The Domesticated Wizard
A wizard's life is not an easy life. One never knows who, or what, one's next client will be, or what kind of unpleasantness he, or she, or it, is bringing. And there's always the certainty of travel to far places over bad roads in nasty weather. It's no wonder wizards prefer to live solitary lives in isolated towers or ruins or caves. They're looking for some peace and quiet.
But it makes for a lonely life. So when a young man of 160 or so — no age at all for a wizard — meets a beautiful enchanted princess and releases her from a cruel spell, it seems the perfect chance to settle down to a life of cozy domesticity. With a bit of magic here and there to take care of the housework and a loyal house-troll to do the heavy lifting, things ought to be idyllic.
And they would be, if it weren't for the unreasonable clients, the barbarian swordsmen, the home furnishings with minds of their own, the otherworldly intruders, and the rest of those annoying day-to-day problems of the profession.
Contents:
- Foreword
- A Voice for Princess (novel)
- Spirits from the Vasty Deep
- Hey, Ho, the Wind and the Rain
- Introduction the First
- The Quality of Murphy
- The Questing of Kedrigern (novel)
- Introduction the Second
- Mirror, Mirror, Off the Wall
- Nest Egg
- Floored
- Afterword
- Bibliography
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