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New Releases: 11/14/17

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

American Drifter by Heather Graham and Chad Michael Murray

Place holder  of - 1 A young veteran of the US Army, River Roulet is struggling to shake the horrors of his past. War is behind him, but the memories remain. Desperate to distract himself from the images haunting him daily, River abandons the world he knows and flees to the country he’s always dreamed of visiting: Brazil.

Then he meets the enchanting Natal, an impassioned journalist and free spirit—who lives with the gangster that rules much of Rio.

The Eterna Solution by Leanna Renee Hieber

Image Place holder  of - 99 Unnatural howls echo across the Atlantic. Lady Liberty’s torch blazes with hellfire. Dead bodies shamble through the grounds of Columbia College.

It’s 1882 and two government divisions of paranormal investigators have completed a most harrowing task—stopping a demonic nobleman from taking over the British Parliament. Now the motley crew of psychics, scientists, scholars, and magicians must race across the ocean to Manhattan to protect it from evil forces they believe Moriel unleashed.

Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson

Placeholder of  -88 In Oathbringer, the third volume of the New York Times bestselling Stormlight Archive, humanity faces a new Desolation with the return of the Voidbringers, a foe with numbers as great as their thirst for vengeance.

Dalinar Kholin’s Alethi armies won a fleeting victory at a terrible cost: The enemy Parshendi summoned the violent Everstorm, which now sweeps the world with destruction, and in its passing awakens the once peaceful and subservient parshmen to the horror of their millennia-long enslavement by humans. While on a desperate flight to warn his family of the threat, Kaladin Stormblessed must come to grips with the fact that the newly kindled anger of the parshmen may be wholly justified.

Seriously Hexed by Tina Connolly

Poster Placeholder of - 18 Teen witch Cam has resigned herself to being a witch. Sort of. She’s willing to do small things, like magically help her boyfriend Devon get over his ongoing stage fright. But tangling with other witches is not on her wishlist. Joining her mother’s wicked witch coven is right out.

New acquaintance Poppy Jones is a Type A, A+ Student of True Witchery. She’s got all the answers, and she’s delighted to tangle with a bunch of wicked witches. She doesn’t need any reluctant witch getting in her way, especially one who knows less than a dozen spells, and has zero plans for witch college.

NEW IN PAPERBACK

Deadhouse Landing by Ian C. Esslemont

Image Placeholder of - 14 Esslemont’s new prequel trilogy takes readers deeper into the politics and intrigue of the New York Times bestselling Malazan Empire. Dancer’s Lament focuses on the genesis of the empire, and features Dancer, the skilled assassin, who, alongside the mage Kellanved, would found the Malazan empire.

After the disappointments of Li Heng, Dancer and Kellanved wash up on a small insignificant island named Malaz. Immediately, of course, Kellanved plans to take it over. To do so they join forces with a small band of Napans who have fled a civil war on their own home island. The plan, however, soon goes awry as Kellanved develops a strange and dangerous fascination for a mysterious ancient structure found on the island.

 

NEW FROM TOR.COM

Mandelbrot the Magnificent by Liz Ziemska

Born in the Warsaw ghetto and growing up in France during the rise of Hitler, Benoit Mandelbrot found escape from the cruelties of the world around him through mathematics. Logic sometimes makes monsters, and Mandelbrot began hunting monsters at an early age. Drawn into the infinite promulgations of formulae, he sinks into secret dimensions and unknown wonders.

His gifts do not make his life easier, however. As the Nazis give up the pretense of puppet government in Vichy France, the jealousy of Mandelbrot’s classmates leads to denunciation and disaster. The young mathematician must save his family with the secret spaces he’s discovered, or his genius will destroy them.

NEW IN MANGA

Generation Witch Vol. 2 Story and art by Isaki Uta

Hana & Hina After School Vol. 3 Story and art by Milk Morinaga

Holy Corpse Rising Vol. 4 Story and art by Hosana Tanaka

My Monster Secret Vol. 8 Story and Art by Eiji Masuda

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Anchors Across the Pond

Image Placeholder of - 16Written by Leanna Renee Hieber

When I envisioned The Eterna Files series, I couldn’t pick one shore, one great, historic city as a setting. So I chose two.

I have a soul-deep connection to London. I love that incredible metropolis more than I have words for and have spent many weeks through the years exploring the city streets and historic sites, researching my Strangely Beautiful and Eterna Files series.

However, my life as a New Yorker, a licensed New York City tour guide at that, has given me too many incredible historical details to omit this great behemoth from an expansive, wild, tumultuous, Gothic, historical, dark fantasy. New York, my inimitable, grand diva, would not be ignored.

Each city is so rich in culture and complications, sins and triumphs, and spectacular, strange histories. Their histories I sometimes tweak or their strangeness I exacerbate, but the base of The Eterna Files is a “realistic” 1882 in which paranormal things happen. The fight on both shores meant I could double my time in two of my favorite places on the planet. I’ve been writing books set in the 1880s since I was a pre-teen, so I’ve been writing in this era and about these cities for the bulk of my life. They’re family.

The Eterna Files stars a large cast embroiled in large spectacles; fitting for cities that in and of themselves are such enormous characters. Having been a student of history in each, I have always been struck by each place’s personality. While writing, I focused on how each one felt to me, and how that might impact my characters. I breathed in their respective quirks, trying to connect with an elder, sootier, gaslit time. I often liken myself to a medium channeling spirits, page by page. Sometimes my characters take that quite literally.

It should be noted that while London and New York have always had differences, by the 19th Century they were considered very much to be sister cities and kept up with one another’s innovations. Great works on either shore often involved their cousins across the pond. For example, the Brooklyn Bridge opened in 1883 on Queen Victoria’s birthday (angering the many Irish workers who had built it and felt disregarded). Earlier, the first trans-Atlantic cable was sent from New York to Buckingham. In some ways New York’s and London’s fates also seem entwined; what befalls one city often befalls the other—and their Phoenix resilience is similarly matched. Both cities have been targets for terrorists and in war. Both cities are fiercely beloved and contain multitudes. No single narrative dominates either place; the stories of these cities are as complex as their citizenry.

In The Eterna Files, what begins in book one as a rivalry and antagonism between two Paranormally focused offices becomes a joint operation when the Eterna Commission (founded under early Secret Service initiatives in the US) and the Omega Department (created as part of the Special Branch in London), realize that they’ve been led to become enemies by a vile magical force targeting both groups.

The biggest change of heart and demolition of preconceived notions from one shore to the other comes from my stalwart London Metropolitan policeman, Harold Spire. A dour skeptic, he shifts from complete disbelief to begrudging acceptance of spectral matters. His assumptions about New Yorkers, and even his fellow Brits, are blown wide open. His New York counterpart, Clara Templeton, faces down her own worst critic, herself, to seize transformative natural power. What binds the teams together is their dogged determination, shared respect for differences, their fierce work ethic, and of course, the fight for survival against an unpredictable foe.

The character arcs I find the most fulfilling are about coming to terms with one’s own powers and limitations, and about learning to love those around one for their own quirks and unique gifts. The same goes for each city going through their respective battles and struggles towards peace with the help of localized magic. The heartbeat of the cities amplifies the heart and soul of my characters. They each inform each other.

Through the series I delve into the ideas of Ley Lines; an ancient and varied belief that the earth’s “magic” and potent life-force runs along certain meridians. I wanted to work with the idea that a Ley Line could be not only geographical, but spiritual and bound to hearts and minds. The energy and attitude of each city throbs in each heart. I expand on the idea of localized magic as also being able to travel in a heart and soul, for stationary places to be alive within us all.

My found family become Ley Lines for each other, making an invisible force tactile as these residents of London and New York travel to their opposite shores to help protect the other side in time of need. The bonds of my characters surpass the boundaries of family of origin, race, creed, socio-economic conditions and other would-be walls in these restrictive 19th century society cities. None of the attitudes my characters espouse are unrealistic demands on history, their attitudes reflect many prominent schools of thought that promoted equality and forward-thinking ideals, especially in large cities. My characters find grounding in hope, in progress and unconditional respect, bound to people and places they put their lives on the line to save. Their cities can then amplify these ideals as they continue to pledge to keep peace.

My characters and the cities they call home: scrappy, determined fighters striving to achieve a loving peace, to be anchors for each other rather than competitors. I’m more interested in building bridges of hope and family than I am in reinforcing walls and separation. I hope you’ll join my quirky family and come fight the good fight.

Order Your Copy

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