<b>Subversive, playful</b> and <b>full of heart, compassion and humanity</b>
Claire North, author of Ithaca
This novel <b>effortlessly ascends to the heights</b> of Mount Olympus. <b>Tough and tender and bittersweet</b>. <i>Wearing The Lion</i> establishes Wiswell firmly on the new fantasy landscape
T. Kingfisher, Hugo Award-winning author of Nettle & Bone
<b>Wise, weird, and wonderful</b> - in short, Wiswellian. <i>Wearing The Lion</i> is the story of Hera and Heracles as it's never before been told. <b>An effortless blend of wicked humor, raw pathos, and monsters</b> who aren't at all what they seem; <b>I was utterly engrossed</b> from start to end
Julie Leong, author of The Teller of Small Fortunes
<i>Someone You Can Build A Nest In</i> made me a John Wiswell fan for life, and <i>Wearing The Lion </i>is an absolutely<b> glorious </b>follow up. Wiswell makes something <b>new and thrilling</b> - and <b>funny and wrenching and tender</b> - out of a very old myth
Kelly Link, author of The Book of Love
If you think you've read all there is to read about Heracles, think again. <i>Wearing The Lion</i> takes a deep dive into a story we all think we are familiar with and creates something <b>entirely spectacular and new</b>. This Heracles is unlike any you've encountered: a bumbling himbo who must struggle to hold onto his humanity even in the face of unspeakable tragedy. John Wiswell has taken Greek mythology and, like Hephaestus, crafted an<b> original, fantastic, and beautiful</b> bit of work - giving us a tale of an indomitable hero, sympathetic monsters, flawed gods, and - quite unexpectedly - found family.<b> I absolutely adored this book. And so will you</b>
P. Djèlí Clark, award-winning author of A Master of Djinn and The Dead Cat Tail Assassins
<i>Wearing The Lion</i>'s <b>hilarious </b>opening <b>lures you in so it can bloodily rip your heart out, suture the wound you didn't know you had, and gently place it back in your chest</b>. Wiswell's mythological take on found family <b>reminds us that we are all monsters and we are all worthy of love</b>
Caitlin Rozakis, author of Dreadful
<i>Wearing the Lion</i> <b>explains human relationships in the only way that makes sense</b>: by suspending them between the dipshit gods we created and the loyal pets we don't deserve. <b>I laughed, I cried, I burned incense at an ancient altar</b>
Meg Elison, author of Big Girl
A <b>deeply original</b> retelling of the Labors of Hercules that <b>should appeal to anyone who has been craving more re-examinations of Greek mythology</b>. I particularly enjoyed the chatty Hydra
Naomi Kritzer, Hugo-winning author of Liberty's Daughter
Wiswell alternates between Hera's and Heracles's perspectives, painting <b>distinctly modern</b> portraits of both. The result is a Greek mythology retelling that <b>stands out from the crowd</b> through its sheer sense of<b> fun</b>
Publishers Weekly
<b>Wise, weird, and wonderful </b>. . . An <b>effortless </b>blend of wicked humor, raw pathos, and monsters who aren't at all what they seem; <b>I was utterly engrossed</b> from start to end
Julie Leong, author of The Teller of Small Fortunes
Lures you in so it can bloodily rip your heart out, suture the wound you didn't know you had, and gently place it back in your chest. <b>Wiswell's mythological take on found family reminds us that we are all monsters and we are all worthy of love</b>
Caitlin Rozakis, author of Dreadful
Takes a deep dive into a story we all think we are familiar with and creates something <b>entirely spectacular</b> and new . . . <b>original, fantastic, and beautiful </b>. . . <b>I absolutely adored this book. And so will you</b>
P. Djèlí Clark, award-winning author of A Master of Djinn and The Dead Cat Tail Assassins
<b>Charming</b>
Interzone
God. Hero. Idol. Monster. Murderer. The story of Hercules is one of the most famous ever told. But what if it's wrong? Locus and Nebula Award-winning author John Wiswell brings his gentle, human storytelling to the most infamous of stories and discovers the heart inside us all.
Furious with Zeus for once again siring a child with a mortal woman, Hera finds herself redirecting all her fury at the baby himself, Heracles, an innocent named in her honour. As Heracles grows into a man - an unfathomably strong, loving man - he thanks Hera for all the blessings he feels she's seen fit to bestow upon him.
In a moment of misdirected rage, however, Hera sends a fury to kill Heracles' family. Heracles sets out on an epic quest to discover the name of the god who set their murders in motion. Desperate to keep him busy until she can come up with a solution, Hera sets Heracles a series of tests, as impossible as they are deadly: the Nemean lion, the hydra, the Stymphalian birds, the Aegean stables . . .
But Heracles' innate kindness, along with his determination to discover the identity of the god who cost him everything he loves, carries him through each task. As his legend grows, so does Hera's desperation.
A novel of friendship, of found family, of kindness and of legend, this is the story of Hercules as it has never been told before.
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
John Wiswell won the Nebula Award for his short story 'Open House on Haunted Hill' and won the Locus Award for his novelette 'That Story Isn't The Story'. He has also been a finalist for the Hugo Award, World Fantasy Award, British Fantasy Award, and Locus Award. His work has appeared in acclaimed publications like Uncanny Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Tor.com, Nightmare Magazine, and others, as well as numerous podcasts, including LeVar Burton Reads, NoSleep, Podcastle, and Escape Pod. He was most recently a finalist of the Hugo Award a second time in 2022 for Best Novelette.
You can find him on X @Wiswell and online at https://johnwiswell.blogspot.com.