Cover reveal and extract from Indra Das' THE DEVOURERS


Thanks to the folks at Del Rey, here's the cover art for Indra Das' upcoming The Devourers. The novel was released last year in India and garnered some great reviews. It will be released in North America this summer. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

For readers of Neil Gaiman, Margaret Atwood, China Mieville, and David Mitchell comes a striking debut novel by a storyteller of keen insight and captivating imagination.

On a cool evening in Kolkata, India, beneath a full moon, as the whirling rhythms of traveling musicians fill the night, college professor Alok encounters a mysterious stranger with a bizarre confession and an extraordinary story. Tantalized by the man’s unfinished tale, Alok will do anything to hear its completion. So Alok agrees, at the stranger’s behest, to transcribe a collection of battered notebooks, weathered parchments, and once-living skins.

From these documents spills the chronicle of a race of people at once more than human yet kin to beasts, ruled by instincts and desires blood-deep and ages-old. The tale features a rough wanderer in seventeenth-century Mughal India who finds himself irrevocably drawn to a defiant woman—and destined to be torn asunder by two clashing worlds. With every passing chapter of beauty and brutality, Alok’s interest in the stranger grows and evolves into something darker and more urgent.

Shifting dreamlike between present and past with intoxicating language, visceral action, compelling characters, and stark emotion, The Devourers offers a reading experience quite unlike any other novel.

And here's an extract for your reading pleasure:
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My part in this story began the winter before winters started getting warmer, on a full-moon night so bright you could see your own shadow on an unlit rooftop. It was under that moon—slightly smudged by December mist clinging to the streets of Kolkata—that I met a man who told me he was half-werewolf. He said this to me as if it were no different than being half-Bengali, half-Punjabi, half-Parsi. Half-werewolf under a full moon. Not the most subtle kind of irony, but a necessary one, if I’m to value the veracity of my recollections.

To set the stage, I must tell you where I was.

Think of a field breathing the cool of night time into the soles of your shoes. A large tent in front of you—cloth, canvas and bamboo—lit from within. Electric lamps surrounding a wooden stage that creaks under the bare feet of bright-robed minstrels. This tent is where the rural bards of Bengal, the bauls, gather every winter to make music for city people. It’s raw music, at times both shrill and hoarse, stained with hashish smoke and the self- proclaimed madness of their sect. A celebration of what’s been lost, under the vigil of orange-eyed street lights.

I am there, that night.

***

Outside in the cold, in Shaktigarh Math, a city park. I watch the bauls and their audience through the fabric of the tent. Shadows flit across as they clap and cheer. The crowd extends outside, faces lit by cigarettes and spliffs. Hand-rolled cigarette between my fingers, grass under my shoes. A stranger walks up and stands beside me. The street dogs are gathering by the field, their eyes hungry. It’s one in the morning.

‘Afraid to go inside?’ the stranger asks. ‘They may be mad, but they won’t bite.’

He’s talking about the bauls. I laugh dutifully. I’m afraid he wants a smoke, having seen my tin of cigarettes. I don’t want to share, having rolled them very carefully. I tell him I prefer the night air to the tent, not thinking to bring up the fact that there’s no smoking allowed within. I ask what he’s doing outside.

‘The music’s a little too shrill for my ears. I can appreciate it just fine from here.’ His voice is gentle, his words unhurried.

He takes out his own hash joint. I glance sideways at him as he lights up. The flame illuminates a slender face, its glow running along hairless skin and brushing against the lines of shadow that hug his high cheekbones. I’m disarmed by his androgynous beauty before he even tells his secret.

‘I’m a werewolf,’ he says. Smoke flares out of his mouth in curls that wreath his long black hair, giving him silver-blue locks for a passing second. I don’t see him throw away the match, but his foot moves to rub it into the soil. He’s wearing wicker sandals. Dark flecks of dirt hide under unclipped nails on the ends of his long toes. Apparently the cold doesn’t bother him enough for socks or shoes.

Now I wish I could tell you this man looks wolfish, that he has a hint of green glinting in his eyes, that his eyebrows meet right above his nose, that his palms have a scattering of hair that tickles my own palms as we shake hands, that his sideburns are thick and shaggy and silvered as the bark of a snow-dusted birch at grey dawn. But I’m not here to make things up.

‘Need a light?’ he asks, and I’m startled to find a new flame between his fingers, the hiss of the struck match reaching my ears like an afterthought. Afraid that I’ve been caught staring at his dirty toes and beautiful face, I nod, even though there’s a lighter in my breast pocket. He touches the flame to my cigarette.

‘You heard right,’ he says, tossing the match. ‘Well, I’m actually half-werewolf. But you heard right.’

‘I didn’t ask if I’d heard right.’

‘You were thinking it, though,’ he says with a smile.

‘I wasn’t, actually. I can hear just fine,’ I assure him. He keeps smiling. I get embarrassed.

‘Thanks for the light,’ I say with a cough. My lungs burn from too enthusiastic a first drag. ‘I suppose I shouldn’t be boasting about my hearing. Wolves have great hearing, right?’

‘I’m not a wolf. And yes, they do.’

‘There aren’t any wolves near Kolkata. Are there? They’re probably extinct in India.’

‘Just because you don’t see them doesn’t mean they’re not there,’ he says. I observe that his fingernails are as long as his toenails, and as dirty. Little black sickles hiding under them. I nod, light-headed from the nicotine rush.

‘I’ve seen jackals in the golf greens at Tolly Club.’

He doesn’t say anything. I feel compelled to keep talking.

‘My parents have a house. Like a weekend getaway. Outside the city, in Baniban. The caretakers there used to scare me when I was a boy, with stories about wildcats from the woods stealing their chickens. Now that you mention it, there might have been a wolf visit. I never really believed any of those stories. They scared me, though. I never even saw any of those animals. Except a snake, once.’ A true story. I still remember the serpent’s grey coils lying there by the flowerpots, beaten to death by the help. They said it was venomous, though I certainly couldn’t tell.

‘You’re not afraid of talking to strangers. I like that,’ he says, swaying slightly now to the rising call of the bauls’ voices.

I feel shy now, which is absurd. ‘What’s your other half, then? Human? Aren’t all werewolves half-human?’ I ask him.

He picks a bit of tobacco out of his teeth, which I don’t think I’ve ever seen a smoker actually do. Spittle clicks between his fingertips and his tongue. ‘Family history can be a tedious business. Though family isn’t quite the right word.’

And that’s all he says. For someone who clearly wants to talk to me, he says very little.

‘When did you find out you were a . . . a half-werewolf ?’

He shrugs. ‘I’ve been one all my life. Before we were called werewolves, really.’

‘What’s it like?’ I ask, the questions flowing from my smoke-soured mouth. I can’t think of anything more awkward at this moment than to stand beside this man and not respond to what he’s just said to me.

‘You’ve seen the movies. I am master of my fortune. The moon is my mistress.’

‘And cliché is your cabaret?’ I ask. Intoxicated disbelief dulls me into self-deprecation. I analyse my words, which seem nonsensical. I look around, checking to make sure the others standing around us in the field are still there, to run my eyes over the streaks of their shadows. The rhythm of the music snarls to the throb of light and shadow behind the walls of the tent.

He doesn’t growl at me. ‘Are you an English professor, by any chance?’

‘No. But close. I am a professor. Of history, actually. Started teaching a couple of years ago.’

His shapely eyebrows rise. ‘History? Tales. The weaving of words. A favourite discipline of mine. I congratulate you on your choice of profession, young though you seem for such an endeavour. To tell stories of the past to children who walk into the future is a task both noble and taxing.’ I feel a mix of resentment and pleasure from being called young by someone who looks younger than me. ‘Well, they’re not exactly children, they’re college students—’

‘If only we had better storytellers, perhaps they would learn more willingly from the past,’ he says.

‘Maybe.’

‘Am I speaking in clichés again, professor?’

A white kitten, its wide eyes rimmed with rheum, looks up at me as it crawls around us. It starts at the violent sound of sticks shattering against each other. I see children mock-fighting with surprising malice nearby, their screams jarring and bodies lithe against the mist. The kitten stumbles and uses my ankle as cover. The street dogs skirt the edges of the field, pack instinct glittering in their eyes as they surround us. Muzzles peel back in tentative grimaces. Their teeth look yellow under the street lights. They watch the kitten.

‘You like cats?’ the stranger asks, looking at the kitten, which gingerly licks my fingers with a dry and scratchy tongue as I pick it up. Its little heart putters against my palm. I can feel its warm body shaking.

Ash flutters from my cigarette as I tap it, brief lives twinkling and fading to grey by our feet. I take care not to burn the kitten.

‘Let me guess,’ I say. ‘I’ve had the blood of the wolf within me all along. You’ve come to initiate me into the ways of our tribe, to run with my brothers and sisters to the lunar ebb and flow. I’m the chosen one. The saviour of our people. And the time of our uprising has come. We’re going to rule the world,’ I say, my sarcasm blunted by how serious I sound. I surprise myself with the eagerness with which I tell this story of possibilities to the stranger. The dogs have come closer, ignoring even the threat of so many humans to get closer to the kitten in my hands.

The stranger grins at me. It’s the first time he seems animalistic.

‘I want to tell you a story. Let’s go inside.’

‘Won’t it hurt your ears?’

He takes one deep drag before licking the burnt-out roach and making it disappear into one of his pockets. I realize that my cigarette has whittled away to the end, its heat tickling my cold fingers.

The stranger strides towards the tent, through the scattered people smoking, past the food stalls with their cheaply wired fluorescents ticking to the patter of night insects. The sizzle of batter in oil and babble of voices only aggravates the sense that I am treading on the tune the bauls are playing—everything here seems to be part of their music, as if the field itself were one stage, and all of us musicians. I toss the cigarette butt and follow the stranger. The dogs begin to follow as well, but stop. I can see more of them running around the field. Repositioning. I hold the kitten close to my chest and go inside.

The tent is a different universe. The hot smell of electric lamps tempered by the chill, the sweaty damp of the crowd, the claustrophobic buzz of being inside an enclosed fire hazard. Minstrels’ feet thump on the stage like drumbeats, twins to the sharper pulse of their dugi drums and tremulous drone of the one- stringed ektara. Their saffron robes are ribbons of sound, twirling around their bark burned bodies as they dance, their madness set aflame by their own music.

My ears itch. Their voices are very loud. The stranger doesn’t even grimace. Some of the spectators squat on the ground, some sit on folding chairs set in haphazard rows. We sit at the back of the tent. I can feel the cold metal of the chair through my pants.

The kitten compresses itself into a ball in my lap, its trembling eased somewhat. Its head darts to and fro. The stranger is looking at the bauls, swaying his head, tapping his feet, curling his toes.

‘The story?’ I ask.

‘Listen. Don’t say anything. I’m going to tell you a story.’

‘I know, I just said—’

He hisses, startling me into silence. The kitten almost leaps out of my lap. I clench my fingers around it, stroking its fur.

‘Listen,’ he repeats. He is not looking at me. ‘I am going to tell you a story, and it is true. To set the stage, I must tell you where I was,’ he says, his words winding their way through the overwhelming sound of the music, which seems to rise with each passing second. The light inside the tent is gauzy. The interior moves in slow arcs as dizziness sets in. I close my eyes. Darkness, touched with blossoms of light beyond my eyelids. His voice, soothing, guiding me as the dark becomes deeper.

The kitten is purring, vibrating against my hands. I can hear the scrabble of swift paws outside the tent, the anxious snarls of the dogs.

It is very dark, as the stranger tells the story.

***

To set the stage, I must tell you where I was, he says.

It is very dark. I listen.

Think of a field. A swamp, rather. This is a long time ago. Kolkata. Calcutta, or what will be Calcutta. Maybe it is this very field, this very ground. It is different then, overgrown and marshy, the hum and tickle of insects like a grainy blanket over this winter night. It is cloudy, the moonlight diffuse as it sparkles on the stretches of water hiding under the reeds. The darkness is oppressive. There is no blush of electricity on the horizon, no vast cities for the sky to reflect. Somewhere beyond the dark, there are three villages: Kalikata, Sutanati, Gobindapur. They belong to the British East India Company. They are building a fort known as William. Things are changing, a new century nears. It will be the eighteenth, by the Christian calendar.

The campfire is an oasis of light. The bauls gather around, flames glistening on their dark swamp-damp skins, twinkling in their beards. They sing to ward off the encroaching darkness, their words lifting with the wood sparks towards the stars. They sing, unheeding of signatures on paper, of land exchanges and politics, of the white traders and their tensions with the Nawab and the Mughal Empire. Here in the firelight, they make music and tell stories to each other. To the land. To Bengal. To Hindustan, which does not belong to them, nor to the British, nor the Mughals. They know there are things in the wilderness that neither Mughal nor white man has in his documents of ownership. Things to be found in stories. But then again, they also claim to be mad.

I watch the bauls. I can see the others in the gloom, crouched amidst the reeds, circling slowly. More approach from afar, their claws sinking into the mud. I can hear them, though. The rustle of their spined fur, the twisting of rushes against their backs.

A howl slices the dark. The bauls falter but continue singing, holding tight to their instruments and gnarled staves. I can hear the mosquitoes whining around them, alighting on knuckles popping against skin, gorging, dying in the heat of the fire. There is a young woman amidst this group of travelling bauls. She looks out into the darkness, the words of their song dissolving on her tongue. Her hair is so black it melts into the night. I remember the taste of her lips, moist but cool from the night air. She keeps her eyes beyond the borders of the fire, searching a wilderness stirred into sentience by the noises of insect and animal, cricket and cockroach, moth and mosquito, snake and mongoose, fox and field rat, jackal and wildcat. Her bright patchwork cloak is wrapped tight around her body, marking her out. She is tired, short and unarmed, and stands no chance of surviving the attack. Not that the others do either. I can smell her terror like sweat against the gritty spice of woodsmoke. The wet soil of the marsh is cold between my toes. The insects catch in my fur, wrestling it, tickling like the reeds and plants around me.

The woman knows we are here, beyond their firelight. She knows because I told her myself, as a young man with long hair and kind eyes, tiger pelt on my back. Your party will never reach Sutanati and the banks of the river. You are being hunted. You have a day to run away, for we are patient, and draw out the hunt for pleasure and sport, I said to her in her sleep, while my own kin were unaware. I am a shape-shifter, after all, and not without my abilities.

She heard me, and saw me, though she slept while I whispered in her ear. She smelled my musk of swamp and blood, shit and piss and rank fur, hair and smooth human skin. She saw the lamps of my green eyes, and the pools of my brown eyes. I saw her face twitch as I spoke. She smelled of the stale sweat of travel, of the rich green of sleeping on grass, of the slick of oil on her lips from the roti and sabzi she had eaten before sleeping. I kissed her once. A chill ran across my neck as I did, because she reminds me so much of someone gone.

I look in the stranger’s eyes to see if they are still brown. ‘I don’t feel well,’ I say. Shhhh. The susurrus of reeds in the breeze. The music of the bauls is unearthly now, their howls and shrieks like banshee wails. The lights are swaying, cutting white trails in the air. The kitten is coiled in my lap. The scrabble of paws, outside.

The stranger shakes his head. You don’t interrupt the storyteller, he says with a gentle smile. I can feel the swamp outside, the city gone, the beasts gathering for the hunt in the misty wilderness. My fingers tighten around the kitten. The tent is an oasis of light, hot smell of electric lamps. Woodsmoke. Wilderness encroaches.

Close your eyes.

She heard me in her sleep, this baul woman with dirt in her hair, her lips sticky with just a little oil. It is clear that she remembers my warning, but she has not run away. Perhaps one of the bauls is her father, or mother, or sibling, or friend, or lover. It does not matter. She will not leave them behind. She begins to sing with them now, her scared voice strained. She remembers my smell, senses it now beyond the fire, in the tangle of the dark.

More of us come from the horizons. The scent of cow’s blood, a slaughter on their muzzles. They have eaten. But their hunt is not over. Their eyes weave trails as they run, leaping fireflies tracking their loping gait. They flank the group of humans, cutting off escape.

The full moon watches through the clouds, eager for massacre. With a bark of exhaled air, the clatter of tusk on fang, we spring. The bauls’ song is loud, and beautiful in its imperfection. It is their last. I run with my pack. My tribe. The bauls are surrounded. They sing till the very last moment.

The first kill is silent as our running, a glistening whisper of crimson in the air. The last is louder than the baying of a wolf, and rings like the bauls’ mad song across the marshes of what is not yet Kolkata. I can hear the howl as I run with this human in my arms, into the darkness, away from the shadows of slaughter. The howl curdles into a roar, enveloping the scream of the last dying minstrel.

But she is alive, against me, shivering against my dew-dappled fur. She is alive.

***

I open my eyes. The tent is still here. The city is outside. Mosquitoes feast on my neck and arms, leaving welts.

‘You can guess the rest, I’m sure,’ he says.

I wipe a sheen of sweat from my neck, shaking my head. ‘I think I got a bit much of your smoke,’ I mumble. But I know whatever just happened wasn’t me getting a second-hand high. I feel like I’ve just woken from the most vivid dream I’ve ever had. ‘Don’t tell me, you run away with this baul girl and live happily ever after. Never mind that you kidnapped her, and got her family and friends killed in front of her.’

‘Happily ever after,’ he says. ‘Isn’t that ironic, considering I’m sitting right here, right now.’

‘Immortality is a side-effect of lycanthropy, is it?’ I ask. Remembering the kitten, I give it some more attention. It mewls, eyes narrowing to sleepy slits.

‘Please, professor. A lycanthrope is a person who mistakenly believes they can turn into a wolf. I’m not a person, I don’t turn into a wolf, and I’m not ill. What I am has no basis in science or medicine.’

‘My mistake. You didn’t answer my question, though. Are you saying you’re immortal?’

His shoulders twitch. A silent laugh, perhaps. ‘Take what you will from my story. I never said that I was the hunter in the tale. It could have been one of my ancestors. A story passed down.’

‘I closed my eyes and I saw it. I smelled it. I don’t even believe you, and I felt it. I felt it,’ I shake my head. ‘Are you a hypnotist?’

‘I happen to be a good storyteller.’

‘Modest,’ I mutter, and shake my head. ‘So you’re rationalizing after telling me you’re a werewolf.’

‘Half-werewolf. And professor, I am merely showing you the benefits of rationalizing a story. There are none. Stories are fiction. Made up.’

‘You told me that story was true,’ I remark, feeling smug.

‘It is.’

Even as he says this, I see the look in his eyes and know that his heart has been broken by someone with dark black hair that melted into night, someone whose crippling revulsion of him, whose grease-stained kiss, still linger in his mind. I give him a moment of silence, surprised by this realization, as mundane as it is. After all, whose heart hasn’t been broken by someone? He seems suddenly too old to look so young, with his smooth face and lush, long hair (touched though it is by the occasional strand of grey). We share a long silence for the first time. It disturbs me, the ease with which I feel sad for him, after he’s told me a story steeped in carnage, not to mention a rather romantic outlook on kissing people in their sleep.

‘What happens afterwards?’ I venture, too curious not to ask.

‘You’re not a professor of literature, but you are a professor of history. History has all the stories. Make it up. Guess. A variation of the tragedy, I suppose. The woman is neither immortal, nor willing to forgive her kidnapper, this rakshasa, this monster. He leaves her in the village of Kalikata, or at the banks of the Hooghly at Sutanati, where her fellow travellers were bound.’ He pauses, taking a deep breath. He continues.

‘Or even if he charms her with a shape-shifter’s magic and they wander off and get married, she dies and he lives on to survive and tell his story to a random wayfarer centuries later. Either way, he is alone. His pack is not forgiving of intermingling with humans, nor sabotaging a hunt, making him an exile from his own kind. They can smell his betrayal from a mile away.’

‘This isn’t too far from a story about a chosen one rising to lead his tribe to salvation, is it? Lone exile, wandering into the future, unable to die, shifting between shapes, all that.’

He nods. ‘I’m just giving you some options. But I knew you had it in you, professor. You can tell someone the rest of the story. Or tell it to yourself. Romance, fantasy, horror, realism, moralistic fable, history, lies, truth. It’s all there for you. Pick and choose, my friend.’

‘You’re the first Indian werewolf I’ve ever heard of.’

‘Werewolf is one word. A European one. We’ve been called many, many things. You can call me anything you like. The shape- shifter is a common thing in the end, and our stories are told here as everywhere else.’

‘And yet, you used the European word,’ I say.

He nods. ‘You’ve got me there.’ I see him shift a bit in his chair, and wonder if I’ve made him uncomfortable.

‘So, if shape-shifters are so common how come nobody knows about you?’ I ask.

‘Everybody knows about us. Most of them just don’t believe that we’re real any more.’

‘Why don’t you tell them you are?’

‘Maybe in this day and age we just want to be left alone.’

‘And occasionally tell a story to a random wayfarer?’

‘Exactly.’

The kitten squeals and leaps out of my lap. The stranger has caught the animal before I can even react.

‘Once everyone leaves, the dogs outside will chase this kitten down and tear it to pieces. For sport,’ he says, running his long fingers through the little creature’s dirty fur. ‘And humans have the arrogance to say they’re the only animals capable of cruelty.’

‘Humans?’ I try to laugh. ‘You’re generalizing just a bit.’

‘Apologies.’ He looks at me. The crowd bursts into applause as the bauls finish. Chairs clatter against each other as several spectators stand, some drunk. I didn’t even notice that the song had ended. The stranger speaks despite the cacophony, and his voice is clear enough that I can hear him. ‘You know what distinguishes us from the dogs out there?’ he asks me. I nod, despite myself. I want to give him a laundry list of things, but I don’t.

‘We can tell stories,’ I say instead.

‘Well done, professor. Perhaps my story did not fall on deaf ears after all.’ I say nothing. He gets up, surprising me. ‘Wait.’ I raise my voice. ‘Where are you going?’ I ask.

‘I’m going to walk away with this kitten, of course. The dogs won’t come near me. I like dogs, myself, but they can be a tad cruel sometimes. So can cats. So can we all. Anyway, that ragtag pack outside won’t come near me. I’ll feed this little thing till it has the strength to survive, and I’ll let it come and go as it pleases after that.’

‘Ever the compassionate werewolf, are you?’

He shrugs, looking weary. ‘Come now. A moment of compassion every two centuries hardly makes one compassionate, does it? You don’t want to hear about the things I’ve done in your and other lifetimes. But there it is. Just today, I saw two dogs—they were licking each other, lapping at each other’s muzzles as if they loved each other with every cell in their bodies. Did they? Or was it just two animals sniffing out compatible genes? When two humans kiss, isn’t it the same thing, deep down? I don’t know. It was a moment I found worthy of keeping in my memory, and telling someone. I have done so. I thank you for lending a willing ear. I’m going now, professor.’

I don’t know what to say. He gets up to leave. ‘Walk with me, if you like,’ he adds.

As if this has been his plan all along, or mine, I get up and follow him. So we leave, together. The dogs trail us at the edges of my vision, eager for the fragile prey curled up in the stranger’s arms.

***

In the warren of narrow roads beyond Shaktigarh Math, we lose the sounds and music of the mela. They’re replaced by the tick of claws on asphalt and concrete eroded by rain. I’ve always been afraid of street dogs at night, but they keep away, don’t even bark. As if they smell something strange in the air. They watch us, ears pricked, silent Anubis-faced sentinels on the deserted street corners of Jadavpur. The rows of blanketed bodies on the footpaths give the streets the feeling of an open tomb. The dogs uncaring guardians to these sleeping humans who share their nocturnal territory, this electric-lit kingdom lined with the twinkle of broken glass, shadows etched across stucco and worn paint, walls glyphed with graffiti in Bengali, Hindi, English.

The stranger holds the kitten to his chest. Madonna and child. His hair catching light to halo his head. We pass a rickshaw parked by a piss-streaked wall, field rats huddling around its wheels, its puller wrapped in a shawl under the canopy. Beyond the corridor of the road, the flare of passing headlights pales the stranger’s face for a moment.

‘Do you want to hear more?’ the stranger asks. I can’t tell if he’s hesitant or just being soft-spoken. His face stippled with the shadows of leaves, sandals slapping the road.

‘Yes. Finish the story.’

‘Maybe some day. Tonight, you deserve another one, for being such a good listener.’

‘If you like,’ I say.

‘You know now. What to do,’ he tells me. I do. I close my eyes.

‘Keep your eyes half open. As if meditating,’ he says. I let some light under my lids. I can smell the stranger now, as if his storytelling has worked him into a sweat. A smell that on anyone else would make me hold my breath. On him it feels alluring, like the smell of my own sweat on summer nights, sublimating on skin flushed with arousal, pooling in my armpits.

‘Tell me if I’m about to trip over something,’ I tell him.

‘What do you see, when you think of a werewolf ?’ he asks me.

‘I . . .’

‘Don’t answer, just think.’

Something takes hold of me—the cold night air and the smell of the stranger making me feel faint. That stupor, like in the tent at the mela. I realize I want it. I think of what he’s asked me to think. Of man and wolf, man and animal, man and woman and animal, twisted together, fur and bones and flesh and claws and teeth, glowing eyes and arched spines, human skin peeling and tearing to spill out flea-bitten fur, a mass of memories from literature and film and myth and art.

‘You know, of course, of the men that lived far, far from here and now, wearing dead wolves and bears on their backs as they fought and killed.’

His presence beside me is a bonfire, infecting the wash of street lights with its warmth, even the mist becoming smoke.

‘And here where we stand, long before India, before its empires and kingdoms. There were human tribes who identified with dogs and wolves, with wild animals. And there were, and still are, tribes who are not human, who identify with humans in similar ways. Who take the shape of humans, just as humans took the shape of animals by wearing skins.’

The vestigial coat of my animal fur rises up, pathetic prickles under my cotton and wool clothes. I want to say something but can barely speak. His hand brushes my shoulder, and the contact courses through my entire arm. ‘It’s all right,’ he says. ‘Now listen to me.’

I walk forward half-blind, guided by the sound of his voice. The lapping of tongues, clicking of fangs behind us. The minute vibration of the kitten’s chest. I become aware of how cold it is again. The stranger speaks, or chants, and it sounds like English. But his accent seems different now, more guttural. I can almost hear other tongues behind his voice, like the overlapping tones of a throat singer’s song.

I hear the panting, the claws, behind and around us. Even as I walk, I dream, of something next to me in the stranger’s place, massive and hunched, rippling like the wind made flesh. Something neither human nor animal, bristling with an energy that I can only describe as elemental. I feel its heat, smell its pungent musk of blood-spiced piss and shit and mud-caked hair, feel it ready to lope out of this distant corner of my vision, on sinewy legs covered in fur, shimming under street lights eclipsed by its size. Those very street lights become rows of high torches rippling with fire, a path for us two, human and inhuman, leading into the well of a night long past, leading backwards into the stinking dark of fermented history.

***

The stranger speaks, or chants, and it sounds like English.

The Úlf héðinn pants like the beast he is not, like the dead wolf he wears on his broad back. Spittle flies from his froth-flecked lips, and his breath pours steaming on the cold air. Blood-rimmed pupils full and black, he stares at me. I am the beast he sees in himself, hot and rank and vast, bear and wolf and man. I am his doppelganger, grown huge on the nourishment of his faith. His spear is held high and trembling, his shield streaked with spit where he has bitten it in frenzy, his boots stamping the frozen ground. My claw is firm, sunken in the soil. I am ready. He kicks the ground and runs to me.

It has been months since I’ve eaten of human, but I am not afraid. I am like Fenrir before Týr, come to bite the war god’s hand, or to swallow the All-father himself. I am kveldulf, the evening-wolf come sunset. I see him, human beneath his bloodlust and dye. I am more than human. My howl drowns out his cry.

But he, too, is fearless. His spear slams into my head, the shaft quivering from the impact. His aim is perfect, his movements quick, and his arm strong. He leaps towards me as I slow down. There is a rain drizzling upon the earth and my naked fur and it is blood. It comes from the fresh hole beneath my blinded left eye, staunched only by the weapon that made it. The Úlf héðinn pounces. The metal edge of his shield crashes into my face, cracking the bridge of my muzzle and shattering my curved fangs. He throws the shield to the ground and jumps on to me, gripping his spear. I look up at him in crippling disbelief, this human perched on my great form, and under the fanged crown of dead wolf ’s gums I see him turned. He is no shape changer, and yet he has become a god in that moment. He has struck down Fenrir.

And then, I am afraid.

It is a terrible thing to be afraid in this shape, to hear my deafening howl twisted to a withering whine as the Úlf héðinn throws his human cry up to the stars. His boots on my shoulders, he drives his weapon deeper into my head. Each turn of the broad spearhead widens a split running from the crack beneath my eye.

I am awakened by panic. I will die if I do nothing. I embrace him. My talons are too sharp for his un-armoured sides, gouging deep lines across the seamed muscle of his torso. He tumbles against me, drenching me with his wounds. I rip him open and fling him off. Mouth mad and red, he gives me one last bloody roar of defiance. I return the cry tenfold and lunge.

His skull cracks beneath my tusks. Scarred hands spasm around the spear still in me, slide off the wet wood. I shake my wounded head, snapping his neck. The sound rings loud in the silenced forest. Limp, he falls from my mouth. The frozen ground melts to dark mud under the Úlf héðinn’s broken body. It is done.

I pull the spear from beneath my useless eye, opening the cleave in my skull. It spatters and hisses into the muddy snow. Seeking the rich scent of my prey’s flesh and soul, I crawl on all fours to his corpse, touching my teeth to his stomach. A desperate hunger seizes my shuddering body and I devour him.

He has nearly taken my life, and now he returns it to me with each bite I take of him, burning in my gut like the flesh of some prophet imbued with divine flame. I feel as if I am eating of my own people, of the carcass of a shape changer. Above the trees, the night sky is hung with the glowing banners of the Úlf héðinn’s gods. I eat of him as if he is my last supper. With his bones I go down into the cold hard earth, burrowing deep into the frost, my hide crisped with blood and water.

Night ends and I am still alive. I burst from the frozen grave I buried myself in, now turned to wet womb from my heat. Sunlight washes over my skin, now without fur. Bitter winter cuts me despite dawn’s light. I am smaller, weaker, though still stronger than any human. The gleam of starlight as only my second self can see it vanishes to give way to the unsubtle glare of man’s morning. I am more than human, but less than my second self.

But today I am grateful for the dead man, who lies at my feet, and lingers in my changed veins. I look at my arms, at the rest of my small, pale shape, with its thickets of under-grown hair, and I bend low to the frozen crimson mirror of my prey’s blood. In its dark surface, I can see my sunlit face, and it is now the face of the Úlf héðinn, this man who now lives in me. There is a new scar on his face, knotted and thick, running down his cheek from just below the right eye, which is now milky and grey. I bid farewell to my previous self.

I touch the slick of red ice, touch his crusted entrails, and kiss my fingers; touch my forehead, my chest, my genitals. Here I fell by my pride, and here I was remade by my prey.

I open my eyes.

***

I look at my small brown hands, smooth and lacking in scar tissue, and I wonder who I am. Then I see the stranger next to me smoking a cigarette, and know I am not him. His lips are rouged with new colour. I look at him, gaunt and tall, skin brown like mine, hair black, and I’m amazed that I know this man now. I wonder where he’s from—whether born of some arcane violence in the depths of ancient Scandinavia, or slid squalling into the hands of doctors in a hospital in India mere decades ago, like me. I wonder at the fact that I’m even considering the former.

He laughs, whether reading my mind I can’t tell. ‘Welcome back,’ he says, a lick of smoke escaping his teeth. His fingers are stained with the new red on his lips as well. I see a dead rat by his feet, neatly slit open, though it could be lipstick on the stranger’s mouth.

We’re still near Jadavpur. This is real. But we’ve walked quite a bit. No longer in the honeycomb of alleys around Shaktigarh Math, we stand instead at the wider avenue of Prince Anwarshah Road. The street is lined with shuttered shops and silent vehicles.

‘If I didn’t trust you, I’d swear you’ve drugged me somehow,’ I tell him.

‘It’s probably unwise to trust me, so you can swear all you like.’

‘You’re admitting you’re untrustworthy?’ I ask.

‘You just met me. Surely telling you a story or two isn’t enough to gain someone’s trust. You have to earn that, yes?’

‘Telling a story or two. You’ve a way with understatement.’ I cough out a bit of laughter, bending down to grasp my knees. I feel incredibly tired. ‘God, I feel so hungry. Like I’m starving.’

‘Yes,’ he agrees, and lets out a piercing whistle.

A taxi stops beside us. The stranger tosses the remaining shred of his cigarette.

The driver tells us in Hindi that it’ll be twenty rupees extra this late.

‘Come on. Let’s get you something to eat. My treat,’ the stranger tells me, holding open the cab door.

‘That’s really not necessary,’ I tell him as my stomach growls. But I get into the taxi all the same, slumping into the back seat like a drunken teenager. The stranger follows. The car’s humid with the rubbery reek of sweat and upholstery. A string of browned lemons and chillies hanging from the rear-view mirror twists in the air, charming the car with luck. The taxi pulls out past the row of off-duty cabs lining the front of South City Mall and its transparent façade, now dark, the hidden metal slashes of stilled escalator steps inside throwing weak reflections from the ambient street light. Dimmed billboards smile down on us with the giant faces of smiling models and Bollywood stars.

I slip in and out of a doze as the taxi moves through Kolkata by night. An empty city, populated only with the bulbous yellow beetle- shapes of Ambassador taxis and the roaring, painted monsters of supply lorries, their spattered mudflaps and rear bumpers decorated with crude faces of tusked demons and red English lettering in careful brushstrokes, warning of DANGER and imploring their fellow denizens of the road to BLOW HORN PLEASE as their shaking exhaust pipes belch clouds of dark smoke. Light filters through the car windows and slides across the stranger’s face, which flashes with waking red when a car or truck stops next to us while indicating.

When we stop, it is on Ballygunge Circular Road, by Sharma’s, one of the few all-night roadside dhabas that service the nocturnals of Kolkata. I have no idea whether the stranger pays the taxi driver his extra twenty rupees. Like a temple, Sharma’s has drawn a flock to its open storefront, which breathes out air thick with the smell of scorched meat and live bodies. With the stranger next to me, it feels like a watering spot, an oasis for human animals to gather at night, ravenous and thirsty, from late-night lorry drivers and labourers to students and wealthy young clubbers. Women remain under- represented, some nervous and others uncaring amid the crush of eating men. The footpath and road in front of Sharma’s is cluttered with double-parked cars, patrons eating inside them to avoid the crowd in the dhaba, their windshields occasionally spotted with bird shit from the trees above.

We sit at one of the tables inside, hard bench under our buttocks. We don’t wait long for a tin tray of butter masala chicken, its gravy neon orange with a floating layer of oil. Ravenous, I dip my naan in the slop and eat the whole tray, feeding a hunger so strong it makes my belly hurt. The stranger doesn’t eat, watching the patrons around us, face calm under the sleepless fluorescents, their light replicated by tiled walls marked with azure Pepsi ads. We don’t talk much, but the silence feels earned after the past few hours that we’ve spent together. I feel a comfort from his presence, as he taps his long fingers against his glass of hot chai, opaque with milk. A comfort, even though he looks at me like I’m a pet, scarfing up the food he’s just poured into my dish.

‘Mr Half-werewolf. Mr H. Werewolf. If you had to, out of all these people, which one would you pick to eat?’ I ask, my lips and brain sloppy with sudden late-night nutrition. He just smiles, though he does look through the crowd as if considering the question. His gaze lands back on me. I can’t tell whether that’s deliberate.

And then I’m done eating, and this long night is over. So abrupt I can barely believe it, standing once again in the chill of the open air, stomach taut with food. It’s dawn, but still dark. My companion lights another joint. I realize the kitten is gone, and am disappointed. I don’t ask what happened to it.

‘Thank you for the meal,’ I say.

‘You’re welcome. Now go home, professor. It’s late, and you’ve listened enough,’ he says.

‘I don’t know about that. Will I see you again?’ I ask.

‘I don’t know. Would you like to see me again?’

‘Yes. I want to hear the end of the first story.’

He closes his eyes and takes a deep drag. His lips are still ruddy from whatever it was that he put on them while I was in his storytelling trance, despite being washed in milky tea. ‘You and your endings, professor. They’ll be the end of you, some day.’

‘You started it,’ I say.

‘And I’m still living it,’ he says, and wipes his mouth. ‘Tomorrow. Oly Pub. Five thirty.’

‘I’ll be there.’

We walk over to a parked taxi nearby. The driver looks at us suspiciously, and demands an extra fifty rupees this time.

‘The price is going up, I see,’ I tell the stranger. ‘Can’t you hypnotize him into not charging me extra?’

The stranger says nothing, and I’m embarrassed. ‘Do you want to share the cab? I’m heading towards Jodhpur Park. Where do you live?’

The stranger hitches with a silent laugh. ‘That’s all right. Get home safely, professor.’

‘Thank you. For the stories,’ I say, opening the taxi door and getting in.

The stranger smiles his red smile and walks away, sleeping kitten cradled in one arm, joint in the other hand. I almost don’t notice this. I could have sworn the kitten was gone. I feel very far from the present. As the taxi rolls down Ballygunge Circular Road and its overhanging canopy of trees, past the yellow walls of the army base, I look back and lose sight of the stranger. Heart thundering, I wait to get home. Ever-present, the dogs watch from the sides of the road, their eyes throwing back the headlights.

From the forthcoming book THE DEVOURERS by Indra Das. Copyright © 2015 by Indrapramit Das. Reprinted by arrangement with Del Rey, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now download Trudi Canavan's The Magicians' Guild for only 2.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

This year, like every other, the magicians of Imardin gather to purge the city of undesirables. Cloaked in the protection of their sorcery, they move with no fear of the vagrants and miscreants who despise them and their work—until one enraged girl, barely more than a child, hurls a stone at the hated invaders . . . and effortlessly penetrates their magical shield.

What the Magicians' Guild has long dreaded has finally come to pass. There is someone outside their ranks who possesses a raw power beyond imagining, an untrained mage who must be found and schooled before she destroys herself and her city with a force she cannot yet control.

You can also get your hands on the second volume, The Novice, for only 3.99$ here.

Extract from Joe Hart's THE LAST GIRL


Here's an extract from Joe Hart's The Last Girl, compliments of the folks at Thomas and Mercer. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

A mysterious worldwide epidemic reduces the birthrate of female infants from 50 percent to less than 1 percent. Medical science and governments around the world scramble in an effort to solve the problem, but twenty-five years later there is no cure, and an entire generation grows up with a population of fewer than a thousand women.

Zoey and some of the surviving young women are housed in a scientific research compound dedicated to determining the cause. For two decades, she’s been isolated from her family, treated as a test subject, and locked away—told only that the virus has wiped out the rest of the world’s population.

Captivity is the only life Zoey has ever known, and escaping her heavily armed captors is no easy task, but she’s determined to leave before she is subjected to the next round of tests…a program that no other woman has ever returned from. Even if she’s successful, Zoey has no idea what she’ll encounter in the strange new world beyond the facility’s walls. Winning her freedom will take brutality she never imagined she possessed, as well as all her strength and cunning—but Zoey is ready for war.

Enjoy!
--------------------------

“I wonder what the princess is eating right now,” Meeka says, picking at the boiled vegetables and canned meat that were already cold by the time they sat down at their places.

Zoey eats hungrily, downing the pasty meat without wondering what animal she might be ingesting. She shrugs. “Something special, I suppose.”

“I’ve heard you get whatever you want,” Meeka says, sipping her water.

“You can’t have whatever you want if they don’t have it.”

“That’s the thing. I think they do. I mean, a lot of these veggies are fresh, right? So they’re growing them somewhere, and I don’t know about you, but I haven’t seen any dirt or plots of land within the ARC.”

It is an old discussion between them, but Zoey indulges her to help patch over their earlier spat.

Zoey chews, thinking. “Might be on the roof.”

“Maybe. But I doubt it.”

“You think they grow them outside the walls?”

“Have to.”

“The only ones who go outside the walls are Reaper and the Redeyes.”

Zoey forces down the shiver that tries to rise in her from speaking the name of the reclamation unit.

“They’re the only ones we see go outside. We can’t see in the dark,” Meeka says, widening her eyes comically.

“No, but . . .” Zoey frowns.

“What?”

She shakes her head. “Nothing. We’re going to get in trouble talking like this.”

Meeka shrugs. “We get in trouble for everything. Don’t speak to the Clerics’ sons, don’t have impure thoughts. We’re not even supposed to touch ourselves—like I’m gonna follow that rule . . .”

“Meeka!”

“Well, it’s true. It’s really all we’ve got. Remember when they caught Kelli in the bathroom with that one Cleric’s son? What was his name?”

“Andrew,” Zoey says in a quiet voice.

“She went in the box for a day and we never saw him or his father again.”

“I remember. That’s why you should keep your voice down.”

“I really don’t care anymore. I’ve got another six months, and then I’ll see whatever they’ve got planned for us. In the face of that, nothing really seems very frightening.” They both fall quiet for a time, concentrating on their meals. “I bet Terra got chicken and mashed potatoes,” Meeka says quietly. “With butter.”

The mention of butter floods Zoey’s mouth with saliva, and suddenly her meal tastes more bland than ever. They only have butter once a year, on New Year’s Eve.

Zoey sighs and sets her fork down. “Why can’t you ever be quiet?”

“Not in my nature.”

Lily rocks beside Zoey, humming something out of tune under her breath. She watches her movements, dread rippling through her like water disturbed by a storm. Who will watch after Lily when she’s gone?

The chime sounds and makes Zoey jump, her hand slashing out, knocking a spoon lying to the other side of the table. Meeka grabs it up, her reflexes so fast Zoey doesn’t even see her hand move.

“You okay?” Meeka asks, handing the spoon back as the table begins to empty.

“I’m fine,” Zoey says.

They file back down the different hallways to their rooms. Zoey watches Lily and her Cleric disappear into the closest chamber to her own before scanning the strap on her wrist.

She enters her room, leaving Simon to stand beside the entry in the hall, his hands folded neatly behind his back. His stance is a hold-over from being in the military, she knows. She suspects that all the Clerics are former military, chosen for their assignments to the women for sometimes obvious, sometimes cryptic reasons.

She recalls the night she knew for sure that Simon had been a soldier . . .

***

She’d been no more than seven years old. The auto-guns woke her. Their chatter was muted somewhat by the walls and the building around her, but it was still loud enough to drag her up from sleep and send her half-way across the room, wide-eyed and staring before she’d even known she’d left the bed. A red glow had filled her room. It had been so beautiful, the color deeper than any she’d ever seen before, deeper than the most brilliant sunrise. She’d gone to the window and peered out, no longer flinching at the thunder of heavy gunfire.

The night had been alive with color.

Streaks of white phosphorus cut the air above the ARC, while a red falling star trailed down toward the compound, its light bathing everything below. The snipers on the wall began shooting then, their gun barrels spraying ire over and over at something below. She could hear screams too, long and loud. Bellows and curses that curdled her insides.

But she couldn’t look away. She pressed her eyes to the glass and stared, finding the zips of light she knew must be bullets lying, but even then the fear was overshadowed by the awe of something beautiful in the chaos.

An explosion shook the entire ARC, sending her vibrating away from the window. A ball of fire as wide as her room rose above the wall, flames licking over its side like water. The fire reached out and touched one of the snipers in his nest, setting him alight. He burned and spun, a sound coming from him that nearly made her clamp her hands over her ears. He had leapt from the wall then. Not inside, toward the track of concrete that surrounded the building, but out into the open air. He had jumped outside. And this fact alone somehow terrified her more than anything else she’d seen. Because at that moment in her early years, nothing was more frightening than being outside the walls.

Simon had burst into her room, eliciting a short cry from her before she realized who it was. She ran to him, clutched at his waist, and he embraced her, one of the last times he had ever done so. His voice was low and calm, but there was something in it that made her look up into his face. He was scared, too.

In the excitement she didn’t notice that Lee was with him until the boy touched her hand. Simon told them to go sit in the bathroom and not to talk, to be quiet. Lee led her there but she glanced back at Simon as he closed the door, one hand pressed to it as if to keep it firmly shut, the other holding a pistol like the ones that hung on the guards’ belts.

They sat together in the darkness of the bathroom, Lee holding her hand, saying things that didn’t make sense at the time. Later she realized he was telling her a story to keep her calm, all the while his arm trembled beside her own. Only several months older than she was, and already he was trying to take care of her.

They stayed that way as the night wore on, the red light coming and going as if the world were spinning so fast that the sun rose and set over and over. Slowly the gunshots lessened, the silences between them growing after each concussion. Soon there was only the quiet crackle of flames, barely audible over their breathing in the enclosed space . . .

***

Zoey catches herself staring out the window at the curving, impassive wall and casts of the memory. It had been a battle, she knows that now, but what for and with whom, she can only guess.

She moves to the narrow closet set beside the bathroom and draws the doors open. In it hangs a dress made from the same rough material as her current clothes, the color an identical gray. She takes it down, hating the feel of the fabric more than the uniform she wears. She takes the dress into the bathroom and changes into it, only looking at herself to make sure the neckline is straight and the shoulders are even.

It’s an ugly thing, lumpy and rough. It isn’t made to be beautiful.

It’s made to remind the wearer of her place and of what will come.

She turns of the light, liking the darkness better, and stands there in the silence, bathing in it like a healing balm.

Excerpted from THE LAST GIRL © Copyright 2016 by Joe Hart. Reprinted with permission by Thomas and Mercer. All rights reserved.

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now download Glen Cook's first Dread Empire omnibus, A Cruel Wind, for only 1.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

Before there was Black Company, there was the Dread Empire, an omnibus collection the first three Dread Empire novels: A Shadow of All Night's Falling, October's Baby and All Darkness Met.

And here's the blurb of the first volume, A Shadow of All Night's Falling:

Across the mountains called Dragon's Teeth, beyond the chill reach of the Werewind and the fires of the world's beginning, above the walls of the castle Fangdred, stands Windtower. From this lonely keep the Star Rider calls forth the war that even wizards dread, fought for a woman's hundred-lifetime love. A woman called Nepanthe, princess to the Stormkings...

Quote of the Day

We live among mysteries. Love is one, there are others. We must not imagine we understand all there is to know about the world.

- GUY GAVRIEL KAY, Children of Earth and Sky (Canada, USA, Europe)

I finished this one earlier today. The year is young, but Kay's latest could well be the best speculative fiction read of 2016!

Charlie Jane Anders contest winner!

This lucky winner will receive a copy of Charlie Jane Anders' All the Birds in the Sky! For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The winner is:

- Oliver Porter, from Bath, England

Many thanks to all the participants!

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


I don't know for how long, but right now you can download Guy Gavriel Kay's excellent Sailing to Sarantium for only 1.99$ here! Don't miss out on this amazing two-volume series!

Here's the blurb:

Sarantium is the golden city: holy to the faithful, exalted by the poets, jewel of the world and heart of an empire. Artisan Caius Crispus receives a summons from the emperor and sets off on a journey toward the Imperial city. But before Crispin can reach Sarantium, with its taverns and gilded sanctuaries, chariot races and palaces, he must pass through a land of pagan ritual and mysterious danger.

In Sailing to Sarantium, the first volume of the brilliant Sarantine Mosaic, Guy Gavriel Kay weaves an utterly compelling story of the allure and intrigue of a magnificent city and the people drawn into its spell.

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


The first three installments of Stephen R. Lawhead's The Pendragon Cycle are on sale for a limited time. The first volume, Taliesin, can be downloaded for only 2.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

It was a time of legend, when the last shadows of the mighty Roman conqueror faded from the captured Isle of Britain. While across a vast sea, bloody war shattered a peace that had flourished for two thousand years in the doomed kingdom of Atlantis.

Taliesin is the remarkable adventure of Charis, the Atlantean princess who escaped the terrible devastation of her homeland, and of the fabled seer and druid prince Taliesin, singer at the dawn of the age. It is the story of an incomparable love that joined two worlds amid the fires of chaos, and spawned the miracles of Merlin...and Arthur the king.

The Real Reason Why Shannara Chronicles Failed to Copy The Success of Game of Thrones


Andrew Liptak wrote an interesting article titled "The Real Reason Why Shannara Chronicles Failed to Copy The Success of Game of Thrones" for io9.com. And though I haven't watched the whole season of The Shannara Chronicles, I found myself agreeing with everything Liptak wrote. Here's an extract:

The Shannara Chronicles isn’t really covering the same ground. The epic struggle between good and evil is fairly abstract. And it’s harder to hit that theme with the same weight as with what we’re seeing in other, top-tier shows. Just as A Song of Ice and Fire made older epic fantasy series look a bit simplistic, Game of Thrones makes Shannara look obsolete.

[...]

By the end of the season, The Shannara Chronicles simply feels like a missed opportunity—and like a sad cash grab from executives who watched Lord of the Rings and Game of Thrones, and simply wanted to compete by creating their own show. As a result, they pulled all the wrong lessons of the successes of those franchises and came away with something that’s entertaining, but not memorable.

Follow this link to read the full piece.

Win a copy of Richard A. Knaak's BLACK CITY SAINT


I have two copies of Richard A. Knaak's Black City Saint up for grabs, courtesy of the folks at Pyr. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

For more than sixteen hundred years, Nick Medea has followed and guarded the Gate that keeps the mortal realm and that of Feirie separate, seeking in vain absolution for the fatal errors he made when he slew the dragon. All that while, he has tried and failed to keep the woman he loves from dying over and over.

Yet in the fifty years since the Night the Dragon Breathed over the city of Chicago, the Gate has not only remained fixed, but open to the trespasses of the Wyld, the darkest of the Feiriefolk. Not only does that mean an evil resurrected from Nick’s own past, but the reincarnation of his lost Cleolinda, a reincarnation destined once more to die.

Nick must turn inward to that which he distrusts the most: the Dragon, the beast he slew when he was still only Saint George. He must turn to the monster residing in him, now a part of him…but ever seeking escape.

The gang war brewing between Prohibition bootleggers may be the least of his concerns. If Nick cannot prevent an old evil from opening the way between realms…then not only might Chicago face a fate worse than the Great Fire, but so will the rest of the mortal realm.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "SAINT." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

Winter is coming snow art



Awesome!

The Everything Box


Although I own a couple of Richard Kadrey's Sandman Slim novels, I have yet to give them a shot. I was planning on doing just that when the folks at Harper Voyager offered me an early read of his newest, The Everything Box. I've been postponing my reading of the author's signature series because I didn't want to go into another multi-volume book sequence. As a stand-alone novel (there is contradictory information claiming that this might be the first installment in a new series), The Everything Box appeared to be the perfect opportunity for me to sample Kadrey's writing.

Advance praise compared this one to Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett's Good Omens, which was all I needed to have my curiosity piqued. Quirky and snarky, The Everything Box is one fun romp of a book!

Here's the blurb:

Reminiscent of the edgy, offbeat humor of Chris Moore and Matt Ruff, the first entry in a whimsical, fast-paced supernatural series from the New York Times bestselling author of the Sandman Slim novels—a dark and humorous story involving a doomsday gizmo, a horde of baddies determined to possess its power, and a clever thief who must steal it back . . . again and again.

22000 B.C. A beautiful, ambitious angel stands on a mountaintop, surveying the world and its little inhabitants below. He smiles because soon, the last of humanity who survived the great flood will meet its end, too. And he should know. He’s going to play a big part in it. Our angel usually doesn’t get to do field work, and if he does well, he’s certain he’ll get a big promotion.

And now it’s time . . . .

The angel reaches into his pocket for the instrument of humanity’s doom. Must be in the other pocket. Then he frantically begins to pat himself down. Dejected, he realizes he has lost the object. Looking over the Earth at all that could have been, the majestic angel utters a single word.

“Crap.”

2015. A thief named Coop—a specialist in purloining magic objects—steals and delivers a small box to the mysterious client who engaged his services. Coop doesn’t know that his latest job could be the end of him—and the rest of the world. Suddenly he finds himself in the company of The Department of Peculiar Science, a fearsome enforcement agency that polices the odd and strange. The box isn’t just a supernatural heirloom with quaint powers, they tell him.

It’s a doomsday device. They think . . .

And suddenly, everyone is out to get it.

The bulk of the action takes place in modern-day California. It's a world in which magic and mystical creatures exist. God, Heaven, Hell, angels, demons, Lucifer, and everything else in between are real. Qaphsiel, the angel who was meant to use the box to wipe out what was left of mankind following the flood, has been wandering the Earth for thousands of years in search of it. Only by completing his task will he be welcomed back in Heaven. And now, the magical map he's been using shows that the object of his eternal quest seems to be found in Los Angeles. Little does he know that a thief contracted to steal the box has just acquired it for a man known only as Mr. Babylon. But this robbery will cause a chain reaction of strange events that will draw various parties in search of the doomsday device. Believe you me: hilarious chaos will ensue.

The characterization is by far the best aspect of this work. In a variety of ways, every single protagonist is an odd, flawed, inept, not-the-sharpest-knife-in-the-drawer kind of character. Majestic angel he might be, but there's no denying that Qaphsiel is a bona fide dumbass. And I'm not being negative when I say this, as his stupidity makes him quite endearing. The same can be said of the thief Coop. Not the strongest of lightbulbs, he and his crew are nevertheless a very entertaining bunch. Agents Bayliss and Nelson are a highly dysfunctional pair, as are two different cults trying to one-up each other and bring about their own version of the apocalypse before the other has a chance to do so. Add to that an incompetent government agency staffed by the living dead and weird creatures, minions of Lucifer attempting to recruit an exiled angel, and you have all the ingredients required for an engaging read!

Dark and twisted humor full of pop culture references abound. This is a fun read that will often make you laugh out loud. Though I must say that at time Kadrey went a little over-the-top with the jokes and the dialogue. It sometimes felt as though the author was going for a chuckle a page ratio and occasionally the humor or the one-liners fell a little flat. But overall, the snark, the quirkiness, and the irreverence work very well.

As enjoyable as it was, The Everything Box was not as dark and edgy as I was expecting the book to be. Given everything I've heard about the Sandman Slim novels, this one was a decidedly lighter read. Hence, I have a feeling that newbies like me might get more out of it than long-time Richard Kadrey fans. Time will tell whether or not this one marks the beginning of a brand new series. As things stand, The Everything Box features a totally self-contained tale and works perfectly as a stand-alone book. Though I'm not sure where the story could go next, I'd be happy to follow more misadventures by Coop and company!

If you are looking for a fun and entertaining read rich in unexpected twists and snarky humor, The Everything Box is definitely for you!

The final verdict: 7.5/10

For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now get your hands on the digital edition of Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan's The Strain for only 2.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

The visionary creator of the Academy Award-winning Pan's Labyrinth and a Hammett Award-winning author bring their imaginations to this bold, epic novel about a horrifying battle between man and vampire that threatens all humanity. It is the first installment in a thrilling trilogy and an extraordinary international publishing event.

The Strain

They have always been here. Vampires. In secret and in darkness. Waiting. Now their time has come.

In one week, Manhattan will be gone. In one month, the country.

In two months--the world.

You can also download the sequel, The Fall, for only 3.99$ here. The third volume, The Night Eternal, can be downloaded for 4.99$ here.

Reminder: Katherine Kurtz's three best Deryni series soon to be available in digital format!


As you know, I've been promoting Katherine Kurtz's Deryni saga for as long as the Hotlist has been created! It is by far one of my favorite fantasy series out there. Unfortunately, many of the books are out of print, and thus hard to find. Even worse, only the first trilogy, which is also the weakest Deryni sequence, is available in ebook format.

But things are looking up, for The Legends of Camber of Culdi, The Histories of King Kelson, and The Heirs of Saint Camber will soon be released as digital editions by Open Road Media! Indeed, all three trilogies will become available on March 8th.

This is awesome news, as it will allow a brand new generation of SFF readers to discover and fall in love with this saga and its characters! And you can now pre-order each installment for as little 4.44$ each! Simply click on these links to find out more about the books!

The Legends of Camber of Culdi:

- Camber of Culdi
- Saint Camber
- Camber the Heretic

The Histories of King Kelson:

- The Bishop's Heir
- The King's Justice
- The Quest for Saint Camber

The Heirs of Saint Camber:

- The Harrowing of Gwynedd
- King Javan's Year
- The Bastard Prince

Here's the blurb for Camber of Culdi, which should be the first book you read:

A Deryni nobleman seeking justice faces a tyrannical king in the magnificent first book of this acclaimed classic fantasy series.

Long before Camber was revered as a saint, he was a Deryni noble, one of the most respected of the magical race whose arcane skills set them apart from ordinary humans in the medieval kingdom of Gwynedd. For nearly a century, Camber’s family has had little choice but to loyally serve the ruling Festils, Deryni usurpers who employed dark magic to wrest the throne from the rightful Haldane liege. Now, the land suffers under the tyranny of King Imre, whose savage oppression of the human population weighs heavily on Camber’s heart—a heart that is shattered when the despot and his evil mistress-sister, Ariella, cause the death of Camber’s beloved son.

Once he sought nothing more than a peaceful retirement and an uneventful old age, but the grim demands of justice and vengeance drive Camber far from his family’s estates in search of the last of the Haldane line. This descendant of kings will not be easily persuaded to accept Camber’s unthinkable plan. But with the kingdom in turmoil, the aging mage and the reluctant Haldane heir must confront together the awesome, terrible might of the Festils for the good of all.

Quote of the Day

Legends, if you crossed their path, could get you killed.

- GUY GAVRIEL KAY, Children of Earth and Sky (Canada, USA, Europe)

Only about 125 pages left to go and this looks like it's going to be one of the speculative fiction novels to read this year!

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


Just realized that you can still download The Robert E. Howard Omnibus: 99 Collected Stories (Halcyon Classics) for only 1.99$ here. That's 2032 pages for less than 2$!!

Here's the blurb:

This Halcyon Classics ebook contains 99 short stories and novellas by 1930s pulp writer Robert Ervin Howard. Howard (1906-1936) is best known today for creating the sword-and-sorcery hero Conan, subject of two movies and dozens of books. However, during his short life Howard also published stories in a number of other genres.

In addition to fantasy, Howard wrote boxing stories, westerns, detective stories, horror, and created an number of compelling characters such as Solomon Kane, Bran Mak Morn, El Borak, Steve Costigan, Pike Bearfield, King Kull, and Conan the Cimmerian.

This ebook is DRM free and includes an active table of contents for easy navigation.

Conan Stories

Gods of the North
Queen of the Black Coast
Shadows in the Moonlight
A Witch Shall be Born
Shadows in Zamboula
The Devil in Iron
The People of the Black Circle
Red Nails
Jewels of Gwahlur
Beyond the Black River
The Hour of the Dragon
The Hyborian Age

Boxing Stories

Alleys of Peril
Blow the Chinks Down!
Breed of Battle
Champ of the Forecastle
Circus Fists
Cupid vs. Pollux
Dark Shanghai
Fist and Fang
General Ironfist
Night of Battle
Sailors’ Grudge
Sluggers on the Beach
Texas Fists
The Bull Dog Breed
The Iron Man
The Pit of the Serpent
The Sign of the Snake
The Slugger’s Game
The TNT Punch
Vikings of the Gloves
Waterfront Fists
Winner Take All
Alleys of Darkness
Apparition in the Prize Ring

Detective Stories

Graveyard Rats
Fangs of Gold
Names in the Black Book
Skull-Face
The Tomb’s Secret
Aha! or The Mystery of the Queen's Necklace
Halt! Who Goes There?
Unhand Me, Villain!

Fantasy Adventure Stories

Almuric The Treasures of Tartary
The Voice of El-Lil
The Valley of the Worm
The Garden of Fear
Witch from Hell's Kitchen

Kull Stories

The Shadow Kingdom
The Mirrors of Tuzun Thune

Bran Mak Morn Stories

The Lost Race

Cormac Fitzgeoffrey Stories

Hawks of Outremer
The Blood of Belshazzar

Wild Bill Clanton Stories

She Devil
The Purple Heart of Erlik

Historical Adventure Stories

Lord of Samarcand
Gates of Empire
The Lion of Tiberias
The Shadow of the Vulture
The Sowers of the Thunder
Red Blades of Black Cathay

Horror Stories

People of the Dark
Black Canaan
Moon of Zambebwei
Black Talons
Black Vulmea’s Revenge
The Cairn on the Headland
The Fearsome Touch of Death
The Haunter of the Ring
The Hyena
The Fire of Asshurbanipal

Solomon Kane Stories

Solomon Kane
Skulls in the Stars
Rattle of Bones

Western Stories

A Gent from Bear Creek
Cupid from Bear Creek
Evil Deeds at Red Cougar
Guns of the Mountains
High Horse Rampage
No Cowherders Wanted
Pilgrims to the Pecos
Pistol Politics
Sharp’s Gun Serenade
Texas John Alden
The Apache Mountain War
The Conquerin’ Hero of the Humbolts
The Feud Buster
The Haunted Mountain
The Riot at Cougar Paw
The Road to Bear Creek
The Scalp Hunter
War on Bear Creek
The Vultures of Whapeton
While Smoke Rolled
Boot-Hill Payoff
"Golden Hope" Christmas
Mountain Man

This week's New York Times Bestsellers (February 29th)

In hardcover:

Pierce Brown’s Morning Star is down ten spots, finishing the week at number 11.

Stephen King's The Bazaar of Bad Dreams is down two positions, ending the week at number 19.

In paperback:

Stephen King's 11/22/63 is up two positions, ending the week at number 3.

Andy Weir's The Martian is down one position, ending the week at number 4 (trade paperback).

Andy Weir's The Martian is up one spot, finishing the week at number 11.

Ernest Cline's Ready Player One is up two spots, finishing the week at number 13 (trade paperback).

Stephen King's Mr. Merdeces returns at number 13.

The Second Apocalypse trailer



Can't wait for The Great Ordeal!

A bit of humor. . .


:P

Quote of the Day

Having enemies could concentrate the mind, rally the heart.

- GUY GAVRIEL KAY, Children of Earth and Sky (Canada, USA, Europe)

Just started this one and it's pretty good thus far! =)

More inexpensive ebook goodies!



Holy shit! Just realized that Guy Gavriel Kay's incredible Under Heaven can be downloaded for only 5.96$ here! This is probably Kay's best work to date, so don't miss out on this bargain!

Here's the blurb:

UNDER HEAVEN will be published in April 2010, and takes place in a world inspired by the glory and power of Tang Dynasty China in the 8th century, a world in which history and the fantastic meld into something both memorable and emotionally compelling. In the novel, Shen Tai is the son of a general who led the forces of imperial Kitai in the empire's last great war against its western enemies, twenty years before. Forty thousand men, on both sides, were slain by a remote mountain lake. General Shen Gao himself has died recently, having spoken to his son in later years about his sadness in the matter of this terrible battle.

To honour his father's memory, Tai spends two years in official mourning alone at the battle site by the blue waters of Kuala Nor. Each day he digs graves in hard ground to bury the bones of the dead. At night he can hear the ghosts moan and stir, terrifying voices of anger and lament. Sometimes he realizes that a given voice has ceased its crying, and he knows that is one he has laid to rest.

The dead by the lake are equally Kitan and their Taguran foes; there is no way to tell the bones apart, and he buries them all with honour.

It is during a routine supply visit led by a Taguran officer who has reluctantly come to befriend him that Tai learns that others, much more powerful, have taken note of his vigil. The White Jade Princess Cheng-wan, 17th daughter of the Emperor of Kitai, presents him with two hundred and fifty Sardian horses. They are being given in royal recognition of his courage and piety, and the honour he has done the dead. You gave a man one of the famed Sardian horses to reward him greatly.

You gave him four or five to exalt him above his fellows, propel him towards rank, and earn him jealousy, possibly mortal jealousy. Two hundred and fifty is an unthinkable gift, a gift to overwhelm an emperor. Tai is in deep waters. He needs to get himself back to court and his own emperor, alive. Riding the first of the Sardian horses, and bringing news of the rest, he starts east towards the glittering, dangerous capital of Kitai, and the Ta-Ming Palace - and gathers his wits for a return from solitude by a mountain lake to his own forever-altered life.

Extract from Myke Cole's JAVELIN RAIN

The folks at tor.com just posted the first chapter from Myke Cole's Javelin Rain (Canada, USA, Europe) on their website.

If my review piqued your curiosity, follow this link to read the extract. . .

Perfection!

People have often criticized me for being too demanding when I review a novel. They often complain about the fact that very few books ever get a score higher than my infamous 7.5/10. But the fact is that year in and year out, there are always a number of works ending up with an 8/10 or more.

When I announced on the Hotlist's Facebook page last week that Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Avatar would get a 10/10, some people were shocked. I received a couple of messages asking me if it was the first book to get a perfect score from me. I knew there were a few, but I actually had to go through my reviews to find out exactly how many of them had wowed me to perfection. Interestingly enough, in the eleven years I've been reviewing books, Carey's Kushiel's Avatar will be the 11th novel to garner a perfect score. The 13th, if you throw the Mötley Crüe biography and GRRM's The World of Ice and Fire into the mix.

Of course, out of 486 reviews thus far, it's not a very high percentage. Yet it's higher than I would have thought. Over the years, dozens of books ended up with scores of 8/10, 9/10, 9.5/10, and even 9.75/10. But only the ten following novels got a perfect 10/10 from Yours Truly. You can read my review by clicking on their title. Check them out and read them if you haven't already! ;-)

Mea culpa: The Jordan assuredly doesn't belong on that shortlist. But after Winter's Heart and Crossroads of Twilight, I guess I was overexcited by the author's return to form. . .

--------------------------


- Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Shadow of the Wind (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

Barcelona, 1945: A city slowly heals in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War. Daniel, an antiquarian book dealer’s son who mourns the loss of his mother, finds solace in what he finds in the “cemetery of lost books,” a mysterious book entitled The Shadow of the Wind, by one Julián Carax. But when he sets out to find the author’s other works, he makes a shocking discovery: someone has been systematically destroying every copy of every book Carax has written. In fact, Daniel may have the last of Carax’s books in existence. Soon Daniel’s seemingly innocent quest opens a door into one of Barcelona’s darkest secrets–an epic story of murder, madness, and doomed love.


- James Clavell's Shogun (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

A bold English adventurer. An invincible Japanese warlord. A beautiful woman torn between two ways of life, two ways of love. All brought together in an extraordinary saga of a time and a place aflame with conflict, passion, ambition, lust, and the struggle for power...


- Steven Erikson's Memories of Ice (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

The ravaged continent of Genabackis has given birth to a terrifying new empire: the Pannion Domin. Like a tide of corrupted blood, it seethes across the land, devouring all. In its path stands an uneasy alliance: Onearm's army and Whiskeyjack's Bridgeburners alongside their enemies of old--the forces of the Warlord Caladan Brood, Anomander Rake and his Tiste Andii mages, and the Rhivi people of the plains.

But ancient undead clans are also gathering; the T'lan Imass have risen. For it would seem something altogether darker and more malign threatens this world. Rumors abound that the Crippled God is now unchained and intent on a terrible revenge.

Marking the return of many characters from Gardens of the Moon and introducing a host of remarkable new players, Memories of Ice is both a momentous new chapter in Steven Erikson's magnificent epic fantasy and a triumph of storytelling.



- Richard Morgan's Altered Carbon (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

In the twenty-fifth century, humankind has spread throughout the galaxy, monitored by the watchful eye of the U.N. While divisions in race, religion, and class still exist, advances in technology have redefined life itself. Now, assuming one can afford the expensive procedure, a person’s consciousness can be stored in a cortical stack at the base of the brain and easily downloaded into a new body (or “sleeve”) making death nothing more than a minor blip on a screen.

Ex-U.N. envoy Takeshi Kovacs has been killed before, but his last death was particularly painful. Dispatched one hundred eighty light-years from home, re-sleeved into a body in Bay City (formerly San Francisco, now with a rusted, dilapidated Golden Gate Bridge), Kovacs is thrown into the dark heart of a shady, far-reaching conspiracy that is vicious even by the standards of a society that treats “existence” as something that can be bought and sold. For Kovacs, the shell that blew a hole in his chest was only the beginning. . .



- Guy Gavriel Kay's Under Heaven (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

UNDER HEAVEN will be published in April 2010, and takes place in a world inspired by the glory and power of Tang Dynasty China in the 8th century, a world in which history and the fantastic meld into something both memorable and emotionally compelling. In the novel, Shen Tai is the son of a general who led the forces of imperial Kitai in the empire's last great war against its western enemies, twenty years before. Forty thousand men, on both sides, were slain by a remote mountain lake. General Shen Gao himself has died recently, having spoken to his son in later years about his sadness in the matter of this terrible battle.

To honour his father's memory, Tai spends two years in official mourning alone at the battle site by the blue waters of Kuala Nor. Each day he digs graves in hard ground to bury the bones of the dead. At night he can hear the ghosts moan and stir, terrifying voices of anger and lament. Sometimes he realizes that a given voice has ceased its crying, and he knows that is one he has laid to rest.

The dead by the lake are equally Kitan and their Taguran foes; there is no way to tell the bones apart, and he buries them all with honour.

It is during a routine supply visit led by a Taguran officer who has reluctantly come to befriend him that Tai learns that others, much more powerful, have taken note of his vigil. The White Jade Princess Cheng-wan, 17th daughter of the Emperor of Kitai, presents him with two hundred and fifty Sardian horses. They are being given in royal recognition of his courage and piety, and the honour he has done the dead. You gave a man one of the famed Sardian horses to reward him greatly.

You gave him four or five to exalt him above his fellows, propel him towards rank, and earn him jealousy, possibly mortal jealousy. Two hundred and fifty is an unthinkable gift, a gift to overwhelm an emperor. Tai is in deep waters. He needs to get himself back to court and his own emperor, alive. Riding the first of the Sardian horses, and bringing news of the rest, he starts east towards the glittering, dangerous capital of Kitai, and the Ta-Ming Palace - and gathers his wits for a return from solitude by a mountain lake to his own forever-altered life.


- George R. R. Martin's A Storm of Swords (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

Of the five contenders for power, one is dead, another in disfavor, and still the wars rage as violently as ever, as alliances are made and broken. Joffrey, of House Lannister, sits on the Iron Throne, the uneasy ruler of the land of the Seven Kingdoms. His most bitter rival, Lord Stannis, stands defeated and disgraced, the victim of the jealous sorceress who holds him in her evil thrall. But young Robb, of House Stark, still rules the North from the fortress of Riverrun. Robb plots against his despised Lannister enemies, even as they hold his sister hostage at King’s Landing, the seat of the Iron Throne. Meanwhile, making her way across a blood-drenched continent is the exiled queen, Daenerys, mistress of the only three dragons still left in the world. . .

But as opposing forces maneuver for the final titanic showdown, an army of barbaric wildlings arrives from the outermost line of civilization. In their vanguard is a horde of mythical Others--a supernatural army of the living dead whose animated corpses are unstoppable. As the future of the land hangs in the balance, no one will rest until the Seven Kingdoms have exploded in a veritable storm of swords. . .


- Robin Hobb's Fool's Fate (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

The triumphant conclusion to our three thrilling fantasy series, from the author of the bestselling Farseer and Liveship traders trilogies. The only hopes for an end to war and insurrection in the Six Duchies rests in the hands of the small party that are embarked on a desperate quest to the frozen island of Aslevjal. Here, so legend says, lies the sleeping form of the legendary great black dragon, Icefyre. The beast is of holy significance to the people of the OutIslands, a powerful talisman, but it is this dragon that their Narcheska has challenged Prince Dutiful to kill. All he has to help him in this in the company of his small coterie: the mercurial old assassin, Chade, the gifted but slow-witted servant boy, Thick, and their Skillmaster, Fitz. The other member of the group has been left behind in Buckkeep, but the Fool will do everything in his power to be with them on the island - he has seen that this is his final destiny. When the ship finally reaches the desolate island it seems out of the question that anything could exist on this wasteland, yet the discoveries that Dutiful and his friends make will not only put the quest and their lives in jeopardy, it will also shape the future of the whole world. The Tawny Man Book 3 brings not only this trilogy but also the Farseer trilogy begun with ASSASSIN'S APPRENTICE in 1996 to a spectacular conclusion. Filled with breathtaking drama and powerful character-led story-telling, Robin Hobb's writing is in a class of its own.



- Ian McDonald's The Dervish House (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

It begins with an explosion. Another day, another bus bomb. Everyone it seems is after a piece of Turkey. But the shock waves from this random act of twenty-first-century pandemic terrorism will ripple further and resonate louder than just Enginsoy Square.

Welcome to the world of The Dervish House—the great, ancient, paradoxical city of Istanbul, divided like a human brain, in the great, ancient, equally paradoxical nation of Turkey. The year is 2027 and Turkey is about to celebrate the fifth anniversary of its accession to the European Union, a Europe that now runs from the Arran Islands to Ararat. Population pushing one hundred million, Istanbul swollen to fifteen million, Turkey is the largest, most populous, and most diverse nation in the EU, but also one of the poorest and most socially divided. It's a boom economy, the sweatshop of Europe, the bazaar of central Asia, the key to the immense gas wealth of Russia and central Asia. The Dervish House is seven days, six characters, three interconnected story strands, one central common core—the eponymous dervish house, a character in itself—that pins all these players together in a weave of intrigue, conflict, drama, and a ticking clock of a thriller.


- Mitch Albom's Tuesdays with Morrie (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

Maybe it was a grandparent, or a teacher, or a colleague. Someone older, patient and wise, who understood you when you were young and searching, helped you see the world as a more profound place, gave you sound advice to help you make your way through it.

For Mitch Albom, that person was Morrie Schwartz, his college professor from nearly twenty years ago.

Maybe, like Mitch, you lost track of this mentor as you made your way, and the insights faded, and the world seemed colder. Wouldn't you like to see that person again, ask the bigger questions that still haunt you, receive wisdom for your busy life today the way you once did when you were younger?

Mitch Albom had that second chance. He rediscovered Morrie in the last months of the older man's life. Knowing he was dying, Morrie visited with Mitch in his study every Tuesday, just as they used to back in college. Their rekindled relationship turned into one final "class": lessons in how to live.

Tuesdays with Morrie is a magical chronicle of their time together, through which Mitch shares Morrie's lasting gift with the world.

After four years on the New York Times bestseller list, Tuesdays with Morrie is at last available in paperback.


- Robert Jordan's Knife of Dreams (Canada, USA, Europe)

Here's the blurb:

The Wheel of Time turns, and Robert Jordan gives us the eleventh volume of his extraordinary masterwork of fantasy.

The dead are walking, men die impossible deaths, and it seems as though reality itself has become unstable: All are signs of the imminence of Tarmon Gai’don, the Last Battle, when Rand al’Thor, the Dragon Reborn, must confront the Dark One as humanity’s only hope. But Rand dares not fight until he possesses all the surviving seals on the Dark One’s prison and has dealt with the Seanchan, who threaten to overrun all nations this side of the Aryth Ocean and increasingly seem too entrenched to be fought off. But his attempt to make a truce with the Seanchan is shadowed by treachery that may cost him everything. Whatever the price, though, he must have that truce. And he faces other dangers. There are those among the Forsaken who will go to any length to see him dead--and the Black Ajah is at his side....

Unbeknownst to Rand, Perrin has made his own truce with the Seanchan. It is a deal made with the Dark One, in his eyes, but he will do whatever is needed to rescue his wife, Faile, and destroy the Shaido who captured her. Among the Shaido, Faile works to free herself while hiding a secret that might give her her freedom or cause her destruction. And at a town called Malden, the Two Rivers longbow will be matched against Shaido spears.

Fleeing Ebou Dar through Seanchan-controlled Altara with the kidnapped Daughter of the Nine Moons, Mat attempts to court the woman to whom he is half-married, knowing that she will complete that ceremony eventually. But Tuon coolly leads him on a merry chase as he learns that even a gift can have deep significance among the Seanchan Blood and what he thinks he knows of women is not enough to save him. For reasons of her own, which she will not reveal until a time of her choosing, she has pledged not to escape, but Mat still sweats whenever there are Seanchan soldiers near. Then he learns that Tuon herself is in deadly danger from those very soldiers. To get her to safety, he must do what he hates worse than work....

In Caemlyn, Elayne fights to gain the Lion Throne while trying to avert what seems a certain civil war should she win the crown....

In the White Tower, Egwene struggles to undermine the sisters loyal to Elaida from within....

The winds of time have become a storm, and things that everyone believes are fixed in place forever are changing before their eyes. Even the White Tower itself is no longer a place of safety. Now Rand, Perrin and Mat, Egwene and Elayne, Nynaeve and Lan, and even Loial, must ride those storm winds, or the Dark One will triumph.