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Deep secret

Front Cover
88 Reviews
Tor, 1999 - Fiction - 383 pages
All over the Multiverse (the universe that is in the shape of Infinity, like a figure eight laid on its side), the Magids, powerful magicians, are at work to maintain the balance between positive and negative magic for the good of all. They use their magical talents to push people into doing the right thing at the right time.
Rupert Venables is the Junior Magid assigned to Earth and to the troublesome planets of the Koyrfonic Empire as well. The Empire is situated right at the twist at the center of the Multiverse. There is a problem of succession when the Emperor dies without a known heir, paralleled by a more personal problem on Earth when Rupert's senior dies and appoints him senior. Now Rupert must search the Earth for an appropriate new Magid, while helping part-time to prevent the descent of the Empire into chaos.
And then the problems become intertwined when Rupert finds that he can meet all five of the potential Magids on Earth by attending one SF convention in England. And that other forces, some of them completely out of control, will be there too.

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But her ending, it dragged on and on and on. - Goodreads
Also, the plot just didn't seem well put together. - Goodreads
Has the same premise with slight variations. - Goodreads
She was writing long before Rowlings! - Goodreads
My main issue was with the ending. - Goodreads

Review: Deep Secret (Magids #1)

User Review  - Ashley - Goodreads

I really liked this book. To me it is better than it's sequel The Merlin Conspiracy, but thats a very good book too. Read full review

Review: Deep Secret (Magids #1)

User Review  - Samantha Waxman - Goodreads

Deep Secret is pretty fun. Add together parallel universes, an imploding empire, one very harried Magid, a sci-fi convention, and blend. This is basically what you get--a bunch of people dressed in ... Read full review

All 88 reviews »

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About the author (1999)

Diana Wynne Jones was born in London on August 16, 1934. In 1953, she began school at St. Anne's College Oxford and attended lectures by J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis. After graduation, she created plays for children that were performed at the London Arts Theatre. Her first book was published in 1973. She wrote over 40 books during her lifetime including Dark Lord of Derkholm, Earwig and the Witch, and the Chrestomanci series. She won numerous awards including the Guardian Award for Children's Books in 1977 for Charmed Life, the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award in 1984 for Archer's Goon, the Mythopeic Award in 1999, the Karl Edward Wagner Award in 1999, and the Life Achievement Award from the World Fantasy Organization in 2007. Her book Howl's Moving Castle was adapted into an animated film by director Hayao Miyazaki, and the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. She died from lung cancer on March 26, 2011 at the age of 76.

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