Magic in Ithkar 2

Magic in Ithkar 2

Cover art from the first edition
Author Andre Norton and Robert Adams (editors)
Country United States
Language English
Series Magic in Ithkar
Genre Fantasy short stories
Publisher Tor Books
Publication date
1985
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 306 pp
ISBN 0-8125-4745-4
OCLC 13097340
LC Class PS648.F3 M282 1985
Preceded by Magic in Ithkar
Followed by Magic in Ithkar 3

Magic in Ithkar 2 is a shared world anthology of fantasy stories edited by Andre Norton and Robert Adams. It was first published as a trade paperback by Tor Books in December 1985. It was reprinted as a standard paperback in October 1988.[1]

The book collects fourteen original short stories by various fantasy authors which share the setting of an annual fair in the city of Ithkar, together with an introduction by Adams and notes on the authors by Norton.[2]

As described in the introduction by co-editor Robert Adams (identical to that in the previous volume), the world of which Ithkar is a part has suffered from some past holocaust which wiped out an earlier, higher civilization. Subsequently, the area which became Ithkar became a base for the explorations of three godlike visitors, who came to be worshiped as actual deities after their departure. A temple and priesthood dedicated to them developed over succeeding generations, which held a yearly fair on the anniversary of the visitors' first arrival. The city of Ithkar grew up about the temple on the strength of the commerce the fair attracted.

The historical background provided appears science fictional in nature; the war that destroyed the previous culture is related in terms which suggest a nuclear war, complete with radiation-derived mutations of life-forms in the vicinities of the nuclear strikes, while the story of the visitors resembles an expedition of interstellar explorers. Present-day Ithkar is, however, a fantasy setting, in which wizards and sorcerers are rife, and magic works.

Contents

Reception

The book was reviewed by Don D'Ammassa in Science Fiction Chronicle no. 83, August 1986.

Notes

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