I am not sure how I feel about this book. Does it provide a conclusion to this trilogy while setting the reader up for the jumping-off point of the next trilogy? (Which is the Shannara way, at this point in the series.) It does. Am I particularly enthused by the ending of this trilogy? Not really.
Morgawr picks up where the previous volume, Antrax left off and y'all, shit is kind of bad for our heroes. Walker is dead. Grianne is in a coma induced by the Sword of Shannara. Bek and Truls Rohk are being pursued by Morgawr and his fleet. Quentin Leah, Panax, and company are fleeing into the mountains, trying to save the native population of Parkasia, the Rindge. Ahren and Ryer Ord Star have been captured by Morgawr and the Elfstones are missing again.
Bek, Grianne, and Truls flee into the mountains and Truls reluctantly helps save Grianne as best he can. Eventually, he is poisoned by a caull and the shape-shifters they encounter in the last book leave Bek with the choice to decide for his friend: he's got to become fully shape-shifter or he will die. Bek struggles with it, not knowing if he has the right to make the decision for his friend, but eventually decides that saving his life matters more, so Truls sheds his human form and becomes fully shape-shifter, leaving Bek and Grianne alone.
Antrax, as it turned out, controlled the weather as well, so apart from a nice rainforest (the Crake) on the other side of the mountains, it's getting cold, snowy, and downright unpleasant for everybody. In the case of Rue, Redden Alt Mer, and the Rovers aboard the Jerle Shannara, that's a good thing, because it enables them to hide from the Morgawr's forces. But it's also a bad thing because their ship crashes and they have to figure out what to do about that.
Quinten, Panax, and the Rindge are doing their best to flee- but Morgawr's forces are getting closer and closer. Eventually, Quinten makes a last stand and gets swept up in a landslide, which he survives- but barely. He manages to dig himself out and start back up the mountain and promptly runs into Bek. (I will say this for the character of Quinten Leah: of all the Leahs in the series, he is probably the most traumatized in many ways and is eager to go home and never do anything like this ever again. Morgan Leah is knocked back by the loss of his magic in The Heritage of Shannara series, but he also finds purpose in a quest to restore it. He's nowhere near as traumatized as Quinten is and having not only this character but all the characters, face up to the fact that this expedition has resulted in a lot of dead people and not much else is probably one of the best aspects of this entire trilogy.)
Eventually, they make it to the Jerle Shannara where they've got to go down into the rainforest to retrieve some of the crystals to get back up in the air again and that's a new wrinkle because there's a Graak down there. (Two, as it turns out. What's a graak? Well, again: full credit to Brooks for just having some fun with this, because I'm pretty goddamn sure it's supposed to be either a really big lizard or a straight-up dinosaur.) The Graak injures Quinten- perhaps mortally and Bek manages to coax Grianne out of her coma long enough for her to heal him.
Ryer gets Ahren away from the Morgawr and gives him back the Elfstones (which she had hidden). Given the revelation that Ryer had been a spy for Morgawr all along, Ahren doesn't exactly trust her at the moment but waits patiently, and then Ryer delivers and frees him, but ultimately at the cost of her own life.
(You kind of figure that Ryer is going to die, but... I wasn't crazy about how she went out. I feel like she deserved more of a heroic death than what she got. But she does resist the torture and brutality of the Morgawr to keep the survivors of the expedition safe and Walker does come in her final hour to 'free' her as she dies, but... I felt like she deserved better.)
Finally, they're reunited. Panax stays behind because he likes the Rindge. (Panax remains a curiously underutilized character even now, so this ending fits. You gotta do something with him.) The Jerle Shannara is repaired. Rue and Bek admit they have feelings for one another and they start the long voyage back home, but the Morgawr is still after them. It all comes to a head on the island of Mephitic where Grianne, freed from her coma and with a little assist from Bek manages to trick the magic spirit that inhabits the castle (remember the castle from the first volume?) into trapping the Morgawr and ending him once and for all.
The survivors make it home. Bek and Rue set out to start their new lives. Ahren goes back to the Westland to give Kylen the Elfstones and then takes two dozen elves back with him to Paranor. Grianne stops at Hadeshorn and we find out that her new job (despite her dark past as the Ilse Witch) is to form a new Druid Council.
Overall: I'm a little disappointed. Don't get me wrong: there's plenty of good here. I love that this trilogy overall, introduces technology, computers, lasers, robots, zombies, and now, in the final volume, dinosaurs and I guess a different kind of zombie? (Morgawr's thing is he likes to sort of suck people's brains/souls out and leave them mindless zombies.) I do love that we have characters reflecting on just how much this entire experience has sucked for them and really trying to heal from their trauma a bit.
Buuuuuuuuuuuuuut, all that being said: this trilogy could have been an email. The fact that they didn't even get one maguffin from Antrax and they didn't come back with anything but the Elfstones (and, yeah, that's something) but we can't find some maguffin from the Old World? Something tangible to make all of this worthwhile. Pretty much they had to drag everyone across the ocean to a strange land just so Walker could die and tell Grianne she was going to be the new High Druid. On balance: lots of good stuff in this trilogy, it made me excited to go back to Shannara and I love the aspects of different genres that make their way into this trilogy. At the end of the day, I'm always a sucker for airships though, so even though I'm not quite sure Brooks stuck the landing on this trilogy, I'm going to say, My Grade: ** 1/2 out of ****