A Knight of the Word (The Word and the Void Trilogy, Book 2)
By Terry Brooks
You can view this book's Amazon detail page here.
Tags: demon, paladin, void, word
- Started reading:
- 4th July 2008
- Finished reading:
- 9th July 2008
- Binding
Paperback
- Genre
Science Fiction & Fantasy
- Pages
408
- Published
1999
- Publisher
Del Rey
Review
Rating: 8
From Amazon.com: John Ross, the tortured, conflicted Knight of the Word from Terry Brooks’s Running with the Demon, finally gets a good night’s sleep in the sequel. He buys this moment’s peace at the cost of his sacred oath to be a champion of the Word, renouncing that pledge after failing to prevent the slaughter of a group of schoolchildren. Duty and destiny are difficult to elude, though, and soon his former charge Nest Freemark, now a college student and Olympic hopeful, arrives to warn him of his imminent destruction, or, worse, his unwitting fall into the service of the Void.
The story winds lazily through sleepy, wet Seattle like a tour bus, steadily building. Everything eventually converges on the homeless shelter where John works with his new sweetie Stefanie Winslow for über-activist Simon Lawrence, a man his dreams tell him he is fated to kill. A thin mystery clouds the identity of the demon conspiring to deliver John unto evil, but the book’s real focus is John’s fitful, foot-dragging attempts to fulfill his destiny. Knight doesn’t provide the suspenseful energy of Running, a book that followed Nest through the dramatic loss of her childhood, but it rejoins her as she assumes the responsibilities of young adulthood and–like that period in life–still manages to deliver satisfying, if more subtle, rewards. –Paul Hughes –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.




