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23 Reviews
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Man from Mundania,
By Gwendolyn Cox (Seoul, Korea) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
Like any of Piers Anthony's Xanth books, this book is wonderful. If you haven't read a Xanth book before then you should start. This book was about Princess Ivy on a Quest. Her quest was to find the Good Magician Humfrey. She ends up in Mundania and meets Grey, an ordinary guy who needs her. He takes her back home and along the way they become engaged. Ivy's parents, the king and queen of Xanth, don't want their daughter to marry someone without a magic talent. This lends them to go off looking for a magic talent for Grey. There are so many scenes that are hilarious, like the scene where Grey and Ivy are captured by the goblins and they have to do some brave yet funny things(funny to me anyway). The twists in this story are great! (I think that the reading level of this book is around 5th or 6th grade level-I'm not good at judging this kind of thing) This is a great book and I think that anybody could read this book and love it!
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A highlight of Xanth,
By "foxechick" (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
"Man from Mundania" is number 12 in Piers Anthony's ever-growing Xanth series, which makes it the third volume of what I think of as the 'next generation' of Xanth novels (the first um, 'trilogy' ended with number 9, "Golem in the Gears"). In a way, it also marks one of the last of the old style Xanth books: although the series continues to be entertaining and amusing, I am less often enraptured by the characters of recent times. Perhaps I'm just getting old. Regardless, "Man from Mundania" remains one of my favourite Xanth novels that I have returned to many times to read and savour.Our heroine for this episode is Princess Ivy, now eighteen and of marriageable age. Being a Sorceress, she must marry a man of similar calibre magic, which presents a slightly awkward situation, since no suitable candidates currently exist in Xanth. Ivy isn't too worried, though- she's in no hurry to get married. Instead, she decides to set off on a Quest: to find the missing Good Magician Humfrey, who has mysteriously disappeared (since volume 10, "Vale of the Vole"). Her quest sends her to that most terrible of blah and boring places, Mundania. Here she meets Grey Murphy, a seemingly ordinary mundane Mundane with hair-coloured hair, eye-coloured eyes and no apparent distinguishing features at all. Grey teaches Ivy about Mundania, while she attempts to convince him about the existence of Xanth, finally taking him back home with her. Along the way, of course (this being a Xanth novel, after all!) they fall in love. And this presents yet another problem, since Ivy must marry a Magician, and Grey is a Mundane who has no magic talent at all- or does he? Ivy and Grey's adventures in the lands of Mundania and Xanth are inventive and entertaining, filled with the sunny good humour of the Xanth series. Characters with a satisfying amount of depth and a well-constructed plot add to the mix to make this one of the best novels in the Xanth series. 8.5 stars out of 10
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Xanth's last hurrah,
By James Hertsch III (Springfield, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
I have to hand one thing to Piers Anthony: He managed to take a single plot element, the disappearance of Good Magician Humphrey, and make it last for five novels, barely advancing the search for the Good Magician in each book.After her brother Dolph looked for the Good Magician Humphrey in the previous book and came back with two fiancees, Princess Ivy decides its her turn to go look for the Answer-providing Magician. After stealing back a magical mirror from a magical Com-Pewter, she invokes the Heaven Cent and .... Enter Grey Murphy, stage left. Residing in magicless Mundania, he has managed to obtain a computer program that procures girlfriends for him. And its latest procurement? No prize if you guess Ivy. Following the by-now standard Xanth formula, they undertake a journey (back to Xanth) and fall in love along the way. But it's a good journey. Piers Anthony made two very, very good decisions with this novel. First, he abandoned the juvenile tone that infested earlier and later entries in the Xanth series. Second, after umpty-ump Xanth novels made tangle trees, ladies-slipper bushes, and other magical marvels seem mundane, Anthony chose to approach much of novel through an outsider -- Grey Murphy. Even as he confronts wonder after wonder, Grey Murphy refuses to believe in magic. A sailing mountain? Special effects. Invisible giant spouting a river of blood? Food coloring. A half-human, half-equine centaur? A robot. A hate spring? Ordinary water, backed by a strong superstition that it will make people hate each other. Despite his disbelief in magic, Grey Murphy is nonetheless the typical Anthony protagonist, with a code of ethics that uniformly matches every other protagonist we've seen out there. Not that I mind ethical characters, mind you; it just gets tiresome when, after a dozen books, all the good guys display identical codes of ethics. Kind of ruins diversity of characters. The plot continues, with Grey having to meet a certain challenge to successfully assert a claim to Ivy's hand in marriage, journey all over Mount Parnassus, and overcome a rather nasty oath that's been forced on him ... but things might just turn out well for this happy couple, right? Right?? If you would like to inflict the remainder of this series on yourself, this book is a very good jumping-on point. Grey Murphy's unfamiliarity with the land of magic makes him a good proxy for an unfamiliar reader, but the book's other flaws (uniform characters, linear plotting) keep it from a perfect rating.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Criticism for Man from Mundania,
By Curtis Lively (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
Man from Mundania is possibly one of the best Xanth novels. Piers Anthony once again amazes readers with his excellent use of puns, and the idea for Grey was a good one. However, Man from Mundania shares the same problem that a lot of Xanth novels have. Anthony tends to reiterate a lot of what he says. I still enjoyed reading it and I hope everyone else did too.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A good Xanth book after a string of so-so ones!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
This is what, the 11th or 12th Xanth book (out of, now, about 25 or so I guess)...the first 4 were great (Castle Roogna and Centaur Aisle were the best), 5-8 were so-so (Ogre Ogre, Night Mare, Dragon on a Pedestal, Crewel Lye, Golem in the Gears) and 9 and 10 were getting good again (Vale of the Vole, Heaven Cent)...I forget if Isle of View was 11, or if this was. Regardless.....!!Those of you who got bored with books 5-8 (or 5-10, or 2-10) can come back. This was the first really good Xanth book in a long while. It got away, to some degree, from just the sheer silliness of the middle books, and got a little more into characterization than before, which was good. I also happened to like the fact that Ivy is finally grown (growing) up and played a big part, and the new character, Grey, was good too.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A magical journey,
By Kurt's OHS Literary Corner (Cleveland, OH USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
The novel, Man From Mundania, by Piers Anthony is a great novel that follows the journey of a magical princess named Ivy and a ordinary man named Grey. The story takes place in Xanth, a land full of magic, where Ivy is searching for the missing Good Magician (Humphrey). The Magician Humphrey is a powerful man who's magical talent is to know the answer to any question and without his knowledge Xanth is going into chaos. Ivy's quest takes her to the dull land known as Mundania where she is joined by a man called Grey. Together, the couple resume the quest and uncover an evil machine's plot to take over Xanth. If they're to stop this they will need some serious help.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Couldn't put it down!!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
I absolutley love Piers Anthony's Xanth series and Man from Mundania had to be one of the best yet. I started reading it on a Sunday night and by monday evening was done. Anyone who loves Anthony's work should definatley read this book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Any fantasy or piers anthony fan should love this book.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
This is one of my favorite books, partially because it got me into the world of piers anthony, my favorite author. This book is a humorous fun and pun-filled book by the fantastic author of the worlds greatest series', including the "Magic of Xanth 'trilogy'". Anyone familiar to Anthony or Xanth will love this book
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Magical Quest,
By Kurt (Cleveland, OH USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
The novel Man From Mundania, by Piers Anthony, follows the journey of an unlikely couple on their quest to find the Good Magician and to save the magical world of Xanth. The Good Magician, also known as Humphrey, has the magical talent of knowing the answer to any question. He mysteriously dissappeared and the land of Xanth is going into chaos without his knowledge. The journeying couple consists of Ivy and Grey. Ivy is a princess and sorceress in the magical land of Xanth and is the one that is originally journeying to find the Good Magician. Grey is a seemingly ordinary human being who comes from the dull land of Mundania. He meets Ivy on her quest and ends up joining her. The couple continue their journey to find Humphrey and instead discover an evil machine's plot to take over Xanth using Grey and Ivy as pawns. I really liked how this story is written and the outcome of the novel is great. I also enjoyed the little puns that can be found throughout the story. All in all, this is a spectacular book and I recomend it to anyone who enjoys a funny, well written novel.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Fantisy Book I've Ever Read!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) (Mass Market Paperback)
The book is about a man who comes from "the real world"into a world of fantisy. A gril named Ivy brings him to Xanth after the Heven Cent takes her to the "real world"(Mundania). She trys to find him a talent so they can get married.This book is undobitly the best book ever. I give it more than five stars. Once I picked it up, I could not put it down. I highly recommend it. |
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Man from Mundania (Xanth, No. 12) by Piers Anthony (Mass Market Paperback - December 15, 2000)
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