![]() ![]() Each element has its particular set of specialties, and its particular “logic.” Fire logic, for instance, works by intuition for “fire bloods,” metaphor and reality are the same. The Elemental Logic books are set in a secondary world in which individuals whose natures are dominated by one element, rather than a jumble of all four, are known as elemental witches: fire, earth, water, air. Happily, that is emphatically not the case. A wait of a dozen years is a decently long interval on this earth, and I know that I, a relative latecomer to Marks’s beautifully realized world of Shaftal, was worried whether the long gap would make the final volume feel different than, not as good as, the earlier books. ![]() Marks’s previous entries in the Elemental Logic series- Fire Logic (2002), Earth Logic (2004), and Water Logic (2007)-this statement will be all the encouragement you need to tackle the final volume of the series, which was published by Small Beer Press last year. I suspect that for those who’ve already read Laurie J. Air Logic has been a long time coming, and it was worth the wait. ![]()
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