Michael Pryor
Author of Blaze of Glory
About the Author
Series
Works by Michael Pryor
Laws of Magic Sampler 2 copies
Shadows on the Heart 1 copy
EvilCo 1 copy
Sewercide 1 copy
Australian Visions 1 copy
Time to Burn 1 copy
Waste 1 copy
Aurealis 78 1 copy
Aurealis 72 1 copy
Aurealis 81 1 copy
Home Free 1 copy
Aurealis 77 1 copy
Aurealis 82 1 copy
Aurealis 97 1 copy
Long Live the King 1 copy
Aurealis 71 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1957-04-23
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- teacher
drainer's labourer
truck driver
Internet consultant
bathroom accessories salesperson
electronic publisher - Organizations
- West Brunswick Amateur Football Club
- Agent
- Jacinta di Mase (Jacinta di Mase Management)
- Nationality
- Australia
- Birthplace
- Swan Hill, Victoria, Australia
- Places of residence
- Geelong, Victoria, Australia
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia - Associated Place (for map)
- Victoria, Australia
Members
Reviews
This was recommended to me by a student and it is actually very good. An evil queen wants to take over an empire of dinosaur knights by divide and conquer. When she has one of her soldier's "accidentally" kill Adalon's father on a hunting expedition, and then puts a puppet uncle in charge, Adalon swears revenge. With two friends who are from different species of dinosaur, he sets out on a quest to find a lost castle where he can hide from the queen's soldiers, and plan how he will save the show more kingdom. The world is populated by dinosaurs that act like humans but each follow a special code (eg. "Way of the Horn" for Triceratops) which is like the code of chivalry that Knights used in the middle ages. There are also all sorts of nasty creatures and some magic thrown in too. This book is the first in a series of 4 I think. Excellent stuff for boys. show less
Full of fun and interest, but just a little bit too glib and easy for my tastes - or perhaps a little too smugly boys-own British. Our hero, Aubrey Fitzwilliam, is a child of privilege - son of a politician and former peer, talented in multiple areas, and enjoying the stalwart support of a best friend with complementary skills. While his life is made slightly troublesome by a small matter of being dead (not a spoiler: that's revealed in the first line of the book) his derring-do adventures show more are otherwise uncomplicated by personal conflicts or self-created challenges. This was probably my only dissatisfaction with the book, which was otherwise thoroughly entertaining. But Aubrey takes his loyal Sam George for granted, blithely excels all over the place in a manner irritatingly reminiscent of Sherlock Holmes, and generally sails through his adventures, and it all leaves me wishing that I could really see his mettle through him being knocked off his high horse and having to struggle along on foot for a while. show less
DNF @ 41%
(book is 1st person pov btw)
I hate the protagonist.
Feelings solidified around 16% mark where I became convinced Anton's skull is like an abandoned hangar with nothing but occasional wind roaring through. He lacks brain-to-mouth filter, cannot shut up to save his life and is incapable of being serious. He is infuriatingly flippant about his occupation, even though the dangers were drilled into him from young age. He makes me want to reach through the pages, strangle him, burn his show more corpse on a pyre and salt the ground.
I can see what the author was going for, but he did not manage to actually pull it off. The writing needs a lot of work and should have been condensed. Also - too much dialogue for something supposedly action-packed. Really, it feels like the only thing they do is talk trying to sound smart.
There is actually a plot! Which drags and drags, and just doesn't seem to happen? They are busy but it does not feel like anything is being done. Personally, I felt no urgency. When things were actually happening writing dragged and got bogged down by overflowing descriptions.
Sadly, not even awesomeness of Rani and Bec combined (plus an actively present parent!) was enough to help the book along. This was not spooky or engaging or thrilling.
The idea was interesting, the execution suffers most terribly.
VERDICT : AVOID. CANNOT RECOMMEND show less
(book is 1st person pov btw)
I hate the protagonist.
Feelings solidified around 16% mark where I became convinced Anton's skull is like an abandoned hangar with nothing but occasional wind roaring through. He lacks brain-to-mouth filter, cannot shut up to save his life and is incapable of being serious. He is infuriatingly flippant about his occupation, even though the dangers were drilled into him from young age. He makes me want to reach through the pages, strangle him, burn his show more corpse on a pyre and salt the ground.
I can see what the author was going for, but he did not manage to actually pull it off. The writing needs a lot of work and should have been condensed. Also - too much dialogue for something supposedly action-packed. Really, it feels like the only thing they do is talk trying to sound smart.
There is actually a plot! Which drags and drags, and just doesn't seem to happen? They are busy but it does not feel like anything is being done. Personally, I felt no urgency. When things were actually happening writing dragged and got bogged down by overflowing descriptions.
Sadly, not even awesomeness of Rani and Bec combined (plus an actively present parent!) was enough to help the book along. This was not spooky or engaging or thrilling.
The idea was interesting, the execution suffers most terribly.
VERDICT : AVOID. CANNOT RECOMMEND show less
Review by Trishe Leong
I read the first two books in Michael Pryor's Laws of Magic series over the course of a weekend, fired off an email on Monday to a friend saying, "Why isn't this guy famous?", and by Tuesday had agreed to write a review of the third book, because it was the fastest way I could get hold of a copy.
The series is utterly addictive. Word of Honour continues the world-saving activities of Aubery Fitzwilliam, Prime Minister’s son and magical prodigy, and should thoroughly show more satisfy any cravings for a rollicking good adventure that combines action, humour, magic and intrigue in the best "Boy’s Own" tradition.
Pryor’s writing is fluid and richly detailed and he credits his readers with intelligence, not hesitating to introduce linguistics, history & politics, and a fascinating and believable magical system, disguising it all in the breezy charm of pre-war upper class England (or rather, Albion).
Word of Honour sees Aubery Fitzwilliam moving on to university and taking further steps into the adult world, juggling the professional and the personal. Can he simultaneously save Albion from the machinations of the sinister Dr Tremaine, prevent his soul from permanently separating from his body, and more importantly, delicately repair his tenuous relations with the frighteningly competent and beautiful Caroline? As always, the story is both delightful and enthralling and I wholeheartedly recommend Word of Honour to lovers of mystery, magic and adventure of any age.
Really—why isn’t this guy famous? show less
I read the first two books in Michael Pryor's Laws of Magic series over the course of a weekend, fired off an email on Monday to a friend saying, "Why isn't this guy famous?", and by Tuesday had agreed to write a review of the third book, because it was the fastest way I could get hold of a copy.
The series is utterly addictive. Word of Honour continues the world-saving activities of Aubery Fitzwilliam, Prime Minister’s son and magical prodigy, and should thoroughly show more satisfy any cravings for a rollicking good adventure that combines action, humour, magic and intrigue in the best "Boy’s Own" tradition.
Pryor’s writing is fluid and richly detailed and he credits his readers with intelligence, not hesitating to introduce linguistics, history & politics, and a fascinating and believable magical system, disguising it all in the breezy charm of pre-war upper class England (or rather, Albion).
Word of Honour sees Aubery Fitzwilliam moving on to university and taking further steps into the adult world, juggling the professional and the personal. Can he simultaneously save Albion from the machinations of the sinister Dr Tremaine, prevent his soul from permanently separating from his body, and more importantly, delicately repair his tenuous relations with the frighteningly competent and beautiful Caroline? As always, the story is both delightful and enthralling and I wholeheartedly recommend Word of Honour to lovers of mystery, magic and adventure of any age.
Really—why isn’t this guy famous? show less
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- Works
- 59
- Also by
- 5
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- Popularity
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- Rating
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- Reviews
- 24
- ISBNs
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