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In this fourth episode of Sergei Sukhinov's monumental Emerald City sage, young hero Almar and his companions set out on a quest to find Torn's Sword, which will be essential in the coming struggle with the evil Pakir. But Pakir wants that weapon himself, and he sends out newcomer Donald on a quest of his own, at the head of the Dark Contingent. Which side will win this competition will keep the reader guessing right up to the last page.
In this ninth installment of Sukhinov's spectacular Emerald City saga, Almar, crushed by the defeat suffered by the Magic Land forces in Book 7, makes a perilous excursion around the Underground Kingdom,seeking information and his enslaved father, and he makes a new ally. Meanwhile, Ellie and her friends make an idyllic trip of their own through another plane of existence and meet up with Torn himself.
Things go badly for Magic Land in this eighth installment of Sukhinov's monumental Emerald City saga. Pakir, furious at the attack launched against him by Magic Land in the previous book, retaliates by closing off all of Munchkin Land with his sinister Infinite Wall and making the ogre Midgety its king.
In this seventh book of Sukhinov's Emerald City saga, the struggle between the forces of Good and Evil finally breaks out into open warfare as, at the urging of Marshal Magdar of the Marrans, the residents of Magic Land assemble an army, build a fleet of warships, and sail over the Subterranean Sea in order to carry out a preemptive strike on the Isle of Gorn, headquarters of the evil Pakir.
In this fifth installment of Sergei Sukhinov's monumental "Emerald City" saga, Agnet, lovely but treacherous lady-in-waiting to Stella (Baum's Glinda), steals the Golden Cap which commands the services of the Winged Monkeys, and when the three sorceresses assemble for a war conference, Agnet has the Monkeys carry them off to the City of Wraiths, so that she herself can take over the throne of Rose Land. How will the hapless sorceresses ever get out of this dilemma? The answer lies in this thriller.
Acclaimed Russian author Sergei Sukhinov has written a spectacular ten-part saga in which the people of Magic Land (the Russian version of L. Frank Baum's beloved Land of Oz) must contend with forces of unspeakable evil. And now this exciting series is being published for the first time in English translation. In this award-winning second installment, Ellie (Dorothy) returns to Magic Land after many years. At every step of her long and difficult journey, she is bedeviled by the sorceress Corina, who is out to avenge the death of her adoptive mother Gingema (the Wicked Witch of the East) and holds Ellie responsible.
This tenth and final installment of Sukhinov's "Emerald City" saga brings matters to a head, and leads up to the final battle between the evil Pakir's army and the forces of Light. The origins of several important characters are revealed in this story.
This third installment of Sergei Sukhinov's monumental Emerald City saga introduces the hero Almar, who has fled the tyranny of his homeland and, under the tutelage of Villina (Good Witch of the North), has developed into a skilled fighter. His services will be sorely needed as the attacks on Magic Land by the forces of the evil Pakir become ever more frequent, and violent.
This sixth installment of Sergei Sukhinov's "Emerald City" saga introduces the lovely but cold Langa, Princess of Darkness, henchwoman to the evil Pakir. At her command, the alchemist Parcelius does his utmost to produce the devastating Black Flame, which Pakir needs for his conquest of Magic Land -- and the world! When his efforts fail, he leads an army of golems to a certain underground cavern, where the Flame is reputed to be already, and the saga assumes a cosmic dimension.
Recipient of the 2018 Outstanding Faculty Research Achievement Award in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics at Syracuse University In 1939, Aleksandr Volkov (1891-1977) published Wizard of the Emerald City, a revised version of L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Only a line on the copyright page explained the book as a "reworking" of the American story. Readers credited Volkov as author rather than translator. Volkov, an unknown and inexperienced author before World War II, tried to break into the politically charged field of Soviet children's literature with an American fairy tale. During the height of Stalin's purges, Volkov adapted and published this fairy t...