The Warden and the Wolf King
Books | Fiction / Fantasy / General
4.9
(265)
Andrew Peterson
All winter long, people in the Green Hollows have prepared for a final battle with Gnag the Nameless and the Fangs of Dang. Janner, Kalmar, and Leeli--Throne Warden, Wolf King, and Song Maiden of Anniera--are ready and willing to fight alongside the Hollowsfolk, but when the Fangs make the first move and invade Ban Rona, the children are separated. Janner is alone and lost in the hills; Leeli is fighting the Fangs from the rooftops of the city; and Kalmar, who carries a terrible secret, is on a course for the Deeps of Throg. Meanwhile in Skree, Sara Cobbler and Maraly Weaver care for the broken Artham Wingfeather as Fangs muster for battle across the Mighty River Blapp. Sea dragons lurk in the waters. Wicked Stranders crawl through the burrows. Ridgerunners and trolls prowl the land. Cloven haunt the forest. Monsters and Fangs and villains lie between the children and their only hope of victory--in the epic conclusion of The Wingfeather Saga
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Author
Andrew Peterson
Pages
519
Publisher
Rabbit Room Press
Published Date
2015-12
ISBN
0986381837 9780986381836
Ratings
Google: 5
Community ReviewsSee all
"After finishing this book, this series has definitely leaped to the top of my list, becoming some of my favorite books for sure.<br/><br/>Around seven years ago, @andrewpetersonmusic came to speak at my school. I’ll admit, the section from his first Wingfeather book he chose to read aloud was a bit disorienting as an into to the series, so I never picked up the books.<br/><br/>Flash forward seven years to college. I remark how much I love siblings in books, and two of my friends say I have to read the wingfeather saga. <br/><br/>So I pick up the books, and I fall in love. <br/><br/>The final installment to this beautiful saga swept me off my feet. <br/><br/>All throughout this series, I’ve really related to Janner. The eldest amongst the three siblings, and the main character, Janner perfectly emulates the meaning behind character flaw and redemption. I’ve never seen it done better. <br/><br/>I don’t think I’ll ever get over chapter 89 of this book. It is a beautiful recapture of what it means to have a broken heart for your sin and long for a holiness inside you. And I felt so loved by my own maker in those moments. Peterson crafted this beautiful scene like no other. <br/><br/>And that ending. My goodness, I was crying for hours afterward. It was the perfect ending, exactly how the saga needed to end, yet I still didn’t see any of it coming. <br/><br/>Peterson is a storyteller like no other. His worldbuilding is astounding, and his characters are raw, fun, and real. I can only aspire to write so amazingly someday."