majic.rs

  • blog
  • books
  • gallery
  • contact
  • about
Home › Blogs › Branko Majic's blog

Search

Gallery

Random Image

P1050282.jpg
 
 

Recent blog posts

  • 56th International Belgrade Book Fair Impressions
  • Upgrading RAM or... How I (re)learned to hate hardware...
  • The Children of Man, Book One: Shatter (by Elizabeth C. Mock)
  • Pain of Salvation and Von Hertzen Brothers in Belgrade
  • Jumping onto the Android Bandwagon
  • Jamendo - Quality Underground Music
  • Vacation and Migration
  • Fedora: Testing the Limits
  • Website Updates and Thoughts on Drupal
  • Brussels Photos Finally Uploaded (FOSDEM 2011)
more

Links

GNU
FSF

Peragro Tempus

Jamendo
Jason's Website
Bakrachi

The Children of Man, Book One: Shatter (by Elizabeth C. Mock)

Branko Majic — 14. October 2011 - 23:27

Well, after my recent purchase of Android, I got back into reading books again. Using FBReader's built-in option for searching and downloading free e-books, I've stumbled upon a very nice fantasy book written by Elizabeth C. Mock titled http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/17486.

The book is supposed to be the first in a The Children of Man trilogy, and I must admit that I look forward to the second book as well. Hopefully it won't take too long to have the second book available for download (even if I need to pay for it) through some similar service.

The author's writing style is very good, with perfect balance between dialogs and events. Although fiction, I'd say it's not epic in its nature, and revolves more around the interactions between characters. What starts-out as an (almost) innocent quest turns into quite a complex story revolving around a betrayal committed by a particular order of magic-users.

The system of magic in the book is laid out interestingly, although it lacks some more explanation (maybe in the form of appendix). By the end of the book one does catch-up at how it actually all works. The gist of it is that the magic can be classified by colours, with each colour representing a single school of magic (dedicated to a particular field, like healing, art etc). Each colour is actually taught by a different order.

The only flaw I've encountered is that there seems to be a lot of couple-matching in the book (that is, almost every character has a possible mate in the party), which feels a bit forced throughout the book.

The book is nevertheless worth the reading, and I can whole-heartedly recommend it to anyone who likes to read fiction.

  • Arts
  • book
  • fiction
  • Public
  • Branko Majic's blog
  • Add new comment

Powered by Drupal, an open source content management system
  • blog
  • books
  • gallery
  • contact
  • about

Copyright (C) 2011 Branko Majic. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article are permitted worldwide, without royalty, in any medium, provided this notice is preserved. Code snippets found throughout the articles are licensed under GPLv3 or later.