Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Download Free Audio Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4) Books

Mention Books In Pursuance Of Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)

Original Title: Mariel of Redwall
ISBN: 0142302392 (ISBN13: 9780142302392)
Edition Language: English
Series: Redwall #4, Redwall (chronological order) #6
Download Free Audio Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4) Books
Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4) Paperback | Pages: 400 pages
Rating: 3.98 | 25240 Users | 355 Reviews

Present Based On Books Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)

Title:Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)
Author:Brian Jacques
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 400 pages
Published:March 31st 2003 by Firebird (first published 1991)
Categories:Fantasy. Fiction. Young Adult. Childrens

Commentary Supposing Books Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)

In the fourth volume of the epic Redwall saga, a mouse-ship is attacked by the pirate rat Gabool and his heinous band of cut-throats. Hapless voyagers Mariel and her father Joseph the Bellmaker are mercilessly thrown into the sea by the pirates. Mariel washes ashore, starved and near death, and is taken in by the hospitable inhabitants of Redwall Abbey. Sure that her poor father is dead, Mariel swears an oath of vengeance against the filthy pirates who killed her father. With he help of a motley band of animals, Mariel leads the charge to recover a bell and avenge her father.

About the Author: Brian Jacques was born in Liverpool, England, in 1939. Growing up on the docks of Liverpool, he attended St. John's School. He went on to work as a radio show host, playwright, longshoreman, lorry driver, folk singer and comedian prior to his career as a writer. The father of two sons, Jacques enjoys walking his West Highland Terrier, Teddy and spends most of his time writing. A new Redwall book is introduced once every year.



Rating Based On Books Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)
Ratings: 3.98 From 25240 Users | 355 Reviews

Article Based On Books Mariel of Redwall (Redwall #4)
Three and a half stars would most definitely be a strong possibility for this work. If ever a writer were to be called truly magnificent, I think that Brian Jacques would have to be the one. As he has done again and again over the years without missing a beat, he has once more crafted an astonishing masterpiece in Mariel of Redwall. Suffused with endlessly exciting adventure, glowing romanticism and breathtakingly gilded language of a rare beauty that shines in only the most wondrous of novels,

=====================Somewhat original review=====================This was frightfully enjoyable, old beans and beanesses. As of such, according to the logical nature of the good ol' world, I enjoyed it. Actually, I enjoyed it a great deal.The humor, battles, characters, and adventures were all vigorously delightful. Nevertheless, my favourite part is almost definitely the different dialects of the assorted animals. British English is so much more enjoyable than American English.

Great as usual! Wonderful storyteller!

I've discovered that I tend to go to Brian Jacques books after I read something that I find really dumb (*cough* Divergent series *cough*). Brian Jacques was just an incredibly masterful story teller and his characters are always interesting and you can't help but care about them. I particularly liked the relationship between Dandin and Mariel how they are partners in crime without being romantically linked. I do also admire the fact that Jacques always manages to make the point that violence is

I had reached for the Redwall series as a break from a lot of dark fiction I had been reading recently. I found the experience was like climbing into my old playroom. At first it's warm and homey and all of my friends are there. But then I realize that I've basically played out all my old games and things are more complicated than "hare, good; sea rat, bad". So I will rate it as my childhood self might have and move on to other things.

Mattimeo was a decent book, but Brian Jacques managed to keep the series fresh by writing a story that originates outside of Redwall Abbey, but still with some of the story set at Redwall with characters we know and love. One nice thing is that the protagonist of this book (and the title of this book) is a female, so it was a good way to bring in female readers. The villains and plotline in this story feel real (for talking animals, at least) and this book really illustrated that Jacques was a

This was a reread (listened to). It was narrated by Brian Jacques and the characters were voice acted which was quite fun (though some of the yelling parts or gruff sea-rat parts were hard to understand at times.) It felt very nostalgic. I think that Jacques wrote very well. I still enjoyed/drooled over all the descriptions of food, the dibbuns antics made me laugh, and the long patrol hairs/lord Rawnblade were cool. In terms of the storytelling, there were a few things which made me scratch my

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.