Margins
The City in Stone
2004
First Published
3.82
Average Rating
300
Number of Pages

Part of Series

In THE CITY IN STONE, the long-awaited sequel to Eisenstein’s classics The Sorcerer’s Son and The Crystal Palace… The age of the Great Sorcerers past long ago. Now, they exist only as beings of myth and legend. Only the older elementals remember what the world was like when power and magic flowed freely. Three young apprentices use magic and elemental lore to discover where these mighty sorcerers lived. As they begin to excavate, strange things start to happen. Can Cray Ormuru stop them before the City in Stone reveals its dark secrets?
Avg Rating
3.82
Number of Ratings
11
5 STARS
18%
4 STARS
45%
3 STARS
36%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Phyllis Eisenstein
Author · 9 books

Phyllis Eisenstein was born in Chicago in 1946 and, except for two years in Germany and one winter in Upper Michigan as an Air Force wife, has spent her life there. In her early student days, she worked as a butcher, grocery clerk, bowling alley pin-setter, and tutor. She dropped out of college to join her new husband Alex overseas, eventually selling two stories in 1969, the first being a collaboration with Alex that appeared in Robert Silverberg's New Dimensions 1. Ten years later, after her third novel was published, she went back to school to acquire a degree in Anthropology from the University of Illinois. Phyllis got her first taste of teaching while assisting Roger Zelazny at the Indiana University Writers Conference in 1977 and went on to teach SF and fantasy writing at the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop, Oakton Community College, and the Writers Digest School. For more than a dozen years she has been a member of the faculty of Columbia College Chicago, where she also edited two volumes of Spec-Lit, a soft cover anthology showcasing SF by her students and others, which sold through bookstores nationally. In 1999, the school honored her with its "Excellence in Teaching" Award. Both alone and with Alex, she has published six novels and about three-dozen shorter works in the science fiction, fantasy, and horror genres, as well as a popular nonfiction book on treating arthritis. Her stories have been nominated twice for the Hugo Award, three times for the Nebula. In her spare time she plays solitaire, writes the occasional book review, and reads widely in a vast array of arcane and not-so-arcane subjects. Though not a practicing mystic, as Madame Klein she has long read Tarot cards at parties and science fiction gatherings, putting her early psych training to good use and astounding the skeptical with her results.

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