YA fantasy book reviews Michael Pryor The Laws of Magic 1. Blaze Of GloryHeart of Gold, Word of Honour, Time of Trial, Moment of Truth by Michael Pryor

“Charmingly old-fashioned” is how I would describe Michael Pryor’s series The Laws of Magic, which begins with Blaze of Glory (reviewed above) and continues with Heart of Gold, Word of Honour, Time of Trial, and the most recent, due out this summer, Moment of Truth, all of which I’ll review as a group here. The concluding book will be Hour of Need.

The Laws of Magic is set in an alternate England (called Albion) during the Edwardian Age, starting on the cusp of WWI and continuing into the beginning of the war in the final two books. The Industrial Revolution happened beside a parallel magical revolution. The two are deeply intertwined in day-to day-life, though magic is less so since it is limited to those with a natural born talent for it, a talent which can be improved and honed via courses of study, the titular “Laws,” as well as the study of the ancient languages that underlie most spells.
fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsThe main character is Aubrey Fitzwilliam, whose father is the Prime Minister and whose mother is a famed explorer/naturalist. Aubrey is one of those with magical talent — a lot of it, as well as a head for the hard science aspect of it, what he calls “Rational Magic.” His best friend and constant companion, George, is devoid of any magical aptitude himself but is full of other surprising talents. The girl he meets in book one and then develops a relationship with, and who thus joins him in all his adventures, is Caroline, who is more than capable in a host of ways (she’s a martial arts expert) despite having no magic. The “big bad” of the series is a completely amoral magician, Dr. Tremaine, who is pushing the world toward world war for the singular reason that he needs a lot of blood sacrifices to cast a spell of immortality on himself.

My review of Blaze of Glory called it a solid if not compelling book that piqued my interest enough to want to continue. I’m glad I did, for while the later books do have some of the same flaws as that first book, in general the series gradually improves and deepens as it goes on, while the world turns grimmer and Aubrey grows older.

fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsHeart of Gold deals with trying to recover an object central to the existence of Gallia (France) and with a “soul-stealer” who is turning people into zombies. In Word of Honour, the three friends head off to university and end up mixed up in sabotaged submersibles, a bank theft, and international finance. Time of Trial takes the group to hostile Holmland (Germany) where they must deal with ghosts, golems, and the seeming inevitability of war. And war has in fact come by the time we reach Moment of Truth, and the three friends waste no time in enlisting, becoming part of an elite espionage group whose first task sends them to a border area between Gallia and Holmland where a mysterious factory connected to Dr. Tremaine has suddenly started producing… something. Each book resolves the book’s specific threat while moving forward the series’ arc: world war and Tremaine’s attempts to become immortal.

fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsI mentioned at the outset that I found the books to be “charmingly old-fashioned.” What I mean by that is they remind me a lot of YA books from the ’60s (before they were called YA) such as The Hardy Boys, Tom Swift, Nancy Drew, etc. (and yes, I realize these had an earlier incarnation but I’m going with what I know here folks — I’m not that old). The characters are all good, they’re all good at what they do and they show surprising skills as needed, there are a lot of convenient coincidences, and one never has a doubt that the heroes (and they are fully heroes — no antiheroes here) will prevail. There is also a sweetness and innocence to the bonds between the characters, both as friends and in romances, that hearkens back to those books. These are not jaded teens; they are not awash in “pop” culture, they don’t ogle each other sexually, they don’t curse or drink, etc. Set in a contemporary world, we’d probably roll our eyes (whether that’s a good thing or not is debatable), but it’s certainly a perfect tone for this world, whose innocence just might come crashing down thanks to modern warfare. I have to say, it’s a bit refreshing and, as I said, charming. I thoroughly enjoyed that aspect.

fantasy book reviews science fiction book reviewsThe pace at which Aubrey and Caroline’s “relationship” develops is another plus. And I put that in quotes because they don’t really have one as we’d usually think of it by the end of Moment of Truth, though it appears to be just beginning by the end. I am so tired of the shorthand relationship recipe we get all the time in seemingly all our media (books, TV, films): take two complete strangers, throw them together into a stressful situation for 5 to 45 hours, add some cross-banter early where they express clear dislike for each, stir well, than add some cross-banter where the express clear attraction for each other, then voila: love! This is a romance that actually takes the time for romancing — and by that I mean not flowers and dinners but two people actually learning about each other. It was a nice change.

The first few books have some pacing issues; each could have lost 50 to 80 pages or so, but the last two are much more efficient. They’re not necessarily leaner in terms of page count, but they don’t really lag at any point. The humor grows throughout the series and there were several times I was laughing out loud in Moment of Truth.

Aubrey still tends to be perhaps a bit too good at magic. We’re told he struggles to come up with ideas now and then, or that an attempt left him weary, but we don’t feel any of that is very true and we always know he’ll come up with a new spell that’s perfect for the job. What I do like about it, though, is that is isn’t simply inborn talent. He’s able to come up with perfect new spells because he studies magic and thinks about it constantly — its foundations, where it can be improved, how different “fields” can be meshed, how various Laws can be put together. He isn’t good because he’s a natural magician; he’s good because he’s smart and curious.

The side characters are mostly shallow, and Tremaine is an abstract kind of villain. In other books these would be flaws, but here they seem to fit the old-fashioned tone of the series, romance (according to the old definition, not “romantic”) or adventure stories.

Some people may find The Laws of Magic too old-fashioned; some may find the coincidences or the lack of in-depth characterization too off-putting, or the predicable nature of the plots bothersome. I can absolutely see that. But to be honest, that all mostly slid by me; I just enjoyed the series. It isn’t “great,” it isn’t particularly moving or thought-provoking, but there’s something to be said for “enjoyable” as a trait in fiction. I think especially for its YA audience, this meets that standard, especially from the third book on. I look forward to seeing how it wraps up. Recommended.

The Laws of Magic — (2006-2011) Young adult. Publisher: Best friends Aubrey and George begin their magical high jinks in this first book of the Laws of Magic series. At a weekend shooting party at Prince Albert’s country estate, Aubrey and George find themselves in a hotbed of intrigue and politics. Together they discover a golem, a magical creature built to perform one task — to kill Prince Albert. Aubrey and George are hailed as heroes for foiling the attempt on the prince’s life — but who sent the golem, and why? Aubrey is far too curious to let the authorities handle this one, and he and George start an investigation of their own to get to the bottom of the royal assassination attempt.

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Author

  • Bill Capossere

    BILL CAPOSSERE, who's been with us since June 2007, lives in Rochester NY, where he is an English adjunct by day and a writer by night. His essays and stories have appeared in Colorado Review, Rosebud, Alaska Quarterly, and other literary journals, along with a few anthologies, and been recognized in the "Notable Essays" section of Best American Essays. His children's work has appeared in several magazines, while his plays have been given stage readings at GEVA Theatre and Bristol Valley Playhouse. When he's not writing, reading, reviewing, or teaching, he can usually be found with his wife and son on the frisbee golf course or the ultimate frisbee field.