Marlon James a Brief History of Seven Killings Wall Street Journal Review

Feb 2019 Indie Next Listing


"Marlon James' Black Leopard, Red Wolf is a shot across the bow of fantasy literature: bold, fresh, and filled with vicious wonder and endless imagination. James'tale set in a fantastical aboriginal Africa follows a hunter known but as Tracker every bit he trails the scent of a lost boy, coming together a shape-shifting leopard along the manner. At turns hallucinatory, dreamlike, and nightmarish, Blackness Leopard, Red Wolf'due south earth envelops the reader in its stink, grime, sweat, and claret. Never has a magical world felt quite so otherworldly and all the same frighteningly tactile at the same time. This is literary fantasy as you've never encountered information technology before and a truly original tale of dear, loss, power, and identity."
— Caleb Masters, Bookmarks, Winston-Salem, NC

Summertime 2020 Reading Group Indie Next List


"Black Leopard, Cerise Wolf is an amazing epic that launches from a familiar framework of the fantasy genre. Lovingly crafted, it immediately steals you away from your world and steeps you lot in one of ancient yet familiar myth and magic. The linguistic communication, the beasts, the people—James' writing is both fell and beautiful. Yous'll get the journeying y'all want from this fantasy, simply it won't be the same trip around the block. Rather, it'southward a walk off the edge of the Earth. James' talent shines and his passion in this volume is clear. This is a book to be GEEKED near, and I absolutely am."
— Olivia Valenza, Boswell Book Visitor, Milwaukee, WI

Description


One of Time's 100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time

Winner of the L.A. Times Ray Bradbury Prize

Finalist for the 2019 National Book Accolade


The New York Times Bestseller

Named a Best Book of 2019 by The Wall Street Journal, TIME, NPR, GQ, Vogue, and The Washington Mail service

"A fantasy world as well-realized as annihilation Tolkien made." --Neil Gaiman

"Gripping, action-packed....The literary equivalent of a Curiosity Comics universe." --Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

The epic novel from the Man Booker Prize-winning author of A Cursory History of Seven Killings

In the stunning first novel in Marlon James'due south Night Star trilogy, myth, fantasy, and history come together to explore what happens when a mercenary is hired to find a missing kid.

Tracker is known far and wide for his skills as a hunter: "He has a olfactory organ," people say. Engaged to rail down a mysterious male child who disappeared 3 years earlier, Tracker breaks his own rule of always working lonely when he finds himself part of a group that comes together to search for the boy. The ring is a hodgepodge, total of unusual characters with secrets of their ain, including a shape-shifting human-animal known every bit Leopard.

As Tracker follows the boy'due south scent--from 1 ancient city to another; into dense forests and across deep rivers--he and the band are fix upon by creatures intent on destroying them. Equally he struggles to survive, Tracker starts to wonder: Who, really, is this boy? Why has he been missing for and so long? Why exercise then many people want to keep Tracker from finding him? And perhaps the virtually important questions of all: Who is telling the truth, and who is lying?

Cartoon from African history and mythology and his own rich imagination, Marlon James has written a novel different anything that's come up before it: a saga of breathtaking adventure that's as well an ambitious, involving read. Defying categorization and full of unforgettable characters, Black Leopard, Red Wolf is both surprising and profound equally it explores the fundamentals of truth, the limits of ability, and our need to sympathize them both.

Well-nigh the Author


Marlon James was born in Jamaica in 1970. He is the author of the New York Times-bestseller Black Leopard, Red Wolf, which was a finalist for the National Book Award for fiction in 2019. His novelA Brief History of Seven Killingswon the 2015 Man Booker Prize. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and won the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature for fiction, the Anisfield-Wolf Book Honor for fiction, and the Minnesota Book Award. It was besides a New York Times Notable Book.James is also the author ofThe Volume of Night Women, which won the 2010 Dayton Literary Peace Prize and the Minnesota Volume Award, and was a finalist for the 2010 National Book Critics Circle Award in fiction and an NAACP Image Accolade. His first novel,John Crow's Devil, was a finalist for theLos Angeles Times Book Prize for first fiction and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, and was aNew York Times Editors' Choice. James divides his time between Minnesota and New York.

Praise For…


Praise for Black Leopard, Red Wolf:

"Gripping, activeness-packed… The literary equivalent of a Marvel Comics universe — filled with dizzying, magpie references to old movies and recent TV, ancient myths and archetype comic books, and fused into something new and startling by his gifts for language and sheer inventiveness." Michiko Kakutani, TheNew York Times

"No novel this year was as intoxicated by the pleasures and possibilities of storytelling as this bloody, bawdy, profane, deliriously overstuffed work of loftier fantasy. The offset part of a planned trilogy, Marlon James's book already boasts more than swagger and invention than most multivolume epics dragging toward their tenth installment." The Wall Street Journal, Best Books of 2019

"The starting time book of a promised trilogy, a fabulist reimagining of Africa, with inevitable echoes of Tolkien, George R.R. Martin andBlack Panther, but highly original, its language surging with power, its imagination all-encompassing. . . . Marlon is a writer who must exist read." Salman Rushdie, Fourth dimension

"James' visions don't jettison you from reality so much as they trap you in his mad-genius, mercurial listen. . . . Drenched in African myth and folklore, and set up in an astonishingly realized pre-colonized sub-Saharan region, Black Leopard crawls with creatures and erects kingdoms unlike any I've read. . . .  This is a revolutionary book." —Entertainment Weekly

"Marlon James is one of those novelists who aren't afraid to give a performance, to change the states of language from viscous to gushing to grand, to go all the style inside the people he's created... [Black Leopard, Red Wolf] looks similar another great, big tale of death, murder and mystery but more mystically fantastical... Not but does this book come with a hefty cast of characters (like Seven Killings), there are also shape shifters, fairies, trolls, and, apparently, a map. The map might be handy. But it might exist the opposite of why yous come to James—to get lost in him." The New York Times

"Fantasy fiction gets a shot of adrenaline." Newsday

"Stand bated, Beowulf. At that place's a new ballsy hero slashing his mode into our hearts, and we may never get all the blood off our hands. . . . James is clear-cutting space for a whole new kingdom. 'Blackness Leopard, Ruby Wolf,' the first spectacular volume of a planned trilogy, rises upwards from the mists of time, glistening like viscera. James has spun an African fantasy as vibrant, complex and haunting equally any Western mythology, and nobody who survives reading this book will ever forget it. That thunder you lot hear is the jealous rage of Olympian gods. . . . 'Bounding main'due south 11' has got aught on this ensemble." Washington Mail

"Blackness Leopard, Red Wolf is earthy (OK, filthy), lyrical, poignant, violent (sometimes hyperviolent), riotous, funny (filthily hilarious), circuitous, mysterious, and e'er under tight and exquisite control…A world that is both fresh and beautifully realized….Absolutely brilliant." LA Times

"James is a professed fantasy nerd, then Black Leopard, Red Wolf will certainly entreatment to fans of all the well-best-selling authors with at least two initials — George R.R. Martin, J.R.R. Tolkien, J.Thou. Rowling, etc. Just if yous've read James' 2014 novel A Cursory History of Seven Killings (decidedly not a sci-fi or fantasy book but a 700-page world-building ballsy about the attempted assassination of Bob Marley), you'll drag yourself to the midnight queue to buy Black Leopard regardless of the whole 'Game of Thrones' selling point." Huffington Mail

"Blackness Leopard, Red Wolf is the kind of novel I never realized I was missing until I read it. A unsafe, hallucinatory, ancient Africa, which becomes a fantasy world also-realized equally anything Tolkien made, with language equally powerful equally Angela Carter's. It's every bit deep and crafty as Cistron Wolfe, bloodier than Robert E. Howard, and all Marlon James. It's something very new that feels old, in the best way. I cannot wait for the next installment." Neil Gaiman

"This book begins like a fever dream and merges into globe upon world of deadly fairy tales rich with political magic. Black Leopard, Ruby-red Wolf is a fabulous pour of storytelling. Sink correct in. I guarantee yous will be swept downstream." Louise Erdrich "The novel teems with nightmares: devils, witches, giants, shape-shifters, haunted forest, magic portals. It's terrifying, sensual, hard to follow just somehow indelible, as well." Vogue
"Blackness Leopard, Red Wolf aims to be an outcome, and to counter the ascendant impression of the genre it inhabits. . . . Blackness Leopard delivers some genre-specific satisfactions: the fight scenes are choreographed with comic-book wit . . . But it deliberately upends others. When I outset saw the news that James was writing a fantasy trilogy, I had assumed that, afterwards reaching the pinnacle of disquisitional acclamation, with the Booker, he was pivoting to the country of the straightforward all-time-seller. . . . Instead, he'd written non but an African fantasy novel simply an African fantasy novel that is literary and labyrinthine to an almost combative caste." The New Yorker

"He's produced a sprawling fantasy novel ready in a dark-age Africa of witches, spirits, dazzling majestic citadels and bulletproof forests. In a genre dominated by imagery derived from the European center ages, Blackness Leopard, Red Wolf feels new and heady." —Wall Street Journal

"A miracle... If Charles R. Saunders' Imaro series opened the door to new means of telling epic fantasy, and N.K. Jemisin's Inheritance trilogy leapt over the threshold, then Marlon James'Black Leopard, Blood-red Wolf merely ripped the whole damn door off its hinges." Tor

"A sprawling, epic fantasy... Fuses mythology, fantasy, and African history into a sensual, psychological triumph." Esquire

"Like the best fantasy, similar the best literary fiction, like the best art menstruum, Black Leopard, Cherry Wolf is uncanny." —Boston Globe

"Black Leopard, Red Wolf [will] surely redefine fantasy for many years to come." —Houston Chronicle

"A standard-bearer for future fantasies." Minneapolis Star Tribune

"This is the kind of immersive fantasy saga that develops a devoted following, an impressive brandish of inspired storytelling that's just just getting started." San Francisco Relate

"Perhaps no other contemporary fiction writer takes such risks and uses such provocative, sensual descriptions every bit James (who masterfully mixes in smells and sounds besides equally sights to build a world)." —Interview Magazine "What marks James's tale as his own is the wonder evoked through descriptive, unrelenting prose along with a focus on a distinct mythology cobbled from history and folk tale. The propulsive narrative has already been optioned by Michael B Jordan, so await to come across this ane coming to screens fairly before long." —The Guardian

"James' sensual, beautifully rendered prose and sweeping, precisely detailed narrative bandage their own transfixing spell upon the reader. He non but brings a fresh multicultural perspective to a g fantasy subgenre, but also broadens the genre's psychological and metaphysical possibilities. If this first volume is any indication, James' trilogy could go one of the nigh talked-almost and influential gamble epics since George R.R. Martin'southward A Song of Ice and Burn was transformed into Game of Thrones." Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

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Source: https://lostcitybookstore.indielite.org/book/9780735220188

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