The Magicians by Lev Grossman has been on my must-read list for about a year now. When I moved to Nashville, it was one of the first catalog searches I did at the public library; much to my dismay, of the dozen or so copies they had across the various branches, all were gone. They were also on hold. All of them. For a long time.
This was a bittersweet recognition that people here actually read. No offense to anyone from my hometown, but there was usually not a line on a book, unless it was the latest Harry Potter. Hmm....speaking of which...
This book was a blatant rip-off of C.S. Lewis and J.K. Rowling. I'm surprised he didn't sign his name as L.V. Grossman. There's nothing new here. Nothing. Almost every aspect was apparently 'borrowed' from a highly known book or movie. I am getting a bit ahead of myself, though.
This is the 400-page story of Quentin Coldwater, a bright high school student who is getting ready to apply to colleges. His life takes a wild turn when he is accepted into the magic school called Brakebills. It's a thousand wonders he was not a neglected orphan as well.
As I mentioned, there's not really anything new here, but there was a bit of magic--at least for me. It's a definite page-turner, but for this reader, it was more about getting down to when the real story was going to start. Around page 357 or so, I realized that Grossman was running out of time. I never got particularly attached to Quentin because he doesn't really seem to have many unique or redeeming qualities. Maybe this was the magic? I kept reading, despite myself. It was a decent book, but it was mostly like Hogwarts with some f-bombs and alcohol thrown in for good measure.
Notable excerpt:
"...perfection is a nervy business, because the moment you spot the tiniest flaw it's ruined."
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