previous fantasy author

Debra Doyle &
James D. MacDonald

Reviewed by Ruth Arnell
and Sarah Webb
next fantasy author
fantasy authors Debra Doyle and James D. MacDonald
Dr. Debra Doyle
and James D. MacDonald also write horror under the pseudonym Nicholas Adams and sci/fi under the names Robyn Tallis and Martin Delrio. You can read excerpts from their novels at their website.




Click covers to view available formats, including audio & Kindle.

Circle of Magic — (1990-2001) Ages 9-12. Publisher: In this first book of a six-title fantasy series, readers will meet a young squire named Randal, who leaves the security of his life at home to become a student at the School of Wizardry. In his spellbinding journey from sorcerer's apprentice to journeyman wizard, Randal will encounter endless perils and deadly enemies... and young readers won't want to miss one bit of the intrigue or excitement!

Debra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's DaughterDebra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's DaughterDebra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's Daughter

Debra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's DaughterDebra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's DaughterDebra Doyle James D. MacDonald Circle of Magic 1. School of Wizardry, 2. Secret of the Tower, 3. The Wizard's Statue, 4. Danger In The Palace, 5. The Wizard's Castle, 6. The High King's Daughter
 

MageWorlds — (1992-2001) Publisher: The daughter of an assassinated politician finds herself in the thick of a galactic intrigue that threatens to shatter a 30-year period of peace after centuries of conflict. She'll get used to the intrigue but will the galaxy get used to her?

Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars
Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of Stars

fantasy book reviews Debra Doyle James D. MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the StarsMageworlds Books 1-3: The Price of the Stars, Starpilot’s Grave, By Honor Betray’d

Mageworlds is one of the best trilogies I’ve ever read. It’s categorized as Space Opera since there are spaceships and multiple planets involved, but trust me, this falls on the fantasy end of the spectrum. If you’ve never tried Space Opera, this is a wonderful place to get your feet wet. If you like Space Opera, jump on in! If you like great characters, intriguing plots and a fast-paced, action packed adventure, you’ll love this series.

I love the Mageworlds characters. They’re all well-drawn — even the minor characters who wander on and off stage. Both the men and women are strong and capable of acknowledging each others’ talents and abilities. Beka Rosselin-Metadi, her family, and the rest of the crew are well worth taking the time to get to know.

The pacing of Mageworlds novels is exactly right. There is plenty of action without being frenetic. The technology is kept to a minimum so that the story flows. The first time I read Mageworlds, I kept reading well past my bedtime for too many nights in a row! I’ll give you a quick plot description of each of the books below, but there are so many perfectly timed twists in the course of the series that I hesitate to give too many details.

Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of StarsThe Price of the Stars: Beka Rosselin-Metadi is a ‘freebooter at heart, spacer by trade.’ She pilots spacecraft and doesn’t want anything to do with her family. Beka’s father is the Commanding General of the Space Force and her mother is Domina of Lost Entibor, whose leadership has held the galaxy together since the devastating war with the Mageworlds. One of her brothers is a medic in the Space Force, and the other is an apprentice Adept. When Beka’s father tracks her down and offers her his old spaceship Warhammer in exchange for the names of the assassins who murdered her mother, she accepts. Let the hunt begin!

Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of StarsStarpilot’s Grave: A dead spaceship has been found drifting in the Net, an artificial barrier zone between the Mageworlds and the Republic, and the message it carries is cause for concern in the Republic. The Magelords make very long range plans, but their plans didn’t include Beka. She is still on the hunt for the ones responsible for her mother’s murder, and this time she is going undercover behind the Net. What she discovers there is a Mageworld rebellion in the making. One woman and one ship might be all it takes to foil their plans.

Debra Doyle James MacDonald Mageworlds 1. The Price of the Stars 2. Starpilot's Grave 3. By Honor Betray'd 4. The Gathering Flame 5. The Long Hunt 6. The Stars Asunder 7. A Working of StarsBy Honor Betray’d: Even the back of the book will spoil things for you if I describe it here. By now you’re either hooked or you’re not…

In the true spirit of opera, there is a little bit of everything in this series. Grandiose settings, devious plotting, court intrigue, disguises, kidnappings, rescues, daring escapes, Mages and Adepts fighting, not one but two styles of magic, sword play, blasters, Space Force, civilians, alien races, espionage, decoys, double-crosses, sibling squabbles, love interests, danger, intrigue, plans made long ago coming to fruition, and a truly great dramatic ending.

Savor every little detail, enjoy each surprise as it’s sprung, and when you’re done, you can release the breath you’ve been holding in a sigh of satisfaction over time well spent. And then start figuring out which of your friends would enjoy it too. I have given The Price of the Stars to everyone in my family and it’s the first series I recommend to anyone who asks. If I’ve intrigued you at all, there are sample chapters on the authors' website. —Sarah (Guest)

Stand-alone novels:

Debra Doyle  and Knight's WyrdKnight's Wyrd — (1992) Ages 9-12. Publisher: On the evening before he is knighted, young Will Odosson is told his wyrd-his fate: He will not inherit his father’s barony; he will meet Death before the year is out.


book review Debra Doyle and James D. MacDonald GrooglemanGroogleman — (1996) Ages 9-12. Publisher: When thirteen-year-old Dan journeys to the Dead Lands to rescue the village healer kidnapped by the grooglemen, he discovers strange things about himself and the world.


Land of Mist and Snow — (2006) Publisher: Called to duty at last, Lieutenant John Nevis faces his assignment with trepidation. Boarding the USS Nicodemus — a sloop of war built in a single night at the top of the world — Nevis wonders uneasily at its strange aura of power, its cannonballs of virgin brass... and its uncanny ability to glide swiftly through the waters without steam or sail. As great armies clash all around them, the mission of Lieutenant Nevis and the Nicodemus book review Debra Doyle James D. MacDonald Land of Mist and Snowcrew is shrouded in an impenetrable gray mist of magic and malevolence. For a fearsome adversary awaits on roiling waves — an awesomely powerful vessel fueled by cruelty and terror; a demon raider driven by an insatiable lust... for blood.


fantasy book review Debra Doyle James D. MacDonald Land of Mist and SnowLand of Mist and Snow

Land of Mist and Snow is an alternate history of the Civil War, focusing on two ships that are controlled by elemental spirits, one ship fighting for the Union, and one for the Confederacy. Thu Union ship, Nicodemus, chases the Confederate Alecto across the Atlantic Ocean, trying to find the key to ending the Alecto’s demonic presence on the water. Key to this discovery are Lt. John Nevis, the Nicodemus’s gunnery officer, and Miss Columbia Abrams, an innocent in the ways of the world, but learned in metaphysics. The story is based on the real life feud between Cornelius Vanderbilt (who funds the Nicodemus) and William Walker (who funds the Alecto), an American who hired an army to make himself president of Nicaragua.

Land of Mist and Snow is a naval adventure novel with an overcoat of magic. The action scenes are well written, and you get a sense of actually being on a ship at sea during a time of war. MacDonald’s many years in the navy are shown here to good use, with appropriate naval terminology and strategies permeating the novel. It’s a fast paced tale with some interesting and intriguing events that aren’t quite explained at the beginning, thus drawing the reader into the tale, trying to determine their significance. However, like Nevis’s constant fear that the powder was going to get wet so that the guns wouldn’t fire, I fear that though all the elements for a good book are here, this tale never quite ignites. There are three main problems:

First, the story is told through multiple first person narrators, in the form of journal entries, letters home, and intercepted dispatches. While the authors successfully establish a distinctive voice for each narrator, there is no suspense about the outcome of a battle when the narrative starts with, “Let me tell you what I went through today…” Secondly, the characters are all flat. There is no development, or any feel that they are in any way affected by the events occurring around them.

Third, the denouement of the novel — the big final action scene — doesn’t involve the ships. We’ve spent the entire novel running around on a big warship, but in the end, its final purpose is just to get the protagonists to where they need to be so there can be a magical battle. This book either needed to have a different ending that utilized the ships, or there needed to be more magic throughout the book to make the ending seem more consistent with the previous action.

Land of Mist and Snow is an uneven story. It can’t quite decide if it wants to be Horatio Hornblower or one of Robin Hobb’s Live Ships. There is some good action, but it lacks the emotional impact or fun characters of the authors’ Mageworld series. If you particularly like naval or military adventure fantasy or alternate histories, it may be worth checking out from the library. —Ruth Arnell


You can support FanLit by purchasing books (or anything else) through our Amazon links. Or donate.
© 2007-2012   Fantasy Literature   
The FTC wants you to know that we often receive free review copies from publishers.
  







1 FREE Audiobook from Audible





Admin