In an altered America where machines no longer work and magic holds sway, former lawyer-turned-visionary leader Cal Griffin guides his small band on a quest toward the Source of the Change -- following a trail he hopes will reunite him with his abducted sister, Christina, transformed into one of the powerful, enigmatic beings called "flares." Armed with little more than compassion and a determination to heal the world, Cal, the warrior Colleen Brooks, Russian physician Doc Lysenko, and bipolar street wizard Herman "Goldie" Goldman encounter old foes and new friends in a landscape of unimaginable beauties and magnificent horrors -- forced to confront the frightful secrets of an emissary from a dread region and to trust in a brilliant triumvirate of grad students who could get things running again ... at a terrible cost--as the final moves in humankind's ultimate nightmare are played out in the depths of the Ghostlands.
It took me almost 20 years to finish this trilogy and I can honestly say that the wait was not worth it. The concept for the books is great. It's an exciting premise. But everything about this reeks of the intent to make this into visual media. This book reads like a pitch for a new TV show, and I mean that in a derogatory way. When I read a book, I want to read the story. I don't want to feel like I'm just the product someone is trying to sell a producer. Like "Hey, look at all these idiots that read it! It would be a great show!"
I wanted desperately to like this. And frankly, throughout this I was like okay, book 1 was weak and book 2 was terrible but I'm enjoying book 3. I really thought, this is a solid 4 star book, until I started really seeing the threads. It's okay to be inspired by Stephen King's The Stand, but this was more like someone rewrote The Stand from memory and they weren't that good at remembering things accurately. There was the addition of characters that felt like they were only there to provide the token "magical nonwhite" character. The plot seemed to drag out. King managed to put it all in one book, why couldn't Zicree? Is it because he didn't actually provide anything for these books except the editing and because of that, we have significant and detrimental changes in tone from book to book? Probably. This just lacked enough everywhere to make it a subpar post-apocalyptic series.
It also had an open-ended ending that is insultingly weak.
Had to check and make sure King did not write this book. Even a few of Kings stock lines in the book. If memory serves they were headed to Colorado in the King version
I know it was based on an idea for a TV show, but it would have been nice to have a finite ending. Plus, this one lacked on the energy and action the previous two had.
The story concept is great but overall the book drove me crazy.
The description says the book is nonstop action... This is a lie unless you consider constant flashbacks and constant internal philosophical thoughts nonstop action. I'm fairly confident that if you removed the seemingly endless 'what it means to be human' and 'what it means to love' parts you could cut this book down to a quarter of its size.
This book felt more like I was reading a philosophy essay pretending to be an action adventure. If you're into that then that's great but I felt like I was being hit over the head with it.
This ended up being a fun trilogy. It has its moments of cliched fantasy tropes and it has its moments of pure fun. It's a quest story with a nice troop of characters. Characters evolve and change, face problems, face the brink, and lots happens. There are a few moments when the story drags a bit, but for the most part it's fairly well-paced and pretty enjoyable.
Also, any character in a story that can reference Star Trek and Blade Runner is awesome.
Fun/Inventive post apocryphal story of the loss of tech and the rise of magic, similar to the Shadow Run role playing game that game out in the late 80s. (except Shadow Run kept tech as well).
The payoff in the end was a bit of a let down for me. The buildup was great but the payoff didn't live up to expectations. Great series overall.
Kind of "simple" in some ways, yet still well done and enjoyable. As I've said about other books in this style, it's not going to change how you view the genre, there are no mind-bending twists or what-have-you...but it's also not going to detract from your overall opinion of it either.
I love characters and endings like this, well almost. I like total wrap up and this leaves it wide open for episodes and continued interpretation. But I like the character development and the, to me, unexpected resolution.
After following the trails leading to the Source, what changed the world forever, a small band of travelers must work to save the remaining pieces of humanity from being consumed by the all-hungry Source.
Very readable trilogy - one step behind great but I am glad I have read it. Maybe if Barbara Hambly had continued to the end her writing and characterization would have raised it another half star to the 5 star level. Overall a good series and very worth reading