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Will Power [Hardcover]

A.J. Hartley (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 14, 2010
While on the run from Empire guards, Will Hawthorne and his band of thieves are transported to a mysterious land that none of them recognize or know how to get home from. Turns out that they've landed right in the middle of a battle between goblins and humans. Their human allies are practically storybook counterparts to the rough sorts they knew in Stavis, speaking in high-flown prose, dressed to the height of fashion, and dripping with wealth and social propriety. Will's companions are quite taken by these fine folks, but the Fair Folk are appalled by Will's unorthodoxy.

At first Will does whatever he can to try to squirm into their good graces, but just when his efforts are feeling totally futile, he begins to wonder if these too-perfect courtiers and warriors have anything to offer beyond their glamour and their burning hatred of the goblins. But is there any recourse for Will and his friends once it turns out that the humans who are sheltering them may not be on the right side of their eternal conflict?

Will Power is a funny and fleet-footed stand-alone fantasy featuring the characters readers grew to love in Act of Will in an all-new adventure about the danger of first impressions.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Fans of 2009's Act of Will, Hartley's first tale featuring roguish almost-hero Will Hawthorne, may be disappointed that the adventurers split up early on and two don't reappear until late in the story. Fortunately, all of the fast pacing, outrageous dilemmas, and sharp, cynical humor are back in full force. Will and his intermittently traitorous friends are about to be captured by soldiers of the Diamond Empire when a mysterious ambassador smuggles them out of the city and possibly the world. They're almost immediately enmeshed in a war between goblins and the eerily humanlike Fair Folk, where nothing is certain except Will's ability to make a bad situation worse. Fans will dive in with the gusto of Will quaffing a tankard of beer, and new readers should have no problem keeping up. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"All of the fast pacing, outrageous dilemmas, and sharp, cynical humor [of the first book] are back in ful force.... Fans will dive in with the gusto of Will quafing a tankard of beer, and new readers should have no problem keeping up."
--Publishers Weekly on Will Power

"Hartley’s prose is so graceful, his narrative so taut, and his battle scenes so exciting and well described…. This is especially true of the compulsively readable second half, which unfolds with remarkable elegance and power.”
--Booklist on Act of Will

“[A] clever page-turner.... In small, swift ‘scenes,’ Hartley deftly proves that people you shouldn’t trust at your back can be the best ones to have at your side.”
--Publishers Weekly (starred review) on Act of Will

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; First Edition edition (September 14, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765321254
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765321251
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,599,880 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

As you will have gathered, I write a number of different kinds of book, because I love to read in a variety of genres. I have a number of projects in the pipeline, so keep your eyes open for new material.

I'm a Shakespeare Professor at UNC Charlotte, and though my Ph.D. was in literature I specialize in performance history and theory. You can reach me through my website, facebook and twitter. I'm always delighted to hear what people think of my work. Enjoy!

AJH

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Will Power": Hard to resist, September 21, 2010
This review is from: Will Power (Hardcover)
Will Power, second in a series of fast-paced fantasy novels by A J
Hartley, makes its debut on the bookstore shelves today. I write "series" in the
hopeful assumption that Hartley has plans for continuing the saga of one Will
Hawthorne--actor, poet, playwright, con man, and now full-time reluctant adventurer. Hawthorne's somewhat checkered rise to stardom as a young Elizabethan-style actor of plays and self-proclaimed pithy purveyor of pentameter poesy, was rudely interrupted in the first installment, Act of Will, leading to new employment as front man for a band of, in Will's modest opinion, much too heroic adventurers.

Stylistically, Professor Hartley has created a somewhat eclectically archaic world
for us to adventure through in accompaniment to his heroes. An entertaining mix of places and individuals with the flavor of the Elizabethan, the Gothic, and the sometimes hard to categorize populates the narrative, written in the first person from Will Hawthorne's perspective. But our inability to 'peg' this time and these places, while at the same time being more than faintly all too familiar with them is the result of a clever device on Hartley's part. And it's the use of that very device that makes it an unusually fresh approach in my opinion. Hartley is able to remain true to his atmosphere with rich and vivid descriptions of the surroundings, situations, battles, creatures, and ancient weaponry, yet allows the reader to settle into an easy, comfortable, narrative realm, through the modern linguistic expressiveness and colloquialisms of his lead character, Will--and far from clashing, the style winds up complementing itself over and over.

Following the events through the eyes of Will Hawthorne, Will Power transports us to ancient lands of Goblins who use bears as horses, wolves that seem to understand what you're thinking, and a gleaming White City where King and court seem all too concerned with outward appearances. Therein lies a theme commented on by Hartley. But the commentary isn't heavy handed. It's intertwined so well within the story line that the denouement, held close enough to the vest to more than support the lessons we might learn, still comes as a shock to the senses, surrounded by the events Hartley so deftly and vividly describes for us. In reality, though we might sometimes wish to ignore their existence, we Know these strange characters for who and what they are--and the realization can come to us as a little unsettling, even though we must nod in assignation as we read. This is one of the qualities I have come to admire about Hartley as a writer; he instructs as well as entertains.

Hartley has also seen fit to aptly furnish his saga with a back story. In the author's words:

--Like the first volume, Act of Will, it [Will Power] has been translated from
the original Thrusian--as preserved in the now famous Fossington House
Papers--with the aid of notes left by the Elizabethan translator Sir Thomas
Henby. As readers of the first manuscript will quickly see, the second volume is
different in key respects from the first, and raises still more vexing questions
of provenance, locale, and issues of how much of the narrative--if any--is
derived from fact.--

He then goes on to promise the results of further investigation in a series of
academic papers to be published in issues of Philological Quarterly
--HA!--Though he doubts that a general reader would be very much interested.
-- What a hoot.
This is the type of well-rounded attention to detail I came to expect from Hartley,
becoming familiar with his work after having fortunately stumbled upon his mystery novel,
What Time Devours. And it's what makes Will Power read with the veracity of a mysterious and exciting in-but-out-of-this-world
historical chronicle, rather than pure fantasy.
(See my review of "What Time Devours":[...])

Although I must admit, upon finishing the copy of Will Power provided by the Publisher (Tor/Forge),
I immediately began a quest to find book #1 --Act of Will, and purchased and read Act of Will on my own.
Will Power certainly holds up to its billing as a 'stand-alone' fantasy novel. But trust me, if you're a fantasy
fan, you too will be looking for more from Professor Hartley, past or future.
This book, as well as all of his others, no matter the genre, is recommended reading. JM
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars superb tale, September 19, 2010
This review is from: Will Power (Hardcover)
The Diamond Empire guards have Will Hawthorne and his gang of thieves at the Waterman, he knows they are lost as the doors crash open. However, they escape as they scatter across the city. Will owes his life to Mithos. At the Fisherman's Arms, they meet Ambassador Linassi who manages to get them out of the city.

When Linassi's coach stops, Will or Mithos has no idea where they are as this land is different than anything he has ever seen. He and his comrade are welcomed by the Fair Folk who are at war with the Goblins. Since the fair Folk are very nice to them and look human while the enemy looks like a horror version of Goblins, the outsiders assume they are on the side of the good guys. However, Will begins to doubt what he initially accepted as gospel although the beer is quite good.

This is a superb tale as the antihero manages to land in one misadventure after another. The story line is incredibly fast-paced and the incidents purposely exaggerated. With the jocular escapades, fans will toast (with beer of course) as A.J. Hartley cleverly weaves throughout the strong saga a warning to never judge a book by its cover as Will begins to wonder who the monsters truly are

Harriet Klausner

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent story, December 26, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Will Power (Hardcover)
I read a lot of non-fiction. Books on business, theology, and history dominate my reading table. So when I take some time to read a novel, I am very particular about what I read. I don't get a chance to read them very often so I want to make sure I choose novels that I am really going to enjoy.

I knew when I picked up A.J. Hartley's Will Power that I had made an excellent choice. And every single page confirmed my decision.

I read the first book in the Will Hawthorne series, Act of Will, and loved it so on one level, Will Power was an easy choice. But you know how things often go with sequels; the second book is rarely as good as the first. There are notable exceptions of course, but the exceptions prove the rule. I will add Hartley's book to the list of exceptions.

Hartley is a craftsman and writes in a way that makes it obvious that he is a man with a deep and profound love and respect for the power of art in general and the written word in particular. As a consequence, his prose is tight and powerful and he doesn't waste even a syllable as he weaves his story.

Like the first novel in the series, Will Power impresses me with the way it is paced. The reader is carried along on a thrill ride roller coaster one minute and then a slow boat down a river the next. This creates an excellent reading experience that makes the book almost impossible to put down. In fact, I stayed up until well after midnight reading one night because I just couldn't let the story go. Or rather, because the story wouldn't let me go. I finally closed the book due to exhaustion but picked it up as soon as I could the following day.

More than once during my reading of Will Power I found myself literally laughing out loud at the dialogue or the hilarious situations Will Hawthorne had gotten himself into. Then, at other times, I was literally holding my breath or shouting at the open pages of the book because I was so enthralled with the action in the story I felt like I was right in the thick of it.

I can only imagine that Hartley's theater background (he is the Distinguished Professor of Shakespeare in the Department of Theater and Dance at the University of North Carolina Charlotte and a director as well) is what makes him such an engaging novelist. The dialogue in this novel certainly reminds one of something a good playwright would craft. It is always purposeful, rich and appropriate to the character speaking it.

Combine all of this and you have a fine story, excellently told, and a reading experience that will leave you wanting more.
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