The Ellimist Chronicles (Animorphs Chronicles #4)
by K. A. Applegate
Animorphs: Chronicles (4), Animorphs: Publication Order (Chronicles — 47.4), Animorphs (Chronicles 4)
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Description
We can't tell you who we are. Or where we live. It's too risky, and we've got to be careful. Really careful. So we don't trust anyone. Because if they find we just won't let them find us. The thing you should know is that everyone is in really big trouble. Yeah. Even you._________________________________________________________ K.A. Applegate is the married writing team Katherine Applegate and Michael Grant. Their Animorphs series has sold millions of copies worldwide and alerted the world show more to the presence of the Yeerks. Katherine is also the author of the Endling series and the Newbery Medal-winning The One and Only Ivan. Michael is also the author of the Front Lines and Gone series. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Okay, I'll admit it. This is the best book in the series so far, and if you removed the prologue/epilogue, it would easily stand alone. Actually treads pretty close to both effective cosmic horror and xenofiction? Incredible.
I didn't even like the ellimist. still dont. fuck that guy. this book is fascinating.
I didn't even like the ellimist. still dont. fuck that guy. this book is fascinating.
This one stands outside the series. It tells the history of that all-powerful being the Ellimist, who came from a peaceful species that lived on crystals in the air on a foreign planet. The description of this alien race (and many others throughout the book) were very different, very creative I thought. At the start of the story Ellimist is a young being, interested only in playing games with his friends- games in an interactive simulation where the goal is to use minimal influences to cause the most effective or positive changes in the evolution of species. Then another alien species shows up near his homeworld, threatening everything he knows. Chain of disastrous events end up with Ellimist adrift, the last of his kind, searching for show more a new planet to inhabit, and eventually pitched up against the Crayak in a battle of wits- with other sentient species on all the planets scattered across space and time subject to their whims. It shows how Ellimist became so powerful and all-knowing, but also that he has flaws and his struggle has been one to evolve, adapt and survive while doing the least harm, the most good- while Crayak's goal is to destroy everything he can. A huge good/evil pitch. I kind of don't like how this is hinting that everything the Animorphs are involved in is just a huge game to a meddling higher power, but oh well. This far in I'm still going to finish it up. It was interesting to see suggestions of how the Andalites evolved as well, how Ellimist also influenced them in the past. Very sci-fi, this one.
from the Dogear Diary show less
from the Dogear Diary show less
I was not a fan of the Animorphs series, but I picked this up randomly in the library one day-- and it was amazing. Even today (10 years later), the brilliance of this book sticks in my mind. There are many fascinating concepts, especially that of the game. Definitely worth a read!
How the Ellimst came to be what he was. A young gamer how goes on to play a much bigger game. I love how he is chosen for the ship because he was a brilliant loser.
A short comment for every book of the series until I get a chance to re-read them. All three of my sons and I loved this series and read every single book - I even bought every single book (most, but not all, used; some through school book sales). I'm excited to re-read them to see how the five main characters develop and to watch all the different transformations again.
The best books appeal to *readers* universally - not children versus adults. These may not be quite worthy of the adjective 'best' but they do have that crossover appeal.
The best books appeal to *readers* universally - not children versus adults. These may not be quite worthy of the adjective 'best' but they do have that crossover appeal.
Amazing book!
First book to emotionally hook me.
A must read.
First book to emotionally hook me.
A must read.
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Author Information

352+ Works 90,397 Members
Katherine Applegate was born in Michigan on July 19, 1956. She writes science fiction, young adult romances, and pop-up books. She is the author of the Making Waves, Making Out, and Roscoe Riley Rules series. She writes the Animorphs, Everworld, and Remnants series under the pen name K. A. Applegate. She also writes under the pen names of C. show more Archer, Catherine Kendall and Elizabeth Benning. She has received numerous awards including a Golden Duck Award (Eleanor Cameron Award for Middle Grades) for The Message in 1997, the SCBWI 2008 Golden Kite Award for Best Fiction and the Bank Street 2008 Josette Frank Award for Home of the Brave, and the 2013 Newbery Medal and the Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award (Illinois) for The One and Only Ivan. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Ellimist Chronicles (Animorphs Chronicles #4) (Animorphs Chronicles #4)
- Original title
- The Ellimist Chronicles
- Original publication date
- 2000-11
- People/Characters
- The Ellimist; Crayak
- First words
- The human child called to me.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 499
- Popularity
- 60,550
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.80)
- Languages
- English, Norwegian (Bokmål), Romanian, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 2

































































