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A Wizard of Mars (2010)
Author:
Diane Duane
Series:
#9 in
Young Wizards
Published:
April 2, 2010
Publisher:
Harcourt Children's Books
# Pages:
560
ISBN:
0152047700
ISBN-13:
9780152047702
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Description
Product Description
In the hotly anticipated ninth installment of the Young Wizards series, Kit and Nita become part of an elite team investigating the mysterious "message in a bottle," which holds the first clues to the secrets of the long-lost inhabitants of Mars. But not even wizardry can help them cope with the strange events that unfold when the "bottle" is uncorked and a life form from another era emerges. Though the Martians seem friendly, they have a plan that could change the shape of more than one world. As the shadow of interplanetary war stretches over both worlds, Kit and Nita must fight to master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to Mars and its last inhabitants. If they don't succeed, the history that left Mars lifeless will repeat itself on Earth.
Amazon Exclusive: A Letter from Diane Duane, author of
A Wizard of Mars
Dear Amazon Reader,
"What the heck...let's go to Mars!" That's what one of those little voices in the back of my head said some years back, when I was contemplating where I'd be taking the Young Wizards series after Wizards at War. When you're a writer, you learn to live with these little voices. As a former psychiatric nurse, I know that they're just one more way that the creative urge expresses itself to help you get the work done--a friendly voice being something you're more likely to listen to than some vague, disembodied Spirit of Creativity. I treat these suggestions as if they came from one of the "shoulder angels" or "shoulder devils" you see in cartoons. When they pop up and whisper something, you can pay attention or you can brush them off, but the final choice is always yours. This time I listened. Mars has turned up in the YW books in the past, but only as a bit player--Nita's sister Dairine stops off there briefly on her wizardly Ordeal, not wanting to pass by without visiting Olympus Mons, the biggest volcano in the solar system (and a must-see for alien tourists in our arm of the galaxy). Surely, I thought, the planet next door merited a little more attention from me than just that single mention. For not merely as an astronomy geek from childhood, but as someone who's spent a lot of time in and around science fiction, I've had Mars on my radar for a long time. Many of the great names in the science fiction and fantasy fields--Wells and Heinlein and Bradbury and even C. S. Lewis--have been interested enough in Mars to "visit" there, each bringing along the best scientific knowledge of the moment, and his or her own particular vision of what the Red Planet meant to them and what it might eventually mean to humanity. Other writers--Edgar Rice Burroughs, particularly--have gone there packing less science and more romance. But regardless, Mars has usually seemed to elicit good things from those who visit there in literary mode: visions of beauty and of terror, the unexpected and the seriously strange. And for me, the fascination with Mars itself became an issue, a question to be answered. Why does Mars command so much attention from both the scientific community and the general public? What is it with Mars, anyway? Specifically, why has it so often been where invaders come from? ("Invaders from Jupiter?" Nita says at one point. "Invaders from Venus? It just doesn’t sound right. But invaders from
Mars
...") Is this just the effect of much piled-up popular culture, or do Earth and Mars have something else going on? If so, what? And what if that long-buried issue should suddenly come up to be resolved? That last one is the question I found myself dealing with as I wrote this book...and it was a w -- From Amazon.com Amazon.com Review
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#8 Wizards at War
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#9 A Wizard of Mars
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