Fantasy Aficionados discussion

61 views
Group Reads Archive > June Read: Magician's Apprentice

Comments Showing 1-50 of 81 (81 new)    post a comment »
« previous 1

message 1: by Jason (last edited Jun 01, 2011 03:38PM) (new)

Jason (darkfiction) | 3204 comments This month we read the great Magician's Apprentice.

Pointers for discussion (if you so desire):

1. Plot
2. Writing Style/Pacing
3. Characterization
4. Setting
5. Themes/Motifs
6. Overall Thoughts/Rating (1-10 or 1-5 stars)
7. Books like this you'd recommend
8. Would you read more of this author?
9. Anything that distinguishes this book from the other epic fantasy on offer nowadays?


message 2: by Maggie (new)

Maggie K | 730 comments I actually read this! I had to hang out in the hospital last weekend, so I decided I'd 'get it over with'. I thought a lot of my resistance to this book was the unfortunate name of 'Pug". That and the first chapter of TSTL. However, it improves... a lot! I thought the twist of the Tsurani was different enough to be interesting, and I am curious about the story with Meckros...


message 3: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) This was one of my first ever fantasy reads, and I recently re-read it for another group. It holds a fond place in my heart for bringing me into the fantasy genre, and I'm interested to see what the newbies to Feist think of it.


message 4: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments I've got this on my TBR mountain, lol. I'd read a little Feist a while ago but never did more than start this book.

Great reason to finish it!


message 5: by Mach (new)

Mach | 572 comments I read this book 7/8 years ago, i think it's about time i reread it.


message 6: by John (new)

John | 5 comments This is the book that got me started reading fantasy many years ago. I found this series through playing Betrayal at Krondor on my computer (on Windows 3.11!!), and I'm sure I'm not the only one.

Feist continues to be one of my favorite writers. The characters he created are definitely some of the best (especially the characters from this book)! His newest book was released earlier this year (2011) and I read it in less than 24 hours. I just couldn't put it down.

For anyone planning to read more Feist, I highly suggest that you read his books in order. Characters from earlier books often show up or are at least mentioned in later books and you will have a much better understanding of events and history. Do not try to skip to a later trilogy.


message 7: by [deleted user] (new)

So I'm wondering, should one read both Magician books back to back in order to get a fuller picture of the story? Or is the first half sufficiently self contained?


message 8: by Maggie (new)

Maggie K | 730 comments no ala, you do kind of need to read both. it kind of just cuts off...I wasnt intending to read Master but think I need to just to wrap up the plotlines


message 9: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) Both Magician books were originally one volume, but split when it went to paperback. Or something like that. Regardless, they are two halves of a whole story.


message 10: by Mach (new)

Mach | 572 comments They broke Magician into two novels in the US but here in Europe it's one single book. I would advise you to read both books if you want to have some closure in the story.


message 11: by [deleted user] (new)

Well damn.

Thanks folks :)


message 12: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) I always considered it as two because I didn't know it had been split. That's just how it was sold to me, so that's how I read it.


message 13: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Dawn wrote: "Both Magician books were originally one volume, but split when it went to paperback. Or something like that. Regardless, they are two halves of a whole story."

To me they are not, they are one whole story because the first book like of leaves off as a cliffhanger.


message 14: by [deleted user] (new)

That's what she's saying, Kevin.

It's one whole story, but in publishing it was split in two.


message 15: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) I think all his books that were published by Bantam were good, but after that all the ones done by EOS/AVON were crap in the plot, at the end into turned into like the Dunes books, were he is just writing for the money.


message 16: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Nicki, one difference is availability. For years and years, the only editions available over here were the split editions 1 and 2. We couldn't readily buy things online for much of that time either.

Whereas, Storm of Swords has been split, but I have yet to stumble across a copy in a store of any split edition of any GRRM. I know they exist, but what you find in the bookstore is the full edition.

And Kevin, Huh? WTF? I think Dawn's pretty awesome so I like her the way she is.

Though what that has to do with a Feist book, I'm not certain.


message 17: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Well now I look like an idiot because of Kevin's famous attack-then-delete tactic.


message 18: by [deleted user] (new)

Chris wrote: "Well now I look like an idiot because of Kevin's famous attack-then-delete tactic."

Ah, was wondering why it popped up 'new' but there was no new post in here(at the time).


message 19: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Kevin wrote: "I think all his books that were published by Bantam were good, but after that all the ones done by EOS/AVON were crap in the plot, at the end into turned into like the Dunes books, were he is just writing for the money..."

(I'll use the 'reply' function this time so when you delete or edit your comment I will still look coherent.)

Apples and oranges, Kevin. That being the Dune comparison. It was Herbert's son and Kevin J. Anderson that milked the Dune series, a good 10 - 15 years after his death. Hard to blame Herbert for that.

Though admittedly, Feist did come out and say that he wouldn't write at all if he wasn't selling it.


message 20: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Nicki wrote: "Chris wrote: "Nicki, one difference is availability. For years and years, the only editions available over here were the split editions 1 and 2. We couldn't readily buy things online for much of th..."

Ummm...

Americans are stupid?

LOL


message 21: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) So do I, actually. Hehe


message 22: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) I've been on the two books bandwagon, but only for group read purposes. In FBCS we did a re-read of all of Riftwar, and I thought it made sense to split Magician into two months, for better consistency in length between the Riftwar books.


message 23: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) I agreed with you on that, Dawn. And I own a copy of the combined edition. It seemed to be a good solution to not overwhelm the new readers.


message 24: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) It may be one story, but taken as a whole it's fricken LONG.


message 25: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Right. And that scares away a lot of people that join Fantasy reading groups.

Which I find strange, in itself.


message 26: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments Nicki wrote: "I get what you're saying, though, I just find it irritating when people insist it's two books because that's the most popularly available format (especially since that's a regional distinction -- it certainly isn't most popular here, where it's never been split). If it was originally published as one book, it's one book."


I didn't know that it was 1 book until someone mentioned it in this group. It doesn't bother me if someone thinks it's two books because that is almost the only way you can buy it (over here, at least). To a casual reader, it is two books if they only find it as two books.

Did you know that the Belgariad was orginally 3 books and not 5? The publisher required him to split them up because they felt the books were overwhelmingly large.


message 27: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Chris wrote: "Nicki, one difference is availability. For years and years, the only editions available over here were the split editions 1 and 2. We couldn't readily buy things online for much of that time either..."

I guess me and Dawn are never going to see eye to eye.


message 28: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Chris wrote: "I agreed with you on that, Dawn. And I own a copy of the combined edition. It seemed to be a good solution to not overwhelm the new readers."

What about those epic fantasy series where the first books are as long as Magician?


message 29: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Chris wrote: "Kevin wrote: "I think all his books that were published by Bantam were good, but after that all the ones done by EOS/AVON were crap in the plot, at the end into turned into like the Dunes books, we..."

Chris one thing is that come on, you did not thing that the last two Dune books that Herbert wrote were any good?
Plus I did not mean it that way, I meant ore along the lines of that he is not writing the quality of stories that he once did before.


message 30: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments I understand what you're saying, but I can't understand why it would annoy you. The books have been seperate here for over 25 years. It's a done deal now. Why get upset simply because you might have information that others don't have?


message 31: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) What I meant is look at the last two books, Heretics and Chapterhouse, I felt like there was no action and almost nothing of importance got done in there. Those two books just don't stand up to the four previous books.


message 32: by Chris (last edited Jun 02, 2011 02:31PM) (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) Kevin, I don't see why you have to argue with Dawn at all. She wasn't even talking to you. I only said something because you insulted her (then deleted it).

Mrs Joseph, he was annoyed enough to get booted out of another group for persisting (attacking) with his arguments. Apparently, it's quite a traumatic moment of his life to see that book split in half.

But again I'll say it, Kevin. The book was split in that group because more people had the 2 book editions or were buying/swapping those. It made sense for the overall group.


message 33: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) And this really isn't the thread for Herbert's books.


message 34: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) Kevin wrote: "Chris wrote: "I guess me and Dawn are never going to see eye to eye..."

Are we involved in a disagreement? Oops, I didn't even realize we were involved in a discussion together, let alone disagreeing. Silly me.


message 35: by Jason (new)

Jason (darkfiction) | 3204 comments Let's try not to argue guys. Let's just discuss Magician!

The facts: It was published as one book in one place, and published as two in another. Accept it! :)

We're reading the first half for our June read, but if you want to continue the fun and read the second book right after the first, go right ahead. You can even discuss it here, in this thread, if you wish.

Just remember your SPOILER alerts. :)


message 36: by Kevin (last edited Jun 02, 2011 03:13PM) (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Chris wrote: "And this really isn't the thread for Herbert's books."

That is not the whole point, it a example to how sometimes authors writes books that a pointless and not as good as the books that came before.


message 37: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Jason wrote: "Let's try not to argue guys. Let's just discuss Magician!

The facts: It was published as one book in one place, and published as two in another. Accept it! :)

We're reading the first half for ou..."


You see this is what happens when basically me Dawn and Chris disagrees.


message 38: by Dawn (last edited Jun 02, 2011 03:42PM) (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) Oh. my. God. There is no disagreement.

I just want to make sure everyone knows... Despite Kevin's every attempt to insinuate that I'm involved in an argument with him here, I'm really not. I am in no argument. I'm in no disagreement! I'm not even talking to him. How the heck is my name being dragged into this? Holy monkey tits. Seriously.

And "holy monkey tits"? Made that up just now, on the spot. Impressive, I know ;)

But ANYWAY.. How about that Magician: Apprentice? Huh? How about that Pug? Nice name, huh? If my name was Pug... Wow. A semi-similar note, my dad wanted to name me "Fawn" when I was born. Luckily, my mom talked him into "Dawn" instead. Crisis averted!


message 39: by [deleted user] (new)

Ive always wondered where he came up with Pug. It doesn't exactly bring a dashing image to mind


message 40: by [deleted user] (new)

*grins* Hey look, Jason! It's not me this time. Aren't ya proud? :)


message 41: by Maggie (new)

Maggie K | 730 comments <<<
Pug as a name is what threw me off reading this book before, that and the first chapter, where he was too stupid to live. I returned the book and promptly forgot about it.

luckily y'all 'forcing' me to read it has changed my mind...but Pug is still a dumb name...lol


message 42: by [deleted user] (new)

Ala wrote: "So I'm wondering, should one read both Magician books back to back in order to get a fuller picture of the story? Or is the first half sufficiently self contained?"

It's all your fault, you bastard. Why'd you have to go and ask a question? Now look what you've done! Hope you're proud of yourself.


message 43: by Jason (new)

Jason (darkfiction) | 3204 comments Very proud, Grant!

I actually thought Pug was a good name. But then I read this when I was 15, or around there somewhere. I love this book because it was what got me into fantasy.


message 44: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) Of course Pug was dumb in the beginning. He was like 10 or 12. I was dumb when I was 10 or 12, it's pretty much to be expected :)


message 45: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments Damn. I go and leave you guys alone for 5 minutes and the house is painted red.

>:|


message 46: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (breakofdawn) But.. But... It looks good in red! Red is a good color on and/or around me.


message 47: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments *pulls out buckets and mops*

I'll go with majority rules regarding Feist. :)


message 48: by Maggie (new)

Maggie K | 730 comments Dawn wrote: "Of course Pug was dumb in the beginning. He was like 10 or 12. I was dumb when I was 10 or 12, it's pretty much to be expected :)"

yeah-but if a book starts out with a kid walking around acting like an idiot it gets real old real fast...and some people (like the old me) don't get far enough to see him stop...lol


message 49: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, *good karma* (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 7282 comments I think I stopped where you stopped, Maggie. Pug quickly got on my nerves. It doesn't help that my best friend has a pug (Marley). Every time I saw "Pug" I'd get a mental picture of my friend's dog.


message 50: by Maggie (new)

Maggie K | 730 comments I do not want to seem overly negative though...once I got farther into the story I liked it a lot


« previous 1
back to top