
Lumos (380 KP) rated Progress: Evolution of Technology in Tabletop Games
Mar 21, 2018

CAPE Communication Studies Revision Guide
Natalee Cole and Brenda Lee Browne
Book
Collins CAPE Revision Guides focus on the content and skills students need to master for success in...
Magic Garden: Color. Dream. Create.
Book
Exquisitely packaged in a big, square format, with exposed-boards, eye-catching fluorescent covers,...

Drawing and Painting the Landscape: A Course of 50 Lessons
Book
Capturing the landscape on paper requires the artist to look - to look deep into the distance and...

Irish PAYE Tax Calculator
Finance and Productivity
App
TaxCalc.ie is a simple to use 2017/2018 Budget calculator. It will estimate your take-home pay based...

Hazel (1853 KP) rated The Glass Magician (The Paper Magician Trilogy, #2) in Books
Dec 7, 2018
The magic continues in Charlie N. Holmberg’s latest novel <i>The Glass Magician</i>. It is three months since the ending of <i>The Paper Magician</i> and Ceony is still apprenticing under Magician Thane – now mostly referred to as Emery. Despite the near death experiences of both the characters in the previous book, Ceony is well on her way to become a Folder – a magician that uses paper.
When an explosion occurs at a paper mill that Ceony is visiting, she realizes that not all her problems have been solved. Her defeat of an evil Excisioner has resulted in two more wanted criminals on her tail. Mistakenly, Ceony believes she can tackle this problem by herself, putting those she loves in danger.
As well as the characters from the first book, <i>The Glass Magician</i> contains a few new names including Delilah, an apprentice of a glass magician, who is a similar age to Ceony. Through Delilah the reader is introduced to another form of magic using glass or more precisely, in the case of this novel, mirrors.
In comparison to <i>The Paper Magician</i> there is a more romantic theme running throughout the book. Events of the past have brought Ceony and Emery closer together causing Ceony to fall in love with him, however she is uncertain whether Emery feels the same way. Even so, fantasy or steampunk remained the key genre.
A criticism I had of the first book was that the characters felt far too modern for the time period it was set in. The case was the same in <i>The Glass Magician</i>, although this may be more to do with the author’s writing style and therefore was unlike to differ. On the other hand the events in this book were more plausible and therefore less confusing which ultimately makes this a slightly better story.
Readers need to have read <i>The Paper Magician</i> before starting this book, as it requires knowledge of previous events, which are vital to the story line. If you loved the first book it is almost guaranteed that you will love the second.

Katey Bassett (610 KP) rated King of Scars in Books
Apr 7, 2019

Dominique Marie (7 KP) rated The Call of the Wild, White Fang, and Other Stories in Books
Nov 28, 2018
