![]() In fact, magic is approached in a scientific way, with laws governing its application in the same way as other rational laws, such as the law of gravity. ![]() It’s a timeline where magic has developed alongside science. It’s alternative history, set in an Edwardian-esque time that never was. It made things much harder than they needed to be.”Īside from the opening and the exciting plot, there are three things, in my mind, that make this book exceptional. Here goes…īlaze of Glory is the first volume of The Laws of Magic. ![]() And now here I am, throwing caution to the wind, putting pen to paper (or, more accurately, finger to keyboard) and reviewing this book. ![]() In my last post I told you about my worries in reviewing Michael Pryor’s Blaze of Glory (see “Aubrey Fitzwilliam and the reviewing dilemma”). Review: The Vanishing Throne by Elizabeth May January 17, 2019. ![]()
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