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Myth Directions

Front Cover
28 Reviews
Ace Fantasy Books, Nov 15, 1986 - Fiction - 202 pages
The Trophy was unique, no question. It was easily the ugliest object Skeeve had ever seen in any dimension. And before landing his job as Court Magician, young Skeeve had seen a thing or two.But Tanda wanted it-and, as a rule, whatever the beautiful Tanda wants, Tanda gets.The problem is, getting it will take more than luck. It will take all the talents of a young but gifted magician, a scaley but canny Pervect, and a charming demon not above a little interdimensional thievery...

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Review: Myth Directions (Myth Adventures #3)

User Review  - Samuel Lubell - Goodreads

Light humor/adventure. This is before the series went downhill fast, back when it was still funny. Read full review

Review: Myth Directions (Myth Adventures #3)

User Review  - Tomthedog - Goodreads

I couldn't find Myth Connections, book #2 in the series, so I skipped ahead to #3. More of the same: pleasant, light comic fantasy. I always enjoyed how with each book, the central cast kept growing; opponents as often as not turned into allies. Not a bad message. Read full review

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
9
Section 3
23
Copyright

14 other sections not shown

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About the author (1986)

Robert Lynn Asprin was born June 28, 1946 in St. Johns, Michigan to Daniel and Lorraine Asprin. Asprin attended the University of Michigan from 1964-65. In 1965, Robert served in the U.S. Army until mid-1966. Asprin then began a career as an accountant, moving up to cost accountant in a small subsidiary of the Xerox Corporation in Ann Arbor in 1976. In 1975, Asprin began working upon a science-fiction novel called Cold Cash War. Asprin sold this idea to St. Martin's Press and soon found himself a published writer. When other publishers approached him for a second novel, Asprin revealed that he had written up a draft of a comedy-fantasy work originally entitled The Demon and I, but they felt that he shouldn't stray far from the science-fiction of his first work. So Asprin began work on The Bug Wars. While working on The Bug Wars, Asprin was approached by Donning Publishing, and asked if he had a submission for their new publishing house, Starblaze. Asprin showed them The Demon and I, which Donning quickly accepted. At the last minute the title was changed to the familiar Another Fine Myth, which became quite popular. With that, Asprin quit his job and started his career as a fulltime freelance writer. Asprin has written and edited over 50 books. For several years Asprin was in extremely serious trouble with the Internal Revenue Service, over the supposed non-payment of income taxes, specifically in relation to his appearances at various science fiction conventions. On top of a severe bout of writer's block, Asprin has not been very prolific in the later stages of his career, but is attempting to remedy the situation.

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