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Halo Encyclopedia |  | Author: DK Publishing Creator: Tobias Buckell Publisher: DK Publishing
List Price: $40.00 Buy New: $18.49 as of 11/23/2009 00:47 CST details You Save: $21.51 (54%)
New (23) Used (3) from $18.48
Seller: ceceralws Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 303
Media: Hardcover Pages: 352 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.3 Dimensions (in): 11.9 x 10.2 x 1.2
ISBN: 0756655498 Dewey Decimal Number: 793.932 EAN: 9780756655495 ASIN: 0756655498
Publication Date: October 19, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description FOREWORD BY GAME DEVELOPER FRANK O CONNOR!
A comprehensive guide to one of the most successful video game franchises in history, the Halo Encyclopedia details the origins of the game along with the characters, weapons, vehicles, equipment and locations from Halo, Halo 2, Halo 3, Halo 3 ODST and Halo Wars.
Created in full collaboration with Microsoft, Halo Encyclopedia is packed with hundreds of images, illustrations, and technical drawings that highlight all the information fans and newcomers to the game need to know.
© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
HALO Galore! November 22, 2009 Steve Rosenberg This book is Beyond Excellent! An absolute must for any and all HALO fans at every level. Price on Amazon is half of that at bookstores and mine arrived within days!
Must have for all Halo fans! November 19, 2009 Martin Nelson (Phila, Pa) Great book. Great art, great info on a great sci-fi title. I highly recommend it, weather your a noob or you've been there since Combat Evolved.
An excellent book to give as a gift. November 15, 2009 Jim (St. Paul, MN United States) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I've spent a couple of weeks reading the Halo Encyclopedia in drips and drabs. I've read chapters in a sitting and only a few pages in another. In the end the book lives up to it's title in a lot of ways that were intended and in ways it might not have been. It's intended as a book for the holiday season but it's also a reference work for one of the most successful video game studio's master creation.
For the hard core, mildly obsessive lovers of all things Halo there's new material here to spur discussions while walking paper routes with friends or arguing in dorm halls. Be warned that it draws heavily from the fiction and backstory already published in the licensed novels of the Halo universe. (The author of the encyclopedia is also the author of one the novels.) There are new nuggets here and there so Halo scholars will have new things to ponder. With detail dripping off of every page it can be mildly overwhelming to those just dipping their toe in the water but pictures go a long way to breaking up the text.
For the more casual Halo fan the book offers deeper glimpses into what goes on behind the scenes without completely tearing down the curtain. Humor goes is applied in the right spots to break the sometimes serious tone of the plight of humanity as it faces extinction before the Covenant. (There's a wickedly funny exploration of Grunt strategy that's someone what Sun Tzu like.) It's easy to explore as much as you want without feeling overwhelmed and that's a good median for casual enthusiasts.
This is a lot of book for it's current price on Amazon. Expect people who receive this on Christmas to curl up on the couch at some point and not want to be disturbed for a while. In the book industry's 30+ year history of publishing tomes of detail heavy books for science fiction enthusiasts this may easily be one of the best. Unlike so many bland books that have come before it where brilliant illustration was accompanied by horrible text, Bungie/Microsoft have picked one of the SF genre's brightest new talents for wrestling what could have been dry copy into something enjoyable and readable.
This isn't a book someone should foist on their grandmother to convince her of John 117's merits and strengths. (Odd's are she would collapse from the weight.) It is a book that will be read again and again as details slip away and the desire to explore one of the most well thought out and well developed intellectual properties in several decades.
I debated giving this 4 stars because I wouldn't recommend it as a gift to the long suffering girlfriend, the confused and slightly worried parents or anyone else who really has no interest in Halo. A 4 star rating would also be insulting to the people who worked so hard on this book. (10 years worth of effort from Bungie, Tobias Buckell's writing, etc.)
If you know someone who has endured midnight launches of the game surrounded by the stench of men enjoying themselves, gone back to complete the game on Legendary, screamed "Skull, skull, who's got the skull!" while playing oddball or still laughs when they hear the word "Chupathingy" then get it sooner than later. They'll thank you for it for years to come and you'll win a spot in their heart as the friend/loved one/parent who, despite not loving Halo as much as they do, understood that this book is something they needed to have. Isn't that what gift giving is all about?
Frank's a naughty boy. November 6, 2009 Rai Skrupskis (Albuquerque, New Mexico United States) 1 out of 14 found this review helpful
The book is fine, but the foreword is exceptional in an Onanistic sort of way.
Greatest. Foreword. Ever. November 4, 2009 Frank John Oconnor (Seattle) 13 out of 27 found this review helpful
While the content of this book is fine, what especially shines is the incredible, paradigm-shifting foreword. The author manages to encapsulate, in a few hundred words, the most profound, resonant and ultimately chilling snapshot of the human condition in literary history. As a piece of writing, it spans the semantic gulf between prose and poetry and ultimately confounds our understanding of both. It takes words and uses them as daubs of color with which to paint a Sistine Chapel - a work of art that literally forces us to look up, beyond the restrictive gravity of our own humanity, and gaze directly into the divine, with only motes of sparkling brilliance to obscure the view.
I gasped the first time I read this foreword and in that seemingly endless pause for breath, I realized that oxygen was a pitiful replacement for the atmopshere of wonder within those all-too brief paragraphs. These heights, they dizzy us.
Read this, or choke on the wan, thin air of lower literature.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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