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Nick O'Donohoe

Author of The Magic and the Healing

10+ Works 816 Members 5 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Nick O'Donohoe

The Magic and the Healing (1994) 239 copies, 2 reviews
Under the Healing Sign (1995) 151 copies, 1 review
The Healing of Crossroads (1996) 132 copies, 1 review
The Gnomewrench in the Dwarfworks (1999) 116 copies, 1 review
Too Too Solid Flesh (1989) 70 copies
Open Season (1986) 5 copies
April Snow (1981) 5 copies

Associated Works

The Magic of Krynn (1987) — Contributor — 1,653 copies, 9 reviews
Kender, Gully Dwarves, and Gnomes (1987) — Contributor — 1,436 copies, 6 reviews
Love and War (1987) — Contributor — 1,355 copies, 6 reviews
The Reign of Istar (1992) — Contributor — 740 copies, 3 reviews
The War of the Lance (1992) — Contributor — 700 copies, 3 reviews
The Cataclysm (1992) — Contributor — 679 copies, 4 reviews
The Dragons of Krynn (1994) — Contributor — 591 copies, 2 reviews
The Dragons at War (1996) — Contributor — 385 copies, 1 review
The Dragons of Chaos (1997) — Contributor — 349 copies
Firebirds Soaring: An Anthology of Original Speculative Fiction (2009) — Contributor — 231 copies, 9 reviews
Heroes and Fools (1999) — Contributor — 224 copies, 1 review
Relics and Omens (1998) — Contributor — 221 copies, 3 reviews
The Search for Magic: Tales from the War of Souls (2001) — Contributor — 221 copies
The Best of Tales, Volume 1 (2000) — Contributor — 116 copies
New Amazons (2000) — Contributor — 92 copies, 1 review
More Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home (2000) — Contributor — 90 copies, 1 review
The Best of Tales, Volume 2 (2002) — Contributor — 75 copies
The Twelve Crimes of Christmas (1981) — Contributor — 68 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
The premise of the story was interesting and the plot well-developed. I found the descriptions of foundry and mechanical work circa 1940 to be educational, and the details were incorporated easily into the story.
There wasn't a lot of nuance about who were the bad guys and the good guys, but that was okay in this context.

One problematical section involved sexual customs differing between the Dwarves and their human ally, and I don't think the human was treated fairly (this is the PG13 show more section; everything else in the book is fine). show less
Wonderful book! BJ Vaughan, a fourth year veterinary student, is dealing with the suicide of her terminally ill mother and the prospect of her own developement of the same degenerative hereditary condition when she fails her small animal rotation. We meet BJ as she packs her locker beleiving she is abandoning school, only to be offered a mysterious, secretive ambulatory block which will transport her and three other students to a strange world where they will be expected to treat the show more extraordinary. This book has all the components of well written fantasy: mythical beasts, well-developed and growing charachters, interspecies romance, and a few political overtones. The average reader should thoroughly enjoy this, and although the veterinary practicioner will relate to certain jokes and charachters on an advanced level, the jokes aren't so private as to be completely lost on the average person. For those practicioners however, there will be several aside moments added to by your own quirky knowledge of the field.

As an RVT and aspiring student dealing with heavy decisions concerning my future because of the clinical appearence of a degenerative diagnosis, this series of books is not only becoming a favorite read and escapist adventure, but also an adjuct therapist/career counselor (Although I hold little hope of treating any Hippoi any day soon).
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Vet school students go to the Crossroads, where they treat unicorns and other magical creatures (and get caught up in an invasion of the place by the murderous Morgan). While the Morgan plot was truncated and awkward, and the magical healing worked a little too neatly for my tastes, I ended up liking this fantasy because the students quickly became recognizable people rather than collections of traits; not unrelatedly, the women outnumbered the men and spent a lot of time dealing with each show more other. show less
What a painfully enjoyable book. Almost every charchter finally matures to intellectual adulthood in this third complement of O'Donohoe's Crossroads. The addition of a group of young but wise beyond years Griffon's adds pride to the story. Although BJ and Stefan's relainships takes a melancholic turn, the reader is left with hope for a bountiful future.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
19
Members
816
Popularity
#31,252
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
5
ISBNs
15
Languages
1
Favorited
3

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