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Les Magiciens

Cette série plonge les lecteurs dans un monde de magie, où de jeunes adultes talentueux naviguent dans le paysage périlleux d'une université magique secrète. Ils découvrent bientôt que la magie n'est pas l'évasion fantaisiste qu'ils avaient imaginée, mais une force dangereuse aux conséquences profondes. Les récits explorent les thèmes de la désillusion, de la perte de l'innocence et de la lutte pour trouver un sens et un but dans un monde à la fois enchanteur et profondément imparfait.

The Magicians Trilogy
The Magician King. 2. díl
The Magician's Land
The Magicians. 1. díl

Ordre de lecture recommandé

  1. 1

    The Magicians. 1. díl

    • 496pages
    • 18 heures de lecture
    3,5(5668)Évaluer

    Quentin Coldwater is brilliant but miserable. After he graduates from college, he and his friends make a stunning discovery: Fillory--the land of the fantasy novels they read as children--is real and much darker and more dangerous than they could have imagined.

    The Magicians. 1. díl
  2. 2

    Quentin and his friends are now the kings and queens of Fillory, but the days and nights of royal luxury are starting to pall. After a morning hunt takes a sinister turn, Quentin and his old friend Julia charter a magical sailing ship and set out on an errand to the wild outer reaches of their kingdom. Their pleasure cruise becomes an adventure when the two are unceremoniously dumped back into the last place Quentin ever wants to see: his parent's house in Chesterton, Massachusetts. And only the black, twisted magic that Julia learned on the streets can save them.

    The Magician King. 2. díl
  3. 3

    The Magician's Land

    • 416pages
    • 15 heures de lecture
    4,2(1985)Évaluer

    From Booklist: The third and concluding volume in Grossman's epic Magicians trilogy finds former High King Quentin ejected from the magical kingdom of Fillory and, in short order, given the boot from a too-brief teaching stint at his old alma mater, Brakebills. What is Quentin to do? At loose ends, he joins a ragtag group of magicians-including Plum, an expelled Brakebills student-on a quest to find a mysterious case, contents unknown but presumed to be invaluable. Meanwhile, it appears, amid intimations of apocalypse, that Fillory is coming to an end, and the novel's action begins bouncing back and forth between the kingdom and the real world, where Quentin and Plum are now living in a New York town house, with Quentin determined to use an arcane spell to create a new magician's land. At this point, Quentin's former inamorata Alice shows up; but wait! Isn't she dead? Hmm- there is much more to the story, but suffice it to say that it is endlessly fascinating and always proceeds apace. In sum, this is an absolutely brilliant fantasy filled with memorable characters-old and new-and prodigious feats of imagination. At one point, Quentin muses, "Magic and books: there aren't many things more important than that." The Magician's Land is ineffable proof of that claim. Fantasy fans will rejoice at its publication

    The Magician's Land