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11 kirjaa tekijältä Jonathan Weiss

Molten Flux

Molten Flux

Jonathan Weiss

various Australia publishers
2023
pokkari
As the freshest conscript aboard the walking fortress of Revance, Ryza forges a name for himself in battle. The enemy are the smelters, bandits that trade in reanimated corpses. But for Ryza, the bloodshed represents a path of redemption for an upbringing he's just escaped. His prowess with a rifle draws the interest of the Locusts, a clandestine faction within Revance's ranks. It turns out that not all aboard the fortress seek to stamp out the plague of molten flux, the mysterious liquid metal that fills the bodies of the dead and makes them walk again. Some seek to profit. The reanimated corpses -known as autominds- are used to control enormous contraptions of magnetically enchanted metal, forming the backbone of The Droughtland's factories. The only thing stopping the smelters from expanding their illicit industry is Revance. The Locusts make Ryza an offer. Either help overthrow Revance to do the smelter's bidding or reveal his father's legacy as the very thing Ryza now fights against. The former is unthinkable. The latter means death. Ryza resolves to infiltrate them and expose the mutiny, plunging him back into the murky underworld of the smelters, testing his convictions, and even leading him to the ancient origins of molten flux itself.
The Hytharo Redux

The Hytharo Redux

Jonathan Weiss

Helixic Books
2023
pokkari
A THOUSAND YEARS AGO THE HYTHARO WERE WIPED OUT.A THOUSAND YEARS LATER SPIRIC WAS SPARED.Lost among the dune-swept ruins of ancient glass towers, 14-year-old Spiric hunts for his stolen memories. Guided by the exiled scholar that found him, he embarks on a perilous journey across the Droughtlands to uncover his origins.He's told his red eyes mark him as a Hytharo, one of the long-extinct storm callers that sealed all water into the air itself before they were erased from history. In the thousand years since, thirst has been quenched simply by breathing, but that hasn't stopped the surviving runic peoples from wanting water any less.For without it, there's no ink, no runes, no magic, and in the vast desert wastes of the Droughtlands, magic means power.To Spiric, the mantra is eerily familiar.Word of his presence ripples across the Droughtlands and pressure mounts on him to reverse the Hytharo's final, sacrificial act. It's only as his memories begin to return that he realises the true reason his people were wiped out.With the fragments of Spiric's memories growing bloodier and more desperate, he must determine whether carrying out his supposed fate will cause history to repeat, or if he can forge a new destiny, both for himself and the Droughtlands.
The Hytharo Origin

The Hytharo Origin

Jonathan Weiss

Helixic Books
2024
pokkari
HISTORY WILL REPEATSPIRIC MUST CHANGE ITA litany of bloody memories showed Spiric the truth of his identity. A thousand years have passed since the fall of The Hytharo Empire, leaving him the sole survivor of the brutal regime. Now an anomaly among The Droughtlands, he must find a way to stop history from repeating or be forced to relive the suffering his people caused.But his presence has already invoked echoes of his past.Journeying to Breggesa to follow a fragment of his stolen memory, Spiric finds a sprawling city on the verge of revolt. Its people are starving, its ruling council intent on lining their own pockets, and when Spiric discovers the power behind their tyranny, he realises he's not the only Hytharo trying to change the future.
Irène Némirovsky

Irène Némirovsky

Jonathan Weiss

Stanford University Press
2006
sidottu
On July 13, 1942, French gendarmes arrested Irène Némirovsky in southern Burgundy. She was deported to Auschwitz where she died on August 19. Who was this woman, author of more than a dozen popular novels and more than thirty short stories, whose posthumous novel, Suite Française, won France's prestigious Renaudot prize in 2004? Born in Russia to wealthy parents, Irène Némirovsky immigrated to Paris in 1919. Although she was Jewish, she consorted with authors and politicians on the extreme right, some of whom were openly anti-Semitic. She was sure that these friends would protect her from deportation after the Nazis invaded France. Instead, they abandoned her. Yet she never lost faith in France, even after she was refused French nationality. In this fascinating biography, Jonathan Weiss analyzes the discrepancy between Némirovsky's real and imagined identities, and explores a literary work that revisits in a unique way Jewish identity, exile, betrayal, and the solidarity of a persecuted people.