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|first printing=September 26, 1994 | |first printing=September 26, 1994 | ||
|ISBN-13=978-00610542426 | |ISBN-13=978-00610542426 | ||
|followed by=[[Whispering Woods (novel)|Whispering Woods | |followed by=[[Whispering Woods (novel)|Whispering Woods]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Arena''' is the very first ''[[Magic]]'' novel ever produced. It was published in October 1994<ref>Forstchen, W. R., & None. (1994). ''Arena''. HarperEntertainment. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/263208.Arena</ref> and was written by [[William R. Forstchen]]. The novel is not part of any cycle, but its story is connected to the [[Greensleeves Trilogy]]. | |||
==Plot== | |||
== Plot == | |||
Festival will never be the same again. | Festival will never be the same again. | ||
For even as the fighter | For even as the fighter mages of the four great houses prepare for their annual battle in the arena, a stranger arrives for the Festival. Who is [[Garth One-Eye]], and where did he get his powerful spells? What is his interest in the fifth House, destroyed a generation ago? And why is the [[Grand Master of the Arena]] so afraid of what Garth might do? | ||
The answer may bring about the fall of the four houses - or Garth's death. | The answer may bring about the fall of the four houses - or Garth's death. | ||
== Summary == | ==Summary== | ||
The [[wizard]] Garth arrives in the city of [[Estark]] and is befriended by [[Hammen]], an old man who is the leader of a brotherhood of pickpockets. Garth quickly becomes known as One-Eye after winning a magical duel on a public street. | |||
Estark is a brutal city where the populace's favored pastime is watching and betting on bloody battles, both on the streets and in the [[Arena]]. [[Zarel]], Grand Master of the Arena, uses the games to keep the populace and the Four Houses of fighter wizards in check. Every year, the city hosts a tournament in the Arena, called the [[Festival of Estark]]. In the past, this event consisted of fairly harmless testing of skills between the Houses. This changed after the former Grand Master killed off the entire Fifth House and took their cache of mana, becoming Planeswalker [[Kuthuman]]. After this, the four surviving Houses have fought in ever-bloodier gladiatorial wizard matches. The Planeswalker returns to watch these yearly bloodbaths, taking his tribute of [[mana]] and supposedly allowing the wizard who wins the tournament to come with him on his extra-planar travels. In reality, he kills them and takes their mana and spells, preventing any rivals from arising. | |||
While in Estark, Garth witnesses a skilled [[Benalia|Benalish]] warrior win a fight in the streets, even though her opponent fought dishonorably and failed to pay the bet. Garth prevents her from being stabbed in the back by her opponent's friend and later confronts her foe's House with her. The warrior, [[Norreen]], says thanks to Garth, but remains aloof, especially after being taunted vulgarly by Hammen. She has entered the city to earn the title of Hero so that she might escape the caste system of her home since her caste, the 7th, is currently at the bottom and any of the higher castes could demand anything of her. | |||
Magical duels continue throughout the city. The standard practice in fighter-wizard battles is to bet a spell on the outcome. If the fight is to the death, the bet is the loser's entire satchel of spells and mana. Garth gets involved in several of these fights, joining and abandoning each of the Houses in turn. He stirs up discord and rioting in the already dangerous and unstable city. | |||
Garth is captured and tortured by Grand Master Zarel, who wishes to know what his plan is, but he is freed by Hammen, Norreen, and [[Varena]] (a fighter whose respect he had earned and with whom he'd had a one-night stand). | |||
Finally, he appears in the Arena and fights under the colors of the Fifth House, of which he is revealed to be a rare survivor. He lost his eye when his family was killed by the Grand Master. We also find that Hammen is of the Fifth House as well and used to serve Garth's father, who was the leader of the House. When Garth is about to be killed, Norreen leads the crowd as a mob into the Arena to aid him. | |||
Later, to kill Garth and satiate the mob's bloodlust, Grand Master Zarel and Planeswalker Kuthuman arrange for all the final battles of the Games to be deathmatches. Any fighters who oppose this are instantly killed by them. Garth is forced to kill Varena with a <c>Psionic Blast</c> after she makes it clear her honor as a fighter-wizard demands her to follow the rules of their match. | |||
Garth is | Garth wins the Arena's tournament and is whisked away by Planeswalker Kuthuman, who tries to kill him. Kuthuman fails and then explains to Garth that Planeswalkers are caught in an eternal struggle with each other for power and that he is therefore justified in exploiting and murdering mortals. Garth disagrees and wounds him, escaping. | ||
Back at the Arena, Varena is revived and rescued by Norreen, Hammen, and [[Naru]], a giant dim-witted fighter who considered Garth amusing. The city is thrown into chaos, the Four Houses fighting against Grand Master Zarel and being destroyed. Zarel is attacked by a mob and kills many of them as well. He is about to kill Norreen, Hammen, and Naru when Garth returns. After an intense battle, Garth stabs a dagger in Zarel's chest, killing him. Norreen embraces Garth and they vanish, pulled away by Planeswalker Kuthuman. | |||
Three years later, the city is rebuilt and the Arena festival is as it once was: a contest of skill rather than a bloodsport. Hammen and Naru are now masters of their respective Houses and Varena became the Grand Master. Norreen and Garth return, having defeated Planeswalker Kuthuman and sealed the portal he used so he could not return. The two of them meet with Hammen once again to let him know they are alive, then retire to the countryside to raise their child, whom they plan to name after him. | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==External links== | |||
*{{DailyRef|feature/arena-2013-06-18|Arena|[[Trick Jarrett]]|June 18, 2013}} | |||
[[Category:1994]] | |||
[[Category: |
Latest revision as of 10:45, 7 July 2023
This publication may no longer be canonical. |
Arena | ||||
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[[File:{{#setmainimage:Arena.jpg}}|250px]] | ||||
Publishing Information | ||||
Author(s) | William R. Forstchen | |||
First printing | September 26, 1994 | |||
ISBN-13 | 978-00610542426 | |||
|
Arena is the very first Magic novel ever produced. It was published in October 1994[1] and was written by William R. Forstchen. The novel is not part of any cycle, but its story is connected to the Greensleeves Trilogy.
Plot
Festival will never be the same again.
For even as the fighter mages of the four great houses prepare for their annual battle in the arena, a stranger arrives for the Festival. Who is Garth One-Eye, and where did he get his powerful spells? What is his interest in the fifth House, destroyed a generation ago? And why is the Grand Master of the Arena so afraid of what Garth might do?
The answer may bring about the fall of the four houses - or Garth's death.
Summary
The wizard Garth arrives in the city of Estark and is befriended by Hammen, an old man who is the leader of a brotherhood of pickpockets. Garth quickly becomes known as One-Eye after winning a magical duel on a public street.
Estark is a brutal city where the populace's favored pastime is watching and betting on bloody battles, both on the streets and in the Arena. Zarel, Grand Master of the Arena, uses the games to keep the populace and the Four Houses of fighter wizards in check. Every year, the city hosts a tournament in the Arena, called the Festival of Estark. In the past, this event consisted of fairly harmless testing of skills between the Houses. This changed after the former Grand Master killed off the entire Fifth House and took their cache of mana, becoming Planeswalker Kuthuman. After this, the four surviving Houses have fought in ever-bloodier gladiatorial wizard matches. The Planeswalker returns to watch these yearly bloodbaths, taking his tribute of mana and supposedly allowing the wizard who wins the tournament to come with him on his extra-planar travels. In reality, he kills them and takes their mana and spells, preventing any rivals from arising.
While in Estark, Garth witnesses a skilled Benalish warrior win a fight in the streets, even though her opponent fought dishonorably and failed to pay the bet. Garth prevents her from being stabbed in the back by her opponent's friend and later confronts her foe's House with her. The warrior, Norreen, says thanks to Garth, but remains aloof, especially after being taunted vulgarly by Hammen. She has entered the city to earn the title of Hero so that she might escape the caste system of her home since her caste, the 7th, is currently at the bottom and any of the higher castes could demand anything of her.
Magical duels continue throughout the city. The standard practice in fighter-wizard battles is to bet a spell on the outcome. If the fight is to the death, the bet is the loser's entire satchel of spells and mana. Garth gets involved in several of these fights, joining and abandoning each of the Houses in turn. He stirs up discord and rioting in the already dangerous and unstable city.
Garth is captured and tortured by Grand Master Zarel, who wishes to know what his plan is, but he is freed by Hammen, Norreen, and Varena (a fighter whose respect he had earned and with whom he'd had a one-night stand).
Finally, he appears in the Arena and fights under the colors of the Fifth House, of which he is revealed to be a rare survivor. He lost his eye when his family was killed by the Grand Master. We also find that Hammen is of the Fifth House as well and used to serve Garth's father, who was the leader of the House. When Garth is about to be killed, Norreen leads the crowd as a mob into the Arena to aid him.
Later, to kill Garth and satiate the mob's bloodlust, Grand Master Zarel and Planeswalker Kuthuman arrange for all the final battles of the Games to be deathmatches. Any fighters who oppose this are instantly killed by them. Garth is forced to kill Varena with a Psionic Blast after she makes it clear her honor as a fighter-wizard demands her to follow the rules of their match.
Garth wins the Arena's tournament and is whisked away by Planeswalker Kuthuman, who tries to kill him. Kuthuman fails and then explains to Garth that Planeswalkers are caught in an eternal struggle with each other for power and that he is therefore justified in exploiting and murdering mortals. Garth disagrees and wounds him, escaping.
Back at the Arena, Varena is revived and rescued by Norreen, Hammen, and Naru, a giant dim-witted fighter who considered Garth amusing. The city is thrown into chaos, the Four Houses fighting against Grand Master Zarel and being destroyed. Zarel is attacked by a mob and kills many of them as well. He is about to kill Norreen, Hammen, and Naru when Garth returns. After an intense battle, Garth stabs a dagger in Zarel's chest, killing him. Norreen embraces Garth and they vanish, pulled away by Planeswalker Kuthuman.
Three years later, the city is rebuilt and the Arena festival is as it once was: a contest of skill rather than a bloodsport. Hammen and Naru are now masters of their respective Houses and Varena became the Grand Master. Norreen and Garth return, having defeated Planeswalker Kuthuman and sealed the portal he used so he could not return. The two of them meet with Hammen once again to let him know they are alive, then retire to the countryside to raise their child, whom they plan to name after him.
References
- ↑ Forstchen, W. R., & None. (1994). Arena. HarperEntertainment. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/263208.Arena
External links
- Trick Jarrett (June 18, 2013). "Arena". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.