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Theatre of the Gods
Theatre of the Gods
Dec 26, 2024 7:31 PM

Author:M. Suddain

Theatre of the Gods

This is the story of M. Francisco Fabrigas, explorer, philosopher, heretical physicist, who took a shipful of children on a frightening voyage to the next dimension, assisted by a teenaged Captain, a brave deaf boy, a cunning blind girl, and a sultry botanist, all the while pursued by the Pope of the universe and a well-dressed mesmerist.

Dark plots, demonic cults, murderous jungles, quantum mayhem, the birth of creation, the death of time, and a creature called the Sweety: all this and more waits beyond the veil of reality.

Reviews

Matt Suddain’s debut is a crazily multilayered odyssey through space, time and the universe next door…it’s definitely not dull. No book in which the Pope addresses his enemies as ‘Bumface’ runs that risk.

—— Imogen Russell Williams , Metro

Wholly original, and by turns annoying and exhilarating, this antidote to formula fiction reads like Douglas Adams channeling William Burroughs channelling Ionesco, spiced with the comic brio of Vonnegut.

—— Eric Brown , Guardian

An extremely literate and clever story… This is a delightful book, full of surreal twists and turns of invention and humour, written in a breezy and engaging manner.

—— Simon Marshall-Jones , Interzone

Literate, clever, surreal and inventive

—— Bookseller

Finally, a sexy book written by someone who would appear to have had sex

—— Dazed & Confused

Those who harp on about the decline or end of literature in France, stuck in its formalism, nihilism or narcissism, are advised to read The Victoria System. It will give them a good wake-up slap

—— La Quinzaine Littéraire

A fantastic and sensual modern thriller, like nothing I've ever read

—— Christian Louboutin

Ambitious, complex, sparkling, to be devoured in one sitting

—— Télérama

Reinhardt is a fine and subtle psychologist . . . with a keen eye for the perverse ways in which capitalism exploits all levels of society and leaves behind smoking ruins. Anyone who begins this book will not quickly put it down

—— Trouw (The Netherlands)

The Thousand Names is an assured debut from Django Wexler and a must-read if you enjoy an action-packed, page-turner.

—— Mike , Fantasy Faction

...an ambitious, well-written opening act. I can’t wait for book two, and I think most readers will feel likewise after reading this.

—— Stefan , Civilian Reader

... I was very impressed with The Thousand Names and immediately dove into the sequel The Shadow Throne. Recommended.

—— Rob , SFFWorld

Wexler’s polished military fantasy, first in the Shadow Campaign series, distinguishes itself from other epic doorstops with its unique setting, intricate plotting, and layered characters…This excellent series debut is for fans of Peter Brett, Daniel Abraham, and Joe Abercrombie.

—— Booklist

The scenes of military life and combat tactics are well crafted.

—— Publishers Weekly
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