Specify Books Toward Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5)
Original Title: | Conrad's Fate |
ISBN: | 0060747455 (ISBN13: 9780060747459) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Chrestomanci #5 |
Characters: | Christopher Chant, Conrad Tesdinic |
Literary Awards: | Locus Award Nominee for Best Young Adult Novel (2006) |
Diana Wynne Jones
Paperback | Pages: 400 pages Rating: 4.06 | 9191 Users | 454 Reviews

Describe Regarding Books Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5)
Title | : | Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5) |
Author | : | Diana Wynne Jones |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 400 pages |
Published | : | May 9th 2006 by Greenwillow Books (first published March 2005) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Young Adult. Fiction. Childrens. Magic |
Interpretation In Favor Of Books Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5)
Someone at Stallery Mansion is changing the world. At first, only small details, but the changes get bigger and bigger. It's up to Conrad, a twelve-year-old with terrible karma who's just joined the mansion's staff, to find out who is behind it.But he's not the only one snooping around. His fellow servant-in-training, Christopher Chant, is charming, confident, and from another world, with a mission of his own -- rescuing his friend, lost in an alternate Stallery Mansion. Can they save the day before Conrad's awful fate catches up with them?
Rating Regarding Books Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5)
Ratings: 4.06 From 9191 Users | 454 ReviewsDiscuss Regarding Books Conrad's Fate (Chrestomanci #5)
I had forgotten I'd read this before, so I read it again. This time I'm giving it four stars.___________________________This is one DWJ's worse, which is why I'm giving it three stars - really I'd like to give it four, at least. Like The Pinhoe Egg, this lacks the perfection of character and form of the 'real' four Chrestomanci books. It drags at the start and squashes the conclusion into the last chapter, and relies on an unrealistic omission by Anthea to create the plot.Naturally, though, itNatasha asked me about what I was reading and I tried to explain. That it's alternate universes, some with magic, some with technology, some with both, and the magician in charge of keeping thins in line, and magicians with nine lives, and kinds in boarding schools, and feuding families in Italy, and...well, all of that isn't in this one, but the series is kind of all over the place, wherever an interesting story occurred to her. And there's no big overarching storyline, as there is in Harry
Not quite as good as MAGICIANS OF CAPRONA or LIVES OF CHRISTOPHER CHANT, but all Christopher is good. I could wish that the final resolution was clearer. I am still trying to sort out who is who. (If Amos is actually Conrad's uncle -- the brother of his father -- then who is Uncle Alfred? I kind of think Alfred is the brother of Conrad's -mother-, but then how can he pretend to the lordship of the castle after eliminating other family members? Wouldn't Conrad himself be a more likely heir?) And

Its been a while since I read the Chrestomanci series, so when I started out with the first book, I just kept going until Id reread the whole thing. My favorite out of the lot, curiously enough, is right in the middle of the series. Conrads Fate is a later book by Diana Wynne Jones, and I dont often hear much about it, but its just as good as the rest of the series and a perfect example of what makes Diana Wynne Jones great. The worldbuilding, little character moments, and just general, well,
A boy with bad karma searches for the source of it at a magical estate, and stumbles into the company of a young Christopher Chant. This is the first in Chrestomanci book (and, IIRC, the first DWJ book I've read) to be in first person; I don't actively dislike the switch, but nor does it add any particularly distinct narrative voice. The upstairs/downstairs estate setting is lively, and DWJ as always nails the lived details and critical humor which make it work; I wish the final reveals hadn't
I finished my third Chrestomanci book, Conrad's Fate, and while I still quite enjoyed it, I think the previous two I've read, Charmed Life and The Lives of Christopher Chant, were a bit better. This one was fun, we followed young Christopher Chant in his years before taking over the role of Chrestomanci; this time he was posing as a domestic in the grand estate of Stallchester in the dimension of Series 7 while searching for his enchantress friend, Mille in the ever-shifting worlds surrounding
I hadn't reread this since it first came out, so rereading now was odd and delightful. Teen!Christopher (and Conrad and Millie) are delightful as ever and the plot is full of exciting hijinks, but I was startled by how abrupt the ending is. A lot of the stuff involving the Travelers is a bit cringey now, and also, it was WILD to realize how very little we get of Anthea--I have such enormous fondness for her and so much of a sense of who she is that just...isn't on the page? It really reminded me
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