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The Wizard Knight: (Comprising Knight and Wizard)
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The Wizard Knight: (Comprising Knight and Wizard)
Current price: $21.99


Barnes and Noble
The Wizard Knight: (Comprising Knight and Wizard)
Current price: $21.99
Size: Paperback
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“Gene Wolfe is the smartest, subtlest, most dangerous writer alive today, in genre or out of it. This book [is] important and wonderful.” —Neil Gaiman on
The Knight
A novel in two volumes,
The Wizard Knight
is in the rare company of works of fantasy like
The Once and Future King,
or
The Wizard of Earthsea,
that drink directly from the wellspring of myth. Now it appears in a single-volume edition for the first time.
A young man in his teens is transported from our world to a magical realm consisting of seven levels of reality. Transformed by magic into a grown man of heroic proportions, he takes the name Sir Able of the High Heart and sets out on a quest to find the sword that has been promised to him, the blade that will help him fulfill his ambition to become a true hero—a true knight.
Inside, however, Sir Able remains a boy, and he must grow in every sense to survive what lies ahead...
“[Wolfe] should enjoy the same rapt attention we afford to Thomas Pynchon, Toni Morrison, and Cormac McCarthy.” —
The Washington Post
on
“Wolfe’s version of Faerie is both allusive and elusive, beautiful and fatally glamorous.” —Tad Williams on
With a new introduction by Yves Meynard, acclaimed author of
The Book of Knights.
The Knight
A novel in two volumes,
The Wizard Knight
is in the rare company of works of fantasy like
The Once and Future King,
or
The Wizard of Earthsea,
that drink directly from the wellspring of myth. Now it appears in a single-volume edition for the first time.
A young man in his teens is transported from our world to a magical realm consisting of seven levels of reality. Transformed by magic into a grown man of heroic proportions, he takes the name Sir Able of the High Heart and sets out on a quest to find the sword that has been promised to him, the blade that will help him fulfill his ambition to become a true hero—a true knight.
Inside, however, Sir Able remains a boy, and he must grow in every sense to survive what lies ahead...
“[Wolfe] should enjoy the same rapt attention we afford to Thomas Pynchon, Toni Morrison, and Cormac McCarthy.” —
The Washington Post
on
“Wolfe’s version of Faerie is both allusive and elusive, beautiful and fatally glamorous.” —Tad Williams on
With a new introduction by Yves Meynard, acclaimed author of
The Book of Knights.