![]() ![]() The information is always accurate (though often in the form of a riddle) and is of a nature such that it must have come from the ghost of Martin the Warrior and could not be the result of a creature "solving" a mystery in its sleep and dreaming about Martin the Warrior on its own. Elements of the supernatural or paranormal appear mainly in two forms: First, the ghost of Martin the Warrior or another long-dead hero will often appear in hallucinations, dreams, or visions to one of the woodland creatures (usually, but not always, an Abbey-dweller) and impart information. Redwall contains little practice of magic. ![]() The characters in the books are all anthropomorphic animals of some sort, almost all of whom are capable of speech (with a few exceptions like the horse in Redwall). However, there were two phases when the novels were published in chronological order. There is a timeline in the Redwall series, but it generally places the books in a completely different order than the order in which they were written. Typically, those books are set before the founding of Redwall Abbey. Some of the books focus on characters who, in other volumes, are historical figures (e.g., Martin the Warrior's father, Luke, in The Legend of Luke). Rather, it covers many periods in the history of Redwall, a world which entails Mossflower woods, surrounding islands, and a land called Southsward. The book series does not chronicle any one particular timeframe. ![]()
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