Fortress of Solitude

Submit Articles


Superman Book, t-shirts  Videos, Posters and more

Superman Returns Merchandise

Superman Books

Superman Soundtracks

Superman DVDs

Superman Posters

Superman T-shirts

Superman Auto & Tools

Superman Toys & Games

Superman Videos

Superman Collector's Corner

Smallville Merchandise

Other Super Heroes Merchandise

Aquaman
Batman
Captain America
Daredevil
Fantastic Four
Green Lantern
Justice League
Hulk
Spiderman
Teen Titans
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Transformers
X-men
Wonder Woman

Superman TV Menu

Smallville


Superman Movies


George Reeves


Lois and Clark


1980's Superboy


Superman Animation


Incredible Hulk VS
 Superman


Superman Message Board

Superman Wallpaper
Superman Articles and News
Superman Fan Art
Superman What ifs
Superman movie serials
Superman Comic Books
Superman Links

 

 
SUPERMAN STORE
 

Books : Taltos: Lives of the Mayfair Witches

In association with Amazon.com

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Enjoyed it
I enjoyed the book, I just wasn't ready for the series to be over. I did miss Rowan, as she was not as central to this story as the others.

This book did not keep me on the edge of my seat like the other two, but it was a good culmination to the story.





Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - good anne rice
Written just as the Mayfair Witches was written. If you liked the first book, you'll like this one.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - The least strongest book out of the series.
Taltos is the last book in the series, "Lives of the Mayfair Witches" by Anne Rice. The novel begins with a Taltos named Ash who has been alive for centuries and is now a billionare living in a New York skyscraper. He's also one of the world's largest doll makers, taking submissions from people all around the world to make some of the best dolls out there. His friend, Samuel, who is not a person of very tall stature, calls him in hopes that he can come see him and Yuri, who he has saved from an asassin. And so begins the tale of the Taltos.

A major character is killed here pretty early on and Rowan and Michael head to London to confront the Talasmac and find out who's behind the evil plot to bring a male and female Taltos together. Along the way they meet up with Yuri, Samuel and Ash, and together the five of them find out who's turned bad at the Talasmac as well as discovering another female Taltos that's been hidden by a member of the Talasmac for quite some time, only she's so old she is barren and can no longer reproduce any children.

Meanwhile Mona Mayfair and a new character to the series, her cousin Mary Jane, are back at first street getting into trouble with Michael and Rowan gone. Mona is pregant by Michael and it may or may not be a Taltos. The story follows them as they become quick friends and Mona's pregancy looms closer every minute. They look at files that Rowan and Lasher made from the second novel and end up running off to Fountervault, in Louisiana, to a house in the middle of the swamp and literally tilting at a five degree angle, just so Mona can have her baby somewhere that people can't find her.

After taking care of the problem in the Talsamac, Rowan, Michael, Ash and Samuel return to Ash's sky scraper in New York, where he relates the story of his life to the two of them. His life chronicles the Taltos beginning in the Lost Land and moves through the centuries past Christianity into almost modern times. We learn what it was like when it was just Taltos, why they had to flee, how they came to be at Donneleith, and why there aren't many left anymore. His story also ties into Lasher's tale from the previous novel at one point. After this, Michael and Rowan return to First Street and the tale winds down to the finale, which I won't give away here.

The prose is up there with the rest of Anne Rice's wonderful books on Vampires and Witches. She's as vivid in her descriptions as always and paints a wonderful picture of what these characters are, how they're thinking, and where they are. Most of the characters here are as wonderful as her last two books on them, especially Michael and Rowan, and the newly introduced character Mary Jane Mayfair. Even Ash the Taltos is well written, although towards the end when he gets fairly whinny I didn't like him as much. Mona is a different story though. She was a character I greatly enjoyed from the previous book, but in this one, towards the middle when her pregancy is in full swing, the character changes quite dramatically. She becomes more of a child looking after a child. There's not that strength in her anymore. Also, her child, Morrigan, is pretty annoying once she's born too. She thinks she knows everything and she is quite pushy when Michael and Rowan get home, so the character never grew on me. I was hoping that Rowan or Michael would decide she had to die, but alas, that didn't happen.

And finally the plot. This book had the weakest plot out of the three. The first one set up all of these wonderful characters and told an amazing story. The second book continued the first story and was a race to stop Lasher before he could kill off any more of the Mayfair women. This third story isn't as exciting. They don't do a whole lot in the book, and during the last third it's mostly Ash's tale of how he came to be and what happened to him and his kind through the centuries. It's interesting stuff, but nothing to exciting. Which leaves the ending. It seems fitting what happens, but I wanted more to it then what we got. I feel like more could have been said about these characters and where they were going and what they were doing, since this is the last book of the series. All and all, a good read, although it is the weakest of the three books.




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - The Grand Finale!!
Ashlar Templeton is the last of an ancient race called the Taltos. Tall, handsome and born full-grown, these beings were eradicated by mankind centuries ago. Ash has lived for hundreds of years, since the Taltos were converted to Christianity in the 13th century, disguising himself, and hiding the history of his kind to escape annihilation. He longs for a Taltos mate so he can perpetuate his race. He contacts Rowan Mayfair, the reigning Mayfair witch, and her husband Michael Curry in 20th century New York. Ash knows that one of his race, Lasher, had been haunting the Mayfair family for hundreds of years, and was recently brought into the real world of man, made into flesh and bone, and then destroyed soon after. Rowan and Michael were the parents of two Taltos, now dead. Ash relates the history of his people to the couple. Ashlar's particular story, a tale of survival through the ages, is one of the strongest and most fascinating parts of this novel.

Meanwhile, Rowan's niece, Mona Mayfair, discovers she is pregnant with a Taltos fetus, fathered by Michael, Rowan's husband. (Don't ask...you'll have to read what happened!). She runs away with her cousin, Mary Beth Mayfair, to protect her unborn child. There are many who would kill the Taltos baby in the blink of an eye. Mary Beth, the country cousin from the Bayou, is absolutely delightful and provides some comic relief in an intense narrative.

Ashlar then discovers that the Talamasca, a group of scholars who have studied and chronicled occult happenings for centuries, is rife with corruption. Aaron Lightner, a dear friend of Rowan's and Michael's, is murdered by a renegade faction of the order who want to keep the history and legend of the Taltos secret. Ash decides to eliminate the evil, rogue element of the Talamasca without destroying the entire group..

"In "Taltos" Anne Rice takes the saga of a family haunted for hundreds of years by a supernatural being, and turns the tale into something more epic in scope. The story of Lasher's roots, the history and legacy of the Taltos, brings the trilogy into an almost mythical realm. While Lasher, as a representative of the Taltos, was viewed as a threat throughout books one and two, "The Witching Hour" and "Lasher," Ashlar changes the readers' perception of his race by revealing their entire history of contribution and persecution.

Although I liked this book, it is the weakest novel of the three. I was certainly ready to have the loose threads tied together from the first two novels, but there is way too much information and unnecessary description here. The novel sometimes drags - the pace is too slow and there is too much filler. Precisely because "Taltos" is the trilogy's conclusion, anything and everything that has been left for last to be resolved, should wind-up here in a neat package. It doesn't. There is unnecessary rambling and too many repetitious summaries of the previous novels. However, there is still much here that is well worth reading, and the conclusion is a good one.

Overall, this is a superb trilogy, filled with lore of the occult, the entire range of passions that generations of one, very odd family can contain, mystery, chaos, murder and much love. Anne Rice has written a fitting conclusion to her series with "Taltos." I recommend that "Taltos" be read as part of the trilogy, rather than on its own.
JANA



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Tolerable distraction
As someone who is not typically a Rice fan, I found this book more digestable than some of her other work. In general, the Lives of the Mayfair Witches is considerably more enjoyable than the vampire books, I felt. The Witching Hour is probably the strongest of the three books; Lasher is wash out...at least until the end, where Rice has Rowan act like a rational person and appears to put a very final ending in place. So I wasn't sure what to expect in this third installment. Indeed, it has very little to do with the other novels except to have some of the same characters stand around and listen while Ash, the Taltos, tells his story. I guess one reason that I liked this one a little more was that the story happens mostly in the present tense (except for a portion of the final third of the book) and that the plotting is fairly straightforward. The only point that made me slap my head in disbelief was when Mona suddenly decides to keep her baby/monster at all costs. That is inconsistent with the character that Rice had created for her.

But mostly it's harmless enough. You won't find anything life changing here--but hey, we're reading Anne Rice, not F. Scott Fitzgerald. It's less grating than much of her other work, and for that alone, I'm willing to give it a decent, three star rating.


page 4 of  20

 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11 
Superman Actors and Actresses Posters and Photos
check out these sections for lots of great images that you can have for your own wall. Find out how each actor or actress relates to Superman.
Actors
  Actresses  Movies   Television Shows
Classic Superman Posters  Superman the Movie  
Superman II Posters  Superman III Posters  Comic Book Posters
Your Favorite Super Hero Posters
Batman
  Captain America   Fantastic Four
Green Hornet  Incredible Hulk
  Incredibles Spiderman  Steel  Supergirl  Swamp Thing  Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Wolverine
   Wonder Woman   X-men

  Click for the Warner Bros. Online Shop-WBShop.com

 Movie Release Costumes

 Click Here for Superman Merchandise

 Superman Returns Figures, Gifts, Collectibles

 free shipping at fossil.com


Buy the new Superman Returns Poster