The Invincible Man

by Robert Bowman


Formats

Softcover
$20.95
$11.50
Softcover
$11.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 1/1/2002

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 232
ISBN : 9780759621374

About the Book

A dead witch haunts A'ly'la’s mind, the ghost of her former forgotten self. They are both assassins, at war over which one of them will live in their body. Passing through Mithris and the Land of Domes on the way back to the ghostly one’s birthplace, they get omens of dangers, including a Talisman of Vengeance, a flaxen girl, a menace of trees, and an Invincible Man. In the Land of Domes, A'ly'la falls in love with its callow, angry King Darr’b. He was put there to rule after being cheated out of the throne of Mithris by his mother and her second husband, Azhn, the sinister Barban King. Azhn is A'ly'la’s father by his adoption of her as soulmate to his daughter.

A'ly'la defeats the ghost inside her, but Darr’b and she are besieged in his castle by rebels. She and Lord Derotql, a holy assassin who protects King Darr’b, fight the rebels. The witch Urtha greets them, men in green accost them, a vindictive Mage haunts them, and the King’s Uncle, Lord Madness, is killed by the Bear God. A'ly'la uses the magic of the ghost inside her to fight the rebel leader, a man armed by the Gods to be Invincible. His holy destiny will destroy her.

Friends and foes abound. To survive, A'ly'la has to solve the mystery of the Invincible Man, and discover how to defeat the undefeatable. To do so, she has to solve the mystery of herself.


About the Author

I was born and live in the U.S. Midwest, am married and have four children. I am a scientist (chemistry and behavior), university professor, and serve in elected public office.

Formative to my novels, I am an eclectic reader (philosophy, science, religion, literature) and have played Advanced Dungeons and Dragons for years. My fantasy novels are set in a medieval world in a fictitious universe. The novels assume dualism, with body and soul as different forms of existence, and awareness (the soul) as part of an unreal universe parallel to the real.

As in our known universe, physicality constitutes the real. Existences that are not physical are unreal. Thus, awarenesses, and the meanings carried by languages, are unreal; that is, though embodied in physical forms, they have no physicality. A complete theory of existence must incorporate them, but such theory has hardly advanced beyond Descartes’ "Cogito, ergo sum."

To illustrate, my book is my awareness, reaching out to yours. You and I and the book are embodied in the physical (the real). Yet, no physical analysis would reveal the meaning (the unreal) which the book transfers from the unreal-me to the unreal-you. The unreal of the book survives our deaths. But does our own unreal?