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Overview
What if you could live for centuries, and the only price was your soul...? Agyar is a man who has paid this price. Born over a century ago, and once a frivolous young man in search of pleasure, he found instead immortality in a woman's blood-red lips. Now he roams from woman to woman, from decade to decade, and from land to land. Death does not bind him. Only one thing does - and that is a bind he has vowed to break. It has brought him to modern day Ohio and an abandoned house in a quiet college town. Here he plays his familiar role: the handsome drifter, the mysterious stranger, the sharp-tongued and heartless Lothario. But in this town are two women, one young and one as ageless as he. And one of these two women will cost him much more than his blackened soul. Once again author Steven Brust proves himself to be one of the most dazzling new stars of the fantasy field with this dark, sharp urban fantasy of the immortal, amoral Agyar.A dark, sharp, unforgettable urban fantasy from the bestselling author of The Phoenix Guards. "The eponymous anti-hero, a suave and mysterious drifter . . . finds himself obsessed with two women, one a beautiful young dancer, the other a harsh taskmistress. . . . One offers him salvation, the second seeks to destroy him."--San Francisco Chronicle.
Synopsis
From the bestselling author of Dragon and The Paths of the Dead, a novel of immortalityand its price
Kirkus Reviews
Impressively wrought modern vampire/redemption yarn, from the author of The Phoenix Guards, The Gypsy (p. 641), etc. Arriving in the quiet college town of Lakota, Ohio, Agyar Janos takes up residence in an empty, furnished houseabandoned because it's haunted by Jim, the ghost of an escaped slave. The pair strike up a wary friendship, and it becomes apparent that Agyar, methodical, callous, detached from both life and death, is a vampire. His first victim is artist Jill, but she rebels against his control of her; so when threatened by Jill's shotgun-toting boyfriend, Agyar kills him without compunction. Then Laura Kellem, the ancient vampire to whom Agyar is himself in thrall, orders Agyar to sacrifice himself by allowing the police to capture him, so as to preserve Kellem's own concealment, which she has foolishly compromised. At first, Agyar cares little; but in his developing non-vampire relationship with Susan, Jill's warm, attractive, intelligent flatmate, he finds compelling reasons to stay alive. Poor Jill, meantime, performs a gypsy magic ritual in another desperate attempt to break free of Agyar. But Agyar is no longer the vampire he was. After learning the details of the ritual, he voluntarily releases Jill; then, accompanied by Susan, he prepares to use the ritual himself in a showdown with the merciless Kellem. Compact, understated, and highly persuasive. Brust accomplishes with a wry turn of phrase or a small flourish what others never achieve despite hundreds of gory spatters.
Editorials
San Francisco Chronicle
Packs more of an emotional wallop than any verbose gore fest served up by less imaginative talents.Kirkus Reviews
Impressively wrought modern vampire/redemption yarn, from the author of The Phoenix Guards, The Gypsy (p. 641), etc. Arriving in the quiet college town of Lakota, Ohio, Agyar Janos takes up residence in an empty, furnished houseβabandoned because it's haunted by Jim, the ghost of an escaped slave. The pair strike up a wary friendship, and it becomes apparent that Agyar, methodical, callous, detached from both life and death, is a vampire. His first victim is artist Jill, but she rebels against his control of her; so when threatened by Jill's shotgun-toting boyfriend, Agyar kills him without compunction. Then Laura Kellem, the ancient vampire to whom Agyar is himself in thrall, orders Agyar to sacrifice himself by allowing the police to capture him, so as to preserve Kellem's own concealment, which she has foolishly compromised. At first, Agyar cares little; but in his developing non-vampire relationship with Susan, Jill's warm, attractive, intelligent flatmate, he finds compelling reasons to stay alive. Poor Jill, meantime, performs a gypsy magic ritual in another desperate attempt to break free of Agyar. But Agyar is no longer the vampire he was. After learning the details of the ritual, he voluntarily releases Jill; then, accompanied by Susan, he prepares to use the ritual himself in a showdown with the merciless Kellem. Compact, understated, and highly persuasive. Brust accomplishes with a wry turn of phrase or a small flourish what others never achieve despite hundreds of gory spatters.From the Publisher
"[Agyar], a suave and mysterious drifter who shares an abandoned house with a compassionate African-American ghost, spends his nights seducing various inhabitants of an Ohio college town. Few can resist him, but he eventually finds himself obsessed with two women, one a beautiful young dancer, the other a harsh taskmistress of indeterminate age. One offers him salvation, the second seeks to destroy him...Packs more of an emotional wallop than any verbose gore fest served up by less imaginative talents." -San Francisco Chronicle
"Steven Burst, in a genre that's mostly done by numbers these days, maintains a hipster charm and originality of mind." -The Philadelphia Inquirer
"The author of the Vlad Taltos series and The Phoenix Guard offers a fresh perspective on a popular theme of dark fantasy in this penetrating look at an individual caught on the border between life and death." -Library Journal