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The Takers by R.W. Ridley
The Takers by R.W. Ridley






The Takers by R.W. Ridley

I am so glad I followed my whim to buy this. It left me cheering for the characters, and sad hearted if anything happened to them. Great characters, great monsters, great companionship. After I read this, I was hooked on this series, and purchased the next in line. The characters are a story within a story, and the writers can make those characters of their comic story anything they want.the premise is very neat.

The Takers by R.W. Ridley

I took that into consideration, and ate this story up. I found some things neatly tied up, and then realized, when a handi-capped person is writing the story within the story, any thing can happen.

The Takers by R.W. Ridley

I thought this was great story telling, with no major gaps in the story. I read a few reviews, and decided to buy the book. I was doing a search of Oz, (as in the wizard), and this came up. I bought this book on a whim, because it was so cheap on amazon. The plot is clearly defined, and the action never flags. The lively narrative will capture the imagination of young teens, especially boys, who will enjoy the more horrifying aspects of the story. Oz, suffering from guilt that he possibly caused Steve's death, must learn to accept responsibility, not only for his actions in the past, but for the future of civilization as he knows it. Steve's untimely suicide leaves only the comic books as clues to vanquishing the Takers.

The Takers by R.W. Ridley

Afflicted with Down Syndrome, Steve created new worlds, replete with battles between good and evil, in the comic books that served as his sole refuge from the teasing of Oz and his friends. Along the way, he learns that his destiny was written by Steve, a boy from his past. In an effort to make things right, he gathers a band of survivors (a baby, an aged mechanic and a talking gorilla, among others), and sets off down his version of the yellow brick road, leading to the Atlanta Zoo. When 13-year-old Osmond "Oz" Griffith wakes from an illness on the floor of his closet, he discovers the world overrun by man-eating monsters, the Takers, and it's largely his fault. Can they get to the end of the story before the Takers devour them? Kirkus Discoveries Review The first volume in The Oz Chronicles recalls both Stephen King's The Stand and L. But every time he and his band of survivors try to read the comic book, the Takers draw closer. He also knows that a comic book written by a neighborhood boy is the key to defeating them. Never say their name! If you do, they will find you! If they find you, they will eat you! Thirteen-year-old Oz Griffin knows it's his fault that the Takers are eating everyone in sight.








The Takers by R.W. Ridley