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Wildwood Imperium audiobook

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Wildwood Imperium Audiobook Summary

From Colin Meloy, lead singer of the Decemberists, and Carson Ellis, acclaimed illustrator of The Mysterious Benedict Society, comes the stunning third book in the New York Times bestselling fantasy-adventure series the Wildwood Chronicles.

A young girl’s midnight seance awakens a long-slumbering malevolent spirit…. A band of runaway orphans allies with an underground collective of saboteurs and plans a daring rescue of their friends, imprisoned in the belly of an industrial wasteland…. Two old friends draw closer to their goal of bringing together a pair of exiled toy makers in order to reanimate a mechanical boy prince…. As the fate of Wildwood hangs in the balance.

The Wildwood Chronicles is a mesmerizing and epic tale, at once firmly steeped in the classics of children’s literature and completely fresh at the same time. In this book, Colin Meloy continues to expand and enrich the magical world and cast of characters he created in Wildwood, while Carson Ellis once again brings that world to life with her gorgeous artwork, including six full-color plates.

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Wildwood Imperium Audiobook Narrator

Colin Meloy is the narrator of Wildwood Imperium audiobook that was written by Colin Meloy

Colin Meloy is the author of The Whiz Mob and the Grenadine Kid and the New York Times bestselling Wildwood Chronicles as well as two picture books, The Golden Thread: A Song for Pete Seeger and Everyone’s Awake. He is also the singer and songwriter for the indie rock band the Decemberists. Colin lives in Oregon with his wife and frequent collaborator, illustrator Carson Ellis, and their sons.

About the Author(s) of Wildwood Imperium

Colin Meloy is the author of Wildwood Imperium

Wildwood Imperium Full Details

Narrator Colin Meloy
Length 14 hours 0 minutes
Author Colin Meloy
Category
Publisher Balzer + Bray
Release date February 04, 2014
ISBN 9780062047090

Subjects

The publisher of the Wildwood Imperium is Balzer + Bray. includes the following subjects: The BISAC Subject Code is Action & Adventure, General, Juvenile Fiction

Additional info

The publisher of the Wildwood Imperium is Balzer + Bray. The imprint is Balzer + Bray. It is supplied by Balzer + Bray. The ISBN-13 is 9780062047090.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Sarah

June 14, 2018

”Who ever heard of a witch who really died? You can always get them back.”~a Narnian hag, Prince Caspian A teenaged resident of South Wood, Wildwood, decides to horse around with parlor necromancy one night and inadvertently summons a spirit far beyond her powers. At first young Zita thinks she’s summoned a primordial being from the deep past, but the true identity of the spirit is tied to the bloody recent history of Wildwood. Zita is no great hero. Her sole claim to fame till now is having marched in the South Wood parade as the May Queen. She also has to deal with the mysterious new cult that her father just joined, the Synod of the Blighted Tree, whose acolytes all wear blank masks, and who seem to be planning for something…Across the magical divide in Portland, Prue McKeel promises her parents that she will at least aim to come home safe after saving the Wood. Then she and Esben Clampett, the clockmaker bear with hooks for hands, head back into the forest as a shadow falls on it. Prue has been told that she has to bring Prince Alexei back to life or the whole Wood will collapse.In the hazy land between the Wildwood and Portland, the Industrial Wastes, the Unadoptable escapees of Joffrey Unthank’s ruined orphanage/child-slave-labor-factory-hellhole have just crossed paths with a team of anarchist men known as the Chapeaux Noir, who spout a lot of fine rhetoric about workers’ rights and the environment, but readily admit that their only actual plan is to (I quote) “blow stuff up.” The two groups realize they have a common goal in bringing down the Industrial Titans, and soon get embroiled in the chaos deeper in the Impassable Wilderness.Curtis Mehlberg was last seen searching for his fellow Bandits, who have all vanished without a trace.And the forest is being overrun with ivy that chokes and drowns everything in its path. Zita suspects the spirit that haunts her has a hand in it. There’s a bustle in this May Queen’s hedgerow, and she’s very alarmed…Content AdvisoryViolence: There’s allusions to heavy violence, although the stuff that’s actually shown isn’t that bad. The people of South Wood have erected a guillotine on the grounds of the Governor’s mansion, and while we don’t see it used, the characters are quick to tell Prue (and us) that the thing is in no danger of gathering dust. We do see the Chapeaux and the Unadoptables lobbing explosives at various buildings, but the carnage left by these explosions is largely left unexplored.Sex: Nothing.Language: One use of “damn”—Curtis remembers his little sister is present and ostentatiously corrects himself, “I mean shoot.”Substance Abuse: Nothing.Politics and Religion: The Synod is the archetypal creepy cult, but Meloy uses mainstream religious lingo to describe them. Individual members are called Caliphs, a name that actually refers to an Islamic authority figure, and the term synod refers to a council of Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox bishops convened to decide on doctrine. I understand why Meloy would use established religious terms to give his fictional cult some credibility, but if you’re reading the book with younger kids, you might want to clarify that Caliphs and Synods are not sinister entities in the real world.The cult members also ingest a fungus as part of their ritual, which was described in terms reminiscent of Catholic Eucharistic rites. As a Catholic, this made me a little uneasy, but I couldn’t tell how much of the resemblance was intentional. At any rate, this is hardly The Golden Compass.Crude Humor: The only way to extract the Spongiform is by pulling it out of the victim’s nose; once removed, the narrator tells us that the stuff looks like grey spaghetti. When Nico, Rachel, and the kids get caught in a net, some poor boy winds up with his face right against Elsie’s butt.ConclusionsI wasn’t impressed with the first Wildwood book, but the second one was a marked improvement on the first and made me care just enough to see how the whole thing ended. I’m glad I stuck around. Meloy ties his whole story together quite nicely here. All the plotlines are addressed and resolved (except for a tiny unanswered question at the end that might be a tentative sequel hook). The many main characters all get page-time and moments of heroism. I feel like the strongest and most memorable of the group turned out to be Rachel when it should have been Prue, but your mileage may vary. These days it’s commendable when an author focuses on the conflict they created rather than getting tripped up by inane shipping wars. The main relationships in this book are those between parents and children, and those between siblings, which is exactly how it should be in a middle-grade book. There are light hints that the friendship between Alexei and Zita, or Nico and Rachel, might deepen down the road, but they’re only hints. It was quite refreshing to read a MG book that stayed age-appropriate, and didn’t force its younger characters to grow up too fast. Kids have the rest of their lives to worry about dating.The final showdown reads like the battle at the Black Gate in LOTR combined with the battle of Manhattan from The Last Olympian (can’t say why without giving the whole thing away), with a touch of Sleeping Beauty and what might have happened in Prince Caspian if Nikabrik and his buddies had successfully resurrected Jadis. So while these images have been used before, they’re still stirring and effective. Ellis brings them to life beautifully in her illustrations, which have never been better. While the literary ancestors of this series have always been fairly obvious—Grimm’s fairytales, LOTR, Narnia, Tiffany Aching, the Spiderwick Chronicles, and maybe Labyrinth —this installment made me realize its musical influences for the first time. I think there must have been a lot of Led Zeppelin playing in the Meloy-Ellis household during the writing of these novels. Much of the imagery in this particular installment seemed inspired by “Stairway to Heaven.” I know classic rock connoisseurs mock that song now because it’s been played to death, but the reason it was overplayed in the first place is because it’s so evocative. The melody is a haunting sister to “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and the lyrics, while they have no clear meaning, borrow just enough from Dante and Tolkien to create their own spooky little realm, where pipers lead perceptive souls through tangled forests and down long roads, towards an enlightened age where everything is revealed to be golden and beautiful.This sort of hippie daydream has become hackneyed now, but it’s reaching for something truly magical, the kind of feeling Frodo gets while listening to Elvish songs in the hollowed halls of Rivendell:Almost it seemed that the words took shape, and visions of far lands and bright things that he had never yet imagined opened out before him; and the firelit hall became like a golden mist above seas of foam that sighed upon the margins of the world. Then the enchantment became more and more dreamlike…and it drenched and drowned him.I always felt like that passage described how it felt to read The Lord of the Rings itself, to read other great fantasies (like the Chronicles of Narnia or the works of Robin McKinley), to listen to those ethereal Celtic-inflected classic rock songs, or to gaze upon a painting by Botticelli or one of the Pre-Raphaelites. These things make you feel as if the boundaries between the real world and the infinite realms of Faerie will dissolve at any moment. There are few books (or songs) written today that stir this feeling in me. Today’s culture is sedentary and sanitized to a fault, immured with our tech far from the natural world—and note that fantasy comes from mythology, which came about to explain the savagery and beauty of nature. I remember reading the part in Throne of Glass where the main characters are riding through the forest on their way to the castle, and being a little startled at how phony the whole scene felt. I actually asked myself, “Has this author spent any quality time in a forest before?” (I don’t think she has, but enough about her).Suffice that in this case, though, the answer to that question is an emphatic yes. Meloy and Ellis have clearly spent lots of time in forests very much like the Wildwood they created. They’ve also studied folk art and ballads from medieval times through the nineteenth century. They’ve listened to, and made, a lot of good music. And they’ve read all the right books. The last fifty or so pages of Wildwood Imperium brought back a bit of that drenching, drowning enchantment that all the best fantasy stories can bring.The first book in this series still has a lot of flaws, and given how long it is, I don’t blame people who give up on the series there. But if you slog through, and slog through Under Wildwood (which is much less of a slog), your efforts will quite possibly be rewarded here. The series lacks the sparkling originality of LOTR and Narnia, or the deep spiritual grounding that those share with the Land of Elyon books. It doesn’t have the innovative creatures of the Spiderwick Chronicles, the twists and character depth of Over the Garden Wall, the wit and world-building of the Artemis Fowl novels, the layers of meta-meaning in A Series of Unfortunate Events, the gothic romance of Labyrinth, or any single character as powerful and memorable as Terry Pratchett’s Tiffany Aching.But it does have a compelling plot and a fantastic atmosphere, and in this installment, it even grows a heart. Overall, I’m glad I read it.

BookishStitcher

June 24, 2018

This book was a lovely final installment in the Wildwood trilogy. I thoroughly enjoyed all three books, and I feel that Colin Meloy did a fantastic job. If you are looking for a whimsical middle grade fantasy series I would recommend these. They aren't short books but so enjoyable. The illustrations are also fantastic.

Jacq.and.the.readstalk

October 08, 2021

An incredible conclusion to this wonderfully whimsy series. Everything was neatly tied up and completed. The final battle was epic with some touching elements. Meloy employs his signature humour, imagery, and suspenseful and action-packed storytelling. This is a perfect series for those who love classic middle-grade fantasy (Narnia, Wonderland, Neverland) with a modern twist. It’s basically for everybody of all ages. The ending is tear-worthy in a good way. While it is a longer read than most books in its genre, the storytelling and illustrations are perfectly enchanting that is engrossing. The books really emphasize on magic and nature. The characters are captivating in their endeavours and their personality traits. Curtis has grown so much from the first, all the characters do, but he really stood out for me. The writing is very detailed but I think it’s a great way for younger readers to expand their vocabulary and to transition into advanced books. I hope Colin Meloy continues to write more stories with his wife and illustrator Carson Ellis, as their imagination and storytelling is beyond amazing, and I’m sure there are more stories to tell. A bittersweet and heartening end to the series.IG Post: https://www.instagram.com/p/CUvfxGrhx...

Brian

March 21, 2014

The third book in the wonderful Wildwood series is arguably the best of the three, which is saying a lot considering the first two were near flawless. But in this concluding chapter of the story that began three years ago with the first novel, Colin Meloy truly hits his stride, cementing himself as one of the finest storytellers of his generation.The story opens with the main characters scattered throughout the various locations in the city of Portland and sections Impassable Wilderness where they each had been left at the end of Under Wildwood. Several months have passed, and many changes have taken place within the province of South Wood following the revolution orchestrated by Prue and Curtis in the first novel. Though things seem to have returned to a sense of normality, disruptive forces are at work under the surface.Several story lines are at work in this novel, from the battle in the Industrial Wastes and Prue's quest to find the other Maker in order to fulfill the Council Tree's prophecy, to Curtis's search for the Missing bandits and the return of the Dowager Governess trying to complete her dastardly plan from the first novel. Needless to say, there is a lot of story happening in these 580+ pages, and somehow all of them manage to be perfectly paced and woven together to deliver a unforgettable climax and remarkably executed conclusion to the entire saga. These books are destined to become classics, read for generations.

Joel

May 27, 2014

Overall, a very satisfying conclusion to the Wildwood trilogy. "Under Wildwood" set up many new characters and story-arcs, and Meloy manages to weave them all towards a conclusion without confusing the reader. There is an extremely well-paced build-up and climax to the Elsie/Rachel conflict with the Industrial Titans about halfway through the book, and I do wish the overall conclusion to the book was as exciting. Nevertheless, this book is just as funny and smoothly written as the first two, and it certainly does not feel as long as its 560+ pages, which is wonderful. The world Meloy has built is still engrossing, though the characters are not quite as strong as Wildwood's counterparts in Narnia and the Golden Compass. I definitely recommend this trilogy to kids interested in fantasy and adults who are fans of Meloy's storytelling in Decemberists' songs.

Charlotte Knott

February 28, 2020

A fantastic end to a wonderfully original trilogy that deserves to be better known.

Sofia

June 17, 2020

This book freaked. Me. Out. During my second reread of the series, I just couldn't get through it. There was something so malevolent and wrong going on. The wrongness scared me more than most horror books. When I was a kid, I loved this series, but I would never read this one before bed. Unlike the first book, which was lighter, this was a whole mess of dark and twisted. Surprising for a middle-grade book.

Bookdragonqueenljs22

December 17, 2020

It was very exciting and suspenseful I loved all the many parts to the story and how complex the story is, an amazing read. I think all read it again sometime all the books perfectly fit together but this one was my favorite what a good story.

Jessie

December 01, 2021

This was such a fun series full of imagination, empowerment, and hope. I loved that children were the heroes, bringing people together, fighting for what they believed in, making sacrifices. They saw some real conflicts and battles, but they fought hard and showed their real strength.

Bean

March 20, 2022

I really enjoyed the story in general, it took me a while to get into the plot. It also did feel like the story timeline was drawn out. (A bit random at times) I also felt that the ending needed a bit of clarification, I found it hard to follow.

milo in the woods

January 16, 2022

colin meloy is a true storyteller. he’s imaginative and brilliant. the illustrations are so fantastic, the magical forest is just perfect. love it.

Ashley

November 14, 2019

The first 2/3 were slow going. Part 3 upped the game and saved the book from being rated my customary 3. Perfect ending.

Ella

December 30, 2020

** spoiler alert ** by far the best book in the series. only one that i didn’t really skim over. it was an exciting conclusion, and when Prue died, i almost cried. (i rarely cry at books) but then she comes back through a tree her parents planted in their backyard! kinda weird, but very original.4/5 way better than the rest of the series

Laura

March 28, 2022

A wonderful way to sum up the story of Wildwood. Of the 3 books I found this to be my favorite.

Ashley

April 24, 2016

Wow! What an absolutely stunning conclusion to a wonderful series! Once again, a fast paced and action packed read that had me unable to stop turning the pages. I was really wondering how so many loose ends from the second book would be tied up but they all were and with such perfection! Everything came together so beautifully at the end. I may have shed a tear toward the end at a certain event but my heart was quickly mended in the final pages. I so thoroughly enjoyed this series, it transported me back to childhood. I will definitely share it with my children if/when the time comes!

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