Suggested reading from Chicago Review Press
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By Boris Strugatsky, By Arkady Strugatsky, Translated by Daniels Umanovskis, Afterword by Boris Strugatsky
Rediscovered Classics
FICTION
184 Pages, 5.5 x 8.5
Formats: PDF, Trade Paper, EPUB
Trade Paper, $19.99 (US $19.99) (CA $26.99)
ISBN 9781641606264
Rights: US & CA
Chicago Review Press (Apr 2023)
eBook Editions Available
Will it work on my eReader?Overview
Today, Russian authors Arkady and Boris Strugatsky are counted among the best science fiction writers of the twentieth century.Author Biography
Arkady and Boris Strugatsky were famous and popular Russian writers of science fiction, with more than twenty-five novels and novellas to their names, including The Doomed City, Lame Fate | Ugly Swans, and Monday Starts on Saturday. Daniels Umanovskis is a software engineer and translator.May we also suggest...
Trade Paper
Published Sep 2000
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2005
Trade Paper
Published Oct 2007
Trade Paper
Published Oct 2007
Trade Paper
Published Sep 2007
Trade Paper
Published Dec 2008
Bringing to life the heady days of the American Revolution through the eyes of a heroine who played a brave and dramatic part in the conflict, this novel follows Celia Garth, a Charleston native, as she transforms from a fashionable dressmaker to a patriot spy. When the king's army captures Charleston and sweeps through the Carolina countryside in a wave of blood, fire, and debauchery, the rebel cause seems all but lost. But when Francis Marion, a lieutenant colonel in the Continental Army known as "The Swamp Fox," recruits Celia as a spy, the tides of war begin to shift. This classic historical novel captures the fervor of 18th-century Charleston, the American Revolution, and a woman who risked her life for the patriot cause.
Trade Paper
Published May 2006
Trade Paper
Published May 2006
Trade Paper
Published May 2008
Trade Paper
Published May 2007
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2009
David Champlin is a black man born into poverty in Depression-era
EPUB
Published Apr 2009
David Champlin is a black man born into poverty in Depression-era
Mobipocket
Published Apr 2009
David Champlin is a black man born into poverty in Depression-era
Published Apr 2009
David Champlin is a black man born into poverty in Depression-era
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2010
Based closely on historical events, this sensuously beautiful, astonishingly evocative novel tells the story of one of history’s most remarkable women—the first female Pharaoh of Egypt. Thirty-five centuries ago, Hatshepsut, the youngest daughter of the Pharaoh, was to marry her father’s illegitimate son and heir to the throne, Thothmes, in order to cleanse the bloodline in accordance with Egypt’s supreme law. Fearing his son’s incompetence, Hatshepsut’s father chose her as the heir—provided that the unprecedented ascension by a woman did not inspire the priests to commit treason or instill enough hatred in the envious heart of her half-brother and future consort to have her put to death. Rich in historical detail, this account recalls the rule of one of Egypt’s greatest queens who, under her father’s guidance, assumed the throne at the age of 15 and ruled brilliantly for more than two decades.
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2011
EPUB
Published Apr 2005
Published Apr 2005
Trade Paper
Published Sep 2011
EPUB
Published May 2008
Mobipocket
Published May 2008
Published May 2008
EPUB
Published Oct 2007
Mobipocket
Published Oct 2007
Published Oct 2007
Mobipocket
Published Apr 2005
EPUB
Published May 2006
Mobipocket
Published May 2006
Published May 2006
Published May 2012
Trade Paper
Published May 2012
Mobipocket
Published May 2012
EPUB
Published May 2012
EPUB
Published Feb 2012
Mobipocket
Published Feb 2012
Published Feb 2012
EPUB
Published Oct 2007
Trade Paper
Published Sep 2012
Published Apr 2010
Based closely on historical events, this sensuously beautiful, astonishingly evocative novel tells the story of one of history’s most remarkable women—the first female Pharaoh of Egypt. Thirty-five centuries ago, Hatshepsut, the youngest daughter of the Pharaoh, was to marry her father’s illegitimate son and heir to the throne, Thothmes, in order to cleanse the bloodline in accordance with Egypt’s supreme law. Fearing his son’s incompetence, Hatshepsut’s father chose her as the heir—provided that the unprecedented ascension by a woman did not inspire the priests to commit treason or instill enough hatred in the envious heart of her half-brother and future consort to have her put to death. Rich in historical detail, this account recalls the rule of one of Egypt’s greatest queens who, under her father’s guidance, assumed the throne at the age of 15 and ruled brilliantly for more than two decades.
Mobipocket
Published Apr 2010
Based closely on historical events, this sensuously beautiful, astonishingly evocative novel tells the story of one of history’s most remarkable women—the first female Pharaoh of Egypt. Thirty-five centuries ago, Hatshepsut, the youngest daughter of the Pharaoh, was to marry her father’s illegitimate son and heir to the throne, Thothmes, in order to cleanse the bloodline in accordance with Egypt’s supreme law. Fearing his son’s incompetence, Hatshepsut’s father chose her as the heir—provided that the unprecedented ascension by a woman did not inspire the priests to commit treason or instill enough hatred in the envious heart of her half-brother and future consort to have her put to death. Rich in historical detail, this account recalls the rule of one of Egypt’s greatest queens who, under her father’s guidance, assumed the throne at the age of 15 and ruled brilliantly for more than two decades.
Published Oct 2007
Mobipocket
Published Oct 2007
EPUB
Published Apr 2010
Based closely on historical events, this sensuously beautiful, astonishingly evocative novel tells the story of one of history’s most remarkable women—the first female Pharaoh of Egypt. Thirty-five centuries ago, Hatshepsut, the youngest daughter of the Pharaoh, was to marry her father’s illegitimate son and heir to the throne, Thothmes, in order to cleanse the bloodline in accordance with Egypt’s supreme law. Fearing his son’s incompetence, Hatshepsut’s father chose her as the heir—provided that the unprecedented ascension by a woman did not inspire the priests to commit treason or instill enough hatred in the envious heart of her half-brother and future consort to have her put to death. Rich in historical detail, this account recalls the rule of one of Egypt’s greatest queens who, under her father’s guidance, assumed the throne at the age of 15 and ruled brilliantly for more than two decades.
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2013
Trade Paper
Published Jun 2014
Don Rumata has been sent from Earth to the medieval kingdom of Arkanar with instructions to observe and to save what he can. Masquerading as an arrogant nobleman, a dueler, and a brawler, he is never defeated, but yet he can never kill. With his doubt and compassion, and his deep love for a local girl named Kira, Rumata wants to save the kingdom from the machinations of Don Reba, the first minister to the king. But given his orders, what role can he play? This long overdue translation will reintroduce one of the most profound Soviet-era novels to an eager audience.
Trade Paper
Published Jan 1981
Trade Paper
Published Jul 2016
Trade Paper
Published Oct 2014
Published Jun 2014
Don Rumata has been sent from Earth to the medieval kingdom of Arkanar with instructions to observe and to save what he can. Masquerading as an arrogant nobleman, a dueler, and a brawler, he is never defeated, but yet he can never kill. With his doubt and compassion, and his deep love for a local girl named Kira, Rumata wants to save the kingdom from the machinations of Don Reba, the first minister to the king. But given his orders, what role can he play? This long overdue translation will reintroduce one of the most profound Soviet-era novels to an eager audience.
Mobipocket
Published Jun 2014
Don Rumata has been sent from Earth to the medieval kingdom of Arkanar with instructions to observe and to save what he can. Masquerading as an arrogant nobleman, a dueler, and a brawler, he is never defeated, but yet he can never kill. With his doubt and compassion, and his deep love for a local girl named Kira, Rumata wants to save the kingdom from the machinations of Don Reba, the first minister to the king. But given his orders, what role can he play? This long overdue translation will reintroduce one of the most profound Soviet-era novels to an eager audience.
EPUB
Published Jun 2014
Don Rumata has been sent from Earth to the medieval kingdom of Arkanar with instructions to observe and to save what he can. Masquerading as an arrogant nobleman, a dueler, and a brawler, he is never defeated, but yet he can never kill. With his doubt and compassion, and his deep love for a local girl named Kira, Rumata wants to save the kingdom from the machinations of Don Reba, the first minister to the king. But given his orders, what role can he play? This long overdue translation will reintroduce one of the most profound Soviet-era novels to an eager audience.
Trade Paper
Published Jul 2015
“There was a smell of blood mingling with the smell of burning that still clung about scorched timber and blackened thatch, and a great wailing rose from the watching crowd. The old High Priest dipped a finger in the blood and made a sign with it on Phaedrus’s forehead, above the Mark of the Horse Lord.”
So began the ceremony that was to make young Phaedrus, ex-slave and gladiator, Horse Lord of the Dalriadain. Phaedrus had come a long way since the fight in the arena that gained him his freedom. He had left behind his old Roman life and identity and had entered another, more primitive, world—that of the British tribes in the far north. In this world of superstition and ancient ritual, of fierce loyalties and intertribal rivalry, Phaedrus found companionship and love, and something more—a purpose and a meaning to his life as he came fully to understand the significance of the Mark of the Horse Lord. First published in 1965 but long out of print, The Mark of the Horse Lord has been acclaimed by many readers as the finest of Rosemary Sutcliff’s many novels, imparting true insight into the nature of leadership, identity, heroism, loyalty, and sacrifice.
Trade Paper
Published Jul 2015
Mobipocket
Published Jul 2015
“There was a smell of blood mingling with the smell of burning that still clung about scorched timber and blackened thatch, and a great wailing rose from the watching crowd. The old High Priest dipped a finger in the blood and made a sign with it on Phaedrus’s forehead, above the Mark of the Horse Lord.”
So began the ceremony that was to make young Phaedrus, ex-slave and gladiator, Horse Lord of the Dalriadain. Phaedrus had come a long way since the fight in the arena that gained him his freedom. He had left behind his old Roman life and identity and had entered another, more primitive, world—that of the British tribes in the far north. In this world of superstition and ancient ritual, of fierce loyalties and intertribal rivalry, Phaedrus found companionship and love, and something more—a purpose and a meaning to his life as he came fully to understand the significance of the Mark of the Horse Lord. First published in 1965 but long out of print, The Mark of the Horse Lord has been acclaimed by many readers as the finest of Rosemary Sutcliff’s many novels, imparting true insight into the nature of leadership, identity, heroism, loyalty, and sacrifice.
EPUB
Published Jul 2015
“There was a smell of blood mingling with the smell of burning that still clung about scorched timber and blackened thatch, and a great wailing rose from the watching crowd. The old High Priest dipped a finger in the blood and made a sign with it on Phaedrus’s forehead, above the Mark of the Horse Lord.”
So began the ceremony that was to make young Phaedrus, ex-slave and gladiator, Horse Lord of the Dalriadain. Phaedrus had come a long way since the fight in the arena that gained him his freedom. He had left behind his old Roman life and identity and had entered another, more primitive, world—that of the British tribes in the far north. In this world of superstition and ancient ritual, of fierce loyalties and intertribal rivalry, Phaedrus found companionship and love, and something more—a purpose and a meaning to his life as he came fully to understand the significance of the Mark of the Horse Lord. First published in 1965 but long out of print, The Mark of the Horse Lord has been acclaimed by many readers as the finest of Rosemary Sutcliff’s many novels, imparting true insight into the nature of leadership, identity, heroism, loyalty, and sacrifice.
Published Jul 2015
“There was a smell of blood mingling with the smell of burning that still clung about scorched timber and blackened thatch, and a great wailing rose from the watching crowd. The old High Priest dipped a finger in the blood and made a sign with it on Phaedrus’s forehead, above the Mark of the Horse Lord.”
So began the ceremony that was to make young Phaedrus, ex-slave and gladiator, Horse Lord of the Dalriadain. Phaedrus had come a long way since the fight in the arena that gained him his freedom. He had left behind his old Roman life and identity and had entered another, more primitive, world—that of the British tribes in the far north. In this world of superstition and ancient ritual, of fierce loyalties and intertribal rivalry, Phaedrus found companionship and love, and something more—a purpose and a meaning to his life as he came fully to understand the significance of the Mark of the Horse Lord. First published in 1965 but long out of print, The Mark of the Horse Lord has been acclaimed by many readers as the finest of Rosemary Sutcliff’s many novels, imparting true insight into the nature of leadership, identity, heroism, loyalty, and sacrifice.
Trade Paper
Published Jul 2016
Trade Paper
Published May 2016
Published May 2016
EPUB
Published May 2016
Mobipocket
Published May 2016
Mobipocket
Published Jul 2016
EPUB
Published Jul 2016
Published Jul 2016
Published Jul 2016
Mobipocket
Published Jul 2016
EPUB
Published Jul 2016
Trade Paper
Published Nov 2017
Trade Paper
Published Nov 2017
Trade Paper
Published May 2017
Trade Paper
Published Nov 2017
Trade Paper
Published Oct 2017
Trade Paper
Published May 2017
Published May 2017
EPUB
Published May 2017
Published May 2017
Mobipocket
Published May 2017
Mobipocket
Published May 2017
EPUB
Published May 2017
Trade Paper
Published Mar 2018
EPUB
Published Mar 2018
Mobipocket
Published Mar 2018
Published Mar 2018
Published Oct 2017
EPUB
Published Oct 2017
Mobipocket
Published Oct 2017
Trade Paper
Published Aug 2018
Trade Paper
Published Apr 2018
Trade Paper
Published May 2018
Cloth
Published Aug 2018
EPUB
Published Aug 2018
Published May 2018
Published Aug 2018
Mobipocket
Published May 2018
EPUB
Published May 2018
Mobipocket
Published Aug 2018
Published Apr 2018
EPUB
Published Apr 2018
Mobipocket
Published Apr 2018
Trade Paper
Published Aug 2020