Charles de Lint je považovaný za jedného z priekopníkov moderného fantasy. Jeho próza, často čerpajúca z folklóru, mýtov a mestských legiend, vtiahne čitateľov do svetov, ktoré sa zdajú byť reálnejšie ako samotná realita. Majstrovsky vykresľuje postavy a prostredia a jeho diela často skúmajú témy súcitu, nádeje a ľudského potenciálu. De Lintov jedinečný štýl a jeho schopnosť vplietať mágiu do všedného dňa z neho robia nezabudnuteľného rozprávača.
The third edition of this accessible and interdisciplinary textbook has been
thoroughly updated to incorporate the latest research and developments,
including the rise of Big Data, AI, and the Internet of Things. Digital Media
Ethics will continue to be the go-to textbook for anyone getting to grips with
this important topic--
Bright lights, big city ...magic spells, witchcraft, wizardry, fairies,
devilry, and more. Urban living, at least in fantasy fiction, is full of both
magical wonder and dark enchantment. Street kids may have supernatural beings
to protect them or have such powers themselves. Brujeria may be part of your
way of life.
The Art of Amy Brown is the first collection of Amy Brown's wildly popular art. It was published by Chimera Publishing in 2003. The book is 157 pages of art, with a commentary by Amy Brown for every piece of artwork. The Art of Amy Brown has an introduction by the well-known author Charles de Lint. There are three editions of this book—a paperback, a hardcover, and a special leather-bound edition limited to 750 copies, which will be signed by Amy Brown and Charles de Lint.
Though the Emerald Isle is no stranger to tales of the fantastic (everything from the Hound Cuchlain to Darby O'Gill and his leprachaun friends), most of the fantasy works dealing with Ireland have limited themselves to either ancient history/Celtic legends and lore, sentimental tales of wee folk, or ghostly tales of hauntings in old deserted castles. Needless to say, there is more to the history and culture of Ireland than the sort of entertainment fare popularized each year around March 17th.Fantastic Irish Tales will present the entire cavalcade of Eire from its earliest beginnings right up to the current climate that has begotten such popular phenomenons as the rock band U2 and the novels of Roddy Doyle as the backdrop for a collection of all new stories of the fantastic.Given the huge success of such books as How the Irish Saved Civilization , and Irish themed novels by such authors as Leon Uris, Roddy Doyle, and Thomas Flanagan, there is no doubt to the widespread appeal of this book.Ideal to any fan of Irish books and perfectly timed for the Saint Patrick's Day season, Fantastic Irish Tales will be a collection to be treasured and enjoyed.
World Fantasy Award winner Charles de Lint conjures a thrilling, otherworldly tale of magic and family bonds.A young woman locked in rage yet seeking magic, Ash is drawn into a wondrous Otherworld of totems and dryads, living tarots and mystic charms. At the same time, Ash's cousin Nina is stalked by an Otherworld demon—a manitou who can force her mind and soul into the bodies of beasts. Ash must find the strength to overcome her own anger, learn the full power of magic, and save Nina before she becomes the manitou's weapon, turning the faerie realm into an arctic wasteland. De Lint fans will relish this urban and otherworldly fantasy, partially set in the author's trademark Newford."A compelling fantasy that combines elements of Native American and Celtic mythology to create a fluid and unexpected otherworld, open to all with the ability to enter and traverse it."— School Library Journal
In novel after novel, and story after story, Charles de Lint has brought an entire imaginary North American city to vivid life. Newford: where magic lights dark streets; where myths walk clothed in modern shapes; where a broad cast of extraordinary and affecting people work to keep the whole world turning. At the center of all the entwined lives in Newford stands a young artist named Jilly Coppercorn, with her tangled hair, her paint-splattered jeans, a smile perpetually on her lips--Jilly, whose paintings capture the hidden beings that dwell in the city's shadows. Now, at last, de Lint tells Jilly's own story...for behind the painter's fey charm lies a dark secret and a past she's labored to forget. And that past is coming to claim her now. "I'm the onion girl," Jilly Coppercorn says. "Pull back the layers of my life, and you won't find anything at the core. Just a broken child. A hollow girl." She's very, very good at running. But life has just forced Jilly to stop.
De Lint's classic novel of native magic in an American future is now back in print. Only Gahzee can save the downed Indian flyer, walking the line between the Dreamtime and the Realtime, bringing his people's ancient magic to bear on the poisoned world of tomorrow.
In the Old Country, the Gentry are ancient, magical spirits of the land, amoral and dangerous. When the Irish emigrated to North America, some Gentry followed but found the New World inhabited by its own spirits, known as manitou among Native tribes. Generations later, the Irish have settled, yet the Gentry remain homeless, lurking in city shadows, dreaming of power. As their ambitions grow darker, they manifest as men in black to those who can see them. Bettina, part Indian and part Mexican, has been raised by her grandmother to understand the spirit world. Living in Kellygnow, an arts colony in Newford, she often observes these dark figures, whom she calls los lobos, until one night, one follows her into the woods. Ellie, an independent sculptor with magic in her blood, also sees the dark men but refuses to acknowledge it. Summoned to Kellygnow by a strange old woman, she must create a mask based on an ancient Celtic artifact—the mythic Summer King—despite her disbelief. Her former lover, Donal, knows the truth of the old myths and aims to exploit the mask and the Gentry. Meanwhile, Donal's sister Miki, a punk accordion player, realizes that more than her brother's soul is at stake, as the very fabric of Newford is threatened. Charles de Lint masterfully intertwines diverse mythic traditions, folklore, and memorable characters in a contemporary urban setting.
A series of increasingly bizarre murders have baffled the police-but each death is somehow connected with the city's elusive gypsy community. The police are searching for a human killer, but the Romany know better. They know the name of the darkness that hunts them down, one by one: Mulengro.
This sequel to "Moonheart" returns to the mysterious corridors of Tamson House in Ottawa. Tamson House is a place of hidden power, for the house is a door to other lands, and the garden path leads to a primal wood. And in that wood are three green children, the coyote man - and something else.
Accepting a gift of a magical harp from Jacky Lantern's fey kin, Angharad follows the wandering ways of bardic life, using her music to awaken the Summerblood magic throughout the Kingdom of the Green Isles. Reprint.
Welcome to Newford... Welcome to the music clubs, the waterfront, the alleyways where ancient myths and magic spill into the modern world. Come meet Jilly, painting wonders in the rough city streets; and Geordie, playing fiddle while he dreams of a ghost; and the Angel of Grasso Street gathering the fey and wild and the poor and the lost. Gemmins live in abandoned cars and skells traverse the tunnels below, while mermaids swim in the grey harbor waters and fill the cold night with their song. Like Mark Helprin's A Winter's Tale and John Crowley's Little, Big, Dreams Underfoot is a must-read book not only for fans of urban fantasy, but for all who seek magic in everyday life. Contents: Uncle Dobbin's Parrot Fair (1987) The Stone Drum (1989) Timeskip (1989) Freewheeling (1990) That Explains Poland (1988) Romano Drom (1989) The Sacred Fire (1989) Winter Was Hard (1991) Pity the Monsters (1991) Ghosts of Wind and Shadow (1990) The Conjure Man (1992) Small Deaths (1993) The Moon Is Drowning While I Sleep (1993) In the House of My Enemy (1993) But for the Grace Go I (1991) Bridges (1992) Our Lady of the Harbour (1991) Paperjack (1991) Tallulah (1991)
Mousehold, ein verschlafenes Hafenstädtchen, wird erschüttert von Niedertracht, Mordversuchen und anderen Schicksalsschlägen - bis Janey alias Jodi den Eingang zur magischen Unterwelt entdeckt und auf die rettende Musik der »Kleinen« stößt. Doch die Mächte der Finsternis rüsten zum Endkampf, allen voran der Großmeister der Grauen Tauben. Ein Wettlauf um das Bestehen der Erde beginnt.
Auf dem Dachboden des großväterlichen Hauses stößt Janey auf ein Buch mit dem Titel »Das kleine Land«. Beim Aufschlagen ertönt eine geheimnisvolle Melodie - und John Madden, Großmeister des Ordens der Grauen Taube, wird alarmiert. Ihm ist jedes Mittel recht, um in den Besitz des Buches zu kommen - und sei es um den Preis von Menschenleben.
The acclaimed author of Moonheart offers "one of the most fascinating books of this decade" (Marion Zimmer Bradely, author of The Mists of Avalon). An ancient, unpublished manuscript--a enchanting tale of sorcery and a young woman's quest--transports musician Janey Little across miles and years--to an awesome confrontation.
Not far from the city there is an ancient wood, forgotten by the modern world, where Mystery walks in the moonlight. He wears the shape of a stag, or a goat, or a horned man wearing a cloak of leaves. He is summoned by the music of the pipes or a fire of bones on Midsummer's Evening. He is chased by the hunt and shadowed by the wild girl.
"When Sara and Jamie discoverd the seemingly ordinary artifacts, they sensed the pull of a dim and distant place. A world of mists and forests, of ancient magics ... - and restless evil. Now, with their friends and enemies alike ... [they] are drawn intothis enchanted land through the portals of Tamson House; the sprawling downtown edifice that straddles two worlds. Sweeping from ancient Wales to the streets of Ottawa today ... a tale of music, and motorcycles, and fey folk beyond the shadows of the moon"--Publisher's description