Back to results
Cover image for book Murder and Magic

Murder and Magic

By:Randall Garrett
Publisher:Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Print ISBN:9780441545414
eText ISBN:9781625670212
Edition:0
Copyright:1979
Format:Reflowable

eBook Features

Instant Access

Purchase and read your book immediately

Read Offline

Access your eTextbook anytime and anywhere

Study Tools

Built-in study tools like highlights and more

Read Aloud

Listen and follow along as Bookshelf reads to you

The Sidewise Award–winning series. "If you are looking for something different in the way of mysteries a few hours with Lord Darcy is a fun way to go" ( Daily Kos). This alternate history series starring detective Lord Darcy and his sorcerer sidekick, Sean O Lochlainn, takes us into a reality where Richard the Lionheart's descendants rule the Anglo-French Empire and the laws of magic have developed in place of the laws of physics. Murder and Magic, comprised of the first four stories of the acclaimed Lord Darcy series, finds Lord Darcy solving murders using his wits, a keen eye for observation, and a few choice magic tricks. In "The Eyes Have It," Lord Darcy must figure out who killed the taciturn playboy, the Count D'Evreux. In the political thriller "A Case of Identity," Lord Darcy picks apart the disappearance of the Marquis of Cherbourg, especially mysterious considering the escalating cold war with Poland. Lord Darcy and Master Sean investigate a body coated in blue paint already occupying a coffin built for the late Duke of Kent in "The Muddle of the Woad." Literary humor is at the heart of "In a Stretch of the Imagination," where the head of an important publishing house commits suicide under suspicious circumstances. Praise for the Lord Darcy series "Some of the finest fantasy ever written . . . Will certainly guarantee him a lasting place in the genre." — SF Chronicle "He has combined the best of the fantasy and detective genres—and made them work as science fiction." —Marion Zimmer Bradley "I cannot count the number of times I have read 'Too Many Magicians'—each time with the same pleasure." —Andre Norton