Fury, on the other hand, could not be more delighted. She's spent her whole life desperate to be a wizard like the rest of her impossible family, and now she has a quest all her own: to find the source of a plague of undead that has risen to threaten the land. And not just to find it, but to destroy it.
Cute outfits? Check. Snacky snacks? Check. But Fury's about to learn a hard lesson: that fashion and sweets and joy won't be nearly enough. To destroy evil, she'll need to live up to her name.
If you love the gleeful crudeness of Christopher Moore, the cosmic absurdity of Douglas Adams, and the warmth Terry Pratchett hid under the jokes, the Magic of Magic only gets more furious from here.
Furiously Inappropriate Magic - Book Seven of the Magic of Magic comic fantasy series.
DISCLAIMER: Adults only. The heroine is young; this book is not. It's the darkest in the series - crude language, shameless innuendo, and a sentient body part that will not read the room, yes, but also real violence, real cruelty, killing that costs something, and a world that treats people as property. A bubbly girl, a decidedly un-bubbly story - bawdy, brutal, and, underneath all of it, about learning to love the whole of yourself.