Piers Anthony used to be one of my favorite authors in the 1980's and 1990's. I loved his Xanth series and found The Apprentice Adept series was to be a close second. So, I originally read this book way back when was I was in college, but that was so long ago that it was like reading this book for the first time. And let me say this, boy, oh boy, am I ever glad I did.
Piers Anthony is a wizard at writing highly entertaining stories. I love the idea of two worlds with the same landscape existing in two different dimensions with the same beings on both. Phaze is a world of magic with fantasy creatures with a luscious environment while Proton is a world of science where everyone lives under domes because the outside world has been devastated by mankind. On Proton, the Citizens have all the power while everyone else are naked serfs and on Phaze the Adepts rule the lands because they have the most powerful magic. What a totally cool idea!
I really enjoyed the new characters that the author created for this book. Stile, who was the main character in the first three books in this series, appears in the book, but he is no longer the focal point. Both his son, and the Blue Citizen's son, are the main characters. I also found that I really enjoyed reading about Fleta and Agape. I thought it was neat to have an amoeba-like character that could take whatever form she wanted, as long as her mass stayed the same. Fleta, on the other hand, can only turn into a human or a hummingbird, while he natural form in a unicorn. Mass doesn't matter on her world because Phaze is a land of magic.
As in the previous books, most of the other Citizens on Proton are power-hungry will do anything to obtain more power, while on Phaze, most of the Adepts feel the same way. I guess what they say is true: power corrupts . . . but not everyone. I think that it depends upon your moral makeup. Stile, who is the Blue Adept, and both the Brown and Red Adepts, are good and do help out Mach with the Adverse Adepts. The same thing can be said for the Citizens on Proton. They crave more power.
I have always enjoyed the quick pace of books by Piers Anthony and appreciate his writing style. Piers writes so that dialog drives the story forward, not a ton of heavy description, which I feel bogs down a story. Nothing is worse that a heavily descriptive book. Snooze city. This book is not a snooze and moves along at a brisk pace.
Overall, I found Out of Phaze to be a great story that has both fantasy and science fiction, which is an unusual mix to have both in one book. I enjoyed the new characters and loved the trouble they find themselves in. I highly recommend this book to any lover of Fantasy, but also feel that you need to start on the first book in this series, Split Infinity. As for me, I cannot wait to see what happens next in Robot Adept, as something happens at the end of this book that made me sit up and say, "Wow!"
I rated this book an 8½ out of 10.