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Friday, July 30, 2010

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Lord Sunday by Garth Nix

Posted by Shaun Stevenson On March - 12 - 2010

Genre: Children, Young Adult

Publisher: Scholastic Press

Publication Date: March 2010

Reviewed by Shaun Stevenson


I walked through the shelves of a local bookstore tonight and literally gasped out loud when I saw Lord Sunday sitting on the shelf. I quickly glanced up to make sure no one had heard me, and then I raced down to the checkout counter. It was all I could do to keep myself from speeding home to read the book, which I had not expected to release for a couple more weeks. And now, after two years of waiting, the final chapter in Garth Nix’s The Keys to the Kingdom series has finally arrived.

Since quite a bit of time had passed since I had read book six, Superior Saturday, I was a bit confused jumping into the storyline again. And Nix really does start blasting right into things. Arthur Penhaligon is still struggling against the forces massing against him and threatening to completely destroy everything he knows and loves. Waves of Nothing ravage the very foundations of the House, the other universe related directly to Earth, which is also crumbling under the throes of an epidemic that might just eat away at every living person left. And as the final battles culminate, it all falls to Arthur to save them all from dissolving into the black Nothingness.

The pacing here is quick and Nix almost leaves the reader breathless as they fly through one near death escape after another. Everything almost started to blend together as I kept waiting for the final mysteries of the series to be resolved. And Nix drags things out to the very bitter end before revealing the secrets behind all seven books in the last few pages. I don’t want to go too deeply into the plot here, as it would really spoil things, but after I closed the book I almost had the feeling that Nix needed a quick way to wrap things up. The rather nihilistic ending did draw things to a definite close, and there was definitely a tremendous climax leading up to the end, but somehow, it just all seemed suddenly over. In the end, I was satisfied with the way things turned out, but it just felt like he could have done a bit more .

All said, this fantasy series is definitely worth the investment. Some of the earlier titles are simply great storytelling. And Lord Sunday is necessary to the end of it all and for wrapping it up. Readers who have enjoyed the series thus far will enjoy the ending, but new-comers should definitely pick up the first book, Mister Monday, and start on through to the end. Fans of books like Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan, or The Seems by John Hulme and Michael Wexler, would definitely enjoy this fantasy romp through imaginative lands and epic battles. And, at least new readers won’t have to wait two years for the final volume.

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