Elemental Magic by Sharon Shinn: Book Cover

    Elemental Magic by Sharon Shinn, Jean Johnson, Rebecca York, Carol Berg

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: November 2007
    • 384pp

      Reader Rating: (5 ratings)

      Detailed Rating: "Escapism" See All

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: November 2007
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
      • Format: Paperback, 384pp

      Synopsis

      Four all-new stories of romance, fantasy, and natural enchantment.

      From wizards to weathermen, many know the powers of the four elements-natural forces that can direct the fates, change destiny, and unite lovers in the most unexpected ways. Now, those magical elements-air, fire, water, and earth-come together in perfect balance, and a perfectly unique romance anthology, from four charmed authors.

      In Air find romance in a breathless retelling of the Cinderella fable from award-winning Sharon Shinn, "an amazing writing talent"(Best Reviews).

      In Fire blazes adventure in a parallel dimension of werewolves and love-slaves from USA Today bestselling Rebecca York, "a true master" (Rave Reviews).

      In Water resides fantasy and a remarkable universe of magic, demons, and dangerous passion from "thoroughly original" (Starburst) award-winner Carol Berg.

      And in Earth discover the ultimate in profound pleasure from Jean Johnson, "a fresh new voice in fantasy romance" (Robin D. Owens).

      Publishers Weekly

      Shinn (Reader and Raelynx), Johnson (The Master), Berg (Flesh and Spirit) and York (Moon Swept) offer stories of air, fire, water and earth in a delicious smorgasbord of styles. Shinn's "Bargain with the Wind" is a cautionary reminder about the dangers of making deals with capricious air demons, as exemplified when Lady Charis strikes a bargain to further her ambition of ruling the palatial estate of Grey Moraine. Johnson's "Birthright" focuses on the earthy desires of twin princesses Kalasa and Arasa, who must determine which was born first in order to decide who will become empress. Berg's "Unmasking" describes the truth-telling properties of water magic as young Joelle undergoes training to seek out souls possessed by demons. York's "Huntress Moon" finds virginal slave Zarah, who can communicate via fire, falling in love with her master, Griffin, a werewolf who buys her without knowing she's a spy. Erotic scenes from York and Johnson match the satisfying paranormal content. (Nov.)

      Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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      Biography

      Sharon Shinn is the award-winning author of many fantasy novels. Rebecca York is a USA Today bestselling author.

      Carol Berg is an award-winning author. Jean Johnson is the author of The Sword and The Wolf.

      Customer Reviews

      Two great stories, one decent, and only one that is complete trash and should be burned.by PhoenixFalls

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      September 22, 2009: The first story, loosely centered around the element "Air" and also very loosely a reimagining of the Cinderella myth, is called "Bargain with the Wind," and is written by Sharon Shinn. It is the reason I bought this collection, and it really impressed me. Shinn's writing style is fairly simple and a little weak, but she excels at creating characters that the reader cares about. This story is some of her strongest work in some time, nearly at the level of her Campbell Award-winning first novel, The Shape-Changer's Wife. Like that novel, it also ends with a melancholy, haunting beauty that lingered in my mind for some time.

      The second novella is very loosely centered around the element "Earth." "Birthright," by Jean Johnson, was the story I found a bit lame. It felt pulled in two directions -- there was too much romance to have enough time building the world and setting up the plot, but there was so much plot (and a rather weak plot to boot) that Johnson skipped all the most interesting parts of the romance: the actual falling in love. Her characters meet, want each other, spend a month together that the reader doesn't get to see at all, then fall into bed (or in this case a bathing pool) with each other and are ready to pledge their undying love. Still, it moved quickly, and the bathing pool scene walked the fine line between being R-rated and X-rated carefully enough that it was titillating rather than either horrifying or ludicrous.

      The third novella is the strongest. Centered around "water" and set in the world of her major trilogy, "Unmasking" by Carol Berg was a revelation. I had read Berg's standalone novel Song of the Beast and wasn't terribly impressed; it read quickly, but I forgot it almost as soon as I finished it. This novella caused me to go out and get the first novel in her Rai-Kirah trilogy immediately on its strength alone. There is nothing flashy about her writing style, but it is serviceable and there is no clunkiness as there sometimes is in Sharon Shinn's writing; but the strength in this story is her characterization. It is the shortest of the novellas in this collection, yet its characters are the ones I will remember the longest -- the inhabit a world I can picture perfectly, they are multi-faceted, and the protagonist faces quite a few hard choices with wonderfully realized courage and grace. While the romance takes up very little time, it made my heart ache. Truly an impressive work.

      The fourth novella is sadly the weakest by far, and left a horrible taste in my mouth after Berg's small masterpiece. Centered around "Fire," "Huntress Moon" by Rebecca York was disgustingly inadequate from the very first page. The characters make no sense, the world-building is trite and nearly non-existent, the plot is hackneyed, and the content is. . . well, I have to say that I never really believed that someone could write such utter filth, and that other people could enjoy it.It is a horrifying tale of a girl buying into her own destruction wholeheartedly. The main character agrees to become a sex slave with the hope of saving her mother and is instantly swooning over her purchaser. Their sex is described graphically (but not at all sexily) and repeatedly, and then they are magically brought together by several coincidences, the evil-doers are conveniently routed, a couple slaves are freed, and everyone lives happily ever...

      I Also Recommend: The Shape-Changer's Wife, Transformation, Wizards.

      So Much Fun...by SunshineQueen

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      February 06, 2009: The only story I didn't like in this anthology was the first one. Sharon Shinn is a good author, but this story I just didn't care about. It was told from a boring point of view and the rather dull romance wasn't spiced up with anything surprising or interestingly magical then all the characters you were supposed to care about died.
      The rest of the stories were great, though. I just wanted to read more of all the characters, especially Rebecca York's post-apocalyptic world with psychic powers and werewolves. Now that's fun.


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