Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Wolf in Shadow

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8.4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8.4
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This


Pages
  
326 (paperback)

Originally published
  
15 January 1987

Preceded by
  
Last Sword of Power

4.2/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
January 15, 1987

ISBN
  
9780099534709

Author
  
David Gemmell

Page count
  
326 (paperback)

Wolf in Shadow t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQ5kObgPLUefkSh8W

Publisher
  
Century, Legend, Del Rey, Random House

Media type
  
print (paperback & hardcover & ebook)

Followed by
  
Ghost King, The Last Guardian

Genres
  
Heroic fantasy, Post-Apocalyptic fiction

Similar
  
Works by David Gemmell, Stones of Power books, Other books

The geste of jon shannow or wolf in shadow after the ice


Wolf in Shadow is a 1987 post-apocalyptic heroic fantasy novel by British author David Andrew Gemmell. It is similar to Gemmell's first book Legend in that Legend arose from Gemmell's own illness with cancer, and Wolf in Shadow was written while he dealt with his mother's cancer and subsequent death.

Contents

Status as a Trilogy

Although initially written as a stand alone novel, Gemmell eventually expanded it into a trilogy consisting of the novels;

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

Setting

Wolf in Shadow is set in the future, three hundred years after the "fall", an apocalyptic event of which little is initially known, but which is regarded in the book as an event akin to Noah's flood in which the world shook out of its orbit tilting it on its axis, which subsequently resulted in the oceans rising and destroying most of human civilization. Several hints are given throughout the novel that this catastrophe might have been due to factors such as pollution and nuclear weapons.

In addition to this setting the novel employs a magic system 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.

Critical Reception

Current Critical Reception of Wolf in Shadow is largely positive with the book rating Goodreads assigning an average rating of 4.1 with 1291 ratings(as of the 1st of March 2012). A similar score of 8.3/10 is given on the website fantasy book review. However in the foreword of the last guardian Gemmell mentions that while most reviews were either very good, or indifferent, one reviewer(whose name is not fully revealed beyond him having the surname Broome) greatly disliked the novel. Of his criticisms Gemmell only mentions the line "I dread to think of people who look up to men like Jon Shannow.". This review in particular led to the introduction of a character Josiah Broome in subsequent novels, who allowed Gemmell to show a contrast between Shannow, a man unhesitating in using force to combat what he saw as evil, and Broome a man who regarded the use of force as an evil unto itself.

References

Wolf in Shadow Wikipedia