D.J. MacHale is a television writer, director, and producer. Read excerpts of MacHale's novels at the Pendragonwebsite.
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Pendragon — (2002-2009) Young adult. Publisher: Bobby Pendragon is a seemingly normal fourteen-year-old boy. He has a family, a home, and even Marley, his beloved dog. But there is something very special about Bobby. He is going to save the world. And not just Earth as we know it. Bobby is slowly starting to realize that life in the cosmos isn't quite what he thought it was. And before he can object, he is swept off to an alternate dimension known as Denduron, a territory inhabited by strange beings, ruled by a magical tyrant, and plagued by dangerous revolution. If Bobby wants to see his family again, he's going to have to accept his role as savior, and accept it wholeheartedly. Because, as he is about to discover, Denduron is only the beginning...
Pendragon: Before the War — (2008- ) A Pendragon prequel with Carla Jablonski and Walter Sorrells. Publisher: Before Bobby Pendragon.
Before Saint Dane.
Before the war...
Every territory of Halla has a Traveler. They lived for years — some even for decades — before learning of their true destiny. What was life like for Bobby Pendragon's fellow Travelers before they joined him in the fight to save every time and place that has ever existed? What led up to their becoming the guardians of Halla? The answers are here!
In this first of three thrilling Pendragon prequels, read about Vo Spader's death-defying adventures in the underwater world of Cloral, Gunny Van Dyke's race to find a murderer in 1930's Manhattan on First Earth, and the tough challenges Kasha faced on Eelong well before Bobby Pendragon arrived...
Related book: The Guide to the Territories of Halla — (2005) Publisher:
All there ever was; all that will be. For the first time, see the amazing sights of Halla as only Bobby Pendragon has. From the watery depths of Cloral to the rugged mountain ranges of Denduron to the jungles of Eelong, from the Earth territories to the decaying fantasy world of Veelox, it¹s all here. So are the Travelers: Uncle Press, Vo Spader, Loor, Aja Killian, Alder, Gunny, and Kasha, and of course, Bobby Pendragon and Saint Dane. This is your private flume to Halla. Enter and discover old friends while you learn new secrets. But remember one thing: This is only the beginning.
Morpheus Road — (2009-2011) Ages 9-12. Publisher: #1 NYT bestselling author D.J. MacHale's Morpheus Road trilogy brings readers down an ethereal pathway between the worlds of the living and dead.
Morpheus Road: The Light
Morpheus Road: The Light by D.J. MacHale is the first book in a projected YA horror trilogy, focused on young Marshall Seaver, who is being haunted by his own artistic creation, a creepily menacing character he calls Gravedigger.
The story is a fast-paced read, though it gets off to a somewhat slow start as we’re introduced to the main character and his best friend Cooper. The two have one of those awkwardly painful adolescent friendships where one has leapt full-heartedly into the young adult world (Cooper) and the other is still staying safe on the outer edges of childhood (Marshall). Unfortunately, Cooper’s jump into near-adulthood has landed him in trouble, and as a consequence, his parents have decided to remove him from bad influences by taking him to their lake cottage for the summer. This ruins Marshall’s plans for the usual buddy-summer, though his ideas of summer fun and Cooper’s had already clearly diverged. The opening does a nice job of setting up the tension between the two, as well as between both of them and Cooper’s older sister Sydney. It also sets up Marshall’s social isolation, which rises not only out of his single friendship with Cooper but the recent death of his mother, an international photographer. Added to the tension of a possibly fracturing friendship and Marshall’s still-tender grief is some suspense over Cooper’s recent trouble and just how deep (and dangerous) that trouble may be.
The supernatural kicks in slowly at first, beginning when Marshall accidentally breaks a strange artifact his mother had picked up on her travels and given him as a present. Things really start to take off, though, when his father leaves for an out-of-town conference and Marshall is left home alone. The horror starts small — strange noises, odd images that turn out later to have possible explanations — but soon neither the noises nor the visions can be easily explained away. When Marshall’s Gravedigger (a character he’s been sketching for some time) starts to show up, the horror builds to a full sense of terror and menace that only deepens when Cooper turns up missing. Eventually, Marshall and Sydney team up (reluctantly at first) to try and figure out what’s happening around them as people start to disappear or die.
As mentioned, The Light is a fast read once one gets past the opening, which is slow only in relation to the rest of the book. And it should be slow, as MacHale takes the time to set up the characters and give us something/someone to care about. Marshall is especially sharply drawn as somewhat lost: a bit of a loner, someone who doesn’t quite understand why those things he was doing just last year suddenly are “childish” or “uncool,” a boy who doesn’t quite get girls yet, a son whose lost his mother and hasn’t come to terms with that loss or his new relationship with his father yet, a friend who doesn’t quite understand why his friendship seems to be unraveling. Sydney is less developed, but has a clearly distinctive personality and is more complex than she first appears. Cooper is the least-defined, but that’s because he’s given the least amount of space. Within that space, though, one gets a pretty good picture of him and that fine line he’s trying to thread between child and adult. Adults are mostly non-existent or undeveloped, not surprising in a YA, though I did wish we had a stronger sense of them.
It’s a tough plot to discuss without giving major spoilers. So suffice to say that while MacHale keeps things moving with several chase scenes and tense moments, and has a nice sense of building to bigger and more horrific things, there are a few aspects that don’t quite seem to hold fully together if one thinks about them too much, mostly toward the latter third of the book. And the ending seemed both a bit over the top and a bit anti-climactic, paradoxical as that sounds. Unfortunately, trying to explain why would spoil too much.
While much of the book’s lower-level mysteries are resolved by the end, the big questions (along with some new ones) remain, setting us up nicely for the second book. While the horror plot is mostly just solid, the main character’s winning voice largely makes up for the weaknesses in plotting. Recommended. —Bill Capossere