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As this visually thrilling tour-de-force opens, Griffin has been sucked down into the underworld through a suspicious fissure in the earth's crust. Pursued by his father, Shade, but also by the dead Goth who wants to steal his life force, Griffin makes his way over a bizarre landscape to a fiery tree planted by Nocturna. Naturally, he meets a host of memorable characters on his journey, including a giant bat with the face of a fox and Luna, a newly dead silverwing from his own colony, who ends up playing Marina to Griffin's Shade.
Oppel's underworld is a smoke-and-mirrors purgatory where dead bats are tricked into believing they are still alive and where the enlightened "Pilgrims," who seek passage to Nocturna's better afterlife, are despised as radicals. Drawing on ideas from Christianity, Buddhism, and other religions, Oppel constructs an intellectually stimulating fantasy world that will captivate readers as young as eight. --Lisa Alward
336 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2000
My second biggest problem, is that Griffin never really steps up as the great protagonist character that Shade is, added to that, a lot of favorite characters from the past books get maybe a scene, and that with the notable exceptions of Java and Luna, all the new characters are flat/boring caused a weak showing for characters (and Goth is back... again! New bad guy please!).
My biggest problem is the horrible payoff, (I can put up with characters going through some seriously rotten times, but they had better get a good return, even if it's just a lesson learned, for all their suffering!) Worst. Ending. Ever.