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The High History of the Holy Quail (Volume the first in The end of all magick saga)
 
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The High History of the Holy Quail (Volume the first in The end of all magick saga) [Paperback]

Bruce Durie
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Citron Press (Aug 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0754400034
  • ISBN-13: 978-0754400035
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,732,255 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Bruce Durie
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Product Description

The Independent 12 November, 1998

"Confident...belongs firmly in Terry Pratchett's comic-fantasy land." --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

sffworld.com, 1999

The High History of the Holy Quail by Bruce Durie

All in all a great read, so if you're into authors like Terry Pratchett this is a book you really shouldn't miss out on. There's also a quite unique ending for a fantasy story, but that's something you'll have to find out for yourself. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Format:Paperback
Any reader expecting to dive into the usual quest-fantasy extravaganza is in for a surprise in Bruce Durie’s The High History of the Holy Quail. Oh, it has your essentials: wizards, magic (sorry, Magick), the ever-present threat of other beings, pretty girls, brutish beasts large and tiny. But Durie is a master of language, lateral thinking and science. There you are bowling along nodding to a predictable cliché around the corner, and you fall down an open manhole of a trap. Excellent.

Initially disturbed by being talked to as “you” the reader, three or more similes in every paragraph, and the parody references such as the Rowan Atkinson “bibble-black”, Durie’s writing style subtly changes making you wonder what’s coming next; besides in the fast action plot. I embarrassed myself, on a train laughing out loud, nearly missing my stop in order to turn another page. I applauded his alternative Edinburgh as in his Fantasy world his SamBernados Castle sat on a crag-and-tail hill; the yearly get-rich-slow Festival with abstruse performances that became known as The Cringe. Hah!

The key to appreciate the uniqueness of this fantasy is in Durie’s fabulous explanation of Magick. As a student leader, I was in deep trouble in the late 60s for occupying the college principal’s office and graffitiying “Entropy will win” as my esoteric message on his wall. I had to explain what I meant to a policeman, whose confusion let me off! In The Holy Quail, Durie goes way beyond the expected by explaining the “scientific” fundamentals of Magick. In brief, lost entropy reappears as extropy, manifested as matter and energy created apparently our of nowhere! Brilliant. And you won’t truly “understand extropy until you can unboil an egg.” I love it. And it was this admiration that kept me thirsting for more, and it came.

OK, some of the humour is a bit not of my liking, but most of it definitely is: such as the Psycoclips K’Nib. As a journo for a cycling mag, my whirring thighs rocked with such play on words. Indeed in many ways the reader is on his own quest inside this book. A recursive (aside references to ASCII and other ‘puter jargon will tease your discoveries) self-referential journey to discover themselves as well as the Quail. And once found will you want the sequel? I will. And the next? YES.

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By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This book is a hoot! It's like Harry Potter for grown ups, Tolkien with jokes and Pratchett with an edge to it. Definitely the best Fantasy read in yonks!
JD
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By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This book is BRILLIANT! Better than Pratchett or Moorcock or Craig Shaw Gardner. It is the most intelligent pastiche on the whole fantasy genre I have EVER read. I can't wait for the next two volumes. When are they coming out?
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Excellent!
...An extremely enjoyable read! As soon as I had read it, I had to re-read it. The puns and hidden double meanings cannot all be discovered in the first read. Read more
Published on 8 April 2001 by karen5@mdx.ac.uk
superlative!
I can honestly say I have never laughed so much out loud in bed! This book ranks with the best comic literature in the English Language. Read more
Published on 8 April 2001
very funny
I've finished the Holy Quail on Saturday and thought it was very funny. It's the first fantasy book I liked, so there you go. Read more
Published on 10 Nov 1999
superlative!
I can honestly say I have nebver laughed so much out loud in bed! This book ranks with the best comic lirerature in the English Langauge. Read more
Published on 29 Jan 1999
Excellent!
An extremely enjoyable read! As soon as I had read it, I had to re-read it. The puns and hidden double meanings cannot all be discovered in the first read. Read more
Published on 26 Nov 1998
THE INDEPENDENT
"Confident...belongs firmly in Terry Pratchett's comic-fantasy land"
Published on 12 Nov 1998
Publisher's review
This genre of this title as comic fantasy will mean readers of Pratchett's Discworld series should respond well to its witty and inventive humour. Read more
Published on 12 Nov 1998
Humour and fantasy - rare combination
Ibought this book in a normal bookshop in the UK. Originally attracted to this book by the title, I had no idea what the contents were. Read more
Published on 12 Nov 1998
This book is BRILLIANT! Better than Pratchett or Moorcock
This book is BRILLIANT! Better than Pratchett or Moorcockor Craig Shaw Gardner. It is the most intelligent pasticheon the whole fantasy genreI have EVER read. Read more
Published on 31 Oct 1998
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