Selected Product: | Bone Volume 7: Ghost Circles Paperback Author: Jeff Smith Publisher: GRAPHIX Release Date: 2008-02-01 Reading Level: Ages 9-12 ISBN-10: 0439706343 ISBN-13: 9780439706346 List Price: $9.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Bone Volume 8: Treasure Hunters ISBN-10: 0439706335 ISBN-13: 9780439706339 List Price:$9.99 Bone Volume 3: Eyes of the Storm ISBN-10: 0439706386 ISBN-13: 9780439706384 List Price:$9.99 Bone Volume 4: The Dragonslayer ISBN-10: 0439706378 ISBN-13: 9780439706377 List Price:$9.99 Bone Volume 5: Rock Jaw: Master of the Eastern Border ISBN-10: 043970636X ISBN-13: 9780439706360 List Price:$9.99 Bone Volume 6: Old Man's Cave ISBN-10: 0439706351 ISBN-13: 9780439706353 List Price:$9.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Bone Volume 7: Ghost Circles by Jeff Smith (ISBN-10: 0439706343, ISBN-13: 9780439706346). At this time we have not yet written a review for Bone Volume 7: Ghost Circles by Jeff Smith (ISBN-10: 0439706343, ISBN-13: 9780439706346). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A long-dormant volcano explodes, blacking out the sun, mowing down trees, and filling the land with soot and ash. The Lord of the Locusts has been released. Against this apocalyptic backdrop, the Bone cousins along with Thorn and Gran'ma Ben struggle to reach safe haven in the city of Atheia.
Meanwhile, Lucius Downs lies severely wounded and trapped with the villagers in the camp at Old Man's Cave.
the adventure continues | Customer Rating: | | In this volume, the story gets more and more serious and scary. I really liked it. The characters are so likeable and the plot so fun and engaging you can't help but enjoy the Bone books, and this one rates very highly. | the pivotal volume | Customer Rating: | BONE volume seven is one of the greatest stories of BONE. Even though the first five are less grim, this graphic novel is an addition to the BONE series that the other books could not do without.
I tried reading volume eight: Treasure Hunters before this, mainly because my hold on Ghost Circles arrived after volume eight. I couldn't wait for volume seven, so I dove right into Treasure Hunters. To make a long story short, it was awful. After my hold arrived, I decided to reread them in order. Sure enough, volume eight made much more sense after having read volume seven, and now both have been added to my favorites list, along with The Great Cow Race and The Dragonslayer. | Very Grim . . . | Customer Rating: | | I loved this book just as well as the others, and the grimness just made it better. It starts off with the death of a supporting character, and has the characters eking out an existence in a valley where they believe everyone is dead, leaving you hoping at the end that a glimmer of hope may appear. However, it does have some sweet moments, like Fone and Smiley's little talk by the fireside and Phoney and Fone turning into Ishmael and Captain Ahab. All in all, you'll love this and all the other BONE books, whether you love Mickey Mouse or The Lord of the Rings (BONE is quite Tolkienesque.) | Great series takes a turn into the grim | Customer Rating: | | With "Ghost Circles," the seventh of nine volumes, the "Bone" saga gets very, very serious. While still appropriate for all ages (there is nothing here you wouldn't let your eight-year-old read), this is hardly kiddy fare. It's dark, grim and rarely funny. "Bone" is an epic story about three "bone creatures" and their adventures in a valley peopled with an assortment of crazy and interesting characters. Looming over it all is the menace of a great evil, revealed slowly over the course of nine volumes, intent on unleashing itself over the world. The series starts off lighthearted, but grows less so as the story unravels itself, as is evident with "Ghost Circles." In "Ghost Circles," despair rules over all. It begins with the death of a supporting character, leads into suffering for all, and sees the main characters trudge through hopelessness before leaving the reader lingering with the hope that maybe, just maybe, a good end will come for the good guys. Here, several story threads move ahead independent of each other, the characters separated by a great calamity in the valley. Throughout the volume, the threads appear to be drawing together - even as evil grows. When finishing this, you'll reach for the next volume right away. Smith combines the kind of classic storytelling perfected by the likes of the legendary Carl Barks (Donald Duck, Uncle Scrooge) and Bill Watterson (Calvin & Hobbes) - pure cartooning with outrageous and expressive faces and gestures - with the epic and engaging plotting of a sweeping fairy tale. "Bone" manages to balance the two well enough to be something fans of both Donald Duck and Frodo Baggins can enjoy. Jeff Smith's "Bone" series may be critically acclaimed, but it is also criminally overlooked. And that's too bad, because this deserves to be read. And in the long run, it will be. There is no doubt people will still be reading "Bone" 50 years from now. Broad and epic in scope yet personal and quaint, this is a charming story in every way that will surely outlast most other comic works on the shelf. |
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