When fear of God has left the land,
To be replaced by fear of man;
When Corenwalders free and true
Enslave themselves and others too,
When mercy and justice disappear,
When life is cheap and gold is dear,
When freedom's flame has burned to ember
And Corenwalders can't remember
What are truths and what are lies,
Then will the Wilderking arise.
~from The Wilderking Chant
Corenwald is in trouble. Six years have passed since Aidan first went to Tambluff in service of King
Darrow. Those six years have not been kind to the king. He's grown increasingly paranoid and he's
made bad moves. Prince Steren has served his father well, soothing and advising him, but now even he
is losing influence and the country appears to be in real danger because of the king's foolish
behavior.
And yet, The Way of the Wilderking, the final book in the Wilderking Trilogy, is not a dark
and depressing book. In fact, it opens with a hilarious scene and the comedy, much like the
Energizer Bunny, keeps going and going and going. I thought these books couldn't get any funnier.
After all, how many funny feechie feasts, feechie sings, and feechie contests can one swamp produce?
Ha! I forgot the old saying, "You can take the feechie out of the swamp but you can't take the swamp
out of the feechie." Fortunately for feechie fans everywhere, Dr. Rogers thought to take the feechie
out of the swamp. What do you get when mix Dobro Turtlebane with a civilizer city? One disaster
following another, in finest feechie fashion.
Rogers, as anyone would expect, does a fine job with the writing in this book. The prose is
great, the scenes are well painted, and the descriptions are clear. As he did with The Secret of
the Swamp King, the author once again weaves in a bit of a mystery for his readers. The
difference is that in The Secret of the Swamp King, the mystery, when solved, brought some
heartache, while in this final book the solving of the mystery brings Rogers' account of
Corenwalder history to a satisfying and happy conclusion.
There are some hard things on the way to that happy conclusion, though. There is war, for one thing,
and with war comes death. The role thrust upon Aidan is also a hard thing--a heavy burden. There are
some deep lessons in this book, too--forgiveness, sacrificial love, reconciliation, humility, obedience, fighting
against a false humility--all of these things were touched upon. They weren't dwelt upon, I think
they could have been brought a little more to the fore even, but they were there in the lives of the
characters as they went about the business of the story.
Altogether a great read. I have to
give it five stars. I can't imagine giving that gallant and goofy Dobro anything less than five
stars for his wonderful performance in this book. I would love to quote several of his lines for
you--there are so many to choose from. He is not only funny, he is sweet and chivalrous and
adorable in so many ways. (Stinky, too, of course, but that goes without saying.) I won't quote,
him, though. I don't want to spoil the fun for you so I'll leave you to catch his show for yourself. He is unforgettable--truly one of the
greatest characters every created.
---back to reviews
Copyright © 2005 Sally Apokedak