Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Casting Fortune

Casting Fortune
Casting Fortune
Author: John M. Ford
ISBN-13: 9780812538151
ISBN-10: 0812538153
Publication Date: 6/1989
Pages: 186
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 3

3.8 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Tor Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Trey avatar reviewed Casting Fortune on + 260 more book reviews
When Mr. Ford died, I started trying to lay hands on all his works to read them. I haven't been disappointed yet, though I am convinced that fantasy is really his strength, and these stories play to that strength.

OK, what's it about? Its two short stories "A Cup of Worrynot Tea" and "Green is the Color" and "The Illusionist" a novella, all set in Liavek. Of the three, "The lllusionist" is the strongest and most worth the time. "A Cup of Worrynot Tea" is a much compressed transition from youth to adulthood amidst the plots of sorcerers and kings. "Green Is the Color" is a sharp little story about the mysterious deaths of several sorcerers, the work of a healer to help a little girl dying of nightmares and a very unusual toymaker. Plus, the plot of a group of sorcerers that set out to create a god 30 years ago.

"The Illusionist" I liked the best - not for the title, but because Ford's love of theater shows through like a warm light. Its about Liavek's most famous tragic playwright and how he as decided to write a comedy. The story then takes us through casting, rehearsals, the lives (and secrets) of the cast, and then leads us back to the playwright and director and his secrets - leading back to the murder of an entire acting company in a land far away where they venerate the ancient plays to the point of banning new ones. And there are secrets in this bunch - some big, some small, many of them tragic. And our playwright forges them together into a company and something more.

Worth it if you can find it folks.