"I found my way to fantasy/adventure. When I got there, I knew I'd found a home," said Terence Dean Brooks, creator of the blockbuster,
New York Times bestselling Shannara, Landover, and Word & Void series. Not only is Brooks at home in the highly competitive realm of fantasy literature, many would call him the genre¿s modern-day patriarch ¿ Tolkien¿s successor. While that title is debatable, Brooks is, without a doubt, one of the world¿s most prolific and successful authors of otherworld (and our world) fantasy. Few writers in any genre can boast a more entertaining collection of work ¿ and a more ravenous and loyal fan base -- than can Terry Brooks.
The most rewarding aspect to writing for Brooks is ¿when someone who never read a book reads [one of mine] and says that the experience changed everything and got them reading.¿ Because of his very engaging, quick-flowing writing style, countless numbers of young people have been introduced to the wonderful world of reading through Brooks¿s adventures. The miraculous thing, however, is that these same fans ¿ whether they¿re now 20, 30, or 40 years old ¿ still devour each new release like a starving man would a steak dinner. Credit Brooks¿s boundless imagination, endearing characters, fresh storylines and underlying complexities for keeping his older, more discerning audience hooked.
Brooks began writing when he was just ten years old, but he did not discover fantasy until much later. As a high school student he jumped from writing science fiction to westerns to adventure to nonfiction, unable to settle on one form. That changed when, at the age of 21, Brooks was introduced to J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien provided Brooks with a forum ¿that would allow him to release onto paper his own ideas about life, love, and the wonder that fills his world," according to his web site.
In 1977, after six trying years, Brooks published novel his first novel, The Sword of Shannara. And quickly it gave him ¿ and his publisher (the newly created Ballantine imprint, Del Rey) ¿ quite a thrill; the fantasy adventure featuring the young Halfling, Shea Ohmsford; the mysterious wizard Allanon; Flick, the trusty companion; and the demonic Warlock Lord, was not only well received -- it was a smash, spending over five months on The New York Times bestseller list. In 1982 Brooks released the follow-up, The Elfstones of Shannara (which Brooks says may be his favorite), to equal success. He closed out the initial trilogy in 1985 with The Wishsong of Shannara, and has since completed two more Shannara sets, The Heritage of Shannara books and the Voyage of the Jerle Shannara books.
As fans of Brooks know, the man doesn¿t like to stay put. ¿I lived in Illinois for the first 42 years of my life, and I told myself when I left in 1986 that I would never live any one place again,¿ Brooks said. He now spends his time between his homes in Seattle and Hawaii; he and his wife also spend a great deal of time on the road each year connecting with the fans. These same nomadic tendencies are also apparent in his writing. Instead of staying comfortably within his proven, bestselling Shannara series, Terry frequently takes chances, steps outside, and tries something new. His marvelous Landover and Word & Void series are the results. While both are vastly different from Shannara, they are equally compelling. Word & Void ¿ a contemporary, dark urban fantasy series set in a fantasy-touched Illinois ¿ is quite possibly Brooks¿s most acclaimed series. The Rocky Mountain News called the series¿ first two books (Running with the Demon and The Knight of the Word ¿two of the finest science fiction/fantasy novels of the 20th century.¿