Ian McDonaldis the author ofPlanesrunner, Be My Enemy, andEmpress of the Sun, in the Everness series. He has written thirteen science fiction novels--including the 2011 John W. Campbell Memorial Award winner for Best Novel, The Dervish House--as well asBrasyl, River of Gods, Cyberabad Days, Ares Express, Desolation Road, King of Morning, Queen of Day, Out on Blue Six, Chaga, andKirinya.He's been nominated for every major science fiction award, and even won some. McDonald also works in television and in program development--all those reality shows have to come from somewhere--and has written for screen as well as print. He lives in Northern Ireland, just outside Belfast, and loves to travel."
"McDonald creates a magnificent knot of intrigue, thrills, and
daring adventures, with the flair for character and setting that
makes his tales so satisfying to indulge in."
-Booklist
"An audacious look at the shift in the power centers of the world
and an intense vision of one possible future."
-New York Times Book Review
"This twisting, turning, part futuristic fantasy, part intuitive
prediction satisfies without divulging all its secrets, just like
the city."
-Time Out Istanbul
"As close to perfection as a book can get. . . . If you only have
money to buy a single sci-fi novel this year, this has to be it.
Impossible to put down."
-Pat's Fantasy Hotlist
The complex plot and its unique characters make for an intriguing
read. McDonald weaves several plotlines together with a whirling
dervish house, a character in its own right, as the common
denominator.
-RT Book Reviews, 4 stars
In the end, spending some time with these six characters in the
fascinating city of Istanbul was pure enjoyment. Look forThe
Dervish Houseon the shortlists of the major SF&F awards next
year. Highly recommended. 41/2 out of 5 stars
-Fantasy Literature
The Dervish House cements Ian McDonald s status as a first class
talent, and one of my all-time favorite authors. He continues to
depict the future of non-western cultures with creativity, depth,
and verve. His prose is a delight to read, his characters are
lively and authentic, and he can pull you in to a near-future
setting like no one else I know. I d recommend this book to pretty
much everyone.
-SF Revu
A rich, accomplished portrait of near-future Istanbul that may be
is the best thing McDonald has written and that s saying something.
It is the product of a writer at the top of his game: beautifully
styled, complexly characterized and plotted without ever feeling
heavy or dull...half a dozen storylines are coiled together as
neatly as DNA, each of them compelling and readable. McDonald
manages to avoid the traps of condescension, or Orientalism, that
lie in wait for the white Westerner writing about places that are
neither of those things. A dervishly good book.
- Locus
First, let's get one thing out of the way. Every book I ve read in
the last several months has been completely overshadowed perhaps
unfairly by Ian McDonald s The Dervish House. He s the kind of
writer who has the power to alter your whole vision of what science
fiction can be and do. Last year s Cyberabad Days was among the
most ferociously intelligent novels I ve read in years, in any
genre. And The Dervish House is even better. After reading a book
like that, it s hard to get excited about merely good sf novels. Or
even genuinely excellent ones...This is what science fiction should
be... McDonald has done the seemingly impossible. He has written a
compelling, action-packed sf novel about the future of AI-based
quantitative trading... But it s no fantasy: it s the reality that
s breathing down the backs of our necks every workday. And McDonald
extrapolates from it with dizzying virtuosity...More than any other
sf writer I can think of, McDonald has a complex, nuanced,
fundamentally real vision of the way power works in the world.
-Fantasy & Science Fiction"
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