Ghostlands
- ISBN13: 9781595327147
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
The mighty Sunwell, source of the High Elves’ magical might, had been thought lost…until now! In the ruins of the High Elf citadel, a young blue dragon and his companions must fight to save one of their own from certain death, though, in the Ghostlands, the dead refuse to rest easy! Jae-Hwan Kim, artist of the best-selling King of Hell series and the upcoming War Angels, and Richard A. Knaak, the New York Times best-selling author, bring you back to the world of Warcraft for the gripping conclusion to The Sunwell Trilogy!”A well-told, exciting story. Kim’s beautiful art has an amazing depth and fluidity that sets it apart.” -Tina Coleman, American Library Association… More >>




A really good conclusion to a great book series.
Rating: 5 / 5
The first two novels really built…and this one was like the end of a Scooby Doo Mystery. The rip the monster’s mask off, go “OMIGOSH!” everyone has a good laugh, all loose ends are tied up conveniently and you’re left wondering “Why did I bother reading this trilogy?”
Art’s amazing. But it feels like Richard A. Knaak was writing a sextet instead of a trilogy. Book # 3 should’ve continued building…and then books 4-6 are the dramatic conclusion.
If only.
I suppose if you’re a WoW clone who never played WC1,2,3, or any expansions this book will be fine because it’s probably new and exciting. But hey, WoW is awesome,right? So anything with the same logo = spend money!
Rating: 3 / 5
Yeah, so I read the whole 3 books in this series and they were good, I enjoyed them but it seemed to be over a little quickly. There was an epic battle and all but it seemed to be over too quickly.
Good, but I would have liked a stronger ending.
Rating: 4 / 5
Wonderful manga! The artistic side was well done and the dialogue was intriguing and attention-grabbing. A must for anyone who loves the Warcraft saga.
Rating: 5 / 5
even though I didn’t really like the first two books that much I bought it anyways because I’m slightly obsessive compulsive about completing sets (damn you Poke’mon, and damn you video game based achievements). Now you all know how I trick myself into buying manga I don’t even want. I took all three books on the train in Tokyo to read while we traveled 3 hours to Japan’s Ikea. The third book was actually a pretty good conclusion to s simple hockey storyline. The art was a little less detailed than the first two books, I guess the artist was getting bored. The summary at the beginning of the third book was a copy of the second book, nothing new. I felt like I paid for the same thing twice. My favorite part of this book is a single frame with a zombie with him saying “Hurr” with googiley eyes. I laughed on the train and Japanese people stared at me.
Overall, I think unless you play war craft you will think this is a pretty lame manga. You might like the art, but you will seek to read the novels or play the games to get a better idea why their are giant cow people, which they don’t even say he is a Tauren. There is a lack of Gnomes, and the orcs are displayed in about 10 frames of the whole series. You would think the orcs would have a bigger role in any Warcraft books, because they were one of the main races of the series from the beginning. Overall, I didn’t like the storyline, but the art and my nerdy interest in Warcraft kept me going.
Rating: 3 / 5