past and ensure the future of the Edge

The Immortals concludes the Quint, Twig and Rook sagas.
But is also a great way to begin reading The Edge Chronicles the internationally bestselling fantasy series and discover the Quint, Twig and Rook trilogies for the first time.


Then new and old readers can join a whole new adventure with the Cade saga the fourth and latest trilogy in The Edge Chronicles, A fantastic end to the series, After being SO disappointed the design was changed this matters to me, and the look of the book was why I picked up the first one all those many yrs ago in Harvard Bookstore, I was halfhearted to begin.
. . But this turned out to continue the series in true form great adventures, strong characters of both genders, strong morality greed bad! Respect the environment!, All the wonderful creatures and fantastic settings.
I'm still struck by the quality/range of vocabulary I think that's one thing British authors do better for children not dumbing down or restricting vocab, or gratuitous explanations trust them to pick it up and that's another reason I would recommend this series for older kids or kids reading "above their grade level", even though the content is suitable for younger, too.
Except there was a little more in the way of gruesome death/violence in this one, I think, . . Unless I'm not remembering from the other ones, And Riddell's illustrations continue to enchant, What a fantastic pair. Sad it's over, glad to have read them all, The past entwines throughout and finally resolves the plot in a comparitively weaker lightninglightfromthesky finale, Orphan Nate flees corrupt mine with resourceful goblin Slip, Add fourthlings pointyeared skinny human type smart Professor and pretty Eudoxia, plus gigantic furry banderbear Weelum, The five friends explore amazing lands and escape heartpounding danger, The worst entry in the series so far, The compression of a planned trilogy into a single book tells in the disjointed and inconsistent narrative, This was simultaneously epic, legendary, and supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, Aside from reading the next book, I'm afraid I can't function momentarily and the rest of this review my emotions after reading this book will have to be expressed in GIFs.



Plot: Were do I even start! This final book surpassed my expectations, Stewart weaves in pieces from the original nine books, leaving a true fan such as myself tearing up at the little mentions of the past stories, The actions keeps you interested all the way until the end, even creating a sort of "false ending"pages until the actual end,



Characters: Nate is a new character, having not been born in any of the previous trilogies, We learn about his life and are swept up into his adventures with Eudoxia and the others, and follow them until the end,



Setting: I LOVED the return of Riverrise and Sanctaphrax! While they were not the same as they were in the previous books, they were still sentimental scenes that made me cry like a baby.




Overall: This book is my new favorite book, It elegantly brought in a new story while wrapping up the loose ends of the other books, The ending shocked me, but it was an amazing ending that couldn't have been more perfectly done, Paul Stewart is an author that is not wellknown, but he knows what he's doing and is one of my favorite authors, I've been a huge fan of this series ever since I read 'Beyond the Deepwoods' years ago, This has been on my shelves for years too I've put off reading it due to the sheer size nearlypages and the fact my copy is hardback it isn't really the kind of thing you want to carry around in your bag all day.


This is a single volume story instead of the usual trilogy, I'm not sure what the decision was behind that, because in my opinion this reads like a trilogy crammed into a single tome, The story is the usual kind of fare lowly and mistreated Nate escapes from the phraxmines, picks up a few friends on the way and eventually gets caught up in a war between the Great Glades and the city of Hive, he has to eventually journey to Riverrise to save his friend Eudoxia by obtaining some of the waters of life.


The story isn't terribly thrilling, sure it's enjoyable, . . but I felt it was lacking depth too often it jogs along, but we don't get the same feel of more classic earlier volumes from the chronicles, which I felt had more competent and complex plots.
This almost reads as
Fetch The Immortals (The Edge Chronicles, #10) Executed By Paul Stewart Accessible In Publication
if Stewart was just writing it as he went along which I'm sure he wasn't but the single volume novel doesn't allow for the slower more gradual introduction of characters and development of plot that a trilogy does.
As a result it isn't as satisfying a read, For example, when Nate meets Eudoxia for the second time the narrative jumps and we don't get the detail of how they kindled their friendship and got to know each other.
Slightly later this is explained in brief, but I would rather have had a chapter devoted to this, The time jumps between chapters began to really annoy me,

The last section of the book, titled 'The Edge' was where the story really picked up for me, and the plot twist on Sanctaphrax was fantastic the last few chapters really saved the book for me even though it was a bit of a convenient tying up of loose ends it did end the series satisfactorily.


Chris Riddell's illustrations are fantastic as usual, he does a great job depicting the intricate characters and architecture of the Edge,

I enjoyed this, but it just didn't have the substance or appeal of earlier novels, and the characters didn't stand out as much as those from earlier books.
I'm sure most long term fans would feel similarly, .