Reviews
“At times it feels like an arch collaboration between Samuel Beckett (for comic Godot despair) and Gilbert & Sullivan (pirate silliness), working with Lewis Carroll and J. M. Barrie . . . Yet Wright can approach the true uncanny unease, fearful ugliness, and lucent beauty of dream. Then the tale . . . wings forward with inventive impulse, genuinely captivating, a little reminiscent of Orson Scott Card’s strangely successful reworking of Russian folklore, Enchantment. . . . [it] is by turns ingenious, absurd, disturbing, elevated, and even moving.” —Locus on The Last Guardian of Everness
“Already regarded as one of the best science fiction writers of the last decade for his stirring Golden Age trilogy, John C. Wright proves he has the right stuff to write exciting modern day epic fantasy with the terrific The Last Guardian of Everness.” —Midwest Book Review on The Last Guardian of Everness
“The author of The Golden Age begins a new series set in the world of today but tinged with the world of fairy and myth. For most fantasy collections.” —Library Journal on The Last Guardian of Everness
“Fans of John C. Wright’s SF trilogy will welcome his thought-provoking fantasy debut.” —Publishers Weekly
“Concluding the extraordinary far-future space opera begun with The Golden Age (2002) and continued with The Phoenix Exultant . . . [The Golden Transcendence is] set forth with such effortless intelligence and confident verisimilitude that the author might be a denizen of the remote future, reporting back to us in the distant past.” —Kirkus Reviews on The Golden Transcendence
“John C. Wright sends his hero on a brilliant and surreally glittering voyage like a Sinbad of the distant future.” —Phyllis Gotlieb on The Golden Transcendence
“A mind-bending Technicolor tale straying into future myth with bags of sensawunda, and no shortage of the weird.” —Neal Asher on The Golden Transcendence
“This is as epic a saga as you’re likely to get . . . realized here with an attention to detail and plausibility that set it in a class of its own.” —SFRevu on The Phoenix Exultant
“John Wright is a stunning new talent. His vivid worlds are filled with wonder and dread, tension and hope.” —David Brin, author of Kiln People, on The Phoenix Exultant
“Wright’s extraordinary far-future space opera continues. . . . Witty, inventive, labyrinthine, with a life-sized cast, Wright’s creation – something like Alexander Jablokov meets Charles Sheffield, with a dash of Gene Wolfe – grows steadily more addictive.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review) on The Phoenix Exultant
“Bursting with kaleidoscopic imagery, Wright’s first novel chronicles the quest of a far-future everyman in his journey of self-discovery. Reminiscent of the panoramic novels of Arthur C. Clarke, Iain Banks, and Jack Vance, this allegorical space opera belongs in most SF collections.” —Library Journal on The Golden Age
“Dazzling . . . Wright may be this fledgling century’s most important new SF talent.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Golden Age