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80AD - The Jewel of Asgard (Book 1) Kindle Edition
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Take a very ordinary, very unhappy 14 year old boy, Phoenix. He's bored by school, hates his step-father, feels like he has no control over his life. In fact, the only things he does like are computer games and martial arts.
Add a smart, miserable 14 year old girl, Jade. She's the youngest of seven girls; teased and picked on; a misfit; her own mother doesn't get her. All she likes is books and botany.
Throw both these kids into a computer game - 80AD - AND into their avatar's bodies. Phoenix and Jade aren't 14 year old kids any longer. They're 17 year old warriors, confused and trapped in an ancient world of warfare, magic and death. They're stuck in 80AD Britain To Phoenix, it's fun - a gamer's dream come true. To Jade, it's a nightmare.
In order to get home, they have to play out Level One of 80AD. They have to find the Jewel of Asgard.
To do that, they must face murderous thieves, creatures of the Dywyllwch Brennau, uncanny powers of the Druids and the might of the invading Roman army.
Can they master their new bodies and survive in Iron Age Britain?
Can they beat the Romans to the Jewel and win Level One?
Will they make it home or will they be defeated by their arch-enemy, Feng Zhudai?
If he wins, they are stuck in 80AD forever - but is that so bad?
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateFebruary 15, 2013
- File size587 KB
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About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B0087Z9FLU
- Publisher : Computing Advantages & Training P/L (February 15, 2013)
- Publication date : February 15, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 587 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 225 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 0994566042
- Best Sellers Rank: #35,225 Free in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #159 in Historical Fantasy (Kindle Store)
- #412 in Sword & Sorcery Fantasy eBooks
- #445 in Science Fiction Adventure
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Aiki lives in Australia and hasn't yet died from ANY wildlife encounter. Go figure.
She has numerous published sci-fantasy and fantasy novels, plus an action-y romance with a kickarse heroine. She has also edited a couple of short story anthologies and has a number of her own short stories in various e-magazines and anthologies.
Her works have been shortlisted in the Australian Aurealis awards and in the USA Writers of the Future competition.
When not writing, she runs a business and does heroine-approved hobbies such as martial arts, archery, knife-throwing, lute-playing, and belly-dancing.
You're more than welcome to check out more details at www.aikiflinthart.com
Always love to hear from happy readers.
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This novel reminded me of an MMORPG-oh wait-it really is an MMORPG. I think anyone hooked on those MMORPG's has often wondered what it would be like to be in the game-really in the game. If you're like me and you know that your avatars have all died at least 30 times or more then it's only a passing thought. One that you let go of really quickly.
Of course this one is a free one- in fact all five books are free- and that's all five levels. Of course we've all often thought about writing a book based on our favorite game and so here we have someone who has- well I think the game is made up- but it all works in the way expected. I'm a fan of Science Fiction but having delved into to MMORPG's I had to check these books out.
80AD is targeted to young adults but it's a pretty darn good story and its quite entertaining for all ages. There are two major characters Phoenix and Jade the to unsuspecting teens who will get trapped in the game. Phoenix builds his character out of his desire to escape from his stepfather's abrasive behavior. Phoenix needs something to take out his aggressions on so he creates a warrior. Jade doesn't fit in and has been hoping if she hides that the rest of here family her 6 older sisters will forget about her and leave her behind. When she gets that wish she finds herself with a free night and obtains permission to play the game on her father's computer. She is intelligent and knowledgeable about herbs and healing plants so of course she creates an Elvin halfbreed healer/magic Avatar.
The story starts with Long Baiyu - a prisoner below someones castle or keep- using magic as his last resort to possible escape.
The game; 80AD, is still in development so the two copies we know of are supposed to be standalone copies of a beta version. But, this story includes a bit of magic before the game starts. Phoenix's mother gives him her half of a yin yang charm necklaces that she and her late husband had. Phoenix's father died in a car accident and his half of the pair was lost. There is a reference to an old couple at the time of the accident.
Jade's family has recently moved into a house that has several places that seem almost like mystery hiding places and she's found a pouch containing a strange necklace with a charm. The house was previously owned by an old couple.
They are both playing the game the same night and although it is not set up to do the MMORPG they somehow connect to each other and lightning strikes and the find themselves trapped in the game.
Phoenix is excited that he's now this big burly warrior and inside a game that seems so real. Jade wants only to get out of the game, which is quickly becoming too frightening for her. That's not going to happen soon and they are about to find out that they need to at least finish this level and that the stakes are high.
Both characters are quite strong and they easily play off of each other since they are almost polar opposite from the start. They each have a slot in the game for one helper and that's how they acquire Brynn and Marcus, a thief and a Roman. Since in this game a Roman would be the enemy we can see where this is all going.
This unlikely quartet set out to acquire the Jewel of Asgard which is the quest of the first level. Jades hope is that when they finish this level they can return home.Phoenix is hoping for as much conflict as he can stand.
Soon the reality of not having bathrooms and showers and restaurants and refrigerators and soft comfortable beds all seem to wear on both Phoenix and Jade. Their helpers don't know of those things so they can't miss them. Add to that the conflict and the pain and trying to reconcile deaths in a game that now seems too real to ignore and things start to get old for them both.
The only thing keeping them going is that they are convinced that if they fail the quest that it will be the end- not just for the game but for the world they're trying to get back to. They don't even know if they have the requisite seven lives and are very much reluctant to give up even one.
The quartet are all very different and engaging characters and the story moves along quickly though for me that thought that this is a novel about a game keeps looming in the back of my mind. It takes an effort to keep the reading of the story on some serious level but Aiki does a fair job of keeping things real.
I loved this book and any gamer should enjoy it and its a good book for Fantasy lovers. There's five levels so there's five books and as far as I can tell they are all free, which is hard to understand considering how engaging the first one is but I'm not going to complain.
There's even a bit of history and mythology buried in the story.
Thanks, Aiki for the entertaining read with good clean fun and the requisite amount of violence; and if the other four books match the level of this one I'm sure I'll polish them all off in no time.
J.L. Dobias
Little things mean a lot here. The two heroes, Phoenix and Jade, play as 17 year old characters. The thrill of suddenly being "grown up" adds an exciting element for the two teens, and probably touches a nerve with readers. The two arrive in the game with "memories" and skills appropriate to their characters - a warrior and a half-elf sorcerer. Talk about wish fulfillment. And so it goes; these touches are the sorts of flourishes that distinguish a book like this.
The levels are interesting. We go from a predictable 80 A.D. Roman Britain setting to a Viking place, then Egypt, then India, then China. These are not your usual or expected locales, and allow the reader to experience new and varied worlds. (This is the first of a five book series. Each book in the series is based in one of those places, and the series wraps up in Book Five at the China level.)
It helps that we have a few other computer based characters who join the quest and add a third point to allow for a mild romantic/crush/jealousy triangle, and some some comic relief. It especially helps that the quality of the dialogue is surprisingly high, with some real wit and character. Scenes are set well; action is clear; the pot unfolds crisply. There's enough timely exposition to keep a young reader on track, but not too much and not belabored. We have a lame sort of villain, but he's just there to keep things moving along.
It seemed to me that this series would fit in very nicely after "Magic Treehouse" level books, (which follow a similar, but simpler, going-to-a-strange-place in each book structure), and would serve as a solid intro to more complex and thematically mature adventure books. The mid middle-grade crowd seems a bit underserved in the hearty adventure genre, and this might just be the series they want.
(Please note that I found this book a while ago while browsing Amazon Kindle freebies. I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.)
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The main plot of this first book is to set the scene of the series, introduce the characters and the main aim of it all. It does this superbly, with characters that are humorous in their own way and provide excellent entertainment in reading. The story itself is quite in depth and follows designed path without straying of the main aim. This is why i gave it only 4 stars instead of a full 5. I believe if it was made a little longer, some more information on whats going on at the time, and more character development in this installment, this could actually be a true great.
I recommend to anyone looking for the something new to read, and i look forward to any more books produced by the author as if he manages to progress from this series on wards, he may be very successful.


