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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A lighthearted adventure through the eyes of a cartoonist
Calvin Bryson is a relatively reclusive cartoonist who hides away in his Southern California home, spending his days reading quirky books and maintaining his collection of "Californiana." Recently breaking up with his fiance, he receives a letter from his uncle and aunt in New Cyprus, a small town in the desert where the borders of California, Arizona and Nevada meet...
Published on December 28, 2008 by Ben Kizer

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Please Sir, may we have some more?
Being a commoner and not being able to pay the larger sums to read his latest collectible works, I was gladdened to find this book recently. It seemed like such a long wait..

It was fun, too short, and not nearly as involving as my favorites from Mr. Blaylock but it does satisfy something I can't explain. It goes on my bookshelf with the other special ones...
Published on February 8, 2009 by Dee


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A lighthearted adventure through the eyes of a cartoonist, December 28, 2008
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Calvin Bryson is a relatively reclusive cartoonist who hides away in his Southern California home, spending his days reading quirky books and maintaining his collection of "Californiana." Recently breaking up with his fiance, he receives a letter from his uncle and aunt in New Cyprus, a small town in the desert where the borders of California, Arizona and Nevada meet. They'd like him to come visit, which Calvin is reluctant to at first until he receives a package from his distant cousin in Iowa with the request to bring it to his relatives in New Cyprus. Thus Calvin heads out to deliver the package and learns about the Knights of the Cornerstone, a secret society which his uncle belongs to that collects artifacts and is involved in many other unknown mysteries which Calvin becomes a part of.

This book is good, light reading with likeable characters, fast moving action and lots of witty humor. It fits the Blaylock model of writing with its realistic setting sprinkled with fantastical elements. I sense a new series with Calvin and the Knights on the horizon, as I felt there was remaining stories to be told. More description on the Knights would have been nice, but if this becomes a series, the future books could be used for that. Overall, it's nice to have new James Blaylock novel after almost nine years of not having one. If you want an enjoyable book that's not too deep and easy to read, pick up Knights of the Cornerstone.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Return of Blaylock, December 8, 2008
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rampageous_cuss (Under Billy Penn's Hat) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
OK, so he hasn't REALLY been away - but if you know this author, you know he's had a couple of distinct "periods" - whimsy-and-wizardry, steampunk-silliness, contemporary-fantasy, ghosts-of-California. With this novel, Blaylock returns to the contemporary fantasy genre he last visited in 1995 with "All The Bells On Earth." If you enjoy Neil Gaiman or Charles De Lint, if you liked John Crowley's "Little, Big" or "Aegypt," or Blaylock's own "The Last Coin," "The Paper Grail," or "The Digging Leviathan," you're sure to enjoy the adventures of hapless cartoonist Cal Bryson as he finds himself juggling a miraculous artifact, a mystic feud between a secret society of California-desert eccentrics and a killer occultist, and a budding relationship with a shrewd waitress with a keen feel for his foibles.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Welcome back Mr. Blaylock, December 21, 2008
This is the first Blaylock book I've read outside of the "Cheeser" series (His earliest works). It's also the first full-fledged novel from Mr. Blaylock in about 9 years. That being said, I was unsure of what to expect since he changed genres.

I felt that the book could have used some more history on the Knights, but maybe that is being saved for another book. I could also see Calvin Bryson, an unassuming hero, being a central character in future series.

Overall, I found the book to be very entertaining, but I know part of that is because I'm very familiar with the area where the story mainly takes place. Though without that level of intimacy, I still believe the story stands on its own.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still Superb N. American Magic Realist - Fabulist, June 27, 2009
By 
W. D. Gagliani (Milwaukee, WI USA) - See all my reviews
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The author of such California Gothics as The Rainy Season and All the Bells on Earth returns with another whimsical, nostalgic fantasy that seems gentle but then still manages to deliver a sharp-edged punch. Unemployed but comfortable, eccentric Calvin Bryson, a talented but not driven cartoonist, agrees to run an errand for his uncle and cancer-ridden aunt, who reside in the strange little desert community of New Cyprus. Immediately drawn into some sort of bizarre squabble between two groups of unusual people, Calvin soon learns that just about all the town's citizens are Knights of the Cornerstone, keepers of some very interesting relics such as the Veil of Veronica, which might just possibly be the real Shroud of Turin - or something. Their opponents will stop at nothing to acquire the relics and other treasure for their own unsavory purposes. Thrust and parry events escalate rapidly to a full-blown medievalist battle complete with siege engines and other logical but unexpected extremes. Revisiting similar themes as his earlier novel The Paper Grail, Blaylock effortlessly blends gentle fantasy with Knights Templar mythology transplanted to an unlikely but altogether very well-realized place. Calvin is just the sort of aimless, unfocused hero Blaylock prefers, a vessel who can be filled with purpose once a noble quest is shown to be his destiny. Deceptively simple narrative hides some astute observations about people rising to the occasion, doing right by others, the modern world, Time, and the imponderable nature of miracles and who owns them. Knights is a worthy addition to Blaylock's canon of North American magic realist novels peopled by the quirky, well-intentioned folks we might ourselves wish to be.

--W.D. Gagliani, author of Wolf's Edge

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars James P. Blaylock is Awesome, December 18, 2010
By 
mark gibney (Rochester, NY, US) - See all my reviews
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Anything by J.P. Blaylock is awesome. He is one of the best and most unique writers I have ever read. If it has his name on it, read it!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing urban/desert fantasy, October 6, 2010
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This review is from: The Knights of the Cornerstone (Paperback)
I love his books. Too bad we had to wait so long for a new James P. Blaylock book, but it was worth it. Must own for fans of "Last Coin" and "Paper Grail"
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book! Superb writing!, January 25, 2011
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What a treasure. I have never heard of this author but I am going to snatch up anything else that might be on Kindle. The Knights of the Cornerstone is rich and beautifully written. The author makes you care about Calvin and there's a lot of wonderful humor in it. Funny, adventurous, mysterious. Right up my alley!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful fantasy by a master of the genre, December 4, 2008
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This is a beautiful piece of fantasy about a man who has fundamentally withdrawn from public life, so to speak, and is seemingly content among his book collections and cartoon drawing. He is asked to deliver an item to his uncle who lives in a rural community fairly cut off, geographically, from casual visitors.

Once there, we find wonderful people, the knights of the cornerstone mentioned in the title, who seem to have a sort of lodge in the town. Or are they perhaps genuinely Knights Templars, or something of the sort? What do they protect?

This is just such a wonderful book. It made me think of the old Charles Williams books, but this author has more compassion for his characters. Read it if you want to enjoy one of the very best fantasy writers publishing today!
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars engaging modern day desert fantasy, December 4, 2008
Cartoonist Calvin Bryson knows he retreated from the world by hiding behind his work and Californiana literary collection as his ex-fiancée Elaine reminded him. Now a letter from his Uncle Al Lymon inviting him to visit him and ailing Aunt Nettie arrives. It has been three years since he has visited New Cypress in the desert squeezed by the Dead Mountains and the Colorado River. He also received a package from Warren Hosmer, his ancient cousin several numbers removed, postmarked Iowa to deliver to Uncle Al.

Reluctantly Calvin, who prefers to catalogue his Californiana collection, drives to his uncle's abode, the Knights of the Cornerstone. However before arriving at New Cyprus, someone steals the Hosmer package. Upon arrival at the Knights of the Cornerstone, Calvin explains he lost the package, but finds out that was a fake; the real item, the mythical magical artifact, the Veil of Veronica, was delivered to Uncle Al. At the Cozy Diner waitress Donna serves him his pancakes reminding him she kissed him when they were six years old, but this time he wants to initiate the kiss; instead he leaves a cartoon and a psychotic tip. However, he soon realizes that his family back in Iowa and here are embroiled with the Knights fighting their enemies for control of the veil.

THE KNIGHTS OF THE CORNERSTONE is an engaging modern day desert (can't say urban) fantasy that sub-genre fans will enjoy even as the story line in many ways is a conventional good vs. bad saga. The reason the audience will relish this novel and want more is Calvin, who in no way comes across as hero material, but unenthusiastically tries although his instincts tell him to flee back to his reclusive lifestyle before he is literally sent to Hell. James P Blaylock provides a fun light read that showcases blood is thicker than water especially when it flows from the body.

Harriet Klausner

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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Please Sir, may we have some more?, February 8, 2009
Being a commoner and not being able to pay the larger sums to read his latest collectible works, I was gladdened to find this book recently. It seemed like such a long wait..

It was fun, too short, and not nearly as involving as my favorites from Mr. Blaylock but it does satisfy something I can't explain. It goes on my bookshelf with the other special ones and again I will wait..
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The Knights of the Cornerstone
The Knights of the Cornerstone by James P. Blaylock (Paperback - October 27, 2009)
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