The Ninth Circle
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- $1.99
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- $1.99
Publisher Description
This is The Bourne Identity . . . as if Neil Gaiman had written it . . .
A man comes round on the floor of a shabby flat in the middle of Budapest. His head is glued to the floorboards with his own blood. There's a fortune in cash on the kitchen table. And he has no idea where, or who, he is.
He can do extraordinary things - speak any number of languages fluently, go three days without food or sleep, and fight with extraordinary prowess. But without a name, without a past, he's isolated from the rest of the world; a stranger to everyone, including himself - until a chance encounter with a young scholar leads to his first friendship, and his first hint that someone out there knows more about him than he does.
Someone is sending him clues about his past. Photographs hidden in books and crates of wine. Cryptic clues pointing towards a murdered woman. And clear warnings against Stephomi, his only friend. But that's not all; Gabriel Antaeus is seeing strange, impossible things: a burning man is stalking his dreams and haunting his mirrors, his dreams are filled with violence from the past, and his pregnant young neighbour is surrounded by an extraordinary golden aura.
Something dark and violent in Gabriel's past is trying to resurface. And as he pieces the clues together, everything points towards an astounding war between angels and demons . . . and a battle not just for the future of the world, but for the minds and souls of everyone in it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
British university student Bell's impressive debut is a mature literary theological mystery with a satisfyingly twisty thriller conclusion. Waking up covered in blood and missing his memories, Gabriel Antaeus learns his name from the lease on his Budapest apartment and starts keeping a journal for fear of forgetting everything again. As he encounters photographs hidden in books and disturbingly supernatural dreams, Gabriel begins to doubt the trustworthiness of his only friend, fellow expatriate Zadkiel Stephomi. Gabriel soon finds his paternal instincts awakened by Casey, his pregnant teenage neighbor, and he begins to fear that much more than his life or hers may hang in the balance. Bell deftly weaves Judeo-Christian myth and Dante's Divine Comedy into a compelling genre mashup with glimmers of Gaiman, Blish and Ludlum, unfolding the mystery in teasingly intriguing bits that will keep pages turning.