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A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series
 
 
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A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series [Hardcover]

Diane Duane (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Young Wizards Series April 12, 2010
Young wizards Kit and Nita are faced with strange events when a life form from another era emerges on Mars. Though the Martians seem friendly, they have a plan that could change the shape of more than one world. As the shadow of interplanetary war stretches over both worlds, Kit and Nita must fight to master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to Mars and its last inhabitants. If they don’t succeed, the history that left Mars lifeless will repeat itself on Earth.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series + Wizards at War: The Eighth Book in the Young Wizards Series + Wizard's Holiday: The Seventh Book in the Young Wizards Series
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Product Description
In the hotly anticipated ninth installment of the Young Wizards series, Kit and Nita become part of an elite team investigating the mysterious "message in a bottle," which holds the first clues to the secrets of the long-lost inhabitants of Mars. But not even wizardry can help them cope with the strange events that unfold when the "bottle" is uncorked and a life form from another era emerges.

Though the Martians seem friendly, they have a plan that could change the shape of more than one world. As the shadow of interplanetary war stretches over both worlds, Kit and Nita must fight to master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to Mars and its last inhabitants. If they don't succeed, the history that left Mars lifeless will repeat itself on Earth.



Amazon Exclusive: A Letter from Diane Duane, author of A Wizard of Mars

Dear Amazon Reader,

"What the heck...let's go to Mars!" That's what one of those little voices in the back of my head said some years back, when I was contemplating where I'd be taking the Young Wizards series after Wizards at War.

When you're a writer, you learn to live with these little voices. As a former psychiatric nurse, I know that they're just one more way that the creative urge expresses itself to help you get the work done--a friendly voice being something you're more likely to listen to than some vague, disembodied Spirit of Creativity. I treat these suggestions as if they came from one of the "shoulder angels" or "shoulder devils" you see in cartoons. When they pop up and whisper something, you can pay attention or you can brush them off, but the final choice is always yours.

This time I listened. Mars has turned up in the YW books in the past, but only as a bit player--Nita's sister Dairine stops off there briefly on her wizardly Ordeal, not wanting to pass by without visiting Olympus Mons, the biggest volcano in the solar system (and a must-see for alien tourists in our arm of the galaxy). Surely, I thought, the planet next door merited a little more attention from me than just that single mention. For not merely as an astronomy geek from childhood, but as someone who's spent a lot of time in and around science fiction, I've had Mars on my radar for a long time.

Many of the great names in the science fiction and fantasy fields--Wells and Heinlein and Bradbury and even C. S. Lewis--have been interested enough in Mars to "visit" there, each bringing along the best scientific knowledge of the moment, and his or her own particular vision of what the Red Planet meant to them and what it might eventually mean to humanity. Other writers--Edgar Rice Burroughs, particularly--have gone there packing less science and more romance. But regardless, Mars has usually seemed to elicit good things from those who visit there in literary mode: visions of beauty and of terror, the unexpected and the seriously strange.

And for me, the fascination with Mars itself became an issue, a question to be answered. Why does Mars command so much attention from both the scientific community and the general public? What is it with Mars, anyway? Specifically, why has it so often been where invaders come from? ("Invaders from Jupiter?" Nita says at one point. "Invaders from Venus? It just doesn’t sound right. But invaders from Mars...") Is this just the effect of much piled-up popular culture, or do Earth and Mars have something else going on? If so, what? And what if that long-buried issue should suddenly come up to be resolved?

That last one is the question I found myself dealing with as I wrote this book...and it was a whole lot of fun. In the process I got to nod "hello" to a lot of my illustrious forbears in the field who've left their literary footprints on the planet (or their name: a surprising number of craters on Mars have been named after science fiction writers). I also got to do some goofy things, which is a writer's prerogative as long as she's careful about it and doesn't disturb the main flow of story business: watch for a cameo by a well-known Martian of 1950s vintage). Most important, I got to push my characters into situations that challenged them in some very different ways from the usual ones, their personal dramas playing themselves out on an alien landscape that's a little less alien because they can see Earth from there.

And--as a happy side issue--I had help from NASA in scouting my locations for the main story events. The Mars Global Surveyor satellite completely mapped the surface of the Red Planet before its sad demise, and NASA's made that data available to anyone who wants it. So with the right software to process the data for you and create the imagery, you can seem to stand on the surface of Mars yourself, and take a look around.

So, all in all, Kit and Nita and I had a serious party in our stay on Mars. In A Wizard of Mars, the party's still going on. And we can't wait for you to join us there!

All the best,

Diane Duane

(Photo © Gary Jordan)




Review

"One of finest current writers of speculative fiction pays loving homage to its Golden Age in this ninth title in the Young Wizards series....Duane's worldbuilding gleams with crystalline precision, a-glitter with lapidary characterization." (Kirkus Reviews ) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Harcourt Children's Books; 1 edition (April 12, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0152047700
  • ISBN-13: 978-0152047702
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 6.5 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #483,842 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Diane Duane was born in New York City -- a descendant of New York's first mayor -- and worked there as a psychiatric nurse before leaving the profession for the only one she loved better, the business of writing. Since the publication of her first novel in 1981, she's written fifty more, not to mention numerous short stories, comics, computer games and screenplays for TV and film, and has picked up the occasional award here and there. (She has also worked with Star Trek in more media than anyone else alive.)

Right now she's probably best known for her "Young Wizards" series of young adult fantasy novels, featuring the New York-based wizards Kit Rodriguez and Nita Callahan -- in business for twenty-five years now, their most recent adventure being described in the ninth YW novel, "A Wizard of Mars" (just released in paperback).

DD shares a two hundred-year-old cottage in the Wicklow Mountains of Ireland with her husband, the Belfast-born novelist and screenwriter Peter Morwood, a laid-back white cat named Goodman, and various overworked computers... an odd but congenial environment for the staging of epic battles between good and evil and the leisurely pursuit of total galactic domination. (And a lot of ethnic cooking: her own favorite foods come from the cuisines of central Europe and the Mediterranean.) In her spare time she gardens (weeding, mostly), studies German and Italian, listens to shortwave and satellite radio, and dabbles in astronomy, computer graphics, iaido, amateur cartography, and desktop publishing ... while also trying to figure out how to make more spare time.

Her favorite color is blue, her favorite food is a weird kind of Swiss scrambled-potato dish called maluns, she was born in a Year of the Dragon, and her sign is "Runway 24 Left, Hold For Clearance."

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.9 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars yet another strong entry in a wonderful series, April 16, 2010
This review is from: A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series (Hardcover)
A Wizard of Mars is the ninth book in Diane Duane's Young Wizards series and continues in the same strong vein as the others. At this point, there isn't much to review in that if you've read the eighth book in a series, it's pretty safe to assume you're going to be picking up the ninth. But in a nutshell, if you do, you'll be rewarded with the same quality you've become accustomed to and many of the same strengths. And if you haven't read the previous eight and are checking out this review simply because it's one of the most recent ones up, then stop reading (possible spoilers) and go pick up book one; it's well worth the time you'll invest as its one of the best fantasy wizard-based series going (and yes, that includes that other young wizard one). You should also know that the series only improves as it goes on. Those nutshell reviews dispensed with, here's the response to A Wizard of Mars in a bit more detail.

The main plot deals with a mysterious artifact found on Mars by a team led by Kit (whose grown steadily more obsessed with the planet). Turns out there's a history of wizards sometimes being able to resurrect "dead" species (it also turns out there are various degrees of "dead") who may have seen whatever calamity that eventually befell them coming and managed to prepare for it. The questions for Kit's team are does the newly found artifact have anything to do with such a process and if so, should the "Martians" be resurrected if possible?

Side plots, as usual for the series, are more interpersonal as the main characters--Kit and Nita--continue to develop personally and magically, as well as with regard to their own long-standing relationship. We also see smaller attention paid to other character development: Nita's father is struggling with his newly widowed status as a single parent, Nita' sister is spending less and less time at home and grieving over the loss of a close friend, Kit's younger sister is still trying to figure out exactly where she fits (not really a wizard but not "normal" either) while his older religious, sister is trying to come to terms with his magical abilities.

The plot takes a little while to get going but then moves along quickly and in interesting, unpredictable direction. One of my personal favorite parts is Duane's use of old-style Martian imagery from film and literature (Burroughs, Wells, etc.) and I wish she had actually given us more of this.

As in earlier books the character development is especially strong as they confront ethical choices, family issues, relationship developments, etc. One of the joys of the series is seeing how these characters change over time--working within a series timeline Duane has given herself the time to develop them slowly and realistically and has the patience to do so. These are also realistic and sharp portrayals of young adults, not some abstract view or an adult's fantasy vision of how young adults act and speak. One example of this is how Duane doesn't simply have them all/speak the same way despite all being "young," but instead gives them distinguishing characteristics according to even small difference in ages. Anybody who is around kids knows there are huge differences between 12 and 14 -yrs-old and 14 and 16-yr-olds, something some authors are seemingly unaware of.

As is typical in the series, the characters grow not simply by being put through their action scenes but because they are often placed in morally grey situations. While this book doesn't have quite the emotional depth of some of the others, this isn't hack-and-slay or Dark Lord bad--Dark Lord opponents good territory. These kids face moral/ethical dilemmas and we get to watch them think their way through them.

There is little to complain about with Wizard of Mars. It's probably a bit too long--there were a few places pacing lagged a little--but a matter maybe of a few dozen pages of cutting rather than a 100 or more as is sometimes the case. As mentioned, I wish she had indulged herself a bit more with the old-style Mars imagery. But these are relatively minor complaints. It isn't the strongest book in the series, but that's a pretty high bar based on just how strong the best books are. It stands pretty well on its own; this is not one of those series where books are seemingly churned out by an increasingly bored author for an increasingly disappointed audience. It continues the series faithfully and leaves the reader wanting to see what these characters will continue to get mixed up with. Recommended and the series highly so.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great addition to the series, May 24, 2010
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This review is from: A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series (Hardcover)
Having read all of the previous books in the series, I eagerly purchased a Wizard of Mars as soon as it came out. I wasn't disappointed. The author obviously had a great deal of fun writing the book, and in the process poked some fun at other writers who have had "Mars on the brain." But overall, what I liked most was the continued development of her two main characters - Kit and Nita - who grow and change most convincingly in this latest addition to the series.

Basic plot line starts with Kit's ongoing obsession with Mars, and the discovery that life may really have existed there in the past. Things get interesting when it turns out that the past may not be all that dead on Mars. Kit and Nita get caught up in rapidly accelerating events which reach an absolutely smashing finale.

A couple of side plots were lightly touched upon in the book, mainly the continuing story of Kit's sister Carmela who is not-quite-a-wizard, Dairine's training on Wellakh, and the homecoming of Kit's eldest sister, who has finally reconciled herself to his wizardry in a very humorous manner.

A great read!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Rich, Descriptive World, May 12, 2010
This review is from: A Wizard of Mars: The Ninth Book in the Young Wizards Series (Hardcover)
Originally Posted at: [...]


Magic and Mars. Teenagers and ancient people. Mix them up and you have a great book which holds the imagination throughout.

Teenage wizards involved with recent discoveries on Mars now want to take the next step. Kit and Nita are in the forefront of the investigations. Kit finds himself drawn to Mars by a compulsion he is unable to resist. The young wizards work on opening the capsule or "message in a bottle" they have found. Both youngsters and their older mentors feel the capsule could hold the answer to the disappearance of the species who used to live on Mars.

Kit's sister Carmela, although not a wizard, has powers of her own and a gateway pass to take her wherever she wants to go in space - usually the Galactic shopping mall.

With the help of their elders and the individual wizard manuals they search for the secret Mars has hidden for so long. Nita and Carmela discover an important work of history, but it is Kit who finds the way to unlock the past and bring forth the ancient Martians. The young wizards still do not have their full powers and at times find it difficult to cope with all that is thrown at them.

This book is attention grabbing. The reader is never quite sure what is going to happen next. For instance the young wizards meet up with Earth's Planetary Wizard, a young woman who comes complete with parrot and baby. Then there is Mamvish, a senior wizard Species Archivist who has six legs and loves tomatoes.

The young wizards are ordinary teenagers with the usual ups and downs associated with that age, but with the added ability of wizardry. Wizards aims are to protect planets and objects and beings on the planet. One of their abilities is to talk to inanimate objects and receive a reply. Kit has talked the remote control into the ability to tune the TV in to alien television.

A Wizard of Mars introduced me to a rich, descriptive world of Mars, both now and in the distant past. The story moved quickly from one scene to another, but slowed at just the right time to enable total absorption of what was happening. There is humor, adventure, magic and even a sinister undertone to the reasons behind the disappearance and reappearance of the ancient Martian inhabitants.

This is not the first of the Young Wizard Series. I shall certainly look out for the other eight to find out what happens before the events that have unfolded in this, the ninth book.
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