The Sword of Shannara Trilogy

Often referred to as the "classic trilogy" or simply the "Shannara trilogy", these three loosely-linked Doorstopper High Fantasy novels launched Terry Brooks' writing career. Set in Brooks' now famous Shannara universe, the three novels deal with three different generations of the Ohmsford family, their ties to the Elven House of Shannara and its magic, and their relationship with the enigmatic Druid, Allanon.

In Sword Of Shannara, Allanon arrives in the sleepy hamlet of Shady Vale with the news that The Warlock Lord, Brona, an evil former Druid, has returned to life. Only the fabled (and titular) Sword of Shannara can rid the world of his threat for good, and only a member of the House of Shannara can wield the sword. As it turns out, Shea Ohmsford is the last living heir of the house. Along with his brother Flick, their friend Menion Leah, and diverse others, Shea and Allanon set out to look for the Sword.

On their way to Paranor, home of the Druids, disaster strikes. Shea is separated from the group. Forced to team with thieves Panamon Creel and Keltset, Shea sets off to recover the sword on his own, while his friends attempt to avert Brona's conquest of the Four Lands. Many adventures, and one Hell of a twist ending, later, Shea recovers the Sword and puts Brona in his grave permanently.

Flashforward fifty years to Elfstones of Shannara. The Ellcrys, the tree that keeps the Demons of legend sealed up within the Forbidding, is dying, and her Chosen are massacred by the escaping Demons. The sole Chosen remaining, Elven Princess Amberle, must travel to the mythical Bloodfire and resurrect the Ellcrys. Realising that he will be needed to help the Elves defend their home from the Demons, Allanon visits the Gnome town of Storlock, intent on strong-arming Shea's grandson Wil into serving as Amberle's bodyguard, since he inherited his grandfather's magic-destroying Elfstones.

Wil soon agrees. He and Amberle set off, with the High Octane Nightmare Fuel-inspiring Reaper in hot pursuit. In the meantime, Allanon, Elf King Eventine, and Eventine's son Ander gather what few allies they have and prepare to fight a delaying action against the armies of the Demon Lord known as The Dagda Mor. In the end, a new Ellcrys is created, the Demons are banished, and all is well.

Twenty years after that, the Mord Wraiths appear. In possession of the Ildatch, the same Tome of Eldritch Lore that corrupted Brona, they seem poised to destroy the Four Lands. Even Allanon cannot penetrate the defences they have raised around the book, and all seems hopeless. Falling back into his old habits, Allanon calls upon Brin Ohmsford, who, thanks to her father's use of the Elfstones, possesses the Reality Warping Wishsong. Unlike Allanon, Brin will be able to use the Wishsong to enter the Maelmord and destroy the Ildatch; she and her Love Interest Rone Leah set off with Allanon in order to do so.

Meanwhile, her brother Jair, who possesses a lesser version of the Wishsong, is told by The King of The Silver River that Brin will fail if he does not go to her aid. Alongside reluctant Gnome Tracker Slanter, and uber-Badass Garet Jax, as well as numerous others, Jair goes after Brin. In the end, Brin is saved, and the Ildatch destroyed, albeit at tremendous cost. The Magic Goes Away...at least until the next series.

While the first book has been criticised for being too similar to The Lord of the Rings, the later books are generally regarded as better, and the trilogy as a whole was very successful. It's best described as good quality pop-fantasy.

For those interested in the history of the fantasy genre, it should be noted that The Sword of Shannara was the first high fantasy novel not written for children to be a commercial success in its own time (that's right; The Lord of the Rings was not a commercial success until many years after it was published), and Elfstones and Wishsong were numbers two and three, respectively; all three spent weeks on the New York Times best-seller list. This was largely what convinced publishers that fantasy could be a commercially viable genre separate from sci-fi, causing an explosion in the publication of fantasy.

See here for the character sheet.

The Sword of Shannara

 * Above the Ruins: Of Skull Mountain
 * After the End: The book's universe is implied to be our world after a World War Three that had destroyed human civilization and caused the creation of new races. The heroes even stumble upon metal ruins of an old city and fight an insectoid cyborg.
 * The Alliance: The Border Legion, and the Elven and Dwarven armies form the bulk of the alliance against Brona.
 * As You Know: To truly epic levels at the start, where the entire history of the world is monologued to the main character.
 * Though not entirely played straight, while everyone knew the general gist of what was told, this is the first time anyone but Allanon had heard the whole story, unaltered by propaganda and bias.
 * Attack of the Monster Appendage: The Swamp monster in the first book is a Type 1.
 * Badass: Allanon, Hendel, Balinor, and Panamon Creel are the standouts. Menion Leah especially.
 * Badass Normal: Panamon Creel, Balinor and Hendel. Menion Leah above all.
 * Big Bad: The Warlock Lord
 * Big Creepy-Crawlies: The giant bug monster they meet in the ruins of the old city.
 * Cain and Abel: Balinor and Palance. It's largely because of the latter's raging inferiority complex.
 * Clap Your Hands If You Believe: Only a Shannara heir can use the Sword, because the legends say only a Shannara heir can use the Sword.
 * Dead All Along:  is revealed to be this, in one of the biggest twists in Fantasy Literature.
 * Don't Go in The Woods: The Black Oaks are avoided by anyone with half a brain. Unfortunately, avoiding them sends Shea, Menion, and Flick into the Mist Marsh.
 * Dressing as the Enemy: Allanon disguises Flick as a Gnome and sends him to infiltrate Brona's army and free the captured Elven king, Eventine. The results are both hysterically funny, and very awesome.
 * Evil Chancellor: Stenmin, to Balinor's brother, Palance.
 * Freudian Trio: Shea (Ego), Panamon Creel (Id), and Keltset (Superego)
 * Good Wings, Evil Wings: The Skull Bearers have leathery, batlike wings.
 * Half-Human Hybrid: Shea is part human, part Elf.
 * Happy Ending: The only unambiguously happy ending in the whole blasted franchise.
 * Hollywood Cyborg: The insectoid monster they meet in the ruins is at least half machine. Might be a Creeper actually, going from the description.
 * Honour Among Thieves: Panamon Creel's belief that he owes Shea for saving his life is the reason he agrees to assist him in finding the Sword. And given Creel's peculiar sense of honour that means he'll take him to the ends of the earth to do it.
 * Informed Ability: Stenmin, the Evil Chancellor, is said to be a mystic. He never shows any sign of magical powers, though it's possible he was some sort of astrologer/fortuneteller/alchemist, and consequently didn't have any (or at least, not that would have helped him against the heroes). To be fair, however, it is very possible to infer that Stenmin's influence over Palance might have some partly mystical cause. Also, the word "mystic" technically does not mean the same thing as "magician."
 * Keystone Army: The Skull Bearers exist only through . When it goes, so do they.
 * Killed Off for Real:.
 * Load-Bearing Boss: Brona.
 * Load-Bearing Hero: Keltset.
 * The Lost Woods: The Black Oaks.
 * McGuffin: The titular Sword, which obsesses most of the characters for the duration of the book.
 * Mordor: The Skull Kingdom is a wreck, with a skull-faced mountain at its core, and is surrounded by poisonous rivers, lethal deserts, and a mountain range filled with poisonous spiders.
 * Odd Friendship: Hendel (gruff, taciturn Dwarf) and Menion Leah (irresponsible hothead).
 * Our Dragons Are Different: Valg, the giant, fire and poison breathing serpent that haunts the Hall of the Kings is essentially a wingless, water-dwelling Dragon, despite never being identified as such.
 * Sorcerous Overlord: Brona
 * Swamps Are Evil: The Mist Marsh. It's miserably damp, filled with pools of brackish water, and oh yeah, there's the Mist Wraith, a Kraken-esque spirit that would desperately like to eat you.
 * What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway? ?: Shea is understandably distressed when he learns that

The Elfstones of Shannara
"Eretria: He was trying to warn you! [She] pointed to Wisp. The little fellow had collapsed in tears."
 * The Alliance: The army arrayed against the Demons ultimately includes the Elven Army, Allanon, the Wing Riders (Sky Elves), the Border Legion (Men), numerous Dwarven engineers and sappers, and 1500 Kershalt Trolls.
 * Asskicking Equals Authority: The Demons are led by the most brutal among their ranks, with The Dagda Mor, The Changeling, and The Reaper at the very top.
 * Badass: Allanon again, Stee Jans (Commander of the Border Legion Free Corps), and Eventine. Ander doesn't do too badly either.
 * Badass Army: The Legion Free Corps is made up entirely of men who would rather that their pasts not be questioned too closely. In exchange they serve as a sort of expendable unit of desperate fighters. Then there's the Trolls, the Elves, and yes, the Demons. Not a lot of un-Badass armies in this book actually.
 * Badass Grandpa: Eventine Elessedil. The man's in his eighties and he manages to lead his army into combat, and kill the.
 * Badass Normal: Stee Jans, the leader of the Border Legion Free Corps.
 * Bat Out of Hell: The Dagda Mor's method of transport.
 * Beast Man: Many of the Demons are part animal, including Lizard Folk, Cat Girls, and many more.
 * The Berserker: The Furies are utterly crazed with rage, hatred, and bloodlust.
 * Big Bad: The Dagda Mor.
 * Big Badass Wolf/ Hellhounds: The Demon Wolves. The Dagda Mor uses them as scouts for his army.
 * Bittersweet Ending: Sure, the Demons get sealed up again. But.
 * Bodyguard Crush: Wil may have had one on Amberle. It's never made entirely clear just what his feelings are about her.
 * Cain and Abel: Morag and Mallenroh, the twin witches of the Wilderun.
 * Carry a Big Stick: Those Demons that don't go unarmed, either loot the bodies of the Elven dead, or arm themselves with clubs. There are mentions of everything from Goblins to Ogres carrying them, rating the placement of this trope here.
 * Catgirl: The Furies. Half human, half cat, with human faces and bodies, but cat muzzles, claws, and limbs.
 * Also, Cats Are Mean: Or at least batshit insane. The Furies are psycho-killers, with Berserker tendencies and no regard for their own safety. The Dagda Mor uses them as his personal killers when The Reaper is absent.
 * The Cavalry: Personified by the Legion Free Corps.
 * Clap Your Hands If You Believe: Wil's initial difficulties with the Stones cause him to form a psychological block that prevents him from using them; he effectively convinces himself that he can't use them, and so they stop responding.
 * Co-Dragons: The Reaper and the Changeling to the Dagda Mor.
 * Delaying Action: The entire War of the Forbidding is a delaying action, meant to give Wil and Amberle enough time to save the Ellcrys.
 * Demon Lords and Archdevils: The Dagda Mor, leader of the Demon army is described as a Demon Lord, in an Asskicking Equals Authority sort of way.
 * Deus Ex Machina: Wil, Amberle, and Eretria escape Safehold, only to find the sun is already setting--on the last day Perk said he would fly over the Wilderun. Wil, worn out from overuse of the Elfstones, tells Eretria to blow the whistle. Nothing seems to happen...then, at last, just when the sun has vanished and it seems they can never make it back to Arborlon, Genewen appears: Perk just couldn't leave them, especially after he saw the smoke from Mallenroh's tower, so he waited an extra day, and even past sunset. This rescue, in turn, allows them to be the Deus Ex Machina for the defenders of Arborlon, winging in just as they're about to succumb to the Demon horde.
 * Dwindling Party: The Reaper does this to Wil and Amberle's party, ending with Crispin.
 * Dying Moment of Awesome: Elven Hunter Crispin's futile Last Stand against The Reaper. He actually manages to slow down the unstoppable monster for a few moments, enabling Wil and Amberle to escape it.
 * Elite Mooks: The Furies, who are The Dagda Mor's best killers after The Reaper. A large group of them almost manage to kill Allanon.
 * Femme Fatale: Eretria. At first it isn't clear whether she is a villain (her anger at being spurned almost costs them the Elfstones when she doesn't warn Wil of Cephelo's plan to steal them), a Spanner in the Works, or just an annoyance during the Rover sideplot. By the end it's clear that she is the heroic version of this trope.
 * Femme Fatalons: The Furies.
 * Final Battle: The Demon assault on Arborlon is shaping up to be this. The Ellcrys is reborn just in time.
 * Giant Flyer: The Wing Riders and their Rocs make their first appearance in this book.
 * Giant Mook: The Ogres, and a huge, lizard-headed Demon all serve this roll on occasion, breaking through the Elven lines and inflicting serious damage until they encounter one of the main characters. The Dragon may actually be the closest example, relying solely on brute force and utterly destroying the Elves until Allanon confronts it.
 * Gondor Calls for Aid: And is eventually answered by Trolls, Dwarves, and The Free Corps.
 * Heroic Resolve: After  Allanon appears to calmly mount up and ride back to the Elven lines. The fight had taken every last bit of energy he had and it was only through sheer force of will that he stayed upright, because he knew the only thing keeping the Demons from swarming over the outnumbered Elves at that point was their fear of him.
 * Hero Secret Service: Wil to Amberle, Crispin and his Elven Hunters to both of them.
 * Heroic Sacrifice:  gives up everything in order to become the next  . Sniff...
 * High Altitude Battle: Between Allanon and Dancer on the one hand, and the Dagda Mor and his bat on the other.
 * Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons: And it works! Allanon's battle with a one-eyed, six-legged, flightless Dragon is one of the high-points of the book.
 * Killed Off for Real:.
 * Leave Him to Me: Allanon about The Dragon, and then The Dagda Mor.
 * The Legions of Hell: The description of the Demon army is pretty close to this. There are dozens of types too.
 * Like Brother and Sister: Possibly Wil and Amberle. They certainly use it as their cover often enough.
 * The Mole: The Changeling serves as the Dagda Mor's, replacing  and listening on every conversation the Elven High Command has.
 * Nothing Is Scarier: Part of what makes The Reaper so frightening, as it is utterly silent (and most likely cannot even speak), has a hood which may very well be completely empty, and it will always inexorably pursue until it catches you--but you will never know where or when it is coming. Crossing this with the silent, empty darkness of the Pykon may explain why that chapter is so subtly terrifying to some.
 * Not Now, Kiddo: Although Wil Ohmsford doesn't say the trope name, he does pretty much ignore poor little Wisp, who keeps trying to tell him something—but he's so set on getting the Elfstones back from Mallenroh so he can prove himself Amberle's protector that he doesn't even pay attention to the hysterical shrieking. Cue Eretria finally grabbing his arm and jerking him back, revealing that the box the Elfstones were in was trapped with a deadly viper inside:


 * One-Man Army: With the Ellcrys staff neutralising the Demons' powers, Allanon is able to become one, as only The Dagda Mor (who has Druidic powers in addition to his own innate magic) is able to challenge him magically.
 * Our Demons Are Different: Evil beings of Faerie exiled before the modern world began, they've been corrupted by hatred into various types of monster:
 * Our Dragons Are Different: The one Allanon fights has six legs, one eye, and can't fly or breathe fire.
 * Our Goblins Are Wickeder: A species of Demon, described as lean, black, and armed with razor-sharp talons. Fairly numerous, their physical description is pretty close to that usually associated with Orcs.
 * Our Monsters Are Different: In addition to Ogres, Goblins, and the Dragon, many other mythical and fairy tale beings, including Imps, Gremlins, Ghouls, Harpies, and of course, the Furies, are mentioned as being a part of the Demon army, although only a few are described in detail.
 * Our Ogres Are Hungrier: Another Demon species, used as the brute force of the Dagda Mor's army on several occasions. All we're really told is that they're big, scaly, and that it took the presence of the Trolls to successfully repel them.
 * Power Nullifier/ Brought Down to Normal: The Ellcrys equips the Elves with a staff that both renders the Demons mortal, and turns off their innate powers. Only The Dagda Mor is left with any workable magic. Sadly it doesn't do anything about their physical advantages (eg, armoured hides, superstrength, sheer size and bulk).
 * The Power of Hate: The Demon army is made of this trope. Years trapped within the Forbidding have completely warped the minds and bodies of the dark Fae, with their numbers, powers, and mutations only increasing as their loathing of all life (and the Elves and the Ellcrys in particular) grow. The Dagda Mor and Allanon both reference the trope on occasion, stating flat out that it is the power of their hatred/rage and not their superior numbers that truly makes the Demons dangerous.
 * Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Many demons are scaled. One of them, a huge monster with the head of a lizard, nearly breaks into Arborlon before Stee Jans stops it.
 * Royals Who Actually Do Something: The Elessedils are very active. Between Amberle being sent on the quest for the Bloodfire, Eventine, Arion, and Ander acting as war leaders, and in Ander's case, more or less holding the alliance together, they're more involved in the events of the story than anyone else.
 * Sealed Evil in a Can: The Demons were sealed up by the good Fairies long before the series ever began. As long as the Ellcrys tree lives, they remain sealed.
 * Second Love: Possibly  and Eretria. We're not sure what he thought of.
 * Scarily Competent Tracker: The Reaper follows Wil and Amberle across the entire Westland, never losing them for more than a few days at a time.
 * Slasher Movie: The Reaper's pursuit of Wil, Amberle and Crispin's men through the Pykon is so very much this. The horrific discovery and chase at Drey Wood also counts.
 * Sleep Cute: Amberle and Wil get a moment like this in the Matted Breaks.
 * Super-Persistent Predator: The Reaper is somewhere between this and the more human Implacable Man, refusing to give up even after Wil and Amberle cross a whole mountain range on Roc-back.
 * Super Strength: Many Demons have this in one form or another, even with their powers turned off. The examples aren't ludcriously unbelievable, but even average Demons are able to inflict a great deal of punishment on armoured men using only clubs or their bare hands. The Ogres, the Dragon, and various other monsters can of course do even more. And then there's The Reaper.
 * Supporting Leader: Ander and Allanon.
 * Swamps Are Evil: The Matted Brakes, a godforsaken tangle of swampland, deadwood forest, scrub, and stagnant water, populated by some of the most unpleasant creatures imaginable, including The Things, which kills two members of Amberle's bodyguard.
 * Tomboy and Girly Girl: Amberle and Eretria have some of this going on.
 * Too Dumb to Live: Cephelo, leader of the Rover caravan, demonstrates both stupidity and Genre Blindness when he steals the Elfstones from Wil. He is killed soon after by The Reaper.
 * The Unfavourite: Ander's position as this is a huge plot point.
 * Vain Sorceress: Morag and Mallenroh are identical twin Vain Sorceresses. Each is convinced that she is the most beautiful and the other is a hag; this is the source of their rivalry and leads to the death of a human who got between them and eventually their own Mutual Kill.
 * Voluntary Shapeshifting: The Changeling.
 * Wham Chapter: Chapter 24, the flight through the Pykon.
 * Wicked Witch: Morag and Mallenroh again.
 * Wizard Duel: Between Allanon and The Dagda Mor. It's epic.
 * You Shall Not Pass: Elven guardsman Crispin pulls what he knows will be a futile one against The Reaper. He manages to buy enough time for Wil and Amberle to destroy the bridge it's standing on though. Easily his Dying Moment of Awesome.

The Wishsong of Shannara

 * Artifact of Doom: The Ildatch is very close to this.
 * Badass: Allanon (noticing a pattern here?), and of course Garet Jax.
 * Badass Normal: Garet Jax may well have been Batman in another life.
 * Big Bad: We're set up to believe that it's the Mord Wraiths, but it's really.
 * The Big Guy: Helt.
 * Big Guy Fatality Syndrome: He's the first of the Dwindling Party to die.
 * Bittersweet Ending: The heroes win. They really, really do..
 * Bodyguard Crush: Inverted. Rone Leah volunteers to be Brin's bodyguard because of his crush on her.
 * Combat Sadomasochist: Both Jachyras are hardwired by the magic to be this. It makes them very, very dangerous.
 * Cool Sword: This is the one where Allanon changes the Sword of Leah into the anti-magic weapon we all know and love.
 * The Corrupter:  of whoever uses it.
 * Covers Always Spoil:.
 * Death Seeker: Garet Jax accompanies Jair because a prophecy promises him that if he does so he will meet his ultimate opponent; namely someone who can kill him.
 * Defector From Decadence: Slanter.
 * Driven to Suicide: Helt, due to the poison of the winged creature in the cellars of Graymark, brings down the gate to cut the rest of the party off from the Mord Wraiths and their forces, a You Shall Not Pass brought on by incipient Body Horror.
 * Dwindling Party: Jair's party is reduced to  by the end.
 * Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods: The Mord Wraiths summon a Kraken to help them take Cullhaven. Garet Jax kills it. With a spear. Badass!
 * The Faceless: The Mord Wraiths, due to a combination of Black Cloak and In the Hood.
 * Fighting Down Memory Lane: To restore  to herself.
 * Garden of Evil: The Maelmord is a sentient garden that protects the Ildatch.
 * Green Aesop: The King of the Silver River sends Jair on a quest to stop the Mord Wraiths from polluting the Silver River.
 * Hero Secret Service: Jair's party.
 * Kill'Em All: Not quite, but the last half of the book makes a valiant effort., and pretty much every other named character bite the dust.
 * Killed Off for Real: See Kill'Em All.
 * Lamarck Was Right: Using magic created by another race, when you've only got maybe one-quarter blood of the creator race in the first place, can cause some problems. Wil Ohmsford was actually damaged by use of the Elfstones, along with passing on some of the magic to his children in the form of the Wishsong. Justified, since this is magic we're dealing with.
 * The Lancer: Slanter slowly evolves into Jair's.
 * Leave Him to Me: Allanon and Garet Jax both say this when confronted by the Jachyras.
 * Lizard Folk: The Mwellrets are first introduced in this book, as a species of reptillian Troll that survived in the swamps instead of the mountains.
 * The Magic Goes Away: The finale. The Ildatch is dust, Allanon is dead, Paranor is sealed away, and Brin and Jair are told to never use the Wishsong again.
 * The Man Behind the Man: Turns out the the Warlock Lord, Big Bad of the first book was actually the puppet of his . Whether he was aware of this is unknown.
 * More Than Mind Control: The Big Bad pulls this on . It takes The Power of Love to fix things.
 * Multi-Armed and Dangerous: The Kraken of course.
 * Obfuscating Insanity: The only explanation for Cogline's behavior in this book versus the Heritage trilogy. Also makes for a huge number of Crowning Moments Of Funny, a rarity in this sort of High Fantasy.
 * According to Word of God, he really was insane, courtesy of a screw-up with the Druid Sleep. By the time Heritage rolls around, he's back to normal and considers that time period his Old Shame/ Never Live It Down moment. Makes it even funnier in a way.
 * Panthera Awesome: Whisper, Cogline and Kimber Boh's moor cat, who attacks the Mord Wraiths and their monsters with only his teeth and claws. He may be more Badass than any of the human characters.
 * Playing with Fire: The Mord Wraiths' usual attack involves red flames.
 * The Power of Love: How  after The Big Bad's More Than Mind Control leads to a bit of With Great Power Comes Great Insanity. Lampshaded by Allanon when his Shade visits Brin.
 * Reality Warper: Brin's Wishsong allows her to force the world around her to comply with how she wants it to be. See the main page for more details.
 * Reptiles Are Abhorrent: The first book to introduce the Mwellrets, in the form of the treacherous Stythys.
 * Suicide Mission: Jair's quest is effectively this. Of the six men who leave Culhaven to go to Heaven's Well and halt the pollution of the Silver River, four of them die on the way.
 * Take Up My Sword:.
 * Tome of Eldritch Lore: The Ildatch is an ancient book, surviving from the time of Faerie, and containing the secrets of many of their darker magics. Reading it subverted Brona, the Skull Bearers, and the Mord Wraiths; as such, Allanon has decided it must be destroyed.
 * Unusual Euphemism: Rone Leah's "...for cat's sake!" which he says frequently enough for it to be considered his catchphrase.
 * Vitriolic Best Buds: Jair and Slanter evolve into the Type II version.
 * Your Days Are Numbered: Allanon is informed in advance by Bremen that he will not live to see the outcome of the quest. Allanon's obviously not too thrilled with this news, but it doesn't deter him from continuing on the quest.