Harry Potter's New Rival, Shadow Mancer is a Christian
Valor Studios, home of the world's finest military artwork and collectibles!
Support the community!
Paratrooper.net Commo Room
Home       Members    Calendar    Who's On
Welcome Guest ( Login | Register )
        



Harry Potter's New Rival, Shadow Mancer is a Christian Expand / Collapse
Author
Message
Posted 4/29/2004 8:02 PM
Seasoned Vet

Seasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned VetSeasoned Vet

Group: Past PNET Supporter
Last Login: 10/22/2008 8:18 PM
Posts: 2,826, Visits: 546

I really was not sure were to post this.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/booksmags/bal-to.book27apr27,0,7742707.story?coll=bal-features-headlines

Harry Potter's new rival
'Shadowmancer' is a Christian option for fantasy readers
   Talk about it
 E-mail it
 Print it
 Contact us
 
By Jennifer Lehman
Sun Staff
Originally published April 27, 2004
For parents who love seeing their children read but, as Christians, worry about Harry Potter's positive depictions of witchcraft, today's arrival of G.P. Taylor's Shadowmancer would seem a godsend. The book, already a hit overseas (it spent 15 weeks at No. 1 on British book charts), offers parents an alternative to author J.K. Rowling's juggernaut Potter series while promising young readers a similar tale of adventure, but with biblical references vs. flying brooms.

And in the writings of British author Taylor, a vicar in the parish of Whitby, good always outweighs evil.

"[We have] 54 copies on hand and we've already sold 10," says Anne Heinricks, an associate at Borders in Columbia, adding that the store already has a Shadowmancer display in the children's section.

Shadowmancer is set in 18th-century London, where an evil vicar, Obadiah Demurral, uses sorcery to set a course toward world domination. All that stands between him and his victory are teen-agers Thomas, Raphah and Kate.

Taylor took nine months to write Shadowmancer, his first book. He sold his beloved motorcycle to cover costs of self-publishing, never expecting a hit.

Since then, Taylor has signed with Putnam Publishing, was offered a $4 million-plus movie deal and has been writing the sequel, Wormwood, due out in June.

Still, on these shores, many bookstores have yet to discover Shadowmancer.

"I haven't heard of it," says Janet Loizeaux, purchasing and receiving clerk at Trustworthy Bookstore in Randallstown. Loizeaux says a book like Shadowmancer is needed at the store, but its supplier doesn't carry it.

Others have been anticipating its arrival.

JoAnn Fruchtman, owner of Children's Book Store in Baltimore, runs a fantasy book group and says she plans to discuss Shadowmancer with the children.

"We actually gave the kids in the fantasy club a folder about it ahead of time," she says. "Most of them know about the book and they'll read it."

As for Shadowmancer vs. Harry Potter, Fruchtman demurs.

"It's a different author, different fantasy, a different book," she says.

Pat Kohr, owner of His Way Christian Bookstore in Ellicott City, says that's just what she's hoping for. "[Harry Potter's] not a book that I would want my children to read," she says. "I think Christians have come along with this to give kids an option."

Kohr, who has owned the bookstore for 26 years, reads all of the books in her store and won't stock anything that she feels doesn't glorify God. Shadowmancer will be no different.

"I will reserve final judgment," she says.

 

 

 

Copyright © 2004, The Baltimore Sun | Get home delivery
 Talk about it      E-mail it      Print it      Contact us

Top books & mags headlines
• Learning to talk the talk
• Writer is back with an old tale
• Stalin, the essence of evil: the peril of true believers
• Rats, rats, rats and more rats - which (almost) nobody can love
• Lawyer, priest, doctor, policeman

Top baltimoresun.com headlines
• Marines, civic leaders broker deal on Fallujah (10:01 PM)
• A crusade to stop the voracious fish (10:14 PM)
• Sept. 11 commission questions Bush, Cheney (6:04 PM)
• Water taxi victims are remembered (10:07 PM)
• 'Horrifying' sinkhole fall recounted by driver (9:47 PM)


 

 



Evil Unchecked Grows, and Evil Tolerated Poisens The Entire System. Jahwal Nehru

-------------------------------------------------------------

In the beginning of a change the patriot is a scarce man, and brave, and hated and scorned. When his cause succeeds, the timid join him, for then it costs nothing to be a patriot.
Mark Twain.

Post #116272
« Prev Topic | Next Topic »


All times are GMT -7:00, Time now is 1:19am

Powered By InstantForum.NET v4.1.4 © 2008
Execution: 0.203. 8 queries. Compression Disabled.