Reave the Just: and Other Tales

Reave the Just: and Other Tales

by StephenDonaldson (Author)

Synopsis

A wondeful collection of fantasy short stories from the renowned author of the Thomas Covenant series. Stephen Donaldson has been one of the world's most popular fantasy writers ever since his first million-selling Thomas Covenant trilogy in 1977. In 1990 he took a new direction with the Gap series, the bestselling sf epic acclaimed as his best work ever. Now, in his first collection since 1984, he returns to mainstream fantasy with eight stunning stories that reveal an astonishing mastery of the shorter form. Here are tales rich with exotic atmosphere, mysticism and menace, including 'The Djinn Who Watches Over the Accursed', an unnerving fable about a reckless adulterer; 'The Killing Stroke', in which martial-arts masters fight as champions in a great mind-battle between mages; and 'Penance', a haunting story of a vampire who roams a battlefield, searching for the dying. Spellbinding, unpredictable and always entertaining, this new collection displays the remarkable imagination and extraordinary range of a writer at the height of his powers, and confirms Stephen Donaldson's position as a master of modern fantasy.

$3.27

Save:$8.07 (71%)

Quantity

4 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 496
Edition: New e.
Publisher: HarperVoyager
Published: 04 Oct 1999

ISBN 10: 0006511716
ISBN 13: 9780006511717

Media Reviews

`If there is any justice in the literary world, Donaldson will earn the right to stand shoulder to shoulder with Tolkien.'
Time Out

`A writer of central significance as an author of demanding and exploratory fantasy.'
JOHN CLUTE

`The most individual of the Tolkien successors.'
Guardian

Author Bio

Stephen Donaldson was born in 1947 in Cleveland, Ohio. Between the ages of three and sixteen he lived in India, where his father, an orthopaedic surgeon, worked with lepers. It was after hearing one of his father's speeches on leprosy that he conceived the character of Thomas Covenant.

`Comparable to Tolkien at his best.' Washington Post