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Magician: Apprentice (The Riftwar Saga #1) Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 485 pages
Rating: 4.17 | 78881 Users | 1755 Reviews

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Title:Magician: Apprentice (The Riftwar Saga #1)
Author:Raymond E. Feist
Book Format:Mass Market Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 485 pages
Published:January 1st 1994 by Bantam Spectra (first published October 1st 1982)
Categories:Fantasy. Fiction. Epic Fantasy. High Fantasy. Science Fiction Fantasy. Magic. Adventure

Ilustration Supposing Books Magician: Apprentice (The Riftwar Saga #1)

An alternate cover edition of this ISBN can be found here. To the forest on the shore of the Kingdom of the Isles, the orphan Pug came to study with the master magician Kulgan. His courage won him a place at court and the heart of a lovely Princess, but he was ill at ease with normal wizardry. Yet his strange magic may save two worlds from dark beings who opened spacetime to renew the age-old battle between Order and Chaos.

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Original Title: Magician: Apprentice
ISBN: 0553564943 (ISBN13: 9780553564945)
Edition Language: English
Series: The Riftwar Saga #1, Riftwar Cycle #1, Kriget om Rämnan #1 , more
Characters: Pug, Tomas Megarson, Kulgan, Dolgan, Borric conDoin, Arutha conDoin, Carline conDoin, Fannon, Algon, Martin Longbow, Roland of Tulan

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Ratings: 4.17 From 78881 Users | 1755 Reviews

Appraise Regarding Books Magician: Apprentice (The Riftwar Saga #1)
Buddy read with some wonderful peeps over at BB&BI really enjoyed this book! I love the main character, Pug. I loved his friendship with his best friend Tomas. Pug got picked to be the magician Kulgan's apprentice while Tomas was to be trained as a soldier. But they found plenty of time to spend together and get into this, that and the other. One day there was a wrecked ship and it turns out they were people from another time. A rift in the world and Pug and the people called them aliens. I

Sorry, but how is this plainly described, one dimensional book so well rated? I'm 200 pages in and bored rigid and utterly fed up of the random lucky events the characters go thru.The line that sticks out is: Dragons were the hereditary enemy of dwarves.Sorry it's just poorly written, based in a second hand middle earth and I've seen better characters in the mr men books.I paid 95p for it from a a charity shop and I feel robbed.

This is the story of how Raymond Feist had a very good Dungeon Master. I recently read this book for the first time since sixth grade. I adored it in sixth grade. I find I still have some affection for it now.Like many young nerds, Raymond loved to play Dungeons & Dragons. His Dungeon Master who ran the game was a fan of the two preeminent world builders of his day: JRR Tolkien who had created a now familiar fantasy world of elves and dwarves that celebrated Western myth called Middle Earth,

Started out well. I liked the main character, it seemed like it might be interesting. Then they walked into the mines of Moria, visited Galadriel in Lothlorien, (but he renamed them all, cuz he's smart like that) and the main character disappeared halfway through the narrative.The characters were flat as cardboard, particularly the females, and he spent most of his time telling rather than showing. Eventually the main character shows up, in the second half of this book which was published as

I was going to give this 4 stars until 60-70% through. The last part of the book was pretty boring. The main character exits the book around this point, and then the 2nd main character exits shortly after and then it just feels like filler until the end. I liked many of the characters and wasn't as bothered as some reviewers by the "fantasy cliche" of it all. I am on the fence about this and I guess I need to read the next book to figure out if I want to keep going or not.

Why hello old school fantasy! Long time no see. I see that you still have dwarves of Moria, beautiful elves living in trees, farmboys turns great warriors, plucky princess and overwhelmingly likable characters. Oh and a cute dragon pet. Not that I mind them much in this book. The writing is good, the pacing was great (I didn't yawn when reading this book) and the main characters, at least Pug and Tomas, make you want to hug them and muss their hair. Pug reminds me of Fitzchivalry Farseer, albeit

Thoroughly enjoyed this one. This was the perfect fantasy for me to read as a follow up to Erickson's "Gardens of the Moon". I loved the first Malazan book but it is very dark, chaotic, and harsh. "Magician: Apprentice" is more what I think you could call cozy sweater fantasy. Which I enjoy probably even more than the grimdarkish stuff.