Jinx's fire

Sage Blackwood

Book - 2015

"Jinx travels throughout the Urwald to unite its people and creatures against encroaching threats"--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Sage Blackwood (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Sequel to: Jinx's magic.
Physical Description
388 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
620L
ISBN
9780062129970
9780062129963
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In this concluding volume of Blackwood's critically acclaimed series, Jinx is nearly 15, and he finally rescues his mentor, Simon, from the fate the evil Bonemaster wrought in Jinx's Magic (2014). First, however, he has to deal with the all-out war in the Urwald, where two kings are vying for ownership of the woodland; use his magic skills to journey through Glass Mountain; and come to terms with the soft and fluffy feelings he has for Elfwyn. With newly gained insight, Jinx considers environmental concerns as he works both with and against the angry trees of Urwald, and though there's an emphasis on the role humans (and other supernatural creatures) have on nature, Blackwood deftly steers clear of a didactic message. Though Jinx occasionally sounds younger than 15, Blackwood nonetheless offers a story of enchanting texture and depth, and series fans will be elated to have another outing with the sweetly sardonic hero, whose conscience is almost as troublesome as his grasp of spells. Fans of Cornelia Funke should add this to their stacks.--Goldsmith, Francisca Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

Jinx, sometime apprentice to Simon the wizard (Jinx, rev. 5/13; Jinx's Magic, rev. 1/14), is facing two seemingly insurmountable problems. One, his former friend Reven, deposed king of Keyland, is teaming up with King Rufus the Ruthless of Bragwood against the Keyland usurper. They're burning trees and killing folks in Jinx's forest home, the Urwald, as they stage assaults there. Two, the Bonemaster, a rival magician steeped in death magic, is holding Simon captive and using him to suck the magic out of Jinx -- and out of the Urwald as well -- preventing Jinx from fighting back on either front. Blackwood keeps an astonishing number of balls in the air for this third book, exploiting facets of her versatile magical world (erudite-but-ravenous werewolves; the Paths of Fire and Ice) by means of multiple alliances, complex plans of attack, and sticky wizardly puzzles to solve. It's the puzzles within Jinx himself, however, that give the tale its heart. How can he get others to work with him if they see him as arrogant? If it's bad to use his magic to kill, is it worse to fail to use it and see his friends killed instead? The author's multifaceted invention and sprawling, brawling, well-delineated cast combine forces for a tight, cohesive conclusion. anita l. burkam(c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Multiple threats to his beloved Urwald send tree whisperer Jinx down magical Paths of Ice and Fire in this populous closer.Readers who haven't followed Jinx from his eponymous beginning (2013) will likely stumble along behind in confusion as he makes his way through crowds of new and previously introduced (and uniformly contentious) wizards, witches, werewolves, trolls, elves and human refugees from two worlds in a desperate effort to save his (equally contentious) trees from three invading armies and the evil wizard Bonemaster. Ominously, not-so-cryptic prophecies indicate that he will succeed only by overcoming his stubborn reluctance to kill and embracing the Bonemaster's icy "deathforce"a moral test he's been avoiding. The pseudonymous author saddles Jinx with other challenges too, from a really close friend bearing a curse that forces her to answer any question with the truth to an almost satirically archetypal journey up a glass mountain and then down through Eldritch Depths to the Nadir of All Things. Many references to the mixed hazards and benefits of choosing paths, keeping to them and leaving them add further thematic underpinnings. A solid conclusion to a trilogy that, though overcrowded and about a half volume too long, is nonetheless threaded with proper amounts of heroism, humor and ingenious twists of character. (map, not seen) (Fantasy. 10-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.