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1''The Lost Years of Merlin'' is a five-book epic authored by T.A. Barron, which details the adventures of a teenaged Myth/{{Merlin}} as he explores the magical isle of Fincayra, with a great amount of focus on how the wizard we all know and love today [[CharacterDevelopment develops from a bratty teenage boy into the wise and all-knowing wizard]].
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3The boy is rooted in humble beginnings in a remote village implied to be [[MedievalEuropeanFantasy somewhere in Wales (called Gwynedd in those days)]], where he lives with his well-intended and doting mother, is tormented by [[TheRival the local bully]], and [[DesperatelyLookingForAPurposeInLife yearns for greater things]]. When a [[TheCallKnowsWhereYouLive terrible incident]] results in the severe wounding of the bully and the loss of the boy's sight, he lives in anguish for several weeks until he slowly begins to develop a magical [[DisabilitySuperpower "second sight,"]] the true awakening of his latent magic powers. [[CallToAdventure He then leaves the village where he has dwelt his entire known life and sails away on a self-built raft]] [[TheHerosJourney in order to find his true home]]. As luck would have it, a storm overtakes him and he washes up on the shores of [[MagicalLand Fincayra]], a legendary isle said to be the gateway between heaven and earth, an "in-between" place. As the boy explores the island, he makes new friends and [[BigBad dangerous enemies]], all of whom help him grow into a respectable young man worthy of carrying the title of greatest wizard of all time.
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5The five books in the series are:
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7# ''The Lost Years of Merlin'' (1996)
8# ''The Seven Songs of Merlin'' (1997)
9# ''The Fires of Merlin'' (1998)
10# ''The Mirror of Merlin'' (1999)
11# ''The Wings of Merlin'' (2000)
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13It is not extremely well-known and is a pretty archetypical StandardFantasySetting, but each book was received relatively decently and sold enough to make the New York Times Best-Sellers List.
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15It eventually gained a SequelSeries, ''The Great Tree of Avalon'', then another, ''Merlin's Dragon'' and later ''Merlin: The Book of Magic''. [[http://tabarron.com/merlin-the-movie There is talk of a movie adaptation of at least the first book of the series]]. It has no relation to the [[{{Series/Merlin 2008}} TV show on the BBC]].
16----
17!!Tropes in the series:
18* ActuallyPrettyFunny: Bumblewy's on-the-spot requiem for Merlin is ''so'' over-the-top and sappy that the dragon who was about to eat them decides they're just too funny to devour (helped by the fact that it's still half-asleep). Bumblewy is quite unhappy though, as that's actually the ''saddest'' poem he knows.
19* AdaptationalBadass: Rhita Gawr is a ''very'' obscure character from Arthurian mythology--he was a king (and possibly a giant) who defeated other kings, cut off their beards to humiliate them and made them into a cloak. Arthur killed the guy. In this series, he's the king of evil spirits and basically wants to conquer the universe. See HijackedByJesus below.
20* AmnesiacHero: The first book begins with Merlin washing up on the shores of Wales, with no memory of who he is. He never actually recovers these memories, either, just pieces together what happened.
21* AntiMagic: Negatus Mysterium, [[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve but it only works if the magic user believes its effect is real]].
22* AntiMagicalFaction: Clan Righteous, who used the AntiMagic Negatus Mysterium in their quest to destroy all magical creatures and magic users, along with creating kreelixes, demonic beings who specifically hunt them.
23* {{Bambification}}: The [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters poor, persecuted]] deer people.
24%%* BigBad: Rhita Gawr.
25* BigDamnHeroes: When the Slayer goes after Merlin and the kids, Shim grabs him and tosses him far out to sea, admitting he wanted to crush him, but the Slayer's arm swords were cutting into his hand.
26* BigEater: The Living Stones are rocks that lie dormant until someone happens across them, and then they eat that person/thing. Grand Elusa is a large spider woman who, while helpful, really advises you to leave when she gets hungry. She saves the heroes from the original encounter with living stones by eating one.
27%%* BigGood: Dagda.
28* BrickJoke: Merlin says that if Bumblewy can make ''anyone'' laugh, he'll eat his boot. He's good as his word and -- not under magical oath or anything -- has to be stopped from finishing it.
29%%* TheBully: Dinatius.
30* BurnTheWitch: A group of bullies tries to do this to Merlin's mother. They pay dearly for this.
31* [[spoiler:ButNowIMustGo]]: The {{bittersweet ending}} of the fifth book has Merlin [[spoiler:choose to leave Fincayra and go back to the human world, where his destiny as Arthur's mentor lies.]]
32* CanonForeigner: Pretty much every character except for Myth/{{Merlin}}, [[EvilCounterpart Nimue]] and [[TimeTravel Ector]] ([[spoiler:who's actually Myth/KingArthur]]) is absent from Myth/ArthurianLegend. A few of the characters ([[BigGood Dagda]], [[BigBad Rhita Gawr]], [[{{Cyclops}} Balor]]) are adapted from Myth/CelticMythology though.
33* CatchPhrase: Shim's "As big as the highliest tree."
34%%* CharacterDevelopment
35* {{Cyclops}}: Balor from ''The Seven Songs of Merlin'', the second story in the series. It's made worse by the fact that his gaze can kill you.
36* DarkIsNotEvil: Domnu, who is described as being cold but not evil, like her other name, Dark Fate. She ''can'' be kind of a jerk, though.
37* {{Dehumanization}}: In the first book, Merlin realizes to his horror that what he believed was just a bundle of rags he'd hit with a stone when playing with other boys is really a person. They retort that this isn't true-it's a Jew. After he refuses to go along with this, they caution Merlin against defending Jews, because people might think he has Jewish stock himself.
38* DeliberateValuesDissonance: Merlin is bullied over being a supposed bastard, Jews are viewed as inhuman by many while fair game for being stoned, and Branwen's labeled a witch because of her skill with herbs which people view as magic. This all sets the tone for life in Merlin's early medieval Welsh village.
39* {{Demihuman}}: The typical fantasy races appear, along with some new ones, like [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent deer people]]. Even Fincayran humans seem a bit different than the usual model: they have pointed ears, for one, and used to be {{Winged Humanoid}}s.
40* DirectLineToTheAuthor: The stories are said to come to the author directly from Merlin.
41* DisabilitySuperpower: Merlin is blinded in the first book, but then develops "second sight," which seems to be a kind of magical version that doesn't use his physical eyes. It also means that he can occasionally see things that normal sight cannot.
42* DiedInYourArmsTonight:
43** In the second book, [[spoiler:Rhia]] dies in Merlin's arms, but in the end he brings [[spoiler:her]] back.
44** In the fifth book, [[spoiler:Stangmar]] dies in Elen's arms, and [[spoiler:Cairpré]] in Merlin's.
45* EasilyForgiven: {{Played with}} for [[spoiler:Dinatius]] the Slayer. He murdered numerous innocents and blames Merlin for his deformities, which were [[NeverMyFault his fault to begin with]]. Merlin opts to forgive him despite all of the tragedies, because he wanted to break the CycleOfRevenge, and that he pitied the slayer for having hatred consume him. Dagda then restores his arms, but does not grant him wings like the other humans, reasoning that he has caused too much harm.
46* ElementalEmbodiment: Merlin befriends an air elemental when he frees her from a container Domnu had trapped her in. To repay him, she later helps him retrieve his staff from Nimue.
47* FantasticRacism:
48** A lot of Fincaryan humans are prejudiced against other sapient races on the island. In the past, it got to the point of enslaving and even sacrificing them.
49** Dwarves generally don't like humans, as shown with Merlin's hostile reception among them.
50** Treelings have been hunted to extinction. Cwen in the last one.
51** The deer people have been hunted for food by humans, despite them being rational beings like themselves who can [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent take human form]].
52** Most humans also don't care that many of the trees can think as well, cutting them down like the rest.
53* GardenGarment: Rhia is dressed in plants.
54* HalfHumanHybrid: {{Subverted}} with Merlin. Arthurian legend usually makes him the son of a demon; here that theory is floated but inaccurate. He is, however, half normal human and half Fincayran human, and his Fincayran parent had a mer-woman mother.
55* HereThereBeDragons: The maps seen at the beginning of the books feature this, with various creatures depicted in the series, such as kreelixes.
56* HijackedByJesus: Rhita Gawr is basically the Celtic version of {{Satan}} in this series. See AdaptationalBadass above. Dagda is also more Christ-like.
57* HumanSacrifice: Fincayran humans sacrificed dwarves and other races in the past, as the absolute nadir of their misdeeds. It's this which caused [[GodOfGood Dagda]] to remove [[WingedHumanoid their wings]].
58* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Sort of a running theme, really, from Stagmar (the king of Fincayra's humans) to the backstory in the last book. Exaggerated in the SequelSeries.
59* {{Hypocrite}}: Nimue steals Merlin's staff in ''The Seven Songs of Merlin'', calling him a thief when he snatches it back from her with the help of an air spirit.
60* IdentityAmnesia: The first book starts with [[strike: Merlin]] Emrys being washed up on the shores of Wales with no memory of his past.
61* ImplacableMan:
62** The first book has the Ghoulians, undead warriors of Stangmar that pull swords and daggers out and cast them aside like they're nothing, and even get up after a very angry giant stomps on them over and over again.
63** ''The Wings of Merlin'' has Slayer, who uses any spell Merlin uses to attack or flee back on him, and even goes through a desperate Stangmar, survives being crushed in Shim's giant hand, comes back after being thrown out into the sea, swims through the sea after Merlin escapes on a boat to an island surrounded by a magic barrier, proceeds through said barrier, and [[MadeofIron even survives a rock slide on top of him]].
64* InNameOnly: When you get down to it, most of this series (including the entire setting of Fincayra) is [[StandardFantasySetting standard fantasy]] with a few brief references to Athurian legend. ''The Mirror of Merlin'' is a bit closer though, as it involves [[spoiler:time travel, allowing Merlin to meet a young Arthur and his own future self]].
65* InterfaithSmoothie: InUniverse, Merlin's mother Bronwen worships both the Celtic gods such as Dagda and also Jesus. The series has Dagda show a lot of traits traditionally attributed to Jesus as well (possibly in the books they are the same being).
66* [[LastOfHisKind Last Of Her Kind]]: Cwen is the last treeling on Fincayra.
67* LukeIAmYourFather: [[spoiler:Stangmar to Merlin at the end of the first book]].
68* MagicIsEvil: A lot of the people in Merlin's village fear magic as inherently evil. Even after he goes to Fincayra, a MagicalLand, some still have this view. Clan Righteous is an AntiMagicalFaction that views magic as the curse of the land, seeking to wipe it out along with all magical creatures and magic users.
69* TheMarvelousDeer: [[BigGood Dagda]]'s usual animal form is a stag.
70* MeaningfulRename: In the first book the main character goes by "Emrys," though his mother is such a MysteriousParent that he isn't sure that she isn't lying about that being his name; as such he never feels comfortably with it. At the end, he starts calling himself "Merlin" in memory of his pet [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merlin_(bird) merlin]], which pulled a HeroicSacrifice in the big battle.
71%%* Myth/{{Merlin}}: Naturally.
72* MerlinAndNimue: {{Downplayed}}; Nimue appears as a minor character in ''The Seven Songs of Merlin;'' she's actually a few years older than him, and flirts with him just enough to distract him so that she can steal his MagicStaff; he gets it back and she's gone from the rest of the story. [[spoiler:Her future self is the BigBad of ''The Mirror of Merlin.'' Although she trapped future!Merlin in the crystal cave, there's no real indication that they had the mentor/student relationship from the story, and young!Merlin changes that future from happening anyway]].
73* [[spoiler:MyFutureSelfAndMe]]: In ''The Mirror of Merlin'', Merlin goes through a MagicMirror [[spoiler:where he meets his future self in the process of mentoring a young [[Myth/KingArthur Arthur]]]].
74* MysteriousParent: Branwen. [[spoiler: Even her true name is mysterious--it's really Elen]].
75* NeverMyFault: Dinatius and the bullies try to burn Merlin's mother, they fail when Merlin attacks them, and the fire consumes them. [[spoiler: Dinatius]] begins to murder innocents and blames their deaths on Merlin because his near-death experience allowed him to serve Rhita Gawr.
76* OddballInTheSeries: ''The Mirror of Merlin'' is a mild example, since it dispenses with the StrictlyFormula model and has more of a connection to actual Arthurian legend.
77* OurWerebeastsAreDifferent: Hallia, a deer-woman, is a major character (and [[spoiler:Merlin's LoveInterest]]) from the third book on. The SequelSeries also includes a race of eagle-people.
78* PlantPeople: The treelings. Also, the tree Rhia lives in is sapient. Other trees are as well, although many have "gone to sleep" according to Rhia and can no longer communicate with anyone.
79* PlotCoupon: The Seven Songs of Magic in ''The Seven Songs of Merlin'', which Merlin needs in order to access the underworld and get an elixir to cure his mother, yet another PlotCoupon.
80* PointyEars: This is the feature that distinguishes Fincayran humans from others. Aside from that, they look just the same. Merlin is thought to be a demon by some in Gwynned (Wales) over his.
81%%* QuestForIdentity
82* RustproofBlood: {{Averted}}; the Rusted Plains are repeatedly described as looking like dried blood.
83* SeparatedAtBirth: [[spoiler: Merlin and Rhiannon]].
84* TheStarsAreGoingOut: This is a big part of ''The Great Tree of Avalon'' sequel series. In the first book, the stars of the constellation of Merlin's staff go out, so the characters seek a way to travel to the stars to relight them.
85* StrictlyFormula: Merlin has a limited number of days to stop (antagonist) from harming (person/thing). At some point, he will be AsleepForDays, giving him even less time. Also, there is a [[PropheciesRhymeAllTheTime rhyming prophecy]] that tells us what will happen, assuming the reader can figure out its [[ProphecyTwist twist(s)]]. ''The Mirror of Merlin'' is the OddballInTheSeries partly because it ignores these tropes.
86* TrilogyCreep: For the first two books, the series was advertised as a trilogy. With the third book, it was decided that two more would follow and the billing for the series became an "epic" instead. In the introduction for the third book, [[DirectLineToTheAuthor the author states that Merlin himself told him]] that three books would not be enough.
87* UnstoppableRage: See BurnTheWitch up above. Also, [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge Slayer]].
88%%* WildChild: Rhiannon.
89* WingedHumanoid: One of the odd things Merlin notices about himself in the first book is a persistent ache between his shoulder blades. It turns out that all Fincayran humans have this, supposedly because they once had wings that were taken away as punishment for their sins. [[spoiler:They get them back in the last book]].

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