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Fables, Vol. 11: War and Pieces
Fables, Vol. 11: War and Pieces
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List Price: $17.99
Buy New: $9.22
You Save: $8.77 (49%)
Buy New/Used from $9.22

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(based on 10 reviews)
Sales Rank: 2106
Category: Book

Author: Bill Willingham
Publisher: Vertigo
Studio: Vertigo
Manufacturer: Vertigo
Label: Vertigo
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 6.6 x 0.6

ISBN: 1401219136
Dewey Decimal Number: 741
EAN: 9781401219130
ASIN: 1401219136

Publication Date: November 25, 2008
Release Date: November 25, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Fables Vol. 10: The Good Prince
  • Jack of Fables Vol. 4: Americana
  • Fables Vol. 9: Sons of Empire
  • Jack of Fables, Vol. 3: The Bad Prince
  • Fables Vol. 8: Wolves

Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A fitting addition to a masterful series   January 8, 2009
I still remember the first day I picked up Volume 1 of FABLES in Barnes & Noble. I was waiting around for my sister to finish work, browsing the comics section in hopes of coming across something that looked halfway interesting. James Jean's artwork on the front grabbed my attention right away, and after reading just the back cover I was hooked. I bought it immediately and have spent the months and years since then eagerly anticipating every volume.

Willingham's re-imagining of classic fairy tale folk blends masterfully and seamlessly with his story of the ultimate war between worlds. I won't spoil anything for those who haven't read everything, but you'd be doing yourself a major disservice by not picking up WAR AND PIECES. I found the ending very fitting and in keeping with Willingham's characters and world.

I can't wait for the next volume, THE DARK AGES, to see what happens to our group of intrepid Fables post-war.



5 out of 5 stars A glorious ending to the FABLES main arc   January 5, 2009
Before commencing with my review, I have to note that FABLES could well become the next TRUE BLOOD. The latter is the highly successful HBO television series, which adapted the wonderful Sookie Stackhouse novels by Charlaine Harris for the small screen. About a month before I write this ABC put a new television series based on FABLES into production. The people in charge of the production and pilot are the people behind the interesting but unsuccessful series SIX DEGREES. Hopefully the pilot will thrill and enchant the top brass at ABC and FABLES will become a primetime series on ABC. I have to confess that at the moment I have a hatred for ABC that is deep and strong, due to their almost unforgivable cancellation of PUSHING DAISIES, but a TV series based on FABLES would go a long way towards making me forgive them.

WAR AND PIECES pretty much brings us to the point that we always knew that FABLES would reach, the war between the Fables and the Adversary. From the very first issue any perceptive reader knew that this moment would come. What is somewhat surprising is that the series will not cease with the resolution of the war. But just as some friends of mine refuse to watch individual episodes of either LOST or 24, preferring instead to watch them in one big chunk on DVD, so I refrain from getting the individual issues of FABLES, instead buying each collected volume. So I won't know what happens next until next August when the 12th volume in the series is published. Meanwhile, Willingham's FABLES has become quite the franchise. Not only is there the possible new ABC series, there are a couple of spin offs in the offing, including a Peter Piper series and a miniseries involving that wonderful superspy Cinderella. The fifth volume of JACK OF FABLES has had its publication date announced, even before the fourth volume has been published. So, even if the main FABLES comic were not to continue (though it is), it seems certain that it will be a long, long time before we are without new comics based upon the FABLES universe.

This was just a glorious set of stories. There is always the danger when anticipating the end to a major story arc that it will be disappointing. These were just a delightful series of issues. We'd had a brief taste earlier of Cinderella as a super spy and it was delightful to have her reprise that guise. On a mission to retrieve an all-important package at the southern tip of South America we get to see her in all her unexpected glory. Some of the things we see various Fables do are wonderfully congruous with what we already knew about them, but the whole idea of Cinderella as a Jane Bond character is so out of whack with everything else we know about her to be delightful, not unlike Goldilocks as a murderous and slutty rogue. Then the actual war is wonderfully inventive. Using magic carpets as ballast to keep a wooden ship airborne seems very much like something the Fables would do. And the heroic demise of the unceasingly selfish Prince Charming is delightfully out of character. As with all the previous FABLES books, this one is filled with endless surprises and unanticipated twists. It is all so very good that even though it would have been a natural place to bring the entire series to a close, I'm quite delighted that Willingham decided not to.

Except for SANDMAN, this has to be my all time favorite comic series. It is exceptional for getting better and better as it has gone along. Early on I felt that some of the volumes were somewhat hampered for attempting to emulate one or another genre (for instance, the first volume was a whodunit, and all the weaker for that). But it really has ceased imitating other genres and found its own voice. I hope that we are a long, long way from the end. Hopefully by the time that Vol. 12 is published in August 2009, we will have heard that ABC has pulled the trigger on a FABLES TV series.



5 out of 5 stars Fables of War   December 28, 2008
This is one of the best Fables Volumes in my opinion. It meets the expectations the series has built up in it's readers page for page. Many lose ends are tied up and some stories even end completely. Other stores are sparked and introduced. It is a perfect climax and introduction all in one. I cursed after reading it because now i have to wait until August for my next dose of Fables! haha!


3 out of 5 stars A somewhat satisfying ending   December 11, 2008
  0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This was the end of a major story arc for Fables - the war with the adversary - and, as such, I expected it to be somehow bigger. The first two issues lead up to the war with only three issues dedicated to the war itself. This is the big climactic event of the series so far and I wouldn't have minded seeing a few more issues dedicated to the conflict. Also, as I've long suspected, the Fables win quite easily, since they are armed with modern-day firepower as well as magic. This creates a lack of suspense throughout the book.

Having said this, I have trouble faulting "War and Pieces." It would be difficult to write a fully satisfying close to this storyline. And several loose ends were tied up in a way that made perfect sense. A few loose ends were left, too, which makes me excited about what Willingham has in store for the future of Fables. And, as always, the art is beautiful.

Still, on the heels of Fables Vol. 10: The Good Prince, which was easily one of the best graphic novels I've read, this story felt somehow lacking.



3 out of 5 stars I Was Disappointed   December 8, 2008
  10 out of 10 found this review helpful

So far the other reviews all seem satisfied with this new volume so don't let my review put you off from taking a look. Especially if you're one of the few people who's gone through the first ten-plus volumes because your going to want to go ahead and graduate with this one.


Ever since the very first volume when all of the fables made a toast to winning back the homelands the series has been leading up to what is the last three issues collected in this paperback. Willingham says this himself in his afterword and calls the 'War and Pieces' arc a milestone in the series so far. We've been waitng 72 issues for this and here it is, the climax, summed up in three slim issues. I wanted so much more than this and I don't understand how the script came out the way that it did. All of the pieces for a great story are here, but it is the execution that leaves it flat. It's filled with excellent and entertaining ideas but it moves so f***ing fast that it feels like more of an outline rather than an actual story. Literally half of the action is gotten out of the way by word baloons. Characters aren't so much the characters we've come to know anymore but vehicles for plot points; they speak in plot points. Subplots from previous arcs that took themselves several issues to be set up are solved here in a single panal. I don't understand how after so much careful planning and time went into this series it would all just be slapped together in the end. I would have been willing to pay twice as much money to have seen this arc spread out over seven or eight issues, maybe more. (Good Prince was 9, and Wooden-soldiers was 8)

I suppose that by now Willingham knows that he has a sure audience and that all they really want is those damn plot points. But I feel as a reader and fan of the series that I deserve more than just flashes of sensationalism that the writer thinks I want, rather than something I can really immerse myself in, as I could in the first six or so paperbacks. It's really a shame how little this feels like an epic.


After 'War and Pieces' things actually are going to change; alot, unlike most comic book promises that the "-universe will change forever." The series is going to have to take an entirely fresh, deep breath which I hope will force Willinham to go back to basics and telling his story without anything to lean on, as he had to do in the beginning. I'll no doubt be buying the next collection so good luck to him.



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