Risingshadow is one of the largest science fiction and fantasy book databases.
Here you can find detailed book information and absorbing reviews.
Run by dedicated speculative fiction fans for other bookworms!
- A review of Lord Horror #7 (Hard Core Horror #5) and Lord Horror #8 (Reverbstorm #1)
- A review of Kenny Soward's Rough Magic
- GUEST POST (AND GIVEAWAY): Life (almost) imitating art by Sean Benham, author of Blope
- A review of D.E.M. Emrys' From Man to Man
- A review of Lord Horror: Reverbstorm (script by David Britton, art by John Coulthart)
Main Menu
Login
| 5.0 |
|
0% |
| 4.5 |
|
33% |
| 4.0 |
|
33% |
| 3.5 |
|
0% |
| 3.0 |
|
33% |
| 2.5 |
|
0% |
| 2.0 |
|
0% |
| 1.5 |
|
0% |
| 1.0 |
|
0% |
| 0.5 |
|
0% |

Average 3.83
Original title: Rumo & Die Wunder im Dunkeln. Translated into English in 2004.
Set in the land of Zamonia, this exuberant, highly original fantasy from Walter Moers features an unlikely hero. Rumo is a little Wolperting – a domesticated creature somewhere between a deer and a dog – who will one day become the greatest hero in the history of Zamonia. Armed with Dandelion, his talking sword, he fights his way through the Overworld and the Netherworld. He meets Rala, a beautiful Wolperting female; Urs of the Snows, who thinks more of cooking than of fighting; Gornab the Ninety-Ninth, the demented king of Netherworld; Professor Ostafan Kolibri, who goes in search of the Non-Existent Teenies; Professor Abdullah Nightingale, inventor of the Chest-of-Drawers Oracle; and, worst luck, the deadly Metal Maiden.
Astonishingly inventive, amusing, and engrossing, Rumo is a captivating story from the unique imagination of Walter Moers. Illustrated with the author's own line drawings and filled with humor, this rambunctious novel will delight fans tired of the usual epic fantasy. The comparisons are many – Douglas Adams, Lewis Carrol, J.K. Rowling, Dr. Seuss, R. Crumb – but Moers is clearly an original. Long live Zamonia!







