Fantasy story; one type of magic grows in power with use, but the more powerful they are, they more they are drawn to travel to their source Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Latest Blog Post: Highlights from 2019 – 1st Quarter Favorite questions and answers from first quarter of 2019What kind of magic is this?old fantasy novel with ravens or crows and magic staffMagical accident makes magician super powerfulWhat is the source of magical energies in the DC Universe?Book where family has to move due to extreme weather conditionsI am looking for a fantasy book series about Elves with magic tattoosFemale Protagonist, Fantasy, Metal Affixed to armsFantasy story with severly disjointed time-line but not using time travelBook about protagonist, Cassia, taken on as a wizard's apprenticeFantasy series with Celtic overtones, intermittent stone magic, and ongoing slow magic

Why do we bend a book to keep it straight?

How to down pick a chord with skipped strings?

Compare a given version number in the form major.minor.build.patch and see if one is less than the other

Dating a Former Employee

Declining "dulcis" in context

Is "Reachable Object" really an NP-complete problem?

Where are Serre’s lectures at Collège de France to be found?

Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours

Significance of Cersei's obsession with elephants?

Is there a kind of relay only consumes power when switching?

What does this Jacques Hadamard quote mean?

Amount of permutations on an NxNxN Rubik's Cube

How can I use the Python library networkx from Mathematica?

Does classifying an integer as a discrete log require it be part of a multiplicative group?

How to answer "Have you ever been terminated?"

How could we fake a moon landing now?

Why aren't air breathing engines used as small first stages

Do I really need to have a message in a novel to appeal to readers?

Why are there no cargo aircraft with "flying wing" design?

Is safe to use va_start macro with this as parameter?

Delete nth line from bottom

Maximum summed powersets with non-adjacent items

What are the out-of-universe reasons for the references to Toby Maguire-era Spider-Man in ITSV

Do square wave exist?



Fantasy story; one type of magic grows in power with use, but the more powerful they are, they more they are drawn to travel to their source



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Latest Blog Post: Highlights from 2019 – 1st Quarter
Favorite questions and answers from first quarter of 2019What kind of magic is this?old fantasy novel with ravens or crows and magic staffMagical accident makes magician super powerfulWhat is the source of magical energies in the DC Universe?Book where family has to move due to extreme weather conditionsI am looking for a fantasy book series about Elves with magic tattoosFemale Protagonist, Fantasy, Metal Affixed to armsFantasy story with severly disjointed time-line but not using time travelBook about protagonist, Cassia, taken on as a wizard's apprenticeFantasy series with Celtic overtones, intermittent stone magic, and ongoing slow magic



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








6















World is a non-Earth and mostly steriotypical sword and sorcery. I think there were only humans. I believe it was a stand alone novel, but it could have been in a series. I think it was written in the 70's or 80's.



The main character is recruiting magic users to go with an army to land far to the south.



There are multiple types of magic users. One of them has telekinetic type magic. This particular type of magic is not based on internal energy, but is based on a combination of how much you use it and how far away from its source (in a mountain to the north) the user is. The more they use the magic, the more powerful they become.



The downside of their power, is that the more powerful you are, the more powerful is the urge to go to the source, from which no one ever returns. As they become more powerful, the users try to travel away from the source, as while distance reduces their power, it also reduces the urge.



This magic user signs on to travel away from the call he feels. The main character has a very minor bit of the telekinetic magic (uses it for dice games) and so knows as far south as they are going, the magic user will be limited to only minor magics such as untying ropes, but takes him on.



Once they are in the south, someone (the magic user, maybe) complains about a buzzing in their head, which turns out to be an inactive "source" similar to that used by the magic user. After others complain about how little help the magic user has been, someone says that it was too bad he couldn't just tap into that source instead.



The magic user briefly considers this (and as they are engaged in a siege at the time) is immediately able to single-handedly destroy the enemy and swiftly installs himself as the local ruler.



After some time, the main character wonders if his massive and continuous use of power will result in him eventually hearing the call from his original source. He considers warning the magic user, but then the magic user slaughters a servent for spilling wine and he decides to not do so.



Eventually, the magic user does hear the call and, shortly after, flys north towards his original source.










share|improve this question






























    6















    World is a non-Earth and mostly steriotypical sword and sorcery. I think there were only humans. I believe it was a stand alone novel, but it could have been in a series. I think it was written in the 70's or 80's.



    The main character is recruiting magic users to go with an army to land far to the south.



    There are multiple types of magic users. One of them has telekinetic type magic. This particular type of magic is not based on internal energy, but is based on a combination of how much you use it and how far away from its source (in a mountain to the north) the user is. The more they use the magic, the more powerful they become.



    The downside of their power, is that the more powerful you are, the more powerful is the urge to go to the source, from which no one ever returns. As they become more powerful, the users try to travel away from the source, as while distance reduces their power, it also reduces the urge.



    This magic user signs on to travel away from the call he feels. The main character has a very minor bit of the telekinetic magic (uses it for dice games) and so knows as far south as they are going, the magic user will be limited to only minor magics such as untying ropes, but takes him on.



    Once they are in the south, someone (the magic user, maybe) complains about a buzzing in their head, which turns out to be an inactive "source" similar to that used by the magic user. After others complain about how little help the magic user has been, someone says that it was too bad he couldn't just tap into that source instead.



    The magic user briefly considers this (and as they are engaged in a siege at the time) is immediately able to single-handedly destroy the enemy and swiftly installs himself as the local ruler.



    After some time, the main character wonders if his massive and continuous use of power will result in him eventually hearing the call from his original source. He considers warning the magic user, but then the magic user slaughters a servent for spilling wine and he decides to not do so.



    Eventually, the magic user does hear the call and, shortly after, flys north towards his original source.










    share|improve this question


























      6












      6








      6








      World is a non-Earth and mostly steriotypical sword and sorcery. I think there were only humans. I believe it was a stand alone novel, but it could have been in a series. I think it was written in the 70's or 80's.



      The main character is recruiting magic users to go with an army to land far to the south.



      There are multiple types of magic users. One of them has telekinetic type magic. This particular type of magic is not based on internal energy, but is based on a combination of how much you use it and how far away from its source (in a mountain to the north) the user is. The more they use the magic, the more powerful they become.



      The downside of their power, is that the more powerful you are, the more powerful is the urge to go to the source, from which no one ever returns. As they become more powerful, the users try to travel away from the source, as while distance reduces their power, it also reduces the urge.



      This magic user signs on to travel away from the call he feels. The main character has a very minor bit of the telekinetic magic (uses it for dice games) and so knows as far south as they are going, the magic user will be limited to only minor magics such as untying ropes, but takes him on.



      Once they are in the south, someone (the magic user, maybe) complains about a buzzing in their head, which turns out to be an inactive "source" similar to that used by the magic user. After others complain about how little help the magic user has been, someone says that it was too bad he couldn't just tap into that source instead.



      The magic user briefly considers this (and as they are engaged in a siege at the time) is immediately able to single-handedly destroy the enemy and swiftly installs himself as the local ruler.



      After some time, the main character wonders if his massive and continuous use of power will result in him eventually hearing the call from his original source. He considers warning the magic user, but then the magic user slaughters a servent for spilling wine and he decides to not do so.



      Eventually, the magic user does hear the call and, shortly after, flys north towards his original source.










      share|improve this question
















      World is a non-Earth and mostly steriotypical sword and sorcery. I think there were only humans. I believe it was a stand alone novel, but it could have been in a series. I think it was written in the 70's or 80's.



      The main character is recruiting magic users to go with an army to land far to the south.



      There are multiple types of magic users. One of them has telekinetic type magic. This particular type of magic is not based on internal energy, but is based on a combination of how much you use it and how far away from its source (in a mountain to the north) the user is. The more they use the magic, the more powerful they become.



      The downside of their power, is that the more powerful you are, the more powerful is the urge to go to the source, from which no one ever returns. As they become more powerful, the users try to travel away from the source, as while distance reduces their power, it also reduces the urge.



      This magic user signs on to travel away from the call he feels. The main character has a very minor bit of the telekinetic magic (uses it for dice games) and so knows as far south as they are going, the magic user will be limited to only minor magics such as untying ropes, but takes him on.



      Once they are in the south, someone (the magic user, maybe) complains about a buzzing in their head, which turns out to be an inactive "source" similar to that used by the magic user. After others complain about how little help the magic user has been, someone says that it was too bad he couldn't just tap into that source instead.



      The magic user briefly considers this (and as they are engaged in a siege at the time) is immediately able to single-handedly destroy the enemy and swiftly installs himself as the local ruler.



      After some time, the main character wonders if his massive and continuous use of power will result in him eventually hearing the call from his original source. He considers warning the magic user, but then the magic user slaughters a servent for spilling wine and he decides to not do so.



      Eventually, the magic user does hear the call and, shortly after, flys north towards his original source.







      story-identification novel magic






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 2 hours ago







      Michael Richardson

















      asked 2 hours ago









      Michael RichardsonMichael Richardson

      1,504914




      1,504914




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          6














          This is Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Unwilling Warlord.




          The Unwilling Warlord was the third novel in the Ethshar series -- though it's not third in internal chronology. It's the story of a young man who finds that he's the hereditary warlord of a small kingdom that's on the verge of war against two larger neighbors. He has a simple choice -- win the war, or die.



          And the only way he can see to win the war is to use magic to cheat.




          Warlocks hear the call from a far-off source, grow in their powers with use, and eventually go mad and unwillingly go to the source (which is somewhere beyond the poisonous fog that surrounds the civilized world). One of the men he hires is a warlock hoping to protect himself by distance, only to find that new source of power, seemingly inert.




          Eventually, Vond starts hearing the original source, and is drawn away to it.




          I rather enjoyed the Ethshar books as a teenager, and read most of the ones released.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 1





            Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

            – DavidW
            1 hour ago











          • As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago






          • 1





            I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "186"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f209272%2ffantasy-story-one-type-of-magic-grows-in-power-with-use-but-the-more-powerful%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          This is Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Unwilling Warlord.




          The Unwilling Warlord was the third novel in the Ethshar series -- though it's not third in internal chronology. It's the story of a young man who finds that he's the hereditary warlord of a small kingdom that's on the verge of war against two larger neighbors. He has a simple choice -- win the war, or die.



          And the only way he can see to win the war is to use magic to cheat.




          Warlocks hear the call from a far-off source, grow in their powers with use, and eventually go mad and unwillingly go to the source (which is somewhere beyond the poisonous fog that surrounds the civilized world). One of the men he hires is a warlock hoping to protect himself by distance, only to find that new source of power, seemingly inert.




          Eventually, Vond starts hearing the original source, and is drawn away to it.




          I rather enjoyed the Ethshar books as a teenager, and read most of the ones released.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 1





            Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

            – DavidW
            1 hour ago











          • As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago






          • 1





            I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago















          6














          This is Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Unwilling Warlord.




          The Unwilling Warlord was the third novel in the Ethshar series -- though it's not third in internal chronology. It's the story of a young man who finds that he's the hereditary warlord of a small kingdom that's on the verge of war against two larger neighbors. He has a simple choice -- win the war, or die.



          And the only way he can see to win the war is to use magic to cheat.




          Warlocks hear the call from a far-off source, grow in their powers with use, and eventually go mad and unwillingly go to the source (which is somewhere beyond the poisonous fog that surrounds the civilized world). One of the men he hires is a warlock hoping to protect himself by distance, only to find that new source of power, seemingly inert.




          Eventually, Vond starts hearing the original source, and is drawn away to it.




          I rather enjoyed the Ethshar books as a teenager, and read most of the ones released.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 1





            Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

            – DavidW
            1 hour ago











          • As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago






          • 1





            I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago













          6












          6








          6







          This is Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Unwilling Warlord.




          The Unwilling Warlord was the third novel in the Ethshar series -- though it's not third in internal chronology. It's the story of a young man who finds that he's the hereditary warlord of a small kingdom that's on the verge of war against two larger neighbors. He has a simple choice -- win the war, or die.



          And the only way he can see to win the war is to use magic to cheat.




          Warlocks hear the call from a far-off source, grow in their powers with use, and eventually go mad and unwillingly go to the source (which is somewhere beyond the poisonous fog that surrounds the civilized world). One of the men he hires is a warlock hoping to protect himself by distance, only to find that new source of power, seemingly inert.




          Eventually, Vond starts hearing the original source, and is drawn away to it.




          I rather enjoyed the Ethshar books as a teenager, and read most of the ones released.






          share|improve this answer















          This is Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Unwilling Warlord.




          The Unwilling Warlord was the third novel in the Ethshar series -- though it's not third in internal chronology. It's the story of a young man who finds that he's the hereditary warlord of a small kingdom that's on the verge of war against two larger neighbors. He has a simple choice -- win the war, or die.



          And the only way he can see to win the war is to use magic to cheat.




          Warlocks hear the call from a far-off source, grow in their powers with use, and eventually go mad and unwillingly go to the source (which is somewhere beyond the poisonous fog that surrounds the civilized world). One of the men he hires is a warlock hoping to protect himself by distance, only to find that new source of power, seemingly inert.




          Eventually, Vond starts hearing the original source, and is drawn away to it.




          I rather enjoyed the Ethshar books as a teenager, and read most of the ones released.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago









          DavidW

          3,64011350




          3,64011350










          answered 2 hours ago









          FuzzyBootsFuzzyBoots

          96.4k12296461




          96.4k12296461







          • 1





            Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

            – DavidW
            1 hour ago











          • As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago






          • 1





            I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago












          • 1





            Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

            – DavidW
            1 hour ago











          • As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago






          • 1





            I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

            – lsd
            1 hour ago







          1




          1





          Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

          – DavidW
          1 hour ago





          Of course it is! I knew I had read this recently, I just couldn't get it.

          – DavidW
          1 hour ago













          As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

          – lsd
          1 hour ago





          As soon as I saw the subject, I knew what series it was. There is also Night of Madness, about the day warlocks were created.

          – lsd
          1 hour ago




          1




          1





          I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

          – lsd
          1 hour ago





          I believe in The Unwilling Warlord there were two sources, and the were drawn to the closest one. I think one of them was beyond the unpassable mountains to the South.

          – lsd
          1 hour ago

















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f209272%2ffantasy-story-one-type-of-magic-grows-in-power-with-use-but-the-more-powerful%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Францішак Багушэвіч Змест Сям'я | Біяграфія | Творчасць | Мова Багушэвіча | Ацэнкі дзейнасці | Цікавыя факты | Спадчына | Выбраная бібліяграфія | Ушанаванне памяці | У філатэліі | Зноскі | Літаратура | Спасылкі | НавігацыяЛяхоўскі У. Рупіўся дзеля Бога і людзей: Жыццёвы шлях Лявона Вітан-Дубейкаўскага // Вольскі і Памідораў з песняй пра немца Адвакат, паэт, народны заступнік Ашмянскі веснікВ Минске появится площадь Богушевича и улица Сырокомли, Белорусская деловая газета, 19 июля 2001 г.Айцец беларускай нацыянальнай ідэі паўстаў у бронзе Сяргей Аляксандравіч Адашкевіч (1918, Мінск). 80-я гады. Бюст «Францішак Багушэвіч».Яўген Мікалаевіч Ціхановіч. «Партрэт Францішка Багушэвіча»Мікола Мікалаевіч Купава. «Партрэт зачынальніка новай беларускай літаратуры Францішка Багушэвіча»Уладзімір Іванавіч Мелехаў. На помніку «Змагарам за родную мову» Барэльеф «Францішак Багушэвіч»Памяць пра Багушэвіча на Віленшчыне Страчаная сталіца. Беларускія шыльды на вуліцах Вільні«Krynica». Ideologia i przywódcy białoruskiego katolicyzmuФранцішак БагушэвічТворы на knihi.comТворы Францішка Багушэвіча на bellib.byСодаль Уладзімір. Францішак Багушэвіч на Лідчыне;Луцкевіч Антон. Жыцьцё і творчасьць Фр. Багушэвіча ў успамінах ягоных сучасьнікаў // Запісы Беларускага Навуковага таварыства. Вільня, 1938. Сшытак 1. С. 16-34.Большая российская1188761710000 0000 5537 633Xn9209310021619551927869394п

          Partai Komunis Tiongkok Daftar isi Kepemimpinan | Pranala luar | Referensi | Menu navigasidiperiksa1 perubahan tertundacpc.people.com.cnSitus resmiSurat kabar resmi"Why the Communist Party is alive, well and flourishing in China"0307-1235"Full text of Constitution of Communist Party of China"smengembangkannyas

          ValueError: Expected n_neighbors <= n_samples, but n_samples = 1, n_neighbors = 6 (SMOTE) The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InCan SMOTE be applied over sequence of words (sentences)?ValueError when doing validation with random forestsSMOTE and multi class oversamplingLogic behind SMOTE-NC?ValueError: Error when checking target: expected dense_1 to have shape (7,) but got array with shape (1,)SmoteBoost: Should SMOTE be ran individually for each iteration/tree in the boosting?solving multi-class imbalance classification using smote and OSSUsing SMOTE for Synthetic Data generation to improve performance on unbalanced dataproblem of entry format for a simple model in KerasSVM SMOTE fit_resample() function runs forever with no result