Journeyman Wizard by Mary Frances Zambreno, 1994.
This book is the sequel to A Plague of Sorcerers.
Jermyn Graves has finished his apprenticeship and is ready to move onto his Journeyman studies. As a Spellmaker, an especially rare type of wizard, he really needs to study with a Master Spellmaker, and for years, there has only been one in the Wizard’s Guild: Lady Jean Allons. Jermyn’s current teacher, Theoretician William Eschar, once studied under her himself.
Mistress Allons is a formidable old woman, and Jermyn is nervous about going to live with her and completing the next part of his training. Master Eschar says that she is strict but an excellent teacher, and he has fond memories of her from his own youth. However, much has changed for Mistress Allons since those days.
Mistress Allons lives in her manor house in the small town of Land’s End with her widower son-in-law, Duncan, and her granddaughter, Brianne, who is only a little younger than Jermyn himself. Since the death of her only daughter, Annalise, in a mysterious accident during a magical experiment, Mistress Allons has not really practiced magic and no longer even keeps a familiar. As Jermyn soon learns, everyone in Land’s End is still haunted by Annalise’s death.
Although Brianne has magical talent, both her father and grandmother refuse to let her study magic. In defiance and because her talent will not allow her to leave magic alone, Brianne has taken to studying magic with a local Hedgewitch, Maudie. Hedgewitches, or Wise Women as they call themselves, practice a very natural form of magic, but it can also be very dangerous because of its raw, undisciplined nature. Although magical accidents are usually rare, that type of magic is more prone to them than the more formal kind that Jermyn is studying. Jermyn tries to convince Brianne of the danger, but Brianne sees it as her only hope for learning anything, in view of her father and grandmother’s opposition.
Jermyn is not there for very long before Mistress Allons herself dies, the victim of another strange magical accident. Was it really just a terrible accident, or was it actually murder? Jermyn struggles to find the answers while some people believe that he may have been responsible for Mistress Allons’s death himself.
I enjoyed the fascinating combination of mystery and fantasy in this short series. While Jermyn’s magical studies are fictional, the book has some interesting insights into cross-disciplinary studies as Jermyn comes to understand something that Mistress Allons was trying to explain to him about using lessons from art and science to solve magical problems because different fields of knowledge are connected and the principles of one discipline have some bearing on the other.
There is also something interesting that Jermyn says to the evil wizard who is responsible for everything about how he can’t really do all the things that he thinks he can do (specifically flying) because the kind of drugs that evil wizards use to boost their powers also cause hallucinations. When I was in college, I did a report about witchcraft trials, and some of the plants used by supposed “witches” in their potions also had hallucinogenic properties, which is probably the origin of the belief in flying witches. Just an interesting little cross-over from real history.
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