05/24/2021
The postapocalyptic adventures of bighearted, irreverent crow S.T. continue in Buxton’s eventful follow-up to 2019’s Hollow Kingdom. In the 13 years since a screen-transmitted virus infected all of humanity and turned them into rapidly evolving, nightmarish chimeras called Changed Ones, S.T. has raised Yup’ik Dee, the last uninfected human, in a remote region of Alaska with the help of the owls and his eagle friend, Migisi. When Dee discovers the hideous, larva-like beings her family has become, she sets fire to the cabin she shares with S.T. and flees into the ocean where a pod of orcas carry her and S.T. (flightless after an injury) back to S.T.’s old stomping grounds near Seattle. There, they reconnect with his old murder, other friends like Orange the orangutan, and nemeses including a trio of tigers escaped from the zoo. But the area’s animals are all hunkered down to avoid the singularly destructive Changed Ones stalking the region. After Dee goes missing, she displays an uncanny knack for communicating across species to fight the Changed Ones and tests S.T.’s strong desires to protect her. Buxton balances the snarky humor and moving tenderness of her delightful protagonist with genuine tension. Fans of postapocalyptic dangers and witty narration will eat up this charming story. Agent: Bill Clegg, the Clegg Agency. (Aug.)
03/01/2021
In Adams's debut, teenage library worker Aleisha shares The Reading List she's found (all scrunched up) with a widower trying to relate to his book-obsessed granddaughter (75,000-copy first printing). Alderson's Sisters in Arms tells the story of the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, the only all-Black battalion of the Women's Army Corps during World War II (150,000-copy first printing). Buxton's Feral Creatures reintroduces us to S.T., the fabulously cheeky crow who starred in the multi-best-booked Hollow Kingdom. Ferguson, the Duchess of York, tells the Victorian-era story of Lady Margaret Montagu Scott in Her Heart for a Compass (150,000-copy first printing). Second in a spin-off from Hearne's New York Times best-selling "Iron Druid Chronicles" series, Paper & Blood features wily Scottish detective Al MacBharrais. In Jio's latest, Seattle-based librarian Valentina Baker receives news sent With Love from London that she's inherited an apartment and bookshop from the mother who abandoned her. Wealthy newcomers wreak havoc to the point of horror in a lakeside rural town in Bram Stoker Award winner Jones's My Heart Is a Chainsaw (100,000-copy first printing). New York Times best-selling Kadrey wraps up his iconic "Sandman Slim" series with the Shoggot gang, led by King Bullet, overrunning a virus-undone Los Angeles (75,000-copy first printing). Debuter Lange's We Are the Brennans features almost-30 Sunday Brennan returning from Los Angeles to New York to explain to both family and ex-fiancé why she left them five years ago (100,000-copy first printing). Author of the LJ best-booked Mexican Gothic, Moreno-Garcia returns with Velvet Was the Night, featuring a romance magazine-reading secretary in 1970s Mexico City obsessed with the disappearance of her beautiful next-door neighbor. Switching from big-hit dystopias, Mott sends his Black protagonist on one Hell of a Book tour in which he confronts police violence. In Pearce's Yours Cheerfully, first in a new series, advice columnist Emmeline Lake helps keep World War II London safe A(150,000-copy first printing). "Bridgerton" series author Quinn joins forces with her illustrator sister to create a graphic novel telling the story of Miss Butterworth and the Mad Baron, first hinted at in the seventh book in the series (50,000-copy first printing). After a four-year renovation, Paris's glamorous Hotel Louis XVI reopens, with Steel allowing Complications to erupt.
2021-06-16
A sequel to Hollow Kingdom (2019) in which clever talking crow S.T. must raise Dee, the last human on Earth, to keep the Changed Ones from destroying all remaining nature.
Delightful, raucous, and bighearted S.T. has pecked off more than he can chew when it comes to raising the MoFo (human) child, Dee. Before her mother succumbed to the virus killing and changing all humankind, she left Dee in the care of the trees and birds of the Alaskan tundra. As Dee becomes a teenager, she learns to speak the languages of the natural world, much to S.T.’s chagrin. He wants her to imitate the MoFos he loved in the before-times, but Dee only wants to be a crow, a bee, a fish, or a musk ox. When they butt heads, Dee’s human emotions often end in angry, dangerous outbursts or the deep sorrow of depression. All S.T. wants is to keep Dee safe from predators, both natural and the decidedly unnatural Changed Ones—former humans, ravaged by the virus and quickly evolving into grotesque superpredators. All Dee wants is to throw herself into adventure and protect the animals she loves dearly but can never quite become. Then, when the creatures of the ocean and their prophet Onida call Dee from the tundra to Seattle, the heart of the outbreak, to stop the Changed Ones from further upsetting the natural order, S.T. ignores his animal friends. He tries to hide Dee away and force her to be something she isn’t. But Dee has other ideas, and together they are swept up by orcas and taken to S.T.’s old home. There, crows, tigers, owls, house cats, elephants, and all manner of creature must decide if Dee is a savior worth trusting or a danger that will lead them to their end. She is a human, after all. Like its predecessor, this is a genre-bending, humorous twist on the zombie apocalypse from a bird’s-eye view, but it, too, is bogged down by tedious exposition and too many morality tales shoehorned into one narrative. The addition of violence against women as a mostly underdeveloped plot device is particularly worth noting for sensitive readers. Repetitive wordplay, exhaustive lists, and convenient scenarios fight with brilliant humor, clever characters, and an intriguing look at the relationship between parents and the children who don’t conform to their expectations.
Exceptional in theory but too busy to fully deliver.
"Readers who fell in love with Hollow Kingdom will not be disappointed by book two . . . S.T.’s struggles [are] both humorous and heart-wrenching in this powerful follow-up."—Buzzfeed
"Kira Jane Buxton's Hollow Kingdom introduced an unforgettable crowtagonist in S.T., a human-raised crow fond of pop-culture allusions and relentless animal puns. In Feral Creatures, S.T. carries on his hilariously narrated postapocalyptic adventures in a sequel that expands and evolves Buxton's post-human world. As in her first book, Buxton excels at managing tone, quickly shifting from outrageously silly jokes to darker meditations on humanity's destructive impact on nature . . . hilarious and heartbreaking." —Shelf Awareness, Starred Review
"Brilliant humor, clever characters, and an intriguing look at the relationship between parents and the children who don’t conform to their expectations."—Kirkus
"Buxton balances the snarky humor and moving tenderness of her delightful protagonist with genuine tension. Fans of postapocalyptic dangers and witty narration will eat up this charming story."—Publishers Weekly
"More sardonic, sassier, and stronger than ever . . . If you’re looking to be entertained, look no further. Start reading this series, especially if you’re an animal lover, and if you like fast-paced stories filled with humorous quips and comebacks from witty animals."—Nerd Daily
"Buxton continues her genre-melding tale with sizzling wit and a deep knowledge of pop culture."—Seattle Times
"Buxton combines dad joke-level humor with powerful and lyrical writing in a way I’ve never seen before. My eyes will be peeled for her next release!"—Book Riot
"Digs even deeper into S.T.’s world and, let me tell you, reading about an entire planet succumbing to a deadly virus hits differently in 2021. Suddenly S.T.’s universe feels pretty familiar."—Chicago Review of Books
"Long-awaited."—Bustle
"Heartfelt, hilarious, and terrifying . . . connects us even more deeply to the natural world and its marvels with humor, horror, and complex and engaging characters. Environmentally conscious dystopian literature has never been so much fun!" —Eat Sleep Pop
"S.T., the irrepressible, cursing crow is my new favorite apocalyptic hero."—Helen Macdonald, New York Times bestselling author of H Is for Hawk, Praise for Hollow Kingdom
"Kira Jane Buxton's voice is fresh, like a newly dug grave, but so joyful and honest you'll laugh out loud, and then check to make sure you haven't lost an eyeball."—Jamie Ford, New York Times bestselling author of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Praise for Hollow Kingdom
"With infinite heart and humor, Kira Jane Buxton's fine-feathered narrator guides us through richly imagined animal realms while braving the terrifying collapse of the human world."—Mona Awad, author of 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl and Bunny, Praise for Hollow Kingdom
"Kira Jane Buxton has created a crow so full of personality you won't even miss the company of humans."—Zoe Zolbrod, author of The Telling and Currency and former editor at The Rumpus, Praise for Hollow Kingdom
"Buxton's quirky ideas and compelling nonhuman characters will satisfy literary fiction and zombie genre enthusiasts alike who are looking for something beguilingly different."—Booklist, Starred Review for Hollow Kingdom