Magic Street

Unabridged
Author: Orson Scott Card
Narrator: Mirron E. Willis
Genres: Fantasy, Fiction
Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks
Date: October 2007
Length: 13 hours, 30 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

Living in a prosperous African-American neighborhood in Los Angeles is Mack Street, a mystery child. Abandoned by his birth mother, Mack passes from family to family, a boy surrounded by people yet deeply alone. He realizes how different he is from others the day he sees a narrow house. Passing through the magic house that no one else can see, Mack is plunged into a realm in which time and reality are skewed. There, what Mack does has strange effects on the “real world” of concrete, cars, commerce, and conflict.

Reviews (4)

Magic Street

Written by Jason Simms on November 11th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I have been an Orson Scott Card fan for years, but not since I read Lost Boys have I been so impacted by his work. This is a tremendous book filled with classic Card characterization. I was sceptical at first because the dust jacket didn't appeal to me, but I was wrong. And the greatest gift this book had to offer was the authors comments at the end. It is definitely one of his best!

Good story

Written by Anonymous from Sterling, VA on February 17th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

This would be an excellent book for high school kids to read along with the Shakespeare play that the story references. It puts a new twist on some old ideas. It creates a new set of heros from a section of society that is under-represented in the hero category.

Great book--better read than listened to

Written by Elly Catmull on December 6th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

The narrator who reads Magic Street is the same who reads Ender's Game. He's great with character voices, but he narrates in a very dry voice. I know Card uses a lot of sarcasm and dry humour, but this reader over-did it in my opinion. I canceled the rest of the CDs and checked the book out from the library. EXCELLENT book (I love fantasies about real-life people), I just realized I prefered to interpret it myself. Also, the language (while not extreme) was too much for me to be comfortable listening to around my young kids.

just weird

Written by SRH on October 24th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

It's not a bad read, but in his last few books, Card has just been ramming his "philoshophy of life" down our throats. The premise of the plot was quite bizzare too.

Author Details

Author Details

Card, Orson Scott

"Nobody had ever won the Hugo and Nebula awards for best novel two years in a row, until Orson Scott Card received them for Ender's Game and its sequel, Speaker for the Dead, in 1986 and 1987. The third novel in the series, Xenocide, was published in 1991, and the fourth and seemingly final volume, Children of the Mind, was published in August 1996. Now a new novel in the Ender's series, titled Ender's Shadow, was published in August 1999 from TOR -- but it's not a sequel. Instead, it returns to the events of Ender's Game and views them from the point of view of another character, a street urchin named Bean. As with Rashomon or The Alexandria Quartet, Card discovers a new story in the midst of the old, when seeing it through other eyes. A sequel to Ender's Shadow will be published in January 2001 entitled Shadow of The Hegemon.

But Orson Scott Card's experience is not limited to one genre or form of storytelling. His contemporary novels Lost Boys, Treasure Box, and Homebody brought a powerful emphasis on character and moral dilemmas to the old-fashioned ghost story. And his newest contemporary novel, Enchantment (April 1999 from Del Rey), is a romantic fantasy that has Sleeping Beauty being awakened by an American graduate student in Ukraine in 1991. The characters pass back and forth between Sleeping Beauty's world of ninth-century Russia and today's America, with the famous anti-hero of Russian folklore, the witch Baba Yaga, following close behind.

Card has broken new ground with each of his major works. ""The Homecoming Saga"" (the novels The Memory of Earth, The Call of Earth, The Ships of Earth, Earthfall, and Earthborn) was a retelling of ancient scripture as science fiction. Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus is the sine qua non of alternate history novels, in which time travelers return to keep Columbus from discovering America -- or at least from returning to Europe after having discovered it. It will be followed by books that reinvision Noah's flood and the Garden of Eden -- in historically, culturally, and scientifically plausible ways.

Perhaps Card's most innovative work is his American fantasy series The Tales of Alvin Maker, whose first five volumes, Seventh Son, Red Prophet, Prentice Alvin, Alvin Journeyman, and Heartfire are set in a magical version of the American frontier. Two more volumes, The Crystal City and Master Alvin, will complete this reexamination of American history.

His works have been translated into many languages, including Catalan, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovakian, Spanish, and Swedish.

A dozen of Card's plays have been produced in regional theatre, including the musical Barefoot to Zion (written in collaboration with his composer brother, Arlen L. Card), which played to sold-out houses in Utah as part of the Mormon Church's celebration of the sesquicentennial of the entry of the pioneers into Salt Lake Valley. His historical novel, Saints, has been an underground hit for several years, and Card has written hundreds of audio plays and a dozen scripts for animated video plays for the family market. And his TV series concept, The Gate, was purchased by the WB network for development. Meanwhile, Ender's Game is being developed for film by Robert Chartoff, co-producer of The Right Stuff, Raging Bull, and the Rocky series, with Card writing the screenplay.

Card has written two books on writing: Character and Viewpoint and How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy, the latter of which won a Hugo award in 1991. He has taught writing courses at several universities, including most recently a novel-writing course at Pepperdine, and has also taught at such workshops as Antioch, Clarion, Clarion West, and the Cape Cod Writers Workshop.

Born in Richland, Washington, Card grew up in California, Arizona, and Utah. He lived in Brazil for two years as an unpaid missionary for the Mormon Church. He received degrees from Brigham Young University (1975) and the University of Utah (1981). He currently lives in Greensboro, North Carolina. He and his wife, Kristine, are the parents of five children: Geoffrey, Emily, Charles, Zina Margaret, and Erin Louisa (named for Chaucer, Bronte and Dickinson, Dickens, Mitchell, and Alcott, respectively). "