Compare prices for raymond e feist
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Voyager Jimmy the Hand (Tales of the Riftwar S.)
Pages: 369, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
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Dabel Brothers Productions The Wood Boy: The Burning Man
Pages: 144, Paperback, Dabel Brothers Productions
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks
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£6.59
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Voyager Flight of the Nighthawks: Darkwar (Conclave of Shadows S.)
Pages: 400, Hardcover, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks
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£12.53
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Voyager Shadow of a Dark Queen (Serpentwar Saga)
Pages: 384, Paperback, Voyager
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£5.59
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Voyager Rage of a Demon King (Serpentwar Saga)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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£5.59
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Voyager Flight of the Nighthawks (Darkwar)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£3.99
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Into a Dark Realm: No. 5
Pages: 400, Hardcover, Voyager
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£9.49
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Voyager Krondor: The Betrayal (Riftwar Saga)
The video game industry has always drawn upon works of fiction for inspiration--sooner or later, the process had to reverse itself. <i>Krondor: the Betrayal</i> began its life as the bestselling role-playing video game of all time, written by Raymond E. Feist for Dynamix Inc. Feist, whose Serpentwar Saga has sold millions of copies and established him as one of the most popular fantasy authors of modern times, also wrote this novelisation which places the action of the game in the context of his fully realised fantasy setting, Midkemia. Feist's fans are legion. Long-time readers will be delighted at the return of popular characters Pug the Wizard, Squire Locklear and others, as they face the menace of a marauding elf war-chieftain and a mysterious cabal of wizards. But first-time Feist readers may find <i>Krondor the Betrayal</i> baffling and tiresome--without the momentum of the larger series, much of the story's effect is diminished. The video game influence in this book is unmistakable, as evidenced by an encumbrance of sword fights, multilevel conspiracy and two-dimensional characters. --<I>Brendan J. LaSall, Amazon.com</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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PerfectBound Krondor: Tear of the Gods (The Riftwar Legacy)
Unknown Binding, PerfectBound
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Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
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£14.99
at Amazon.co.uk
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PerfectBound Krondor: the Betrayal (The Riftwar Legacy)
The video game industry has always drawn upon works of fiction for inspiration--sooner or later, the process had to reverse itself. <i>Krondor: the Betrayal</i> began its life as the bestselling role-playing video game of all time, written by Raymond E. Feist for Dynamix Inc. Feist, whose Serpentwar Saga has sold millions of copies and established him as one of the most popular fantasy authors of modern times, also wrote this novelisation which places the action of the game in the context of his fully realised fantasy setting, Midkemia. Feist's fans are legion. Long-time readers will be delighted at the return of popular characters Pug the Wizard, Squire Locklear and others, as they face the menace of a marauding elf war-chieftain and a mysterious cabal of wizards. But first-time Feist readers may find <i>Krondor the Betrayal</i> baffling and tiresome--without the momentum of the larger series, much of the story's effect is diminished. The video game influence in this book is unmistakable, as evidenced by an encumbrance of sword fights, multilevel conspiracy and two-dimensional characters. --<I>Brendan J. LaSall, Amazon.com</I>
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Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
Shipping: refer to store website
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£5.99
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Talon of the Silver Hawk (Conclave of Shadows S.)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Jimmy the Hand (Tales of the Riftwar S.)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£8.57
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Faerie Tale: A Novel of Terror and Fantasy
Pages: 496, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
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Voyager King of Foxes (Conclave of Shadows S.)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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£5.59
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Voyager Prince of the Blood
Pages: 480, Paperback, Voyager
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£6.39
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Voyager Honoured Enemy (Legends of the Riftwar S.)
<I>Honoured Enemy</I> is the first of a series of novels--<I>Legends of the Riftwar</I>--which act as sidebars to the main action of Feist's epic of the clash of two worlds. Here, in the middle of the desperate war between the Kingdom and its Tsurani invaders, patrols from each side find themselves forced into a perpetually collapsing alliance against an enemy that wants to kill both. The Kingdom commander, Dennis, has a fairly standard set of scores to settle, notably the seizure of his ancestral home on his wedding night and the death of his entire family, including his new wife. The Tsurani leader, Asayaga, has a complex set of political feuds and obligations to balance against his need to survive. Add to the mix a couple of attractive sisters and a long-standing fratricidal blood feud between their light-elve scout and the dark-elf commander of the pursuing army, and the stage is set for a superior Sword and Sorcery western--and yet at times it becomes something more. There is a real sense here of the depths of winter and of the difficult practicalities of replacing a wrecked bridge in the middle of a battle, of scouting and quarter-mastering and all those unglamorous tasks that get soldiering done. --<I>Roz Kaveney</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Krondor: Tear of the Gods (Riftwar Saga)
Pages: 384, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Collins Magician (Riftwar Saga)
Like a venerable patriarch, <I>Magician</I> stands at the head of a great tribe of fantasy writing. When Raymond Feist's enormous novel was published, critics called it the best new fantasy concept in years, and Feist has refined and explored that concept over a dozen novels. His concept was to bring together two (and later, more) whole, intricately realised fantasy worlds. Midkemia is a Tolkienian realm, a European- Medieval series of kingdoms in which magic is prominent, and where men share the earth with dwarves and elves. Feist's genius was inventing another sword and sorcercy realm based more closely on eastern models, the Empire of Tsuranuanni, as vast as Ancient China, as formalised and devoted to the arts of war as a samurai Japan. A magical rift in time-space brings these two worlds clashing together, and the young boy Pug and his soldier friend Tomas are thrown into the ensuing maelstrom of invasion and epic battle, before embarking on a more fundamental magical journey towards the very roots of evil itself. Feist's two sequels to <I>Magician</I>, <I>Silverthorn</I> and <I>A Darkness at Sethanon </I> complete the richly conceived Riftwar Saga, and Feist has gone on to chronicle other aspects of his invented worlds. With Janny Wurts he wrote the Empire trilogy, which charts the rise, through the rigid patriarchy of the Empire of Tsuranuanni, of a remarkable female heroine, a woman who eventually reaches the heights of the imperial throne itself <I>Daughter of the Empire</I>, <I>Servant of the Empire</I> and <I>Mistress of Empire</I>. More recently he has returned to the world of Medkemia, and to his hero Pug, with the Serpentwar saga, beginning with <I>Shadow of a Dark Queen</I> and continuing with <I>Rise of a Merchant Prince</I>, <I>Rage of a Demon King</I> and <I>Shards of a Broken Crown</I>. Heroic Fantasy is a crowded-enough field, but Feist stands out in it for his sheer inventive power, the scope and range of his narratives, the diversity of his characters and his thundering battle sequences. Start reading here, and you may find yourself unable to stop until you have followed the saga right up to date. --<I>Adam Roberts</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£6.39
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Exile's Return (Conclave of Shadows S.)
Pages: 368, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Murder in Lamut (Legends of the Riftwar S.)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
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Voyager Daughter of the Empire
Pages: 528, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
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Voyager Jimmy the Hand (Legends of the Riftwar)
Pages: 400, Hardcover, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks
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£11.87
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Talon of the Silver Hawk (Conclave of Shadows S.)
Pages: 390, Hardcover, Voyager
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Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
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£11.87
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Krondor: The Assassins (The Riftwar Legacy)
<I>Krondor: the Assassins</I> is book two of Raymond Feist's <I>The Riftwar Legacy</I>, set in the world of his 1982-92 debut <I>Riftwar</I> series. As <I>The Encyclopedia of Fantasy</I> puts it, Feist is an adept manipulator of standard material. This is comfortable action-adventure fantasy using well-worn props and settings, as a group of likeable characters return from the wars of book one (<I>Krondor: the Betrayal</I>) to deal with twin threats to their kingdom. A vicious gang of outsiders is killing off Krondor city's established thieves' guild, the Mockers, while sinister, fanatical assassins known as Nighthawks are for some reason targeting people with magic abilities. Also threatened are visiting nobles from a rival kingdom. Someone is trying to provoke war. There's lots of action and swordplay as a hunting party runs into were-leopards and massed assassin attack, and a secret fortress of diabolical cultists is stormed by just three of our heroes in the manner of Indiana Jones. New physical and magical threats appear at regular intervals and are rapidly dealt with, the emphasis being on excitement rather than suspense. Feist provides enjoyable dialogue, moments of comedy, a touch of savvy political intrigue and unfailing narrative flow. All ends satisfyingly, with one hidden villain still on the loose and devilishly plotting world domination in book three. --<I>David Langford</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Shards of a Broken Crown (Serpentwar Saga)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
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HarperCollins Rise of a Merchant Prince (Serpentwar Saga)
Pages: 512, Paperback, HarperCollins
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Flight of the Nighthawks (Darkwar)
Pages: 400, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£8.57
at Amazon.co.uk
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Eos Talon of the Silver Hawk: Conclave of Shadows: Book One (Conclave of Shadows (Paperback))
Pages: 400, Mass Market Paperback, Eos
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£4.19
at Amazon.co.uk
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Spectra Books Silverthorn (Riftwar Saga)
<I>Silverhorn</I> is the sequel to <I>Magician</I>, which, like a venerable patriarch, stands at the head of a great tribe of fantasy writing. When Raymond Feist's enormous novel was published, critics called it the best new fantasy concept in years, and Feist has refined and explored that concept over a dozen novels. His concept was to bring together two (and later, more) whole, intricately realised Fantasy worlds. Midkemia is a Tolkienian realm, a European-Medieval series of kingdoms in which magic is prominent, and where men share the earth with dwarves and elves. Feist's genius was inventing another sword and sorcercy realm based more closely on eastern models, the Empire of Tsuranuanni, as vast as Ancient China, as formalised and devoted to the arts of war as a samurai Japan. A magical rift in time-space brings these two worlds clashing together, and the young boy Pug and his soldier friend Tomas are thrown into the ensuing maelstrom of invasion and epic battle, before embarking on a more fundamental magical journey towards the very roots of evil itself. Feist's two sequels to <I>Magician</I>, <I>Silverthorn</I> and <I>A Darkness at Sethanon </I> complete the richly conceived Riftwar Saga, and Fiest has gone on to chronicle other aspects of his invented worlds. With Janny Wurts he wrote the Empire trilogy, which charts the rise, through the rigid patriarchy of the Empire of Tsuranuanni, of a remarkable female heroine, a woman who eventually reaches the heights of the imperial throne itself <I>Daughter of the Empire</I>, <I>Servant of the Empire</I> and <I>Mistress of Empire</I>. More recently he has returned to the world of Medkemia, and to his hero Pug, with the Serpentwar saga, beginning with <I>Shadow of a Dark Queen</I> and continuing with <I>Rise of a Merchant Prince</I>, <I>Rage of a Demon King</I> and <I>Shards of a Broken Crown</I>. Heroic Fantasy is a crowded-enough field, but Feist stands out in it for his sheer inventive power, the scope and range of his narratives, the diversity of his characters and his thundering battle sequences. Start reading here, and you may find yourself unable to stop until you have followed the saga right up to date. --<I>Adam Roberts</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Shipping: refer to store website
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£4.19
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Servant of the Empire
Pages: 827, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£6.39
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Mistress of the Empire
Pages: 860, Paperback, Voyager
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£6.39
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager A Darkness at Sethanon (The Riftwar Saga)
<I>A Darkness at Sethanon</I> completes the Riftworld saga which started with Feist's <I>Magician</I>. When Raymond Feist's enormous novel was published, critics called it the best new fantasy concept in years, and Feist has refined and explored that concept over a dozen novels. His concept was to bring together two (and later, more) whole, intricately realised Fantasy worlds. Midkemia is a Tolkienian realm, a European-Medieval series of kingdoms in which magic is prominent, and where men share the earth with dwarves and elves. Feist's genius was inventing another sword and sorcercy realm based more closely on eastern models, the Empire of Tsuranuanni, as vast as Ancient China, as formalised and devoted to the arts of war as a samurai Japan. A magical rift in time-space brings these two worlds clashing together, and the young boy Pug and his soldier friend Tomas are thrown into the ensuing maelstrom of invasion and epic battle, before embarking on a more fundamental magical journey towards the very roots of evil itself. Feist's two sequels to <I>Magician</I>, <I>Silverthorn</I> and <I>A Darkness at Sethanon </I> complete the richly conceived Riftwar Saga, and Fiest has gone on to chronicle other aspects of his invented worlds. With Janny Wurts he wrote the Empire trilogy, which charts the rise, through the rigid patriarchy of the Empire of Tsuranuanni, of a remarkable female heroine, a woman who eventually reaches the heights of the imperial throne itself <I>Daughter of the Empire</I>, <I>Servant of the Empire</I> and <I>Mistress of Empire</I>. More recently he has returned to the world of Medkemia, and to his hero Pug, with the Serpentwar saga, beginning with <I>Shadow of a Dark Queen</I> and continuing with <I>Rise of a Merchant Prince</I>, <I>Rage of a Demon King</I> and <I>Shards of a Broken Crown</I>. Heroic Fantasy is a crowded-enough field, but Feist stands out in it for his sheer inventive power, the scope and range of his narratives, the diversity of his characters and his thundering battle sequences. Start reading here, and you may find yourself unable to stop until you have followed the saga right up to date. --<I>Adam Roberts</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Shipping: refer to store website
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£6.99
at Amazon.co.uk
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Collins The King's Buccaneer
Pages: 623, Paperback, Collins
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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£6.39
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager Silverthorn
<I>Silverhorn</I> is the sequel to <I>Magician</I>, which, like a venerable patriarch, stands at the head of a great tribe of fantasy writing. When Raymond Feist's enormous novel was published, critics called it the best new fantasy concept in years, and Feist has refined and explored that concept over a dozen novels. His concept was to bring together two (and later, more) whole, intricately realised Fantasy worlds. Midkemia is a Tolkienian realm, a European-Medieval series of kingdoms in which magic is prominent, and where men share the earth with dwarves and elves. Feist's genius was inventing another sword and sorcercy realm based more closely on eastern models, the Empire of Tsuranuanni, as vast as Ancient China, as formalised and devoted to the arts of war as a samurai Japan. A magical rift in time-space brings these two worlds clashing together, and the young boy Pug and his soldier friend Tomas are thrown into the ensuing maelstrom of invasion and epic battle, before embarking on a more fundamental magical journey towards the very roots of evil itself. Feist's two sequels to <I>Magician</I>, <I>Silverthorn</I> and <I>A Darkness at Sethanon </I> complete the richly conceived Riftwar Saga, and Fiest has gone on to chronicle other aspects of his invented worlds. With Janny Wurts he wrote the Empire trilogy, which charts the rise, through the rigid patriarchy of the Empire of Tsuranuanni, of a remarkable female heroine, a woman who eventually reaches the heights of the imperial throne itself <I>Daughter of the Empire</I>, <I>Servant of the Empire</I> and <I>Mistress of Empire</I>. More recently he has returned to the world of Medkemia, and to his hero Pug, with the Serpentwar saga, beginning with <I>Shadow of a Dark Queen</I> and continuing with <I>Rise of a Merchant Prince</I>, <I>Rage of a Demon King</I> and <I>Shards of a Broken Crown</I>. Heroic Fantasy is a crowded-enough field, but Feist stands out in it for his sheer inventive power, the scope and range of his narratives, the diversity of his characters and his thundering battle sequences. Start reading here, and you may find yourself unable to stop until you have followed the saga right up to date. --<I>Adam Roberts</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Shipping: refer to store website
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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Voyager A Darkness at Sethanon
<I>A Darkness at Sethanon</I> completes the Riftworld saga which started with Feist's <I>Magician</I>. When Raymond Feist's enormous novel was published, critics called it the best new fantasy concept in years, and Feist has refined and explored that concept over a dozen novels. His concept was to bring together two (and later, more) whole, intricately realised Fantasy worlds. Midkemia is a Tolkienian realm, a European-Medieval series of kingdoms in which magic is prominent, and where men share the earth with dwarves and elves. Feist's genius was inventing another sword and sorcercy realm based more closely on eastern models, the Empire of Tsuranuanni, as vast as Ancient China, as formalised and devoted to the arts of war as a samurai Japan. A magical rift in time-space brings these two worlds clashing together, and the young boy Pug and his soldier friend Tomas are thrown into the ensuing maelstrom of invasion and epic battle, before embarking on a more fundamental magical journey towards the very roots of evil itself. Feist's two sequels to <I>Magician</I>, <I>Silverthorn</I> and <I>A Darkness at Sethanon </I> complete the richly conceived Riftwar Saga, and Fiest has gone on to chronicle other aspects of his invented worlds. With Janny Wurts he wrote the Empire trilogy, which charts the rise, through the rigid patriarchy of the Empire of Tsuranuanni, of a remarkable female heroine, a woman who eventually reaches the heights of the imperial throne itself <I>Daughter of the Empire</I>, <I>Servant of the Empire</I> and <I>Mistress of Empire</I>. More recently he has returned to the world of Medkemia, and to his hero Pug, with the Serpentwar saga, beginning with <I>Shadow of a Dark Queen</I> and continuing with <I>Rise of a Merchant Prince</I>, <I>Rage of a Demon King</I> and <I>Shards of a Broken Crown</I>. Heroic Fantasy is a crowded-enough field, but Feist stands out in it for his sheer inventive power, the scope and range of his narratives, the diversity of his characters and his thundering battle sequences. Start reading here, and you may find yourself unable to stop until you have followed the saga right up to date. --<I>Adam Roberts</I>
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Shipping: refer to store website
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£5.59
at Amazon.co.uk
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