The Properties of Rooftop Air
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
Tim Powers makes a triumphant return to the setting of The Anubis Gates with a tale that features the beggar clown Horrabin, and one who opposes him.
In the slum known as the St. Giles rookery in 19th century London, the beggar guild run by Horrabin the Clown is the last resort of the down-and-out. Horrabin is rumored to maim his people to make them more effective mendicants, and when dimwitted beggar Isaac Fairchild is summoned by the clown, he fears the worst.
But in the subterranean chamber known as the Nursery, Fairchild learns that Horrabin’s purpose is to greatly increase his intelligence, by grafting his rudimentary mind into the group mind shared by Horrabin’s gang of Spoonsize Boys—alchemically-hatched homunculi, two-inch-tall men employed by the clown for subtle thefts and assassinations.
Fairchild yearns to be able at last to think clearly, understand conversations—read books!—but there’s a cost.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The evil clown Horrabin returns in this tense and emotionally rich novella, which pulls readers back into the world of Powers's 1983 fantasy, The Anubis Gates. In 19th-century London, 34-year-old Isaac Fairchild is a member of Horrabin's crew, and a poor one at that, having failed miserably as both a Mintie Dropper and a Famished Beggar. Fairchild's greatest desire is to learn to read, to be like the people who "peer into the pages and then raise their heads knowing things they hadn't known before." Fortunately for Fairchild, Horrabin offers just that, but the opportunity comes at a price. Deep in the bowels of the Rat's Castle, Horrabin is raising an army of tiny men with a singular mind, dubbed the Spoonsize Boys, and Fairchild is left with a choice to join their hive mind, gaining intelligence but losing himself to Horrabin's bidding in the process, or to resist and retain his autonomy. Powers delves deep into themes of desire and selfhood while bringing back familiar faces sure to please long-standing fans. Though the high price tag and Spartan length may turn off casual readers, Powers enthusiasts will enjoy this return to the Rat's Castle.