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Be Gay, Do Crime: 7 SFF Books Full of Chaotic Queer Criminals

Two things we love at Tor: Being gay. Doing crime. And who does gay crimes better than the characters of our authors? Check out this list of queerly criminal stories for your perusal pleasure. 

Check it out!


the-thousand-eyesThe Thousand Eyes by A. K. Larkwood

Eons ago, the Serpent Goddess Iriskaaval destroyed her own empire. Millenia later, our wayward heroes from The Unspoken Name must contend with her re-manifestation. Contained within this book is a multiplicity of crime, yearning, love, action, death, betrayal, and sometimes apotheosis. It’s amazing and incredible and should be read with quickness and haste.

atlas-1The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake

Olivie Blake’s virally sensational The Atlas Six tells the story of six ambitious magicians as they vie for induction into a secret society that safeguards all the world’s most dangerous and forbidden research and knowledge. They drink fancy drinks, create magical wormholes, pour over research, and occasionally gayly pour over each other… and then backstab!

This is a book for lovers of romance, betrayal, and intricate intrigue 😈

Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka AokiLight From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

In Ryka Aoki’s brilliant debut, Light from Uncommon Stars, love is weighed against Faustian bargains. Shizuka Satomi cut a deal with a demon long ago to save herself from damnation. Now, she must convince seven violin prodigies to sell their souls for success. But! A retired starship captain and a shop that sells warm donuts give her a chance at real love. Don’t miss this defiantly joyful adventure of queer courtship and crimes. 

winters-orbitWinter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell

Look. Sometimes, to solve the big crimes, you need to commit a few smaller, more fun crimes. Kiem and Jainan, our two favorite space princes, need to solve a murder as they fall into mutual pining (despite being married) and that means things like hacking databases and a little bit of light breaking and entering.

ceruleanseaThe House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune

Linus works for Extremely Upper Management, and they have a lot of rules. One of the most important is “Do Not Form Attachments”. But that’s pretty hard when you’re soft and gay and you end up on a private island with the mysterious Arthur Parnassus and the cabal of terrifying but adorable children with supernatural powers he looks after.

becaame a sunShe Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

Few people on this list frighten us as much as Zhu Chongba, the titular heroine of She Who Became the Sun. She’s willing to do an awful lot of crime to achieve greatness. Plus she did steal her brother’s identity to masquerade as a man and join the rebellion against the Khans.

book-9781250175359Trouble the Saints by Alaya Dawn Johnson

Set in gritty alt-history Harlem, the crime in Trouble the Saints is organized! Phyllis LeBlanc is a bisexual assassin, hired to keep the Manhattan underworld in line. Trouble is both a magical love story and a compelling exploration of race in America at the dawn of World War II. And there are also knives. A lot of knives.

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Hope Wins: On Writing in Dark Times

Dance with the DevilEven in the darkest of times, hope wins.

This is the position of Bree Bridges, half of writing duo Kit Rocha (of Deal with the Devil fame!). We’re all familiar with just how dreadful the world can be, but although Kit Rocha’s Mercenary Librarians series doesn’t go easy on the future, it shows that even the world post-apocalypse is larger than the devastation that begets it. And, with Dance with the Devil, the third and concluding Mercenary Librarians volume releasing soon, now is the perfect time to get caught up with Kit and dive into this incredible series!


By Bree Bridges (Kit Rocha)

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These two tweets from a more innocent time, sent in a moment of pure joy, marked a huge milestone in my life. In November of 2016, after years of hard work, my co-writer and I had just written the final hopeful happily ever after on the ninth book in our post-apocalyptic dystopian romance series.

Nine books. Almost one million words. We’d taken our futuristic world from the darkest depths of 

an authoritarian theocracy to the giddy triumph of successful rebellion–a rebellion built on hope, compassion, loyalty and love.

We were flying high when Donna closed our word document and left to cast her vote in the 2016 election. (I’d already cast mine several weeks ago by absentee ballot.) We’d accomplished something massive, unspooling a rebellion plot arc and a slow dismantling of the patriarchy around and through nine separate romance arcs, bringing it all together in a culminating moment that might as well have been our manifesto:

Hope wins.

We woke up the next morning facing down a Trump presidency, and the prospect of trying to go out and sell our one million words of dystopian fiction to an audience reeling in the face of what, to many of them, felt like an increasingly dystopian future. 

For the last four years, I’ve heard one thing over and over again: this must be such a great time to market your books! They’re so relevant!

Yes, I suppose books about resisting in the face of escalating bigotry and increasingly eroding social norms might seem relevant to the time in which we find ourselves. But I don’t want them to be. I don’t want to trade on the very real fear and harm being done to the most vulnerable among us. I don’t want to use a moment of cultural pain as a marketing hook.

I want to be the hope my books represent, not the opportunistic greed they fight. 

And yet, here I am. Again.

My upcoming book is awkwardly relevant.

Deal With the Devil is about a trio of women with genetically enhanced abilities who use their unique skill set to collect and distribute media and other resources in a post-apocalyptic Atlanta. They’re the ones who find you the lost manual on how to repair that buggy air-conditioner, or get you a source for seeds you can grow on your porch. They get you movies to entertain your children and books to heal your soul. They organize potlucks and freeze-drying parties, let you rent out tools to fix your house and lend you books that teach you about home repair.

They’re the heart of their community. They are hope. And they’re what I see right now every day when I log into twitter. 

When I see scientists offering to Skype children who are stuck at home.

When I see musicians livestreaming free concerts. 

When I see librarians scrambling to expand their digital libraries so people stuck at home can still borrow books.

When I see young adult authors offering to talk to kids who want to be writers.

When I see people offering to send groceries. Supplies. Money.

When I see livestream knitting tutorials, and cooking lessons, and book club, and hair-cutting advice, and everything, everything, everything we could possibly want to learn or do or experience.

They’re what I see in us, the best of us, reaching out in the darkest moment of a generation, every offer screaming, you will not have to do this alone.

I see greatness in the book community, in all of our communities, and that is why I refuse to feel awkward this time. Because I didn’t plan to write a book that is relevant to this staggering moment in history, but I did.

It’s not relevant because it’s dystopian. Or because it’s about the end of the world.

It’s relevant because it’s a radical manifesto on how good we can be in a crisis, and every time I open social media, I see the proof of how right we were scrolling past me in real time. For every asshole who hordes hand sanitizer, a hundred of you are out there making a list of your vulnerable neighbors and arranging check-ins to make sure your community has what it needs.

You make the hope in my books relevant.

The day after the election in 2016, I drew in a shaky breath that I never quite let out. The accomplishment of finishing a million word series was inexorably tangled with the hopeless pain of the following months, of editing through a fog and releasing a book into a world that made our bright optimism feel reckless. 

Today, I’m letting that breath out. I don’t know what will happen over the next few weeks as we rally our resources to face down this pandemic, but I know that my faith has been renewed.

Hope wins. 

We’ll make it win. Together.

 

Bree Bridges is half of Dance with the Devil writing duo Kit Rocha. Dance with the Devil is on sale from Tor Books 07/28/2020. 

Pre-order Dance with the Devil now

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5 SFF Books Featuring Memorable Trips

by Becky Yeager

Buckle up, readers. Do you hear the call of the road? These authors did, except the routes they have planned involve stops that are decidedly elsewhere. Don’t forget to pack your map.


Poster Placeholder of - 95Last Exit by Max Gladstone

Have you ever gone on a road trip, had everything go completely wrong, and then decide maybe it’s worth trying that road trip a second time? Ten years ago, Zelda led a band of merry adventurers whose knacks let them travel to alternate realities and battle the black rot that threatened to unmake each world. The group’s center—its heart—was Sal, Zelda’s lover. On their last mission, Sal was lost. And they all fell apart. A decade later, Sal threatens to return, surrounded by the rot. Zelda cannot face this peril alone and needs to reunite the old band. Which brings us to Road Trip 2.0 where the stakes are higher than ever.

Place holder  of - 21American Gods by Neil Gaiman

Shadow only wanted to go home when he finally got out of prison. Tragedy leads him to accepting a job offer from a mysterious man named Mr. Wednesday to become his bodyguard. Together they travel across America on a strange road trip. There’s far more than meets the eye to the places they visit and the individuals they meet.

Placeholder of  -85The Brotherhood of the Wheel by R. S. Belcher

Sometimes the road requires protectors. The Brotherhood of the Wheel descended from a small offshoot of Templars. They are a secret group of knights composed of truckers, bikers, taxi hacks, state troopers, bus drivers, and others. Their mission is to defend the roads of the world and to guard those who travel on them. Jimmy Aussapile is one such knight. He’s driving a big rig down South when a promise to a ghostly hitchhiker sets him on a quest to find out the terrible truth behind a string of children gone missing all across the country.

Image Placeholder of - 79Redwood and Wildfire by Andrea Hairston

This is one traveling act you won’t want to miss. Redwood and Aiden are gifted performers and hoodoo conjurors. At the turn of the 20th century they leave behind George and journey to Chicago, going from a haunted swampland to a “city of the future.” Their adventure is both magical and painful as they deal with trauma, a changing world, and the challenges their own abilities present.

Image Place holder  of - 9Deal with the Devil by Kit Rocha

Road trips are so much more challenging when the terrain involves a post-apocalyptic dystopia. Luckily, mercenary librarians are made of tougher stuff. The prospect of access to the long-lost U.S. Library of Congress is enough to convince Nina, Maya, and Dani to work with the Silver Devils, a rogue group of enhanced ex-soldiers. Together they will deal with numerous perils including no-good biker gangs and the secrets they’re keeping from each other. Now if Nina can avoid falling for the leader of Silver Devils then everything might go off without a hitch.

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$2.99 eBook Sale: January 2022

New year; new you; NEW SALES! Start 2022 with all of the following titles that YOU can snag for $2.99 here.


Cover of Empress of Forever by Max Gladstone

Empress of Forever by Max Gladstone

The end of time is ruled by an ancient, powerful Empress who blesses or blasts entire planets with a single thought. Rebellion is literally impossible to consider—until Vivian Liao arrives. Plucked from the past, the young tech innovator finds herself trapped between the Pride—a ravening horde of sentient machines—and a fanatical sect of warrior monks who call themselves the Mirrorfaith. Viv must rally a strange group of allies to confront the Empress and find a way back to the world and life she left behind.

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Cover of Wild Cards, edited by George R. R. MartinWild Cards 1 edited by George R.R. Martin

There is a secret history of the world—a history in which an alien virus struck the Earth in the aftermath of World War II, endowing a handful of survivors with extraordinary powers. Some were called Aces—those with superhuman mental and physical abilities. Others were termed Jokers—cursed with bizarre mental or physical disabilities. Some turned their talents to the service of humanity. Others used their powers for evil. Wild Cards is their story.

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Cover of The Emperor's Blades by Brian StaveleyThe Emperor’s Blades by Brian Staveley

The emperor of Annur is dead, slain by enemies unknown. His daughter and two sons, scattered across the world, do what they must to stay alive and unmask the assassins. But each of them also has a life-path on which their father set them, destinies entangled with both ancient enemies and inscrutable gods.

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Cover of Deal with the Devil by Kit RochaDeal with the Devil by Kit Rocha

Nina is an information broker with a mission—she and her team of mercenary librarians use their knowledge to save the hopeless in a crumbling America. Knox is the bitter, battle-weary captain of the Silver Devils. His squad of supersoldiers went AWOL to avoid slaughtering innocents, and now he’s fighting to survive. They’re on a deadly collision course, and the passion that flares between them only makes it more dangerous. They could burn down the world, destroying each other in the process….Or they could do the impossible: team up.

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$2.99 eBook Sale: October 18-24, 2021

Ready for some ebook deals?! Check out which books you can snag for only $2.99 from October 18-24!


Image Placeholder of - 95Hunters of Dune by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson

Hunters of Dune and the concluding volume, Sandworms of Dune, bring together the great story lines and beloved characters in Frank Herbert’s classic Dune universe, ranging from the time of the Butlerian Jihad to the original Dune series and beyond. Based directly on Frank Herbert’s final outline, which lay hidden in a safe-deposit box for a decade, these two volumes will finally answer the urgent questions Dune fans have been debating for two decades.

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Placeholder of  -79Winter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell

Prince Kiem, a famously disappointing minor royal and the Emperor’s least favorite grandchild, has been called upon to be useful for once. He’s commanded to fulfill an obligation of marriage to the representative of the Empire’s newest and most rebellious vassal planet. His future husband, Count Jainan, is a widower and murder suspect. Neither wants to be wed, but with a conspiracy unfolding around them and the fate of the empire at stake they will have to navigate the thorns and barbs of court intrigue, the machinations of war, and the long shadows of Jainan’s past, and they’ll have to do it together.

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Image Place holder  of - 45Old Man’s War by John Scalzi

John Perry did two things on his 75th birthday. First he visited his wife’s grave. Then he joined the army. Far from Earth, a war has gone on for decades: brutal, bloody, unyielding. The bulk of humanity’s resources are in the hands of the Colonial Defense Force, which shields the home planet from too much knowledge of the situation. What’s known to everybody is that when you reach retirement age, you can join the CDF. They don’t want young people; they want people who carry the knowledge and skills of decades of living. If you survive, you’ll be given a generous homestead stake of your own. John Perry is taking that deal. He has only the vaguest idea what to expect. Because the actual fight, light-years from home, is far, far harder than he can imagine-and what he will become is far stranger.

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Place holder  of - 53The Word for World is Forest by Ursula K. Le Guin

When the inhabitants of a peaceful world are conquered by the bloodthirsty yumens, their existence is irrevocably altered. Forced into servitude, the Athsheans find themselves at the mercy of their brutal masters. Desperation causes the Athsheans, led by Selver, to retaliate against their captors, abandoning their strictures against violence. But in defending their lives, they have endangered the very foundations of their society. For every blow against the invaders is a blow to the humanity of the Athsheans. And once the killing starts, there is no turning back.

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Deadmen Walking by Sherrilyn Kenyon

Deadmen Walking is the first historical fantasy title in New York Times bestselling author Sherrilyn Kenyon’s Deadman’s Cross series. It is a tale of passion and loss, emotions that wound and heal…and ultimate redemption

kindlee nooke ebookse google playe koboe

Magic for Liars by Sarah Gailey

When a gruesome murder is discovered at The Osthorne Academy of Young Mages, where her estranged twin sister teaches Theoretical Magic, reluctant detective Ivy Gamble is pulled into the world of untold power and dangerous secrets. She will have to find a murderer and reclaim her sister—without losing herself.

kindlef nookf ebooksf google playf kobof

Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson

For a thousand years the ash fell and no flowers bloomed. For a thousand years the Skaa slaved in misery and lived in fear. For a thousand years the Lord Ruler, the “Sliver of Infinity,” reigned with absolute power and ultimate terror, divinely invincible. Then, when hope was so long lost that not even its memory remained, a terribly scarred, heart-broken half-Skaa rediscovered it in the depths of the Lord Ruler’s most hellish prison. Kelsier “snapped” and found in himself the powers of a Mistborn. A brilliant thief and natural leader, he turned his talents to the ultimate caper, with the Lord Ruler himself as the mark.

kindleg nookg ebooksg google playg kobog

Deal with the Devil by Kit Rocha

Nina is an information broker with a mission—she and her team of mercenary librarians use their knowledge to save the hopeless in a crumbling America. Knox is the bitter, battle-weary captain of the Silver Devils. His squad of supersoldiers went AWOL to avoid slaughtering innocents, and now he’s fighting to survive. They’re on a deadly collision course, and the passion that flares between them only makes it more dangerous. They could burn down the world, destroying each other in the process…Or they could do the impossible: team up.

kindleh nookh ebooksh google playh koboh

The Emperor’s Blades by Brian Staveley

In The Emperor’s Blades by Brian Staveley, the emperor of Annur is dead, slain by enemies unknown. His daughter and two sons, scattered across the world, do what they must to stay alive and unmask the assassins. But each of them also has a life-path on which their father set them, destinies entangled with both ancient enemies and inscrutable gods.

nooki ebooksi google playi kindlei koboi

Disciple by Walter Mosley

Hogarth “Trent” Tryman is a forty-two-year-old man working a dead-end data entry job. Though he lives alone and has no real friends besides his mother, he’s grown quite content in his quiet life, burning away time with television, the internet, and video games. That all changes the night he receives a bizarre instant message on his computer from a man who calls himself Bron. At first he thinks it’s a joke, but in just a matter of days Hogarth Tryman goes from a data-entry clerk to the head of a corporation. His fate is now in very powerful hands as he realizes he has become a pawn in a much larger game with unimaginable stakes—a battle that threatens the prime life force on Earth.

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Hope Wins: On Writing in Dark Times

Image Place holder  of - 3Even in the darkest of times, hope wins.

Bree Bridges, half of writing duo Kit Rocha (of Deal with the Devil and The Devil You Know fame!) knows what it’s like to write books that are almost alarmingly relevant to our social and political climate. Check out her essay below on writing in times of turmoil, keeping hope alive, and more.

This article was originally published on 4/22/20. 


By Bree Bridges

These two tweets from a more innocent time, sent in a moment of pure joy, marked a huge milestone in my life. In November of 2016, after years of hard work, my co-writer and I had just written the final hopeful happily ever after on the ninth book in our post-apocalyptic dystopian romance series.

Nine books. Almost one million words. We’d taken our futuristic world from the darkest depths of an authoritarian theocracy to the giddy triumph of successful rebellion–a rebellion built on hope, compassion, loyalty and love.

We were flying high when Donna closed our word document and left to cast her vote in the 2016 election. (I’d already cast mine several weeks ago by absentee ballot.) We’d accomplished something massive, unspooling a rebellion plot arc and a slow dismantling of the patriarchy around and through nine separate romance arcs, bringing it all together in a culminating moment that might as well have been our manifesto:

Hope wins.

We woke up the next morning facing down a Trump presidency, and the prospect of trying to go out and sell our one million words of dystopian fiction to an audience reeling in the face of what, to many of them, felt like an increasingly dystopian future. 

For the last four years, I’ve heard one thing over and over again: this must be such a great time to market your books! They’re so relevant!

Yes, I suppose books about resisting in the face of escalating bigotry and increasingly eroding social norms might seem relevant to the time in which we find ourselves. But I don’t want them to be. I don’t want to trade on the very real fear and harm being done to the most vulnerable among us. I don’t want to use a moment of cultural pain as a marketing hook.

I want to be the hope my books represent, not the opportunistic greed they fight. 

And yet, here I am. Again.

My upcoming book is awkwardly relevant.

Deal With the Devil is about a trio of women with genetically enhanced abilities who use their unique skill set to collect and distribute media and other resources in a post-apocalyptic Atlanta. They’re the ones who find you the lost manual on how to repair that buggy air-conditioner, or get you a source for seeds you can grow on your porch. They get you movies to entertain your children and books to heal your soul. They organize potlucks and freeze-drying parties, let you rent out tools to fix your house and lend you books that teach you about home repair.

They’re the heart of their community. They are hope. And they’re what I see right now every day when I log into twitter. 

When I see scientists offering to Skype children who are stuck at home.

When I see musicians livestreaming free concerts. 

When I see librarians scrambling to expand their digital libraries so people stuck at home can still borrow books.

When I see young adult authors offering to talk to kids who want to be writers.

When I see people offering to send groceries. Supplies. Money.

When I see livestream knitting tutorials, and cooking lessons, and book club, and hair-cutting advice, and everything, everything, everything we could possibly want to learn or do or experience.

They’re what I see in us, the best of us, reaching out in the darkest moment of a generation, every offer screaming, you will not have to do this alone.

I see greatness in the book community, in all of our communities, and that is why I refuse to feel awkward this time. Because I didn’t plan to write a book that is relevant to this staggering moment in history, but I did.

It’s not relevant because it’s dystopian. Or because it’s about the end of the world.

It’s relevant because it’s a radical manifesto on how good we can be in a crisis, and every time I open social media, I see the proof of how right we were scrolling past me in real time. For every asshole who hordes hand sanitizer, a hundred of you are out there making a list of your vulnerable neighbors and arranging check-ins to make sure your community has what it needs.

You make the hope in my books relevant.

The day after the election in 2016, I drew in a shaky breath that I never quite let out. The accomplishment of finishing a million word series was inexorably tangled with the hopeless pain of the following months, of editing through a fog and releasing a book into a world that made our bright optimism feel reckless. 

Today, I’m letting that breath out. I don’t know what will happen over the next few weeks as we rally our resources to face down this pandemic, but I know that my faith has been renewed.

Hope wins. 

We’ll make it win. Together.

 

Bree Bridges is half of Deal with the Devil and The Devil You Know writing duo Kit Rocha. The Devil You Know is on sale from Tor Books 08/31/2021. 

Pre-order The Devil You Know Here:

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$2.99 eBook Sale: July 2021

Summer is finally here and you know what that means…SUMMER SALES! Check out what books you can grab for the entire month of July here!

Poster Placeholder of - 79Deal with the Devil by Kit Rocha

Nina is an information broker with a mission—she and her team of mercenary librarians use their knowledge to save the hopeless in a crumbling America. Knox is the bitter, battle-weary captain of the Silver Devils. His squad of supersoldiers went AWOL to avoid slaughtering innocents, and now he’s fighting to survive. They’re on a deadly collision course, and the passion that flares between them only makes it more dangerous. They could burn down the world, destroying each other in the process…Or they could do the impossible: team up.

kindlea nooka ebooksa google playa ibooks2 86 koboa

Placeholder of  -25Sorcery of a Queen by Brian Naslund

Driven from her kingdom, the would-be queen now seeks haven in the land of her mother, but Ashlyn will not stop until justice has been done. Determined to unlock the secret of powers long thought impossible, Ashlyn bends her will and intelligence to mastering the one thing people always accused her of, sorcery. Meanwhile, having learned the truth of his mutation, Bershad is a man on borrowed time. Never knowing when his healing powers will drive him to a self-destruction, he is determined to see Ashlyn restored to her throne and the creatures they both love safe.

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Place holder  of - 7Venus by Ben Bova

The surface of Venus is the most hellish place in the solar system. The sky is perpetually covered with clouds of sulfuric acid. The atmosphere is a choking mixture of carbon dioxide and poisonous gases. This is where Van Humphries must go. Or die trying. His older brother perished in the first attempt to land a man on Venus, years before, and his father had always hated Van for surviving when his brother died. Now his father is offering a ten billion dollar prize to the first person to land on Venus and return his oldest son’s remains. To everyone’s surprise, Van takes up the offer. But what Van Humphries will find on Venus will change everything–our understanding of Venus, of global warming on Earth, and his knowledge of who he is.

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Image Place holder  of - 33The Nightjar by Deborah Hewitt

Alice Wyndham has been plagued by visions of birds her whole life…until the mysterious Crowley reveals that Alice is an ‘aviarist’: capable of seeing nightjars, magical birds that guard human souls. When her best friend is hit by a car, only Alice can find and save her nightjar. With Crowley’s help, Alice travels to the Rookery, a hidden, magical alternate London to hone her newfound talents. But a faction intent on annihilating magic users will stop at nothing to destroy the new aviarist. And is Crowley really working with her, or against her? Alice must risk everything to save her best friend—and uncover the strange truth about herself.

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Excerpt: The Devil You Know by Kit Rocha

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Poster Placeholder of - 30The Mercenary Librarians and the Silver Devils are back in The Devil You Know, the next installment of USA Today and New York Times bestselling author Kit Rocha’s post-apocalyptic Action/Romance, with hints of Orphan Black and the Avengers

Maya has had a price on her head from the day she escaped the TechCorps. Genetically engineered for genius and trained for revolution, there’s only one thing she can’t do—forget.

Gray has finally broken free of the Protectorate, but he can’t escape the time bomb in his head. His body is rejecting his modifications, and his months are numbered.

When Maya’s team uncovers an operation trading in genetically enhanced children, she’ll do anything to stop them. Even risk falling back into the hands of the TechCorps.

And Gray has found a purpose for his final days: keeping Maya safe.

Please enjoy this free excerpt of The Devil You Know by Kit Rocha, on sale 08/31/2021!


Mozart was the perfect music for a heist.

Over the years, Maya had made an in-depth study of the ideal music for every moment. Too many people considered pre-Flare orchestral music to be the sole domain of the rich assholes and their fancy ballrooms up on the Hill. To them, it was the music of tuxedos and gowns and placid recitals. Despite being raised by those rich assholes, Maya knew the truth.

Elfman was excellent for a fun, rollicking bar fight. Zimmer was the only choice for a shootout. Holst had all the melodrama necessary for an elaborate jailbreak. She liked Tchaikovsky on stakeouts and Williams for safecracking.

But to accompany the adrenaline of a daring heist?

Mozart. Requiem in D minor. Dies Irae.

Accept no substitutions.

“Status report.”

“Hallway’s clear, boss,” Conall replied from beside her. “I’ll have the door unlocked by the time you get there.”

“Acknowledged.”

Conall’s fingers clacked noisily over his keyboard, echoing in the confined space of the van. He swore the sound of the antiquated tech soothed him. After a couple missions with him, Maya knew the unique click of most of the keys on the damn thing.

N-E-T-S-T . . .

Exhaling, Maya deliberately shifted her concentration back to the music. The choir chanted with escalating intensity, the Latin so familiar that it melted into background noise. As the sound of Conall’s typing faded, her brain stopped trying to interpret either the keystrokes or the lyrics.

She resumed her survey of the security cameras, scanning the facility for any guard a few minutes ahead of his rounds or any scientist who’d decided to stay late. She’d memorized their routines during mission prep, setting their complicated schedule to music. The guard in C-block rounded the corner to the soaring sounds of the violins. Trumpets announced a distant perimeter check. She could feel the rhythm of the building, the movement of the people inside.

A complicated, dangerous dance. Her very favorite kind.

“I can’t believe I still haven’t talked you out of the Mozart,” Conall muttered as he switched to swiping at a display tablet to his left. “I’m telling you, if you have to stick to the old, extremely dead guys, there are better options.”

Maya made an amused noise as she watched the perimeter guard swipe his ID at the farthest checkpoint. A few seconds ahead of the music, but nothing too dire yet. “You want me to switch to an even older, deader guy.”

“Respect the Haydn.” Conall grimaced. “I mean, if we have to go classical. I don’t understand why you’re obsessed with it. Some nice seventies techno, now . . .”

Her own lips twitched into a grimace. Techno from the 2070s was good for exactly one thing—thrashing it out in a throng of people in one of the dance clubs that lined the perimeter. Some nights after she and Dani came home, she’d lie in bed staring at the ceiling, her heart keeping time with the throbbing bass that seemed to echo inside her head.

At least the echoes drove the voices away.

On the screen in front of her, the A-block guard swiped his key at his checkpoint. She counted the seconds until the chorus lifted in the next verse.

Ingemisco, tamquam reus . . .

Her brain provided the translation out of habit. I sigh, like the guilty one. Latin had been the first language they’d locked into her brain, the first she’d internalized to the point of effortless comprehension. Irritating, since she’d mostly seen it in technical documents. Not even scientists sat around using conversational Latin.

Maya could, though. That was what the TechCorps had built her for. Maya could speak dozens of languages with the fluent ease of a native speaker. She’d been an expert in astronomy by nine, advanced mathematics by ten, programming languages by twelve, and cryptography by sixteen. She’d been picking away at biochemistry when . . .

When.

Culpa rubet vultus meus . . .

Maya shuddered as the translation drifted through her. Guilt reddens my face.

She wasn’t the one who should feel guilty about the abrupt termination of her education. No, that burden lay on the shoulders of the woman who had raised her—Birgitte Skovgaard, vice president of Behavior Analysis for the TechCorps. As an executive in the sprawling corporate conglomerate that ruled most of the Southeast, Birgitte had enjoyed almost unfathomable power. She could have lived a soft life of luxury. Instead, she’d used Maya’s perfect memory to organize a rebellion.

A failed rebellion. Biochemistry still made Maya think of blood and death and fear and pain and all the reasons she hated the fancy fuckers up on the Hill, in their expensive suits, souls empty as their eyes glittered with greed.

There was a reason she’d never gone back to studying it.

Supplicanti parce, Deus.

Maya tapped her comms. “The A-block guard is ten seconds behind schedule on his rounds. Watch the corridors up ahead.”

Nina’s voice whispered into her ear. “Got it. Window’s narrowing.”

Ten seconds might be enough to blow their whole plan, especially if the B-block guard showed up early. Maya watched the corridor for him, her heart rate quickening with the pulse of the music. “I always do crimes to classical music,” she told Conall, her foot bouncing lightly from the increased adrenaline. “It’s my personal fuck you to all the assholes up on the Hill.”

Conall snorted. “Can’t argue with that. The suits would be appalled. How utterly gauche of you.”

Yeah, Conall understood. Neither of them had attended the fancy parties in the elegant ballrooms frequented by the TechCorps elite, but they’d been raised by the assholes. Trained and molded into perfect tools with finely honed edges. Wielded without compassion.

Confutatis maledictis,

Flammis acribus addictis . . .

“Once the cursed have been silenced, sentenced to acrid flames . . .” Maya translated under her breath.

“Huh?”

“Nothing.” God, she’d love to burn the TechCorps to the ground. In lieu of an apocalyptic rain of fire, though, she’d take the crime. Every job they pulled, every law they broke, every bit of pre-Flare data they liberated, every credit they earned and funneled back into their community . . .

Pulling heists to fund a library might not be everyone’s idea of a righteous good time, but Maya lived for those middle fingers thrust firmly in the TechCorps’ faces.

The B-block guard passed his checkpoint right in time with the music, and Maya started to exhale with relief. But a smudge of movement on the bottom right camera caught her attention, and she switched the image to full screen.

“Oh, shit.”

Her tone caught Conall’s attention. He leaned over, and together they watched as the perimeter guard broke from his route and headed for the parking lot.

Straight toward them.

Conall checked his watch and bit off a curse. “They’re almost to the package. I need to pop the doors and manage the cameras.”

Maya twisted in her seat to snatch up her shiny new stun gun. Rafe had given her this one and trained her extensively in its use. His passion for combat training made even Nina look reasonable, but Maya couldn’t fault his zeal now.

“I got this,” she assured Conall, then tapped her earpiece. “B-block guard’s right on time. I’m stepping out to deal with an issue, but you should have a straight shot.”

“Tell the issue I said hi,” Dani murmured.

“Remember the best target areas,” Rafe chimed in.

Maya rolled her eyes. As if remembering had ever been her problem.

She reached for the door to the van, but Conall stopped her with a hand on her arm. “If you don’t think you can handle this . . .”

He meant well. So had Rafe. A month together had been enough time for their blended teams to fall into a routine, but not enough for the Silver Devils to stop worrying about her.

She supposed she couldn’t blame them. They were literal supersoldiers. Rogue supersoldiers, no less, former members of the fearsome Protectorate. In all of Maya’s years on the Hill, she’d done her best to avoid members of the TechCorps’ standing army. The biochemical implants hardwired into their brains gave them unbelievable speed, enough strength to lift a car, and the stamina to go days without rest or sleep.

Of course, they weren’t the only ones with superpowers. Nina was the product of a genetic engineering project that produced soldiers with all the same perks but none of the biochemical drawbacks. And Dani was faster than all of them put together, thanks to her rewired nervous system. She’d escaped from the TechCorps, too—but not before they’d put her through their brutal Executive Security training.

The difference was that Nina and Dani never treated Maya like she couldn’t handle her shit. But Maya wasn’t tall and commanding and capable of lifting a car like Nina. She wasn’t a ripped, back-flipping, not-so-former assassin like Dani. She was soft and squishy, something Conall and the others couldn’t seem to forget.

They’d learn. She’d make sure they learned.

“I’ve got this,” she promised him, squashing down her irritation. “No supersoldiers out there, just a nosy guard. I can handle a nosy guard.”

“If you need me . . .”

“I will not be subtle about screaming for help.” She patted his hand, then gave him a push. “Go on, you have a job to do. They’re depending on you.”

With a final worried look, Conall turned back to his work. Maya checked the camera for the guard’s position one last time and then slipped from the van.

The night was warm and muggy. The start of September had brought no relief from the relentless humidity, and sweat beaded on Maya’s skin almost immediately. Atlanta rarely cooled off before late October these days, though when winter hit, it would hit hard. She was almost looking forward to waking up to frost on the windows.

For now, she had to deal with the stagnant night air. She leaned back against the van. The approaching footsteps were a whisper across asphalt, the leather soles crunching across fine gravel.

She tried to focus on the sounds, on what they told her about the world around her and the obstacles in her path. She could tell the guard was favoring one foot by the uneven crunch of gravel. She could tell that he wasn’t scared by the unhurried pace of his steps. She could tell the sound was getting louder.

She had no fucking idea how close he was.

Conall swore she should be able to tell. He’d given her shit about it just last week, swearing that anyone who could calculate trajectories in her head or crack a vault combination by the sound of the keystrokes should be able to accurately judge distance.

If her genetically enhanced brain had the ability to triangulate distances from the echoes or vibrations or whatever, no one had given her the key to unlocking that superpower.

The footsteps paused, so loud that he had to be near the front of the van. Probably peering in the windows. The front seat looked innocent enough, and the tinted windows hid the rolling command station in the back. The steps resumed, and Maya forced out a silent breath as she rolled her shoulders, trying to keep her limbs loose for an attack.

The second the guard rounded the van, she jumped him.

“What the—?”

She rammed her stun gun into his side and smashed the button, reducing his words to a grunt. Not exactly the shriek of pain Maya expected, and she had a half second to panic before a giant arm flailed at her. She twisted out of the way of a meaty fist, but pain exploded through her face as he clipped her with an elbow.

At least she’d been trained for this. She stumbled back a step but didn’t lose her grip on her weapon. The eye he’d hit was watering, but through the tears she recognized his uniform—a thick polyester blend popular with people too cheap to equip their guards with real body armor. It wouldn’t do shit to stop a gun or a knife, but it would make it harder for someone to turn his own Taser against him.

Of course he wouldn’t go down easy.

The perimeter guard was still shaking off his confusion. No doubt he was staring at Maya—young, half his size, with a body that was a lot more soft curves than hard muscle—and wondering what the hell was going on. She probably didn’t look like the kind of person who jumped security guards outside highly secure facilities.

In fact, she looked like what she was. A woman who spent most of her time scanning books, obsessing over metadata, freeze-drying food, teaching people how to use their tech, and sitting up half the night swearing at antiquated video file formats.

She looked harmless. That was her secret weapon.

Maya didn’t give him a chance to collect his thoughts. She lunged, aiming the stun gun at the largest expanse of bare skin she could find. He moved at the last second, swatting her hand away from his neck with enough force to leave her fingers numb.

Ignoring the discomfort, Maya used the momentum of her lunge to drive her booted foot down on his toes. She had a fraction of a second to worry they’d be steel-toed, but her heel crushed down on leather, and he howled and flailed. Dancing back would save her face, but driving forward—

Instinct made the decision for her. She took the hit to the face, hissing with pain. But she was inside his guard now, too close for him to stop her.

Her stun gun hit his neck with a crackle, and it was all over. His body convulsed, and she stumbled back out of the path of destruction as he went down with all the grace of a felled tree.

“Fuck.” With the guard down, Maya took a second to wipe tears from her stinging eye. She’d have a shiner tomorrow, which would only make everyone more annoying and protective. As if they didn’t frequently come back riddled with bullets or bruised to hell and back.

Supersoldiers were exhausting hypocrites.

“Maya?” The concern in Conall’s tone was palpable.

She tapped her ear. “I’m fine. Guard’s down. Just gotta stash him somewhere.”

“Good job.” Knox’s voice always managed to sound deadly serious, even at a low whisper. “We’re about to secure the package. Be ready.”

Shit. The fight must have taken longer than she’d realized. Maya reached down, hooked her hands under the man’s armpits, and grunted with the effort it took to drag him a mere foot from the van.

“Of course no one’s running out to help me now,” she muttered, bracing herself to pull him again. The nearest cars were a good twenty feet away, which had seemed like nothing before she started trying to drag dead weight.

And it’s your own damn fault, taunted an inner voice. If you hadn’t overruled Knox, Gray could have dropped him before he ever even knew you were here.

During mission prep, Knox had raised the possibility of Gray finding a vantage point where he could guard the van. Maya had been the one to protest— they wouldn’t have held Gray back from the main assault just to watch over Conall, and she’d be damned if she let Knox and his squad get into the habit of acting like she needed special protection.

All perfectly logical. And she hadn’t needed protection. The unconscious security guard at her feet was proof. She didn’t need a babysitter watching her through a sniper scope, ready to leap in and save her lest she break a nail—or take a stray elbow to the face. Honestly, who the hell felt better knowing a broody sniper was tracking their every move?

You would, whispered that traitorous inner voice.

Maya stomped on that thought with a vicious mental boot and turned her attention back to getting her assailant’s limp body to cover.

The parking lot suddenly seemed a lot bigger than it had before, and it was riddled with cracks that were just begging to trip her up. She supposed even rich evil scientist outposts didn’t have the resources to keep asphalt in top repair.

Roads seemed like the last priority for most people these days, though the old-timers around Five Points insisted that the roads had been crap even before the Flares. Some swore they’d grown up watching sinkholes open up and swallow entire highways full of cars. The city had tried to keep up with maintenance, but road infrastructure had fallen by the wayside after solar flares had caused the whole damn country to collapse right in the middle of an unprecedented famine.

People who’d survived the dark days always had a certain look in their eyes. It had been almost fifty years since the lights had gone off, and the world had changed, but some of them would still look at you like it had all happened yesterday, like time didn’t mean anything when the pain cut that deep. They remembered the panic, the fear. The brutal winters without access to heat. The sweltering summers where neighbors dropped dead of heatstroke.

They remembered the hunger. The Energy Wars had shaken the country, and the second Dust Bowl had brought it to its knees. The solar flares that swept the globe in ’42 might have struck the death blow to the faltering federal government, but they weren’t what killed people.

The famine had done that. It lasted for a decade, right up until the TechCorps and its corporate partners had established the Heartlands irrigation program. Food started to trickle back into Atlanta after that—but only through the TechCorps. Soon, they were the only reliable source of clean water. Electricity. Communication.

The TechCorps had demonstrated how easy it was to take over a region without fighting. All you had to do was own everything people needed to survive.

Well. That, and be heartless enough to withhold it until they fell in line.

“Fuckers,” Maya muttered, stepping over another fault in the asphalt before dragging the limp body after her.

“Almost there.” Nina’s quiet words drifted over the comms. “Couple of close calls, but we’re still undetected.”

Maya heaved again and imagined what was going down inside the building. The team would be slipping through the halls right now, expertly exploiting the razor-thin gaps between patrols, relying on Conall to shield their passage from the cameras and the algorithms that ran the security system. That was how Nina preferred to operate. In and out, like a ghost. Less attention meant less danger. Get the mission done and get home in one piece.

Knox would be in the lead. He would assess each tiny shift in their master plan and adjust their strategy accordingly, with Nina at his side, ready to crack any safe or lock. Rafe was the muscle, capable of ripping a door off its hinges— or a head off a body, if it came to that—while Dani ranged ahead of them like a ghost, her speed making her the perfect scout.

And, of course, Gray would be guarding their backs. He might be most comfortable with his sniper rifle, but give him a handgun and he became a protective wall. Chaos could be erupting all around him, and he’d quietly assess the situation, decide who needed to be shot, and swiftly and efficiently get it done.

Maya worried a lot less about everyone when Gray was around.

This is the one,” Knox said. “427-D.”

“Retinal scan paired with voice recognition. You’ll have to pop it.” Maya could hear the grin in Dani’s voice. “Seventeen seconds.”

“My record is nineteen,” Nina protested.

“Don’t care. I’ve got fifty on it. You in, Morales?”

“Any time, sugar pie. My money’s on twenty-three.”

“Sure,” Maya muttered into her comm. “You two just keep foreplaying while I’m dragging around a body twice my size.”

“Focus,” came Knox’s firm command. “We’re almost out.”

Sweat dripped down Maya’s spine. Her arms were starting to ache, and her face wasn’t feeling a lot better. The perimeter guard was actually getting heavier. She winced as his boots scraped across the gravel, even though she knew no one was close enough to hear.

Well, no one except Conall. But since he wasn’t leaping out of the van to help her now, she got a better hold on the guard and continued dragging. If she made it through this, she’d start lifting weights. That would probably make Nina happy. Rafe, too. Maya wouldn’t even bitch about the additional training time.

Next week. She’d start next week. For a few days, she was gonna eat ice cream and pout about her poor face.

She settled for running through a brief dissociation exercise until the ache in her muscles faded to a nagging buzz. Definitely not her favorite solution. Numbness was a bandage over a jagged wound—thin and temporary. Sensory input didn’t go away just because she’d tricked her brain into not noticing it, and reconnecting with the world tended to sting twice as bad.

But sometimes you needed to get a job done and pay the price later.

She finally reached the two cars parked at the edge of the lot. Three more shoulder-punishing heaves tucked the unconscious guard neatly between them, out of sight until shift change, by which point Maya and the rest of the team would be far, far away.

Good enough.

“I’m in,” Nina murmured.

“Sixteen point five two.” Dani’s voice vibrated with triumph. “You owe me fifty bucks, Morales.”

“Add it to my tab.”

A beep tickled Maya’s ears, followed by the whispering slide of a metal door opening. Then silence, heavy and loud, more than the mere absence of sound.

“This isn’t a vault,” Gray muttered. “It’s a fucking cell.”

“Over here.” All traces of victorious glee had bled from Dani’s tone. Now, she sounded breathless, almost . . .

Stricken?

Shit. Anything that could rattle Dani was bad. Apocalyptically bad.

“Grab and go,” Knox said tersely.

“But Cap—”

“Move.”

A scuffle of boots. Heavy breaths. They were falling back to a fast retreat, which wasn’t likely to be quiet or invisible.

Shit, shit, shit.

Maya bolted across the parking lot and slid open the van door. “Which exit?”

Shouts and the brash, hard sound of gunfire erupted through the earpiece. Conall swore and dove into the front seat of the van. Maya slid into his chair and cycled through the camera feeds until she caught Rafe’s back disappearing around a corner as Knox and Nina laid down cover fire.

The gunfire continued over comms, their team too busy to answer her question. But they didn’t need to. Knox had planned for a dizzying number of contingencies, and Maya knew which one he was enacting now.

“West side!” she shouted to Conall. “Get to the loading dock!”

“On it.”

The tires squealed as Conall rocketed the van into high gear. Everything that wasn’t bolted down slid across the table. Maya clutched at a handle welded to the frame as the van went up on two wheels and the speakers blared a choir chanting about the fires of hell.

She was going to have to rethink her entire musical methodology, because Mozart was entirely too stressful for a car chase.

They rounded the side of the building to the sight of the team spilling out of an open bay door in the loading area, pursued by a squad of security guards. Everyone was clustered around Rafe, who carried a blanket-wrapped bundle in his arms.

“Oh my fucking—”

Shock stole the rest of Maya’s words as Conall turned so hard that the van skidded across the asphalt. Her heart jumped into her throat, but she held on as they screeched to a stop.

They’d never had to leave a site hot before, but everyone knew their places. Knox and Gray piled into the front next to Conall, with Gray riding literal shotgun. Rafe clambered through the back doors, and Nina covered them by firing off three more shots.

Dani was suddenly there, gripping one of the handles on the ceiling of the van as she fired past Nina’s head. Their leader dove into the van as Conall hit the gas, and Maya caught the back of Nina’s jacket and held her steady as they tore out of the parking lot, bullets pinging off the van’s reinforced siding.

Rafe curled himself protectively around the bundle, and the blanket slipped to reveal shorn dark hair, a pale face, and huge, terrified eyes.

The package was a fucking kid.

Copyright © Kit Rocha 2021

Pre-order The Devil You Know Here:

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$2.99 eBook Sale: January 2021

We’re kicking off 2021 in the best way possible—SALES!!!! Below, check out which of our SFF books you can snag as $2.99 ebooks throughout the entire month of January!


Placeholder of  -54Everfair by Nisi Shawl

Shawl’s speculative masterpiece manages to turn one of the worst human rights disasters on record into a marvelous and exciting exploration of the possibilities inherent in a turn of history. Everfair is told from a multiplicity of voices: Africans, Europeans, East Asians, and African Americans in complex relationships with one another, in a compelling range of voices that have historically been silenced. Everfair is not only a beautiful book but an educational and inspiring one that will give the reader new insight into an often ignored period of history.

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Poster Placeholder of - 98Fate of the Fallen by Kel Kade

Everyone loves Mathias. Naturally, when he discovers it’s his destiny to save the world, he dives in head first, pulling his best friend Aaslo along for the ride. However, saving the world isn’t as easy, or exciting, as it sounds in the stories. The going gets rough and folks start to believe their best chance for survival is to surrender to the forces of evil, which isn’t how the prophecy goes. At all. As the list of allies grows thin, and the friends find themselves staring death in the face, they must decide how to become the heroes they were destined to be or, failing that, how to survive.

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Place holder  of - 15The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson

Baru Cormorant believes any price is worth paying to liberate her people—even her soul. When the Empire of Masks conquers her island home, overwrites her culture, criminalizes her customs, and murders one of her fathers, Baru vows to swallow her hate, join the Empire’s civil service, and claw her way high enough to set her people free. But the cost of winning the long game of saving her people may be far greater than Baru imagines.

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Image Place holder  of - 78Deal with the Devil by Kit Rocha

Nina is an information broker with a mission—she and her team of mercenary librarians use their knowledge to save the hopeless in a crumbling America. Knox is the bitter, battle-weary captain of the Silver Devils. His squad of supersoldiers went AWOL to avoid slaughtering innocents, and now he’s fighting to survive. They could burn down the world, destroying each other in the process… Or they could do the impossible: team up.

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Image Placeholder of - 55The Emperor’s Blades by Brian Staveley

In The Emperor’s Blades by Brian Staveley, the emperor of Annur is dead, slain by enemies unknown. His daughter and two sons, scattered across the world, do what they must to stay alive and unmask the assassins. But each of them also has a life-path on which their father set them, destinies entangled with both ancient enemies and inscrutable gods.

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Wild Cards I by George R. R. Martin

There is a secret history of the world—a history in which an alien virus struck the Earth in the aftermath of World War II, endowing a handful of survivors with extraordinary powers. Some were called Aces—those with superhuman mental and physical abilities. Others were termed Jokers—cursed with bizarre mental or physical disabilities. Some turned their talents to the service of humanity. Others used their powers for evil. Wild Cards is their story.

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The Mongrel Mage by L. E. Modesitt, Jr.

In the world of Recluce, powerful mages can wield two kinds of magic—the white of Chaos or the black of Order. Beltur, however, has talents no one dreamed of, talents not seen in hundreds of years that blend both magics. On the run from a power hungry white mage, Beltur is taken in by Order mages who set him on the path to discover and hone his own unique gifts and in the process find a home. However, when the white mage he fled attempts to invade his new home, Beltur must hope his new found power will be enough to save them all.

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Soleri by Michael Johnston

Detailed and historical, vast in scope and intricate in conception, Soleri bristles with primal magic and unexpected violence. It is a world of ancient and elaborate rites, of unseen power and kingdoms ravaged by war, where victory comes with a price, and every truth conceals a deeper secret.

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An Illusion of Thieves by Cate Glass

In Cantagna, being a sorcerer is a death sentence. Romy escapes her hardscrabble upbringing when she becomes courtesan to the Shadow Lord, a revolutionary noble who brings laws and comforts once reserved for the wealthy to all. When her brother, Neri, is caught thieving with the aid of magic, Romy’s aristocratic influence is the only thing that can spare his life—and the price is her banishment. Now back in Beggar’s Ring, she has just her wits and her own long-hidden sorcery to help her and Neri survive. But when a plot to overthrow the Shadow Lord and incite civil war is uncovered, only Romy knows how to stop it.

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On the (Digital) Road: Tor Author Events in November

We are in a time of social distancing, but your favorite Tor authors are still coming to screens near you in the month of November! Check out where you can find them here:

V. E. Schwab, The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

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Wednesday, November 11
Tor After Dark: NaNoWriMo Edition
Instagram
5:00 PM ET

Monday, November 16
Macmillan Library Happy Hour
Crowdcast
4:00 PM ET

Saturday, November 21
Miami Book Fair, in conversation with Leigh Bardugo
Books & Books
2:00 PM ET

Brandon Sanderson, Rhythm of War

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Tuesday, November 17
Rhythm of War Launch Event
Sign Up Here
8:00 PM ET

Wednesday, November 25
Tor After Dark: NaNoWriMo Edition
Instagram
7:00 PM ET

Christopher Paolini, To Sleep in a Sea of Stars

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Wednesday, November 18
Tor After Dark: NaNoWriMo Edition
Instagram
7:00 PM ET

Daniel Kraus, The Living Dead

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Saturday, November 21
FanNation: THE LIVING DEAD: Daniel Kraus on the legacy of George A. Romero
More Information Here
1:00 PM ET

Kit Rocha, Deal with the Devil

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Monday, November 30
River Dog Book Co. and The Briar Patch
Register Here
7:00 PM ET

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