The Magician’s Land is the third and final book in Lev Grossman’s Magicians trilogy. For those who haven’t heard of the series, it’s basically a dark take on the Chronicles of Narnia (with some Harry Potter-ish elements) featuring disaffected college students rather than kids.
I found this one to be a quite satisfying conclusion. Where the second book felt like less than the sum of its parts to me, this one was very tight. If you found the first book too negative, this one is a lot more optimistic in the end (though not surprisingly there’s still plenty of darkness along the way).
It has been translated, though unfortunately I can’t link to the translation. The story is unusual, and very, very hard to explain without spoiling it; let’s just say that if you like Greg Egan’s works, there’s a good chance you will like this.
Specifically, the reason I couldn’t link to the translation is that doing so is illegal in some countries, possibly including the one where this site is hosted. Following links is not, so maybe you can amend your post to just mention that it’s possible?
Meh. I very much doubt the site cares (gwern links to a bunch of music remixes every month, for example). An admin can delete my post if LW is really bothered.
So I just finished reading Fate Stay Night, and I feel hungry for more, but its sequels are a lot more silly and laid back, and what I want isn’t the easy familiarity of characters whose tales are already told, but the poignant drama and character development, and the poetic narrative delivery, that I’d never experienced before. Does anyone here know stories that have this type of heart-gripping-ness?
the poignant drama and character development, and the poetic narrative delivery
Have you considered other VNs? You could look at the top rated VNs on VNdb and see whether they sound dramatic enough for you; for example, Umineko (although I’m not sure if I recommend it or not).
Fiction Books Thread
The Magician’s Land is the third and final book in Lev Grossman’s Magicians trilogy. For those who haven’t heard of the series, it’s basically a dark take on the Chronicles of Narnia (with some Harry Potter-ish elements) featuring disaffected college students rather than kids.
I found this one to be a quite satisfying conclusion. Where the second book felt like less than the sum of its parts to me, this one was very tight. If you found the first book too negative, this one is a lot more optimistic in the end (though not surprisingly there’s still plenty of darkness along the way).
Utsuro no Hako to Zero no Maria (“The Empty Box and The Zeroth Maria”) (review)
The Slow Regard of Silent Things is a novella about Auri from the Kingkiller Chronicles. There’s not really a plot. I loved it.
I’m reading it right now, I love it too!
I/O Revision II, a visual novel.
It has been translated, though unfortunately I can’t link to the translation. The story is unusual, and very, very hard to explain without spoiling it; let’s just say that if you like Greg Egan’s works, there’s a good chance you will like this.
Just following links from your link, the translation is at http://lemniscatranslations.wordpress.com/io/
Specifically, the reason I couldn’t link to the translation is that doing so is illegal in some countries, possibly including the one where this site is hosted. Following links is not, so maybe you can amend your post to just mention that it’s possible?
Meh. I very much doubt the site cares (gwern links to a bunch of music remixes every month, for example). An admin can delete my post if LW is really bothered.
So I just finished reading Fate Stay Night, and I feel hungry for more, but its sequels are a lot more silly and laid back, and what I want isn’t the easy familiarity of characters whose tales are already told, but the poignant drama and character development, and the poetic narrative delivery, that I’d never experienced before. Does anyone here know stories that have this type of heart-gripping-ness?
Have you considered other VNs? You could look at the top rated VNs on VNdb and see whether they sound dramatic enough for you; for example, Umineko (although I’m not sure if I recommend it or not).