Drood A Novel (Paperback)
| Author: Dan Simmons |
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Product Details:
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Grand Central Pub
ISBN-10: 0316120618
ISBN-13: 9780316120616
Sku: 216380583
Publish Date: 1/1/2011
Pages:
946
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| Based on the historical details of Charles Dickens'' life, "Drood" explores the still-unsolved mysteries of the famous author''s last years, and may provide the key to his final, unfinished work: "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." Available in a tall Premium Edition. |
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From the Publisher:
On June 9, 1865, while traveling by train to London with his secret mistress, 53-year-old Charles Dickens--at the height of his powers and popularity, the most famous and successful novelist in the world and perhaps in the history of the world--hurtled into a disaster that changed his life forever. Did Dickens begin living a dark double life after the accident? Were his nightly forays into the worst slums of Just as he did in The Terror, Dan Simmons draws impeccably from history to create a gloriously engaging and terrifying narrative. Based on the historical details of Charles Dickens's life and narrated by Wilkie Collins (Dickens's friend, frequent collaborator, and Salieri-style secret rival), DROOD explores the still-unsolved mysteries of the famous author's last years and may provide the key to Dickens's final, unfinished work: The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Chilling, haunting, and utterly original, DROOD is Dan Simmons at his powerful best. |
Annotation:
This gripping Victorian thriller depicts the final days of Charles Dickens, and the extraordinary events which haunt the great writer's unfinished final novel, THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD. Wilkie Collins, Dickens's friend, rival, and collaborator, narrates this compelling saga, which begins when Dickens and his mistress survive a train wreck in 1865. In the aftermath of the disaster, Dickens encounters a bizarre practitioner of the black arts called Drood, who was protected from the crash because he was traveling in a coffin. Dickens pursues Drood into London's sprawling, decrepit underworld, where he develops a swelling obsession with corpses, crypts, and necromancy. Collins inevitably begins to question whether Drood really exists, or whether Dickens himself is responsible for the mysticism and murder they continually uncover. But Collins's telling of the tale is tainted by his looming jealousy of Dickens, and his considerable opium habit, so that the truth behind this twisted enigma is as elusive as the mysterious Mr. Drood himself. Selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the 100 Best Books of 2009.
This gripping Victorian thriller depicts the final days of Charles Dickens, and the extraordinary events which haunt the great writer's unfinished final novel, THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD. Wilkie Collins, Dickens's friend, rival, and collaborator, narrates this compelling saga, which begins when Dickens and his mistress survive a train wreck in 1865. In the aftermath of the disaster, Dickens encounters a bizarre practitioner of the black arts called Drood, who was protected from the crash because he was traveling in a coffin. Dickens pursues Drood into London's sprawling, decrepit underworld, where he develops a swelling obsession with corpses, crypts, and necromancy. Collins inevitably begins to question whether Drood really exists, or whether Dickens himself is responsible for the mysticism and murder they continually uncover. But Collins's telling of the tale is tainted by his looming jealousy of Dickens, and his considerable opium habit, so that the truth behind this twisted enigma is as elusive as the mysterious Mr. Drood himself. Selected by Publishers Weekly as one of the 100 Best Books of 2009.
Author Bio
Dan Simmons
Following his graduation from Washington University in St. Louis in 1971, Dan Simmons moved to Colorado and taught elementary school for many years, while trying and failing to get his fiction published. In 1981 he attended a course for beginning writers taught by the writer and critic Harlan Ellison. At Ellison's urging, Simmons submitted a story to an unpublished writers competition. The story, "The River Styx Runs Upstream", won the contest and, on the same day it was published in Twilight Zone magazine--February 15, 1982--his first child was born. In 1985, his debut novel, SONG OF KALI, a grim horror novel set in the backstreets of Calcutta, won the prestigious World Fantasy Award. Since then, Simmons has racked up an impressive collection of other awards, including the Hugo Award, Locus Reader's Poll Awards, the British Fantasy & Science Fiction Award, and four Bram Stoker Awards. His masterpiece, THE HYPERION CANTOS, a massive work inspired by the works of John Keats and structurally based on Chaucer's CANTERBURY TALES, is credited in many quarters with single-handedly rescuing the sf sub-genre of "space opera" from the disrepute into which it had fallen. THE HYPERION CANTOS is a classic work of science fiction that many fans speak of in favorable comparison to works like Frank Herbert's DUNE series, and, along with its sequel ENDYMION, it is one of the most important works of science fiction written since 1970. Splitting his writing between epic science fiction and spectacularly dense, complex horror novels, Simmons is a genre-straddling author who will undoubtedly remain a powerful force in both fields, even when his work comes to be accepted outside of the constraints of genre fiction.
Praise
"Simmons is a master at fashioning competing worldviews, and emergent ones too. Many species of reality materialize in this almost-800-page story..."
- Katherine A. Powers
03/22/2009
"Simmons blends the facts of the Dickens and Collins biographies with graphic details about life in Victorian London. The result is a spellbinding tale, bold and sly and so steeped in the filigree of this era that it seems to have been written just after a seance during which both authors were present."
- Julia Keller
02/15/2009
"[Simmons] cleverly braids together fact and fiction -- biographical bits of Dickens' life and that of Wilkie Collins, details of Victorian London, elements of THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD plus 'murder, death, corpses, crypts, mesmerism, opium, ghosts' and phantasmagoria by the fistful."
- Ellen Kanner
02/23/2009
"Simmons also offers a stunning re-creation of Dickens' London and its characters that's almost as good as, well . . . Dickens. A top-notch, genre-bending tour de force, this is where history and horror meet."
- Ilene Cooper
01/01/2009
"[I]t is...an engrossing mystery tale, and it offers a compelling portrait of two famous novelists and their evolving friendship, not to mention a portrait of 19th-century England's underworld and literary scene."
- Robert J. Hughes
02/14/2009

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