The Magician: The Secrets of the Immortal

Reference; The Magician: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel 

Daily Bullcrap Clickbaits  

WHAT COLOR IS YOUR MAGICAL AURA?
READ MORE TO FIND OUT!

___

By Sydney Draney

Image result for magical powers

INTRODUCTION

The Magician By Michael Scott is a wonderful book that expresses the fullness of all magical essence. One of Harry Potter’s biggest competitors. 

“The best lie is wrapped around a core of truth.” -Michael Scott, The Magician 

This quote is a great example of this article. The Magician is a great book, but you are probably wasting your time reading this. It’s just for a school assignment, you can’t actually learn how to use magic. Right? No, you can’t. I think. It’s fine just keep reading to find out?

“And in their rush to create wonders, they have ignored the wonders all around them, ignored the mysteries, the beauty.” -Michael Scott, The Magician 

This is one of the many inspiring messages that this book has to offer. There are many different types of themes throughout this book but one of the main ones is to be ready. To be ready for anything. And I mean anything. Image result for ad for shoes

Are you going to heaven or hell? Click here to find out… 800-333-660 For more info…

SUMMARY

A summary of the book would start with the main characters taking a lei gate to the center of Paris, and it would end with them running from stone statues that attacked them from a giant cathedral. The main character Josh, has yet to be awakened and becomes jealous of his sister. Meanwhile, He is also losing trust faster and faster with the Alchemist Nicholas. Image result for pokemon

Sophie, Josh’s sister, learns the magic of fire and uses it for the first time in battle. The heros’ notice her immense power and Josh’s potential. Josh is armed with the cursed weapon the Clarent. He seems to yearn for power more and more throughout this book. 

At the end of the book Scathath is kidnapped and the city of paris is damaged from Nidhogg’s destruction. Josh gets his powers awakened by Mars, and Mars gives Josh a gift. We don’t know what he did to Josh, but we do know that there is no asking, because Mars sank into the earth, when Nicholas used a transmutation spell. 

Try it out today! Use Sticky Notes!Image result for ad for pills

Insurgent

Insurgent was published in March of 2015 by author Veronica Roth, and it is the second book in the Divergent series. Divergent, Insurgent, and even the third book, Allegiance, were popular enough to receive their own respective movies. This isn’t a review of the series though, just Insurgent. The book starts right from where the predecessor ends, with little transition and offering little information that was already covered in the first book. Because of this, information from the first book must be understood to give an accurate analysis of the second book. I will first go over a brief synopsis of the first book and all the relevant details before explaining the plot of the book’s two parts.

The Divergent series’s main protagonist is Tris, whom I will refer to often. In the first book, she left her family in Abnegation faction to instead live as a Dauntless, as her world is divided into five factions, which represent ideologies. During her life as a Dauntless initiate, she realizes that she will seldom see her parents, and begins to question how much she really knows them. Tris’s feelings amplify when her mother visits her on Visiting Day, because her mother seems strangely different from her usual Abnegation self. Fast forward to the final turning point of the first book, Tris’s mother sacrifices herself to save Tris’s life and continue her progression to destroy the simulation file. This ends up being an essential reason for Tris’s success, but also builds to the massive inner conflict that she has during the first part of Insurgent. I have seen some people criticize the book for not resolving the inner conflict she gained in the first book, and instead saving it for the next. I personally do not mind, and very much enjoyed the first book.

I am not writing a review for the first book though, so let me continue by analyzing the first part of the second book. The first parts dwells majorly in two of Tris’s inner conflicts: killing one of her best friends, Will, and the death of her mother. While she’s travelling from faction to faction to gain info, she’s also engaging in reckless acts of selflessness, because she has stopped prioritizing her own life after tension between her friends and all the weight put on her shoulders from the last book.To overly summarize things, her final act of recklessness was to sacrifice herself to Erudite headquarters in exchange for the lives of her friends, being controlled by Erudite simulation. Her inner conflict was finally resolved when she was seconds away from dying, which made her realize her will to live because of how real it all felt. I personally did not enjoy the way the author made this happen. Before staring at the eyes of death, Tris revealed no sign of ever wanted to live in her inner dialogue. This made her revelation feel unnatural and slightly forced by the author. I would have preferred if, instead, she slowly began to recover from her unhealthy mindset from small actions, with her near-death being the cherry on top, finally changing her mindset in the heat of the moment. Regardless of how it happened, this concludes the first part of the book, and the part of Tris’s life that she couldn’t overcome.

Once she escapes Erudite headquarters, Tris goes with her boyfriend to recover in the homes of the factionless. I mention her boyfriend, Tobias, because the second part of Insurgent mainly focuses on Tris’s betrayal to him. To understand why she betrayed him, the events in between must first be understood. Once Tris is near recovery, the loyal Dauntless form new leaders and then conspire with the factionless. The goal they develop is to destroy all of the data stored at Erudite headquarters to render them powerless. Tris is secretly against this plan because she discovered that the Erudite have information stored that her mother was trying to find before she died, so she wants to preserve the data that will otherwise be destroyed by Dauntless. She has no proper way to convince the Dauntless that the information is too important to destroy, though, so she then conspires with her only option, Tobias’s father, who also knows the importance of the information. Tobias and his father, Marcus, are on very poor terms, so she does not trust Tobias enough to ask for his help. Instead, she gathers a friend and a few Erudite traitors to assist her and Marcus. To summarize that entire mission, Tris’s insurgency fails, up until Tobias uses his Dauntless authority to probe the security details of the data from a capable Erudite. I really enjoy the theme in this part of the book for two reasons. First: Tris’s insurgent mission allows for her to better understand her mother, and because next-to fully recovered from her mother’s death. Second: Tobias decided to put his trust in Tris even after she betrayed him to work with his father, because of the bond they had built beforehand.

The story ends directly after Tobias broadcasts the knowledge of the outside world to the public, leaving us on a cliff-hanger. I personally don’t mind that, because I have already started reading the next book, but others may not share my opinions. Now, I honestly enjoyed this book, and although I criticized the first part, I will still rate this book four out of five stars. There were no points during this book where I was uninterested, and I enjoyed the massive amount of personal conflict, both with Tris and Tobias, and Tris with herself. That being said, this book had little plot that related directly to the ultimate goal, which I consider to be resolving whatever conflict is in the outside world. Instead this book mostly focuses on the preparation and build-up for the third book’s main plot. For that reason, I would not rate this book anymore than four stars, as it feels more like a transition that a main event. Regardless, the transition was smooth and I thoroughly enjoyed this book.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

PTSD Clarinet Boy meme

At the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Dumbledore’s funeral is held, and people from all across the world show up, including Umbridge. Seeing as though Umbridge was kidnapped by the Centaurs, she most likely had a PTSD flashback, (Rowling, 644)

This scene was important to me because it was one of the most emotional scenes in the whole series. Dumbledore was always one of my most favorite characters. And as Umbridge was only there for self-gain, she deserved to be dragged back into the forest again.

Baby Yoda meme

In this scene, Dumbledore is confronted by Malfoy and some other death eaters before Snape kills him. (Rowling, 595) Before that Dumbledore freezes Harry into place, who is waiting for Dumbledore to unfreeze him, and either help or run, when there’s an opportunity. However, that never happens.

This scene is important to me because this is another one of the most emotional scenes in the series, and also one of the most important scenes in the series as well. While the picture above makes fun out of this, this scene did have an emotional impact on me.

 meme

In this scene, Harry is asked by Romilda, a cute girl in his year, to sit next to her and her friends instead of Neville and Luna, and Harry coldly declined. (Rowling 138) The joke is that Harry’s a clown for not doing it. Of course, this isn’t true it’s only a joke, and Harry made the right choice.

This scene is important to me because it shows some of Harry’s true character into play. Harry is a true friend, and he’s willing to do anything for them, even if they aren’t willing to do anything for him, and they would do anything for him.

In these scenes, Harry tells his friends that Draco may be a death eater. Barely anybody believes him, and Harry ends up being right anyway. (Rowling, 135) But when they find out Harry uses the book by the mysterious Half blood-prince, their reactions seem more exaggerated, especially Hermione’s reaction.

These scenes are important to me because both of them were very interesting parts of the book and some of my favorites as well. Both of these scenes are also major plot points.

Pennywise

In this scene, Harry spies/stalks on Malfoy in the Hogwarts express to see if he can get any information on him, to confirm that he’s become a death eater. And this isn’t even the first time in the book Harry has followed him around.

This scene is important to me because it’s a very strange thing for Harry to do something like this, and sure, Malfoy has always been somewhat of a bad guy, (nothing worse than a bully) it’s an interesting thing for Malfoy to be an actual bad guy.

References

Rowling, J.K. (2005) Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.