previous fantasy author

Walter Moers

1957-
Reviewed by John Hulet
next fantasy author
Walter Moers
Walter Moers is a German cartoonist and author.







Click covers to view available formats, including audio & Kindle.

Zamonia — (2000-2009) Young adult. Publisher: A unique novel set in a magnificently rendered imaginary country. Bluebear is a bear with blue fur and 27 lives, 13 1/2 of which he uses up by the end of the book, in a world as far removed from our own as can possibly be imagined — mysterious Zamonia. Captain Bluebear is a German cartoon hero, part sci-fi, part fairy-tale.

Walter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's ApprenticeWalter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's ApprenticeWalter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's ApprenticeWalter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's Apprentice

YA young adult fantasy book reviews Walter Moers The City of Dreaming BooksThe City of Dreaming Books

Walter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's ApprenticeWalter Moers's young adult novel The City of Dreaming Books is a wonderful combination of fantasy and farce. Moers leads the reader on a highly entertaining, and sometimes tense, journey through an imaginary world where literature is life.

Following the death of a beloved mentor, aspiring author Optimus Yarnspinner journeys to the city of Bookholm, a city devoted entirely to the creation, sale and consumption of books. The City of Dreaming Books follows Yarnspinner as he tries to follow the path that leads from his mentor to Bookholm and finds adventure along the way. Yarnspinner may be a dinosaur, but he lives and thinks like we do. After all, what could be more human than spending late nights in a café, drinking good coffee and eating good food?

I really liked Walter Moers’s willingness to use a combination of high level vocabulary with deliberate recreations of words. The characters are all interestingly named and the level of detail provided to flesh out Bookholm and its environs is really wonderful. One could easily imagine the setting that Moers creates and it truly brings the story to life.

The City of Dreaming Books is clearly a Young Adult fantasy, but it holds enough compelling and interesting content to readily draw in a more mature reader. It's just very fun. I didn't coast through the story in a day, but worked through it over a month; Moers’s descriptive prose is best savored slowly.
John Hulet


YA young adult fantasy book reviews Walter Moers Zamonia The Alchemaster's ApprenticeThe Alchemaster's Apprentice

Walter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the Night, The Alchemist's ApprenticeFirst, my hearty thanks to the translator. I saw Walter Moers’s previous novel, The City of Dreaming Books, in the Berlin Airport in German. As a German linguist, I can’t imagine how difficult it must be to translate prose like this. Simply amazing.

Walter Moers
takes us back into the world of Zamonia, but this time to a completely different city and with all-new characters. You don’t really need to have read previous books because he provides enough background as the story flows. The Alchemaster’s Apprentice is really a wonderful, if slightly darker, addition to the Zamonian world.

Our hero, Echo, is a Crat, which is much like a cat only with special abilities: Crats can understand and speak any language, they have extreme grace and dexterity, and they have eidetic memory — they can remember completely any thing they're told. Echo is swept into the life of an incredibly talented (but just as incredibly demented) Alchemaster, Ghoolian. An Alchemaster is something between a magician and an alchemist, combining equal parts artistic madness and scientific rigor. In the City of Malaisea, Echo and Ghoolian take us on a month-long journey and a roller-coaster ride of a story.

I loved how Moers turns alchemy on its ear and invents whimsical combinations of science and nonsense that make sense in the story. He's got a lot of fun ideas about how to make certain alchemical processes work and he draws an amusing comparison between alchemy and culinary mastery. The plot is deftly woven and I loved the way it contains so many elaborately detailed sidelights; For example, we get all the particulars about the types of feasts that Ghoolian prepares for Echo. Even when the story grows darker, it is written with a joy that keeps the grimmer aspects from putting off the reader.

I enthusiastically recommend The Alchemaster’s Apprentice for young adults and adults alike. Walter Moers’s talent for taking the mundane and making it magical is reminiscent of some of the early Xanth books by Piers Anthony, but Moers doesn’t rely on puns and other cheap humor to entertain us. He just creates something sublimely interesting and fun. —John Hulet

Stand-Alone Novel:
Walter Moers Zamonia: Captain Bluebear, Rumo, The City of Dreaming Books, A Wild Ride Through the NightA Wild Ride Through the Night — (2003) Young adult. Publisher: Using twenty-one drawings from the work of Gustave Dor-, the most successful illustrator of the 19th century, Walter Moers has created a wondrous and utterly delightful tale. In a world between legend and dream, in a time between childhood and adulthood, A Wild Ride Through the Night describes the exhilarating and comic adventures of 12-year-old Gustave, a boy who aspires one day to be a great artist. But before he can achieve this, Gustave must first tackle Mysterious Giants and a Siamese Twins Tornado; he also finds himself encountering the Greatest Monster of All, freeing a maiden from the claws of a dragon, riding through a forest full of ghosts, navigating a Galactic Gully and meeting a dream princess, a talking horse, scantily-clad Amazons and even his own self. Having made a wager with death for nothing less than his life and his soul, he must travel from the earth to the moon and back in a single night.


You can support FanLit by purchasing books (or anything else) through our Amazon links. Or donate.
© 2007-2012   Fantasy Literature   
The FTC wants you to know that we often receive free review copies from publishers.
  







1 FREE Audiobook from Audible





Admin