Witnessing a friend's death at the hands of a demon, English professor Skye King finds himself unwittingly hooked onto the MagicNet, a computer-generated, magical force that has taken on a life of its own. Reprint.
John DeChancie Orden de los libros
John DeChancie es un aclamado autor cuyas obras imaginativas abarcan la ciencia ficción, la fantasía y el terror. Sus novelas de ciencia ficción y fantasía han cautivado a los lectores durante más de quince años, ganándose comparaciones con los nombres más venerados del género. DeChancie es célebre por sus tramas alucinantes y su habilidad para crear narrativas expansivas y que invitan a la reflexión. Además, su escritura de fantasía humorística ofrece un contrapunto caprichoso pero literario a los cuentos más tradicionales, demostrando una voz versátil y entretenida.





- 1994
- 1991
Castle Murders
- 242 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
- 1989
Castle Kidnapped
- 216 páginas
- 8 horas de lectura
The magical Castle Perilous malfunctions, sending its guests to wacky worlds such as a planet of golf-crazed dinosaurs and a world of Amazon women
- 1989
Once upon a time, the king of a mysterious castle found himself out of place. The odd thing was that the time was the future and the place was New York City! Castle Perilous had been a universe unto itself until it started living up to its name. Now it is a gateway to thousands of universes, each increasingly bizarre and more bewildering. Behind every door there is a room for every fantasy and around each corner a perilous journey for every inhabitant. With its population sent to otherworldly realms and demented demons taking their place, will anyone find their way home in time? The stone walls may be the only stable element in this fantastic fable, as time and place disappear before one's eyes. Pandora's box has never been so big!
- 1987
Crooked House
- 346 páginas
- 13 horas de lectura
Pikadon's stairways lead nowhere. Its doors open to reveal solid, impenetrable walls. Its hallways form an unsolvable, twisting maze. Against its colossal structure people seem as insubstantial as ghosts. Pikadon is full of ghosts. Once the sun goes down, the labyrinthine corridors are haunted by the shambling, moaning dead. Blind and deaf, crippled, skin shredded by atomic blasts, the imprisoned dead stalk the imprisoned living.