“In an attempt, discover time,
travel, bumbling, Genius, Dr. Marvin Brewster accidentally transports himself
to a parallel universe where Magic really works. Period. I land of leprechauns,
giants, guitar, playing elves, chess, playing assassins, gossiping, dragons,
Virgin-hating unicorns, gorgeous, Brigand queens, walking bushes, and talking
chamberpots. Here Brewster’s knowledge of science -and eyeglasses, penknives,
and gin- causes him to be mistaken for sorcerer. Only the real sorcerers have a powerful guild. Brewster doesn’t have a
unicorn card. Or any bonafide magic. Or a way out of this crazy world where
sorcerers put curses on scabs, and the only escape route is now controlled by
the grand Director of the guild himself.”
For the
most part, this book is very light, sometimes very funny, but it’s never going
to be considered in the same breath as more established fantasy writers over
the last 90 years. The book is okay, but not a lot really happens here, as
there are pages and pages (of a really short novel) of exposition and humorous
comments on writing itself (as Hawke sort of becomes part of the story, known
as the narrator). While the idea is not that unique, it does have some original
aspects, like instead of traveling to past, Brewster travels to a different dimension.
And Brewster seems more able to accept his situation than most would, I guess. It
makes him more likable and endearing.
Hawke
can be a bit flippant (something I remember from his Timewars series), but it’s
not intolerable. It’s not Terry Pratchet or Neil Gaiman, but it’s not Piers
Anthony, so to each their own,
Born Nicholas Yermakov he began his prolific
writing career in the early 80s with Last Communion (1981), Journey from Flesh (1981) Epiphany (1982), Clique (1982), Fall Into
Darkness and Jehad (1984), along with two Battlestar
Galactica novelizations: Battlestar Galactica #6: The Living Legend (1982) and Battlestar
Galactica #7: War of the Gods (1982). He re-launched his career as Simon
Hawke (he later changed his legal name to Hawke) in 1984, and all his books have been
either part of a series and/or tie-in novels and novelizations. His
first major work as Simon Hawke was the twelve volume Timewars series, which
recounts the adventures of an organization tasked with protecting history from being
changed by time travelers (I read about half of them). He has also written a
series of humorous murder mysteries which features a young William Shakespeare
and a fictional friend, Symington "Tuck" Smythe. He has also written near future adventure novels under the
penname "J. D. Masters" and mystery novels. In the late 80s and well into the 90s, he began
the multi-volume Wizard of 4th Street, three Star Trek novels, a
bunch of movie novelizations (including the first four Friday the 13th
books), six Dungeon and Dragons novels, and this Reluctant Sorcerer series.
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