The Complete Compleat Enchanter
by L. Sprague de Camp, Fletcher Pratt
Harold Shea (Collections and Selections — omnibus of 1-3)
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AN EPIC FANTASY, AN OMNIBUS VOLUME FROM A TRILOGY: THE INCOMPLETE ENCHANTER, THE CASTLE OF IRON AND THE ENCHANTER COMPLETED. PROFESSOR HAROLD SHEA HAS MASTERED TIME TRAVEL AND HE AND HIS FRIEND REED CHALMERS HAVE ADVENTURES, BOTH IN THE PAST AND PRESENT. 5/10/87- 608PP: B: 10000 @ $3.99: UC=73P: MAX. 3 X INDIVID A FMT EDITIONS TO B FMT OMNIBUS.Tags
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Member Reviews
http://nhw.livejournal.com/684127.html
Reading "The Compleat Enchanter",
when I came to the fourth section,
(set in Finland's Kalevala)
somehow I began to wonder:
Can one write LiveJournal entries
in iambic tetrameter?
(Yes, I know that last word's bogus
and perhaps that gives the answer.)
This, a five-book compilation
of the works of Pratt and de Camp,
brings together the adventures
of a man called Harold Shea from
Ohio, mid-20th century,
who is, with his friends and lover,
thrust in various fant'sy poems,
first Norse legends, second Spenser,
third Orlando Furioso
(also Kubla Khan here featured),
fourth (as mentioned) Kalevala
ending in Cuchulain's Ireland.
Though Mark Twain perhaps began it
writing of King Arthur's Yankee
(don't think I can really show more mention
which state that wayfarer came from
as it has two unstressed vowels
in succession, so won't scan here)
this ambitious and effective
merging of mundane and mythic
surely was an inspiration
for much else in the same genre.
Even the stock story setting -
visitors arrive from elsewhere,
get entwined in local issues,
solve the problem (sometimes fail to)
disappear to next adventure
using magic means of travel
sounds a bit like Doctor Who, ne?
Also, use of spell components
such as "verbal" and "somatic"
was employed by Gary Gygax
in so far as I remember
from my teenage D&D days.
Anyway, this book is harmless.
Irish bit is, sadly, least good -
use of silly plot devices
to prevent our heroes making
any diff'rence to the story.
But the rest is entertaining.
And I think I'd recommend it.
Four stars in my on-line cat'logue. show less
Reading "The Compleat Enchanter",
when I came to the fourth section,
(set in Finland's Kalevala)
somehow I began to wonder:
Can one write LiveJournal entries
in iambic tetrameter?
(Yes, I know that last word's bogus
and perhaps that gives the answer.)
This, a five-book compilation
of the works of Pratt and de Camp,
brings together the adventures
of a man called Harold Shea from
Ohio, mid-20th century,
who is, with his friends and lover,
thrust in various fant'sy poems,
first Norse legends, second Spenser,
third Orlando Furioso
(also Kubla Khan here featured),
fourth (as mentioned) Kalevala
ending in Cuchulain's Ireland.
Though Mark Twain perhaps began it
writing of King Arthur's Yankee
(don't think I can really show more mention
which state that wayfarer came from
as it has two unstressed vowels
in succession, so won't scan here)
this ambitious and effective
merging of mundane and mythic
surely was an inspiration
for much else in the same genre.
Even the stock story setting -
visitors arrive from elsewhere,
get entwined in local issues,
solve the problem (sometimes fail to)
disappear to next adventure
using magic means of travel
sounds a bit like Doctor Who, ne?
Also, use of spell components
such as "verbal" and "somatic"
was employed by Gary Gygax
in so far as I remember
from my teenage D&D days.
Anyway, this book is harmless.
Irish bit is, sadly, least good -
use of silly plot devices
to prevent our heroes making
any diff'rence to the story.
But the rest is entertaining.
And I think I'd recommend it.
Four stars in my on-line cat'logue. show less
A fun jaunt into the realm of heroic fantasy, this is actually three short books starring Harold Shea, a modern-day psychologist bent on practicing magic in the lands of epic myth. Bungling magical spells and inventing himself along the way, our hero discovers he can even use a sword when the need arises. Somehow we are led to believe that it is possible to access these places using mathematical formulas. All highly improbable, but fantasy that nevertheless retains its sense of humor.
Amiable, amusing set of stories about psychologists stumbling their way through literary realms of magic. More than a little dated, but great concept, fun execution.
Contains the first three books in the series. L. Sprague de Camp (and his editors) and his erstwhile collaborator, Fletcher Pratt, knew a good thing when they saw it. These were some very popular stories (they were fun, the writing was great, popularity was deserved). The first two novels were combined into "The Compleat Enchanter" and when there was additional work, it became this work. Thank goodness they didn't try to add in the fourth; this book is thick enough as it is.
These are fun. They are just honestly fun. Get a snack and curl up in a chair, and read for a while. It'll be good for you.
These are fun. They are just honestly fun. Get a snack and curl up in a chair, and read for a while. It'll be good for you.
Symbolic logic helps define the science of magic. Not just easy reading, but captivating...I read all 5 stories in 6 days. The only reason I gave the stories a 4, instead of 5, is that the last 3 stories aren't as compelling as the first 2.
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Author Information

329+ Works 25,130 Members
L. Sprague de Camp, winner of the World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement, was fluent in several languages and traveled the world. He was chased by a hippopotamus in Uganda and sea lions in the Galapagos Islands. He saw tigers and rhinoceroses from elephantback in India, and he was bitten by a lizard in the jungles of Guatemala. His fascinating show more autobiography. Time and Chance, won the 1997 Hugo Award for best nonfiction. L. Sprague de Camp passed away in May 2000 show less
Some Editions
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Fantasy Masterworks (10)
Science Fiction Book Club (15035)
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Contains
Is an expanded version of
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Complete Compleat Enchanter
- Original title
- The Complete Compleat Enchanter
- Original publication date
- 1989
- People/Characters
- Harold O'Shea; Pete Brodsky; Loki; Heimdall
- Important places
- Xanadu
- Epigraph*
- Ich schreibe von Dingen, die ich nie gesehen und auch nicht von anderen erfahren habe, Dingen, die es nicht gibt und die es nie gegeben haben kann, und deshalb sollten meine Leser sie keinesfalls glauben. (Lukian von Samosata... (show all))
- Dedication
- To John W. Campbell, Jr., of gyronny, argent, and sable
- First words
- There were three men and a woman in the room.
- Original language
- English
- Disambiguation notice
- The Compleat Enchanter is not the same work as The Complete Compleat Enchanter. Only the second contains The Wall of Serpents and The Green Magician as well as The Roaring Trumpet, ... (show all)>The Mathematics of Magic and The Castle of Iron.
Unfortunately, however, the Millennium Fantasy Masterworks edition called The Compleat Enchanter (ISBN:1857987578) is in fact an edition of The Complete Compleat Enchanter.
Also published in the UK as: The intrepid enchanter.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 807
- Popularity
- 34,386
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.58)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 7


































































