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Master of the Five Magics

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Country
  
United States

Series
  
Magics

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Originally published
  
October 1980

Genre
  
Fantasy literature

Publisher
  
Del Rey Books

3.8/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Publication date
  
October 1980

Pages
  
373 pp

Author
  
Lyndon Hardy

Followed by
  
Secret of the Sixth Magic

Cover artist
  
Rowena Morrill

Master of the Five Magics wwwjeffreysomerscomblathermasterfivejpg

Similar
  
Lyndon Hardy books, Fantasy books

You should be reading book 2 chapter 15 master of the five magics


Master of the Five Magics is a fantasy novel by Lyndon Hardy, first published in 1980. It is the first of a trilogy set in the same world; the second book is Secret of the Sixth Magic and the third Riddle of the Seven Realms. The books feature different characters, but each explores the same system of magic in successively more detail. It may be an early example of hard fantasy.

Contents

Plot summary

The book focuses on the adventures of its main character and hero Alodar in the fictional land of Procolon. Alodar's self-imposed quest for much of the book is to distinguish himself sufficiently to wed Queen Vendora.

The book is divided into six parts, the first five of which correspond to the five disciplines of magic learned by Alodar in that portion of the narrative. The final part is entitled "The Archimage" and corresponds to Alodar's mastery of all other forms of magic.

In the first three parts, Alodar learns enough of a particular type of magic to make a notable achievement, but the antagonist of that part usurps Alodar's credit and becomes a recognized suitor to the queen. Alodar is then left with an artifact of some type that allows him to begin learning a new discipline of magic. The first part also introduces Aeriel, a female character important in the second half of the book.

The fourth part does not feature an artifact; instead, Alodar discovers an ancient wizard placed in suspended animation, who reveals the basics of his craft to Alodar at the start of the fifth part.

The fifth part of the book reveals that Alodar's journey was planned by the ancient wizards, who predicted the now-imminent demonic invasion.

In the sixth and final part, Alodar uses his knowledge of all five magical disciplines in combination to defeat the leader of the demon army. However, Alodar spurns both marriage to the queen and an offer by his previous antagonists to support a coup placing Alodar on the throne; instead, he chooses to marry Aeriel and continue his apprenticeship.

Characters

  • Alodar, protagonist of the book. His family is stated to have once been noble; however, they have fallen into disrepute by the start of the narrative. Therefore, Alodar is merely an apprentice to a thaumaturge, the least prestigious type of magic-user.
  • Vendora, the queen of Procolon.
  • Aeriel, advisor to Vendora. She confesses her love to Alodar in the first part of the book, but Alodar does not clearly reciprocate until the final chapter.
  • Feston, antagonist in the first part of the book. His father Festil is a nobleman in Vendora's service. They take full credit for the queen's escape from a besieged fortress, ignoring Alodar's important contributions, leading the queen to name Feston as an official candidate suitor.
  • Basil, antagonist in the second part of the book. One of his henchmen steals an alchemical potion from Alodar and uses it to gather a vast wealth of gems for Basil. This gives Basil sufficient leverage to court the queen.
  • Duncan, a magician appearing in the third part of the book. He completes a ritual on an artifact discovered by Alodar, making it into a powerful talisman. This causes the queen to name him yet another official marriage candidate.
  • Kelric, an elderly sorcerer who instructs Alodar in the fourth part of the book.
  • Handar, a wizard placed in suspended animation. In the fifth part of the book, he instructs Alodar in the basics of wizardry.
  • Disciplines of Magic

    A primary focus of the plot is upon the five magics of the title. In the system devised for the trilogy, each of Thaumaturgy, Alchemy, Magic, Sorcery, and Wizardry allow the user to perform magical actions within a particular set of rules. These rules are specified after the table of contents, and are also stated within the narrative.

    The song "Five Magics" by Megadeth was inspired by this book, although the five magics listed in the song's lyrics differ to those in the book. The five magics in the song are listed as Alchemy, Sorcery, Wizardry, Thermatology and Electricity.

    Master of the Five Magics was credited by author Patrick Rothfuss as being influential in the writing of his Kingkiller Chronicles (The Name of the Wind (2007), The Wise Man's Fear (2011), The Slow Regard of Silent Things (2014), and the yet-unpublished Doors of Stone) during an author's panel at the Phoenix Comicon in 2014.

    In the Space Ghost: Coast to Coast episode "Curling Flower Space", during Space Ghost's story, Moltar exclaims that "Space Ghost has mastered the Five Magics!" right before Space Ghost uses an energy attack to disintegrate his nemesis, a loose ceiling tile named "C. Ling".

    Richard Garfield revealed tn an interview that the five color model of Magic: The Gathering was inspired by Master of The Five Magics.

    References

    Master of the Five Magics Wikipedia