![]() ![]() Diane Duane brings us deep enough into the story that it doesn’t seem at all like a cheat it feels perfectly natural, and because of that, it isn’t a cheat at all. With the antagonist existing outside of time, he may be defeated and defeated and yet still return to attack again. That’s one of the interesting points about the series, by the way. (Things rarely do when you start playing around with magic.) The pair find an injured whale and soon find themselves called into action once again to fight the Lone Power. Nita and Kit fully expect to spend their time relaxing and playing in the water, but naturally, things don’t go according to plan. ![]() Glad their bookish daughter finally has a friend, the Callahans have invited Kit along to the beach with them for a vacation. ![]() After that, even an adult would want a bit of time off, and Nita and Kit have only just started to hit puberty.Īt first, all is well. The Lone Power came to their Manhattan, after all, and they had to call upon the statues of New York to defend the city. They are also on a well-deserved vacation. Nita and Kit, the young wizards who thwarted the Lone Power, reappear just as they were in the first book: young, brash, and in ever so slightly over their heads. The second book in Diane Duane’s Young Wizards series, Deep Wizardry, is just as good as the first, I’m happy to say. ![]()
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