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From the author of the cult classic The 131/2 Lives of Captain
Bluebear comes another fantastical journey into Zamonia. This
captivating story from the unique imagination of Walter Moers is
astonishingly inventive, amusing and thoroughly engrossing.
Captain Bluebear is a bear with blue fur, a creature as unique as
the fantastic adventures he undergoes. Unlike cats, which have only
nine lives, bluebears have twenty-seven. This is fortunate, because
our hero is forever avoiding disaster by a paw's breadth. In this
remarkable book, Captain Bluebear tells the story of his first
thirteen-and-a-half lives spent on the mysterious continent of
Zamonia, where intelligence is an infectious disease and water
flows uphill, where headless giants roam deserts made of sugar, and
where only Captain Bluebear's courage and ingenuity enable him to
escape the dangers that lie in wait for him around every corner. In
company with our indomitable hero, we enter a realm of the
imagination that combines the fantasy of "Lord of the Rings and
"The Neverending Story with the humour of Baron Munchausen - a
wonderland where anything can exist except boredom.
'Within the first 15 pages I was carried away by the sheer craziness of it all.Some Minipirates find a baby bear with blue fur inside a walnut shell floating on the ocean towards a giant whirlpool. They rescue him and teach him about knots and waves, and that a good white lie is often considerably more exciting than the truth. Then, when he outgrows their ship to such an extent that he is in danger of sinking it, they abandon him on an island with a bottle of seaweed juice and a loaf of seaweed bread. Thus Bluebear comes to the end of his first life and embarks on his second. By the end of the book, he has expended exactly half of his 27 lives. Again and again, Moers confounds our expectations as the narrative twists and turns, travels backwards and forwards in time.Part science fiction, part fairy tale, part myth, part epic, the book is a satire on all these genres and so constantly satirises itself.Very amusing' Daily Telegraph
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Rumo (Paperback, New ed)
Walter Moers; Translated by John Brownjohn
2
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R740
R646
Discovery Miles 6 460
Save R94 (13%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Astonishingly inventive, amusing and engrossing, Rumo is a
captivating story from the unique imagination of Walter Moers. Rumo
is a little Wolperting who will one day become the greatest hero in
the history of Zamonia. Armed with Dandelion, his talking sword, he
fights his way across Overworld and Netherworld, two very different
worlds chock-full of adventures, dangers, and unforgettable
characters: including Rala, the beautiful girl Wolperting who
cultivates a hazardous relationship with death; General Ticktock,
the evil commander of the Copper Killers; Ushan DeLucca, the finest
and most weather-sensitive swordsman in Zamonia; Professor Abdullah
Nightingale, inventor of the Chest-of-Drawers Oracle; and, worse
luck, the deadly Metal Maiden.
Over two hundred years ago Bookholm, the City of Dreaming Books,
was destroyed by a catastrophic firestorm. Optimus Yarnspinner, who
witnessed this disaster, has since become Zamonia's greatest writer
and is resting on his laurels at Lindworm Castle. Spoilt by his
monumental success and basking in adulation, he one day receives a
disturbing message that finally reinvests his life with meaning: a
cryptic missive that lures him back to Bookholm. Rebuilt on a
magnificent scale, the city is once more a vibrant literary
metropolis and Mecca of the book trade teeming with book fanatics
of all kinds. On the track of the mysterious letter that brought
him there, Yarnspinner has scarcely set foot in the city before he
falls prey to its spirit of adventure. He is reunited with old
friends like Inazia Anazazi the Uggly and Ahmed ben Kibitzer the
Nocturnomath, but he also encounters the city's new marvels, which
include the mysterious Biblionauts, the warring Puppetists, and the
city's latest craze, the Invisible Theatre. Yarnspinner strays ever
deeper into the Labyrinth of Dreaming Books, which seems to wield a
strange power over Bookholm's destinies. He is eventually drawn
into an irresistible maelstrom of events far more sensational than
any of the adventures he has previously embarked upon.
Optimus Yarnspinner, a young Zamonian writer, inherits very little
from his beloved godfather apart from an unpublished short story by
an unknown author. This manuscript proves to be such a superb piece
of writing that he can't resist the temptation to investigate the
mystery surrounding the author's identity. The trail takes him to
the City of Dreaming Books. After falling under the spell of this
book-obsessed metropolis; Yarnspinner also falls into the clutches
of its evil genius, Pfistomel Smyke, who treacherously maroons him
in the city's labyrinthine catacombs. He finds himself in a
subterranean world where reading books can be genuinely dangerous,
where ruthless Bookhunters fight to the death for literary gems and
the mysterious Shadow King rules a murky realm populated by
Booklings, one-eyed beings whose vast library includes live books
equipped with teeth and claws. Walter Moers transports us to a
magical world where reading is still a genuine adventure, where
books can not only entertain people but also drive them insane or
even kill them. Only those intrepid souls who are prepared to join
Optimus Yarnspinner on his perilous journey should read this book.
We wish the rest of you a long, safe, unutterably dull and boring
life!
Malaisea, the unhealthiest town in the whole of Zamonia, is home to
Echo the Crat, a multi-talented creature resembling a cat in
appearance but capable of speaking any language under the sun,
human or animal. When his mistress dies, Echo finds himself out on
the street. Dying of starvation, he is compelled to sign a contract
with Ghoolion the Alchemaster, Malaisea's evil alchemist-in-chief.
This fateful document gives Ghoolion the right to kill Echo at the
next full moon and render him down for his fat, with which he hopes
to brew an alchemical concoction that will make him immortal. In
return, he promises to regale the little Crat with the most
exquisite gastronomic delicacies until his time is up. But Ghoolion
has reckoned without Echo's talent for survival and his ability to
make new friends. These include the Leathermice, the Cogitating
Eggs, the Golden Squirrel, the Cooked Ghost, Theodore T. Theodore
the one-eyed Tuwituwu, and, above all, Izanuela Anazazi, the last
Uggly in Malaisea. Walter Moers's magnificent translation of
Optimus Yarnspinner's novel introduces us to yet another of
Zamonia's hotbeds of adventure: Malaisea, a place where sick is
healthy, up is down, right is wrong, and Ghoolion the Alchemaster
reigns supreme - until Echo crosses his path.
The first three books set in Zamonia the mythical land created by
Walter Moers, whose work has been compared to J.K. Rowling, Douglas
Adams, and Shel Silverstein have achieved raucous critical acclaim
and created hundreds of thousands of die-hard fans here and all
over the world. Now Moers returns with a fourth "relentlessly
whimsical" fantasy ("Library Journal").
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