

Interspersed throughout and printed to look like facsimiles, Nevery's journal entries and correspondence offer intriguing counterpoint to Conn's perspective sketches of characters and places, incorporated on the first page of each chapter, also lighten the lengthy text. Prineas depicts Conn, the narrator, as refreshingly candid and a quick study while revealing Nevery as insightful and unexpectedly caring. Soon, Conn must enroll in wizard school, find his own magical stone and help his master determine the cause of Wellmet's diminishing magic while avoiding some unsavory characters.

Accordingly, Nevery takes him on as a potential apprentice and offers him refuge in his crumbling home. Recently returned from banishment, Nevery Flinglas is not angered by the boy's thievery, just surprised the stone's power didn't kill the orphan. Conn-waer, a preteen pickpocket, steals the locus magicalicus from the most revered and powerful wizard in the city of Wellmet. Readers clamoring for magical tales will enjoy Prineas's fast-paced first novel, the opener of a promising trilogy.
