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THE ANGELS' GALAXIES

An energetic and unusual take on a familiar angels-versus-demons plot.

Debut author Noor offers a high-fantasy epic with Judeo-Christian trappings.

There are various orders of angels in the universe, including Virtues, Powers, Principalities, Thrones, Dominions, and Seraphim, among others, and each are headquartered in a specific galaxy; the Principalities are in the Andromeda Galaxy, for instance. The Dark Kingdom, ruled over by King Saty and inhabited by demons and jinn, exists in the dark spaces between galaxies—and on Earth, among humans. Young Princess Jennifer, the only daughter of King Jason of the Virtues, is a headstrong, compassionate warrior-in-training who loves her celestial home in the Comet Galaxy. One day, she encounters a small crowd of Dark Kingdom jinn attacking a young angel. She intervenes, and after the danger is dispatched, she realizes that the angel is “cute”; he’s Prince Justin of the Powers, and he and Jennifer immediately embark on adventures together, spurred by upheaval in the Dark Kingdom. It turns out that Prince Kaly and Princess Sally have grown impatient with the complacent attitude of their father, King Saty, toward the angel galaxies, which they seek to conquer. In the ensuing fast-paced narrative, Noor shows considerable skill at building dramatic tension and delivering effective action sequences, while also ably developing the story’s young leads. Readers coming to this tale expecting familiar angels from the Christian mythos, though, will need to adapt quickly, as Princess Jennifer and her cohorts sleep, dream, bleed, and bicker like average young adults. The hybridization of Christian material with standard fantasy concepts, such as warring kingdoms and military orders, is enthusiastic, if scattershot; Noor’s angels do intercede in human affairs, but they’re much more concerned with warfare and romance in a manner that calls to mind fantasy author Sarah J. Maas’ A Court of Thorns and Roses series.

An energetic and unusual take on a familiar angels-versus-demons plot.

Pub Date: March 21, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-5255-2266-6

Page Count: 294

Publisher: FriesenPress

Review Posted Online: June 19, 2018

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FIRESTARTER

An improvement over The Dead Zone, with King returning to his most tried-and-true blueprint. As in The Shining, the psi-carrier is a child, an eight-year-old girl named Charlie; but instead of foresight or hindsight, Charlie has firestarting powers. She looks and a thing pops into flame—a teddy bear, a nasty man's shoes, or (by novel's end) steel walls, whole houses, and stables and crowds of government villains. Charlie's parents Vicky and Andy were once college guinea pigs for drug experiments by The Shop, a part of the supersecret Department of Scientific Intelligence, and were given a hyperpowerful hallucinogen which affected their chromosomes and left each with strange powers of mental transference and telekinesis. When Vicky and Andy married, their genes produced Charlie and her wild talent for pyrokinesis: even as a baby in her crib, Charlie would start fires when upset and, later on, once set her mother's hands on fire. So Andy is trying to teach Charlie how to keep her volatile emotions in check. But when one day he comes home to find Vicky gruesomely dead in the ironing-board-closet, murdered by The Shop (all the experimental guinea pigs are being eliminated), Andy goes into hiding with Charlie in Manhattan and the Vermont backwoods—and Charlie uses her powers to set the bad men on fire and blow up their cars. They're soon captured, however, by Rainbird, a one-eyed giant Indian with a melted face—and father and daughter, separated, spend months being tested in The Shop. Then Andy engineers their escape, but when Andy is shot by Rainbird, Charlie turns loose her atomic eyes on the big compound. . . . Dumb, very, and still a far cry from the excitement of The Shining or Salem's Lot—but King keeps the story moving with his lively fire-gimmick and fewer pages of cotton padding than in his recent, sluggish efforts. The built-in readership will not be disappointed.

Pub Date: Sept. 29, 1980

ISBN: 0451167805

Page Count: 398

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: Sept. 26, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1980

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PRACTICAL MAGIC

Part of Hoffman's great talent is her wonderful ability to sift some magic into unlikely places, such as a latter-day Levittown (Seventh Heaven, 1990) or a community of divorcÇes in Florida (Turtle Moon, 1992). But in her 11th novel, a tale of love and life in New England, it feels as if the lid flew off the jar of magic—it blinds you with fairy dust. Sally and Gillian Owens are orphaned sisters, only 13 months apart, but such opposites in appearance and temperament that they're dubbed ``Day and Night'' by the two old aunts who are raising them. Sally is steady, Gillian is jittery, and each is wary, in her own way, about the frightening pull of love. They've seen the evidence for themselves in the besotted behavior of the women who call on the two aunts for charms and potions to help them with their love lives. The aunts grow herbs, make mysterious brews, and have a houseful of—what else?—black cats. The two girls grow up to flee (in opposite directions) from the aunts, the house, and the Massachusetts town where they've long been shunned by their superstitious schoolmates. What they can't escape is magic, which follows them, sometimes in a particularly malevolent form. And, ultimately, no matter how hard they dodge it, they have to recognize that love always catches up with you. As always, Hoffman's writing has plenty of power. Her best sentences are like incantations—they won't let you get away. But it's just too hard to believe the magic here, maybe because it's not so much practical magic as it is predictable magic, with its crones and bubbling cauldrons and hearts of animals pierced with pins. Sally and Gillian are appealing characters, but, finally, their story seems as murky as one of the aunts' potions—and just as hard to swallow. Too much hocus-pocus, not enough focus. (Book-of-the-Month Club selection)

Pub Date: June 14, 1995

ISBN: 0-399-14055-7

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1995

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