The Books of Magic: Bindings

by John Ney Rieber (Writer)

Other authorsNeil Gaiman (Consultant), Jane Yolen (Introduction), Charles Vess (Covers), Peter Gross (Inks), John Costanza (Letters), Gary Amaro (Pencils), Sherilyn van Valkenburg (Colors), Stuary Moore (Editor)
Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

PN6727.R54 B56

Publication

DC Comics (New York, 1995). 3rd printing. 112 pages. $18.95. Originally published in single magazine form as The Books of Magic #1-4.

Description

Timothy Hunter may grow up to become the greatest magician of his day ... if he survives the trials of adolescence and the dangers of the physical world. In this graphic novel, Tim must defend the realm of Faerie from the deadly Manticore.

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
The start of Timothy Hunter's story. He's an angry young man with magical powers in an ordinary life who needs to find a place for himself before the powers around destroy him.
LibraryThing member PhoebeReading
This second volume in the Books of Magic series (numbered, confusingly, as volume 1) further develops the character of Timothy Hunter and begins to explore his mythic origins. When Tim is drawn away from his world by his birth father Tam Lin, we witness his first true trial--capture by the
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manticore--and learn of his otherworldly genesis. Unfortunately, the story suffered a bit in some of the same ways that the first did--sometimes I felt as if I had missed large swathes of the story, I suspect because some action took place in some comic book or another that I missed--and Tim, though his characterization is drastically improved here, still felt a little thin.However, there were a handful of stand-out scenes that made this book memorable: Tim's experiences in the manticore's den, his interactions with Death, and the rambling monologue of his surprisingly empathetic one-armed foster father. I'm having trouble evaluating this series so far as I normally do. The bits I like, I like very, very much, but as a whole, the graphic novels seem to leave me scratching my head. They're wispy and dreamlike, not always to good effect, but the parts that were well done were well done enough to keep me reading. We'll see if there's any improvement.
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LibraryThing member stipe168
Not as thrilling and magical as the original but how can it be. Good because i want to figure out what happens next,I really want Timothy Hunter to grow to be a great
magician, so i wouldn't like it if the rest of the books were just his
education in magic. it should really be the full story, with
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a
beginning or an end.
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LibraryThing member bookwormteri
In which Timothy Hunter finds out that his parents aren't his parents and almost dies. I love this series, but I like the later issues or trades better.
LibraryThing member ragwaine
When I started this new series I thought it started with #5 because the original series was 1-4. Then after reading about 20 issues I found the "new" 1-4 (this one). Good stuff. Wish I would have read it first, probably would have made things make a little more sense.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

112 p.; 6.52 inches

ISBN

1563891875 / 9781563891878
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