AN EASY ASSIGNMENT INSTEAD TURNS HARD AND LEADS TO A STRING OF MURDERS, AND A RACE AGAINST AN ALIEN ENEMY
Gregory Roarke—former bounty hunter, former Trailblazer, current agent
for the ultra-secret Icarus Group—has received a new assignment: locate
a suspected but as-yet undiscovered teleportation portal on the backwater
colony world of Alainn.
The rival Patth are also searching for the device, and have considerably
more resources at their disposal. Fortunately, Roarke has Selene and her
incredibly sensitive Kadolian sense of smell. On paper, it should be a
straightforward enough job.
But that was before there was a murder in the small town of Bilswift . . .
and another one . . . and the discovery that the Patth are already on the
scene and have narrowed the search to a heavily forested area in the
hills and mountains east of town.
Most disturbing of all is the discovery that one of Selene’s people, a
Kadolian teenaged boy named Tirano, is working at one of Bilswift’s
fish markets. A boy who may have lost his parents before his proper
socialization was completed. A boy who may be connected to both the
murders and the Patth.
A boy who may be the potentially dangerous wild card that the Kadolians
call changelings.
BOOK TWO IN A NEW SERIES FROM CELEBRATED AUTHOR GREGORY FROST
It’s been nearly a century since Thomas Rimor last battled Yvag knights. In
that time his wife and daughter have grown old and died, and he has discovered
that he ages not at all. The elven world believes him long dead.
In his grief, he has retreated to the depths of Sherwood and Barnsdale
Forests and become a hermit, lost in his memories, his grief. But the arrival of a
dying outlaw on his doorstep with items stolen from an Yvag skinwalker
sets in motion events that thrust Thomas back into the world
and forces him into combat with Queen Nicnevin’s soldiers once again,
including this time his late sister’s changeling daughter and the Queen’s
own grotesque offspring, Bragrender.
As Thomas takes on two sheriffs of Nottingham and a horde of Yvag
raiders, he enlists the aid of outlaws Little John and Will Scathelocke,
and the Keeper of Sherwood Forest herself, Isabella Birkin, who sets him
on a path back to humanity. To keep his true identity hidden from the
Yvags, he creates an alter-ego named Robyn Hoode, whose exploits,
unbeknown to Thomas, are about to become the stuff of legend.
DUST KNIGHTS: A NEW SERIES IN CATHERINE ASARO’S SKOLIAN EMPIRE
A CITY DIVIDED
For centuries The City of Cries—one of the most desired locales in the Skolian Imperialate—has existed by the thinnest of threads. On the dying world of Raylicon, the “haves” live in great luxury in Cries while the “have-nots” scrape by, eking out a marginal existence in the notorious Undercity beneath the desert. Major Bhaajan, formerly of the Pharaoh's Army, knows both worlds. Born into the Undercity, she nevertheless has made a name for herself in the Imperialate. And now, she has the chance to help her people.
HOPE FOR RECONCILIATION
For the first time, a member of the Royal class wants to extend an olive branch to the Undercity. Hoping to build bridges, Colonel Lavinda Majda recruits Bhaaj and her Dust Knights to act as guides and bodyguards on a mission of goodwill to those who live below the surface of their parched world.
THE DOWN DEEP
But the problems of the Undercity run deeper than anyone knows. To help find peace, the Dust Knights must reach the most hidden rungs in that mysterious underground world, a place known only as the Down Deep, where the scars from centuries of distrust are greatest. There they will face an unseen enemy that may destroy the lives of everyone they know—and threaten interstellar civilization.
History isn’t what you think it is. It’s been rewritten to remove all the magic. Together, two people decide to put things right. A new novel of magic, history and true love from Simon R. Green.
When they fall in love, it’s magic!
History can change and has changed. Magic was and is real.
Once upon a time, there was a forgotten era of magic and monster. But the remnants—and all memory—of the old world have been replaced by the sane, the scientific, and the rational. But sometimes the magical past isn’t content to stay past. That’s where Jack Daimon comes in. It’s his job to protect our present from the supernatural remnants of an earlier time, a different history. It’s his job to make the past safe.
Jack is called to the Tate Museum, where dozens of people have disappeared beneath the surface of a painting. While investigating, he finds himself smitten with a mysterious art expert, Amanda Fielding. But Amanda has plans of her own, and soon the two are traveling through time—back to the Roman Empire and then forward through history, from King Arthur’s court to Sherwood Forest. As they explore histories past as written and overwritten, the balance of magic and science shifts, and the choices the two make could change the world forever.
A bold journey into a future where humanity and its children travel to a new star where they must overcome the unexpected challenges on the exoplanets that await them—or die trying.
Traveling to the stars will be difficult, but not, perhaps, the most difficult part. What about when we get to another star? What then? Will the planets be immediately habitable? Not likely. Will those who undertook the journey be able to easily turn around and come home if they don’t find “Earth 2.0”? Almost certainly not. Therein lies the challenge: Finding worlds that are potentially habitable and then taking the time, perhaps centuries, to make them compatible with Earth life. They will encounter mysteries and unexpected challenges, but the human spirit will endure. Join this diverse group of science fiction writers and scientists as they take up the challenge of The Ross 248 Project.
Contributors:
USAF (Ret) General Steven Kwast
Patrick Chiles
Stephanie Osborn
Brent Ziarnick
Laura Montgomery
Daniel M. Hoyt & E. Marshall Hoyt
Matthew Williams
D. J. Butler
Robert E. Hampson
Monalisa Foster
J. L. Curtis
K. S. Daniels
Les Johnson & Ken Roy
Ever since the assassination of King Louis XIII and the overthrow of his chief minister, Cardinal Richelieu, France has been in political and military turmoil. The possibility—even the likelihood—of revolution hovers in the background.
The new king Gaston, whom many consider an usurper, is no friend of France’s Protestants, known as the Huguenots. The fears and hostility of the Huguenots toward the French crown have only been heightened by the knowledge brought back in time by the Americans of the town of Grantville. Half a century in the future, the French king of the time would revoke the Edict of Nantes of 1598, which proclaimed that the rights of Huguenots would be respected.
At the center of all this turmoil is the universally recognized leader of the Huguenots: Duke Henri de Rohan. He knows from the same up-time history books that he is “scheduled” to die less than two years in the future and he has pressing problem on his hands.
His estranged wife and brother are siding with the usurper Gaston and plotting against him. Still worse, his sole child and heir is his nineteen-year-old daughter Marguerite. He believes he has less than two years to find a suitable husband for her—but acceptable Calvinist noblemen, French or foreign, are sparse at the moment.
What’s a father to do?