The Last Guardian (novel)

The Last Guardian is a 1989 British post-apocalyptic Heroic fantasy novel written by bestselling British author David Andrew Gemmell.

Setting

The Last Guardian is set in the same world as Wolf in Shadow, but aged by two years. The Hellborn are no longer a threat, and all but two of the Guardians are dead. Additionally the largest source of Sipstrassi has been destroyed making the stones much harder to come by. Additional details of the world are also revealed as we learn by the end of the first novel that the city of Atlantis did exist, and sank in the first "fall", the story of which time has been passed on as the story of Noah's ark.

Same as in the previous novel Wolf in Shadow The Last Guardian's magic system is also based on Sipstrassi or stones of power, which are golden meteors which allow one to heal oneself, create food, and who are supposedly limited only by ones imagination, although each stone only has a certain amount of power, and as they are used black veins will appear upon the stone and grow, until eventually the Sipstrassi is coal black, and powerless. However by feeding Sipstrassi blood one can refill them, although Sipstrassi refilled in this manner become blood red, incapable of healing or producing feed, good only for combat. Additionally blood Sipstrassi inspire darker feelings such as lust, greed, and rage in their wielders.

Plot outline

Beginning right after the previous novel's conclusion The Last Guardian starts with The Jerusalem Man Jon Shannow near death on a mountain. The book is set in two different times firstly in ancient Atlantis eight thousand years ago, and then in Jon Shannows Time (several hundred years after "The Fall").

The Core plot deals with the danger from ancient Atlantis which created a gate in time to Shannow's world, as well as the formation of a new city in the Shannow's post-apocalyptic time.

Like the previous novel the mystical stones (i.e.; stones of power) Sipstrassi once again play a large role, this time as the main way of traveling between times and worlds.

Main characters

1. Jon Shannow, The Jerusalem Man. Regarded as one of the best gunmen in the land, Shannow is now middle-aged and feels himself slowing down. Known as much for his skills as his quest to find the destroyed city of Jerusalem Shannow is regarded as potentially insane, and travels from town to town killing outlaws for money.

2. Nu-Khasisatra, an outlawed prophet of the god Chronos, from the city of Atlantis 8000 years past.

3. The Dark Lady who heals and teaches the beast men.

4. Beth McAdam a resourceful recent widow, and mother of two young children migrating across the lorn bandit filled deserts seeking a new home.

Status as a trilogy

While the first Jon Shannow novel Wolf in Shadow was originally written as a stand alone, Gemmell later revisited the world twice, first with the novel The Last guardian in 1989 followed by the novel Bloodstone in 1994.

Trilogy

This novel is the second book in an unnamed trilogy by David Gemmell generally called The Chronicles of The Jerusalem Man, after the 1995 anthology The Complete Chronicles of The Jerusalem Man which contained the three Jon Shannow novels;

  1. Wolf in Shadow (1987)
  2. The Last Guardian (1989)
  3. Bloodstone (1994)

Origins of the trilogy

In his foreword to The Last Guardian David Gemmell says that while he originally intended for Wolf in Shadow to be a single standalone novel, a letter from a reader denying this possibility led to him writing the trilogy.[1]

Response to previous criticisms

According to Gemmell a critic named Broome wrote him a particularly vile letter criticizing the novel, in his foreword to the novel Gemmell explains how Broome's line "I dread to think of people who look up to men like Jon Shannow" stuck with him, and how in response he created the character Josiah Broome, a character initially intended to be cannon fodder, who eventually grew to be Jon Shannows opposite, a man who in Gemmell's words was "passionately opposed to violence who would loathe the hero, but be drawn into his world."[1]

Critics' responses

Response to this novel has been greatly positive, with the book rating website goodreads giving it a 4.02 out of 5 stars[2] with 1046 ratings, while the website Graeme's fantasy book review[3] gave it a rating of 8.25 out of ten. Similarly the website Fantasy books review gave it a rating of 8.5 out of 10[4] with the comment "even better than Wolf in Shadow".

References

  1. 1 2 Gemmell, David (1997). The last guardian (1st American ed.). New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 0345379004.
  2. "Goodreads".
  3. "Graeme's fantasy book review".
  4. "Fantasy Books Review".
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, August 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.