![]() ![]() It continues to expand in later books as well, with the students even leaving their home nation briefly. The plot slowly grows wider and wider as events escalate, but always at a manageable pace, such that I didn’t get confused. And I live for it.Ĭorin and the supporting characters all feel genuine, with genuine relationships. Not what his father wants, but one that suits Corin, and allows us as readers into the nitty-gritty of rules that underpin the magic system. He doesn’t find his brother, he does find Keras (who has two series dedicated to him, they are great, go and read them), and gets the Enchantment attunement. Both to find his brother, but also to get his own power. Corin’s brother goes missing in a spire, and Corin, when he is of age, goes in. ![]() So here’s the plot - you get powers (attunements) ostensibly from the goddess, via blessings you receive in the spires. He is, as I image many of us think, how we would approach being a person in a magical world. I’ll make sure this review focuses on Book One: Sufficiently Advanced Magic.Ĭorin Cadence is one of my favourite main characters in all of fantasy. ![]() My rating is for the series as a whole as of writing. ![]()
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