Inheritance of Magic #1 An Inheritance of Magic Benedict Jacka

Posted October 6, 2024 by jrsbookr in Uncategorized / 1 Comment

by Benedict Jacka
Inheritance of Magic #1 An Inheritance of Magic  Benedict JackaAn Inheritance of Magic Series: Inheritance of Magic #1
Published by Penguin on October 10, 2023
Genres: Fiction / Fantasy / Contemporary, Fiction / Fantasy / Dark Fantasy, FICTION / Fantasy / Urban
Pages: 384
Find the Author: Website, Twitter, Goodreads, Amazon
Goodreads

The super-rich control everything—including magic—in this thrilling and brilliant, contemporary fantasy from the author of the Alex Verus novels.

The wealthy seem to exist in a different, glittering world from the rest of us. Almost as if by . . . magic.

Stephen Oakwood is a young man on the edge of this hidden world. He has talent and potential, but turning that potential into magical power takes money, opportunity, and training. All Stephen has is a minimum wage job and a cat. 

But when a chance encounter with a member of House Ashford gets him noticed by the wrong people, Stephen is thrown in the deep end. For centuries, the vast corporations and aristocratic Houses of the magical world have grown impossibly rich and influential by hoarding their knowledge. To survive, Stephen will have to take his talent and build it up into something greater—for only then can he beat them at their own game.

Reading Challenges: Beat the backlist, Netgalley Backlist

Review:

An Inheritance of Magic is the first creative book in the Inheritance of Magic series by Benedict Jacka. I read this a second time to refresh my knowledge on the various aspects of the Duracraft world that we learned in book one. Our main character is a young adult who dabbles in dura craft after his father leaves him with a note to keep practicing. Stephen is just trying to survive at a mediocre job when an encounter with a random girl with some fascinating eye-opening information is on his doorstep. Stephen soon learns he is part of a wealthy family who is politically high up in the world of dura craft and has no idea what he is doing, but soon he figures it out with the help of all people, a priest. I like this type of trope in fantasy as we go in with the character knowing a little, but by the end of the book, we learn quite a bit by fumbling around with the magic and those we encounter in the plot. Stephen is a loveable character, and I almost stopped reading when they harmed the cat, but the cat becomes so much more important after that part, so press on. It is worth it.

 

 

About Benedict Jacka

One overcast day in November I sat down at a study cubicle in my school library. I was 18 years old and in my final year at City of London School, and the library was on the third floor, looking out over the River Thames. I was supposed to be working but instead I stared out of the window across the water, and when I finally picked up my pen what I began to write in the back of my exercise book wasn’t schoolwork but the notes for a story.

To this day I can’t tell you why I started that story that afternoon. I’d written stories before, but no more than any other bookish kid – usually they were done for a school assignment or quickly abandoned. But for some reason this one stayed in my head and sometime over that winter I opened up a Word file on my computer and started writing. I didn’t really have a plan, I just wanted to see what would happen.

I kept writing, and then kept writing some more. Winter turned into spring, spring turned into summer, and by the time I finished at the end of that year what I had wasn’t a story but a 100,000 word novel. Somewhere along the line I’d had it suggested that it might be publishable, so I sent it to some agencies to see if they were interested. They weren’t, but by the time that had been established I’d finished a second novel and was ready to send that out instead.

I kept writing through my time at Cambridge University, leaving three years later with a BA in Philosophy and a very good agent, Sophie Hicks. My first three novels had been children’s fantasy, but the one that finally got published was children’s non-fantasy, a book called To Be A Ninja (later reprinted as Ninja: The Beginning).

It took me a little under 7 years to go from that day in the library to being published for the first time, and it’s been just short of another 7 years from that first publication to today. As I write this it’s the first days of 2012, I’m 31 years old, and once again I’m home in London – I’ve lived in different cities and countries, but London’s the place I always come back to. Along the way I’ve worked for a year in the Civil Service, taught English to kids of various nationalities in England and Romania before doing it full-time for six months in China, spent an interesting period working in North London as a bouncer, and most recently went back to college for a GDL/LPC in order to become a solicitor. I’ve also studied a few martial arts (boxing, Krav Maga, and ninjutsu), gone in for competitive ballroom dancing, spent an enormous amount of time reading (especially Agatha Christie, Tolkien, Jack Vance, Jim Butcher, and Robert Jordan), and skated across most of London at one time or another. I also love gaming, both on computers (Final Fantasy, Suikoden, Fire Emblem, Halo, EVE) and tabletop RPGs (Star Wars, WoD, and especially D&D – I play once or twice a week and GM too).

And that brings us up to date. I’ve needed a new website for a while and with the upcoming launch of the Alex Verus series in March 2012 I decided to sort out a proper webpage. I’m very happy with the Alex Verus books and his world – it’s the best work I’ve done and I’m looking forward to writing more. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did writing them!

Reading this book contributed to these challenges:

One response to “Inheritance of Magic #1 An Inheritance of Magic Benedict Jacka