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Reviews:
Delightful from start to finish. A truly impressive debut novel. ~Kirk Outerbridge, author of Eternity Falls, a Rick Macey Cyberthriller
A breath of fresh air: crisp, sharp and to the point. ~Walt Staples, Radio Playwright and author of Crossways comics
The Muse will inspire readers to enjoy their own artistic gifts and the time it takes to create them. ~Jill Williamson, author of By Darkness Hid
A light-hearted, family-friendly page-turner. The Muse does for writers what Superman did for men wearing tights. ~T.W. Ambrose, Editor, Digital Dragon Magazine
A heart-warming tale of friendship and family that takes an unexpected twist into an otherworldly adventure. ~Steve Rzasa, author of The Word Reclaimed
Author bio:
Fred Warren hails from the merry old land of Kansas, and his short stories have appeared in a variety of online and print magazines, such as A Fly in Amber, Beyond Centauri, Every Day Fiction, Mindflights, and Residential Aliens.The Muse is his first novel.
Excerpt:
They opened their eyes. Stan was resplendent in chain mail that seemed to glow from within despite the dim light, a fine silk hauberk, and a triangular shield bearing the image of a silver unicorn rampant across a black field. At his side was strapped a magnificent jeweled sword, which he drew in a smooth arc, the metal ringing like a bell as he did so.
"Illustrion," he sighed, gazing in wonder at the keen, rune-inscribed blade.
Davos looked every bit the dashing space ranger in his uniform, with an insignia-laden leather jacket, side-striped trousers, and shiny knee-high boots. He carried a lethal-looking energy rifle that hummed with power. "Yes," he said in a satisfied tone, "I think this might deal some damage."
Jilly also seemed pleased with her transformation. She wore a black leather catsuit that sported a weapons belt with a variety of sharp objects suitable for hacking, stabbing, and throwing, and she carried a sleek crossbow and a quiver filled with razorhead bolts. "Nice," she said, taking aim at an imaginary target with the crossbow, "I think I could get used to this."
"Ah...guys?" Stan said, pointing toward the other inhabitants of the clearing, their eyes wide with terror as they huddled together. "I'm thinking we may want to ask our friends over there to join our Let's Pretend Club."
"Just a second," said Jilly, twisting her body and swiveling her head around in an effort to see her back. "I need to do a little more imagineering here. I just realized this outfit doesn't have a zipper."
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Impressive Debut!,
This review is from: The Muse (Paperback)
The Muse is a delightful tale from start to finish. Warren's crisp and clean prose lends itself to transporting the reader into a world of struggling fiction writers. As a fiction writer myself, I found Warren's characters instantly genuine and the depiction of their lives, families, hopes and dreams easy to empathize with.
What starts out as a story of three friends struggling with writers block soon turns into a tale of everyday magic with celestial beings, an evil spirit and the heroes in real danger for their lives and those of their loved ones. But beyond the fast paced chapters, great dialogue and fantastically magical climax is the soulful inner journey of the main character that so many stories seem to lack these days. Warren does a bang up job of keeping these themes consistent and tight throughout the book, yet subtle enough as not to hammer it over the reader's head. The result is a heart warming ending that ties everything together in a hope filled conclusion that will have the reader reminiscing about it for days. A truly impressive debut novel.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"The Muse" will brighten your day!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Muse (Paperback)
"Stan Marino needs a muse. He's written himself into a corner...again. A shot of inspiration is all he needs to finish his story ...where is he going to find it? What Stan doesn't know: Inspiration has found him. And it's about to take over his life. Ripped from reality, he must lead a band of lost souls in a life-or-death battle with a merciless enemy. Stan has found his muse, but will he survive it?"
I did this a little differently--the above is the actual back cover blurb. I normally don't use that as an intro to a review because, to be honest, I rarely read back cover blurbs. I've found all too often that the book turns out to be nothing like the back cover description. NOT THE CASE HERE! I also found myself wanting to copy the endorsements for this novel, because I actually agree with them. Descriptions like, "A light-hearted, family-friendly page-turner..." (T.W. Ambrose, editor of Digital Dragon magazine), and "Unique and imaginative, a humorous yet mysterious twist..." (Jill Williamson, author of By Darkness Hid). I found The Muse by Fred Warren funny and heart-warming, with great characterization. I truly enjoyed reading it. I picked it up on a day that I was feeling pretty dumpy, and by the time I had finished it (and I stayed up late to finish it!) I was smiling :).
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"And a little child shall lead them...",
By W. Staples (West of 40 degrees Lon and South of 40 degrees Lat) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Muse (Paperback)
"The Muse," Fred Warren's new book from Splashdown Books, is a breath of fresh air. It is a riff on "The Devil and Daniel Webster" without the idiocy of Characters knowingly signing on the dotted line with sulfurous ink then trying to escape their stupidity by putting one over on old Scratch. Rather than dupes, the people involved are victims innocently attempting to get through life.
Stan Marino, the protagonist, is a writer of heroic fantasy who belongs to a small group of third-tier authors, the sort who write entertainingly but unnoticed by the big houses and agents. The collection of scriveners, who call themselves "The Seventh Circle of Hell," are a support-group of writers working in disparate genres of speculative fiction. One day, a mousy woman walks into the book-cum-coffee shop in which they hang out. She shatters the writer's block Stan has struggled with on his work-in-progress with one small suggestion. Soon he and the other writers of the "Circle," Jilly and Davos, find that every keystroke is suddenly golden. Charity, Stan's beloved wife with a secret of her own, realizes there are dark forces in motion the menace her husband, small daughter, and every creative person in the area. A bill is being written out that will worse than bankrupt the people she loves. In the final conflict, creativity becomes a two-edged sword that cuts for and against the wielder and a four year-old is the most powerful human involved. Warren's novel deals with the creative process and the mythic without doing serious violence to anyone's belief-system. One warning, this work made even the old snake-eater's eyes well up. If Splashdown Books can continue this quality in its publications, it could evolve into one of the better new houses. This is definitely a book to muse about.
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