The Secular Wizard
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
CAN A SECULAR SOVEREIGN SURVIVE IN A WORLD OF PURE GOOD AND EVIL?
In sunny Latruria, the wicked old king was dead, and the new king spurned the rule of Evil. But turmoil began to spread, even across the border, when the new king also resisted Good! In nearby Merovence, Lord Wizard Matt Mantrell donned a disguise and set off to investigate, never dreaming that Latruria’s malevolent prime minister was mobilizing his minions...
“Minstrel” Matt sang his way south, dodging deadly enemies and music critics alike. He was teamed with a lovesick lad, menaced by a manticore, haunted by a ghost from Greece, and swept along in a flood of youngsters fleeing the provinces for the “glamour” of the city. But when they all washed up in the capital, harsh reality awaited them, not gold-paved streets.
An even harsher reality awaited Matt: cutthroat court politics vying for control of Latruria’s King... and if he refused to be controlled, he’d have to be eliminated. To keep Latruria’s secular monarch on the throne, Matt would have to square off against corrupt conspirators and sinister sorcerers backed by all the power of Hell. In the end, the Lord Wizard would face the ultimate test of magic—and he would need a lot of help to pass!
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This is the latest enjoyable installment in the escapades of Matt Mantrell and Saul (``Wizard of Sarcasm'') Bremener, former graduate students now living happily in an alternate world where verse has magical powers. When the evil King Maledicto of Latruria (``Italy by any other name'') is killed, his grandson Prince Boncorro, having determined to be loyal to neither Good nor Evil, introduces supply-side economics to his goods-based kingdom. Matt, now Lord Wizard of neighboring Merovence, investigates the changes Boncorro has wrought. His ``incognito'' expedition is a curious one, impeded by occasional contretemps and the specious reasoning and obtuseness of several characters (Queen Alisande, Matt's wife, is particularly ill-served by multiple scenes apparently intended to show that pregnancy can make a woman moody). Readers older than Stasheff's usual audience may be bemused by the presences of Chancellor Rebezo and a friendly ghost called Spiro. Fans of the series' previous volumes should find this one, though a progression for neither author nor reader, as pleasant a distraction as those. Science Fiction Book Club alternate.