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Book Cover

Conor Kostick

Award Winner!

IBbY Honour List 2006
International Reading Association Young Adult Choice


Children's fiction
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Book Details:
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Price: €7.95
Binding: pb
Pages: 320
Size: 196x130mm
ISBN-10 0-86278-877-3
ISBN-13 978-0-86278-877-3

Rights held: World, all languages.

Rights sold: Australia/New Zealand * Canada * Czech * Danish * French * German * Italian * Portuguese * Portuguese (Brazil) * Russian * Serbian * South Africa * Ukrainian * USA

Epic


by Conor Kostick

Blue Flag: For readers aged 10+
Blue Flag: For readers aged 10+

#WELCOME TO EPIC: PRESS START TO PLAY#.

On New Earth, Epic is not just a computer game, it's a matter of life and death. If you lose, you lose everything; if you win, the world is yours for the taking.

Seeking revenge for the unjust treatment of his parents, Erik subverts the rules of the game, and he and his friends are drawn into a world of power-hungry, dangerous players. Now they must fight the ultimate masters of the game -- The Committee. But what Erik doesn't know is that The Committee has a sinister, deadly secret, and challenging it could destroy the whole world of Epic.

Extracts available: read some of this book now ...
Chapter 1 -- A Death in the Family
Chapter 2 -- In Praise of Beauty

The Author Speaks
Conor Kostick answers questions about Epic
Where did the idea for Epic come from?

Links
Wikipedia page for Conor
Blog about Conor

Teaching Resources: free to view and download
Teaching guide to the book, written by the author, Conor Kostick

List of all available resources

Problems viewing resources? You will need a PDF file reader, such as Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free from Adobe.

Cover Gallery: other covers for this book
Australian edition cover Brazilian edition cover Czech edition (hardback)
German edition: hardback with holographic image Italian edition (hardback) cover Original O'Brien Press cover
Portuguese edition cover Serbian edition cover US edition cover


Praise for Epic

'kids in this country would love this book, as video games are a big component in kid life these days, and some even come to question gaming's place in the world at large. Can we really siphon off the all-too-human desire for violence and adventure through gaming? This book takes that idea about as far as it can go, and gives us some honest answers, while entertaining us right to the finish line.' Sherwood Smith, sfsite.com

Four stars: 'Call your first novel Epic and you run the risk of being thought, at the very least, ambitious - not that such a description will carry anything but the most favourable connotations when the book in question is something such as Kostick's. This is a fantasy novel which, while retaining many of the stock elements of the genre (dragon slaying, a magic ring, cataclysmic battles, treasure chests, fearsome weapons, inter alia), moves well beyond these conventional bits and pieces to allow for the incorporation of a challenging intellectual dimension. This, concerned essentially with political systems and the role of violence in such systems, may at time prove (especially in the earlier chapters of the novel) rather demanding and dense for younger teenage readers. For them, however, there will be other rewards: there will be the two interlocking parallel worlds of the novel and the cleverly devised 'Epic' role-playing computer game which the young Erik Haraldson and friends ultimately attempt to turn to their advantage when opposing the dictatorship of the 'small, self-selected elite' known as the Central Allocations committee. We are now ready for epic confrontations, in various senses, and for the vivid portrayal of a society (with some oblique allusions to our own) on the edge of disintegration. 'Epic,' as one of the committee remarks at one point, 'is a strange game with greater depths, more than perhaps we realise.' Like game, like book: 'clip on', as the characters say when play begins, and enjoy! Robert Dunbar, Books for Keeps

'a triumph of control, focus and a truly dazzlingwriting style that takes us through a world of avatars and ogres, orcs and dwarves, of human concerns and human feelings; a narrative that itself jestly deserves the word 'epic'. It succeeds on so many levels without ever resorting to the asinities of allegory but cannot fail to present resemblances to the nascent imperialism of our own world. Yet the book remains first and foremost an attention-grabbing, action tale in the new genre that might be called 'cyber-fiction'.' Tony Hickey, Village Magazine

'A fictional masterpiece, my only regret is that the game doesn't exist. Eagerly awaiting a sequel. I was surprised to get a book that i had heard nothing of. But I think all people over 12 should read your book. Especially if they are interested in Sci-Fi.' Shane Hunt (13), Chester

'This is, in my view, the most important Irish novel of this year'. Celia Keenan, The Sunday Independent

'I think the book was good because it is futuristic and it doesn't drag. I would recommend the book for the 10-13 age group.' Evening Echo (Andrew Burrows,Cork)

'It is moral without moralising, the distinctions between good and bad are blurred, as it suggests that everyone has the capacity for both. Its inherent existentialist philosophy gives the reader something to ponder, long after the book has been completed.' Books Ireland

'this is a fantastic novel. The story has both depth and action. Buy it.' Sue Ellis, Writeaway.org.uk

'Amid so many books in which the loss of knowledge seems inevitable and the tearing down of society a given, it was wonderful to read a book in which each movement was part of a set of sane, sensible, but fundamentally unpredictable chains of decision.
More please.' Farah Mendelsohn, The Inter-Galactic Playground

'Humanity has migrated to a new Earth. The social order is tough and weird. Citizens progress in society by winning points in a gigantic interactive computer game, and Erik's parents are losing badly. Erik applies his unconventional mind to winning. And why stop there? Why not go after the Committee that runs the game? A thoughtful, exciting science-fiction epic, with strong interpersonal and political resonances. The author is a games designer, and it shows. This book will appeal to computer-games zombies, and makes a good introduction to science-fiction.' Sam Llewellyn, Author of Little Darlings

I think that your book is brilliant. It is among the best books I've read and they include books by J.K. Rowling, Darren Shan and Eoin Colfer. 'Epic' really captured my imagination -- I loved the descriptions of the characters. The book is a real page tuner and I couldn't put it down. I've recommended it to the school librarian, local Scottish bookshops and my friends! Good luck with the next book. Send me an e-mail as soon as it is finished. Jamie (aged 12), Aberdeen

'It isn't all questing knights and hideous monsters ... A well-crafted novel ... It will appeal to older teenagers and adults who enjoy computer games' Audrey Baker, Inis Magazine