They're the super rich, the princes of capitalism, living off the deaths of the swarming masses and all too happy to see the world burn. In three critically-acclaimed novellas, Tchaikovsky takes you down into the mud and dust and poverty... and sows the seed of revolution.
A race for survival among the stars . . . Humanity's last survivors escaped earth's ruins to find a new home. But when they find it, can their desperation overcome its dangers? Winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Best Novel.
In a sequel to the much-praised Dogs of War, Honey the genetically engineered bear takes a ride in Jimmy the Martian's head and starts a revolution on the Red Planet.
A bio-engineered dog fights for its life and its right to life. From the Arthur C. Clark award-winning author of Children of Time.
Ten years ago, the Kinslayer returned from the darkness. His brutal Yorughan armies issued from the pits of the earth, crushing all resistance, leaving burnt earth and corruption behind. Thrones toppled and cities fell. And then he died.
From the Arthur C. Clarke award winner, Adrian Tchaikovsky, comes the third instalment of the DOGS OF WAR science fiction series, a future where genetically engineered “Bioforms” have inherited not the Earth, but the Solar System.
LIVES OF BITTER RAIN is a novella in Adrian Tchaikovsky's award-winning Tyrant Philosopher Quintet. It is a prequel to the third novel in the sequence, DAYS OF SHATTERED FAITH.
A rousing fantasy epic of friendship, lies and what it takes to be a hero – set amongst a misfit crew of a spider, priestess, mage, knight, ranger and rogue. From the award-winning Adrian Tchaikovsky.
A fantasy tale set in a crime-ridden city from the award-winning Adrian Tchaikovsky. Coppelia, a resourceful street thief and puppeteer, makes a pact with two magic-infused puppets – and sets out for a major heist . . .
Whether into space, through time or into other worlds, humanity has always yearned to explore. In three critically-acclaimed novellas, Tchaikovsky shows you worlds beyond the known... and why it's sometimes best to stay at home.