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Redwall: El Muro Rojo

Redwall: El Muro Rojo

Brian Jacques

4.15
129,889 rating·6,217 ulasan

La abadía de Redwall, un hogar tranquilo para ratones amantes de la paz, se ve amenazada por Cluny el Azote, una despiadada rata guerrera, y su horda de guerreros. Pero los valientes ratones de Redwall y sus leales amigos del bosque unirán su coraje y fuerza en una búsqueda para recuperar un arma le...

halaman
352
Format
Paperback
Terbit
2006-09-04
Penerbit
Red Fox
ISBN
9781862301382

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Brian Jacques
Brian Jacques

222 buku · 0 pengikut

James Brian Jacques was an English author celebrated for the Redwall series of children’s fantasy novels and the Castaways of the Flying Dutchman books, along with several collections of short stories that blend adventure, folklore, and the supernatural. Raised in Liverpool, he left school at fifteen and pursued a wide...

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Ulasan Komunitas

6,217 ulasan
4.2
129,889 rating
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Nikola
Nikola·1 years ago
DNF 25%
Nie wiem czy to nie jest na nią czas czy o co chodzi, ale porzucam.
Chętnie bym wróciła gdyby był audiobook
Sofia
Sofia·5 years ago
I'm insane, and here's evidence.

There are 22 books in this series. Each has about 400 pages (we'll take the median here). That makes 8,800 pages in the whole series.

I've read all of them five or six times.

That means I've read 44,000 to 52,800 pages of Redwall.

Sometimes you need pages and pages of mouthwatering descriptions of food and animals talking and singing and reciting rhymes.

I'm a cult follower. Fight me.
Bentley ★ Bookbastion.net
Bentley ★ Bookbastion.net·8 years ago
See this review and more like it on www.bookbastion.netThis book was actually one of the first chapter books I read as a child, but because that was so long ago and at the start of my life as a reader, my brain had pretty much deleted all of the details of it - save for the fact that I enjoyed it when I was young. I'm happy to report that I found the book just as enjoyable as an adult reader; perhaps even more so, for the aspects of it I'm sure I appreciate more as an adult reader that would hav...
Brian
Brian·11 years ago
I loved the Redwall series when I was young. When we'd go to visit my grandmother's house, I'd head to the library and grab a bit pile of books, and the Redwall books always featured among them. I read quite a few of them--up to Lord Brocktree, I think--before my interest waned, partially because the plots were all kind of blurring together, but also because I just moved on to other things. When my book group picked Redwall as the next book, I was eager to read it again, curious if it would hold...
Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽
Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽·11 years ago
Yea, verily, a young mouse yclept Matthias doth live peacefully in the walled city of Redwall, wherein reside all manner of goodhearted animals like mice, badgers, squirrels, etc. (not to be confused with the mean villain predators like rats and foxes). It comes to pass that their bucolic lifestyle is disturbed, nay, gravely threatened, by an incursion of an evil cohort of rats. Mayhap Matthias will rise to the occasion and become the heroic warrior that will save his people animals in their tim...
Zeke Gill
Zeke Gill·12 years ago
This was pretty much the book that got me hooked on reading because I used to hate it. I know, I know, Hate reading? how is that possible? The truth is, When you're eight or nine reading doesn't normally sound as good as watching a cartoon. But one glorious day I somehow stumbled across a cartoon of Redwall, and I LOVED it! I liked it so much that when the cartoon was over I had to know more about this amazing world, but I didn't have a way of watching the other movies so I was forced to do some...
Niki Hawkes - The Obsessive Bookseller
Niki Hawkes - The Obsessive Bookseller·12 years ago
Via Book Reviews by Niki Hawkes at www.nikihawkes.comIf I could say one thing about Jacques, it’s that he was a master storyteller! His books take you on grand adventures that rival the best fantasy novels out there. I’ve read them so many times the covers are falling off! An what’s more, the series sustains itself, with drawn out stories about downright fascinating characters. Bravery and Goodness can come from anywhere, and there are always evil-doers to stand up to. They are such well-rounded...
Annette
Annette·16 years ago
Can't remember when I've been so disappointed by a book that came so highly recommended and clearly has such a strong following. Seriously: I love a good yarn about talking animals as much as the next person, but I do expect some basic level of believability, maybe a good character or two... a plot... One of the things that especially niggled at me was that I couldn't figure out the *scale* of the Redwall world. Are they mice and rats living clandestine in a human-built world? If so, where are t...
Stephen
Stephen·17 years ago
2.0 stars. Now I admit upfront that YA fantasy is somewhat starting to lose its appeal to me, making me a harsher critic of what I think are weak efforts. At the same time, I still really enjoy the compelling, higher end stuff. Unfortunately, THIS A'INT IT!! YA is one thing, but I found this to be the “Y” est of YA fantasy books that I have read in quite a while. It was just too young. Despite the fact that the book is fairly well written and decently paced, I found the plot itself to just b...
Erin
Erin·18 years ago
you know what was the best part of these books? and i say books as in plural because there were so fucking many of them i can't sit still long enough to check them all off. and i DID read every single one. what else was there to do in middle school?anyway, the best part of these books was brian's description of food. it was magnificent. it didn't just make you hungry, it made you crave weird ass things that nobody would ever dream about eating in middle school. nutted cheeses and flan bread and ...