NICHOLAS KAUFMANN lives in Brooklyn, New York with his wife and two cats—one of which has special needs, the other of which only pretends to.
NICHOLAS KAUFMANN is the author of Dying is My Business. He lives in Brooklyn, New York with his wife and two cats—one of which has special needs, the other of which only pretends to.
Dying Is My Business
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9781250036094
- Publisher: St. Martin's Press
- Publication date: 10/08/2013
- Sold by: Macmillan
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 384
- File size: 913 KB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
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Given his line of work in the employ of a psychotic Brooklyn crime boss, Trent finds himself on the wrong end of too many bullets. Yet each time he's killed, he wakes a few minutes later completely healed of his wounds but with no memory of his past identity. What's worse, each time he cheats death someone else dies in his place.
Sent to steal an antique box from some squatters in an abandoned warehouse near the West Side Highway, Trent soon finds himself stumbling into an age-old struggle between the forces of good and evil, revealing a secret world where dangerous magic turns people into inhuman monstrosities, where impossible creatures hide in plain sight, and where the line between the living and the dead is never quite clear. And when the mysterious box is opened, he discovers he has only twenty-four hours to save New York City from certain destruction, in Dying Is My Business by Nicholas Kaufmann.
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Trent works as a hit man for a Brooklyn crime lord. When ordered to retrieve a box from a warehouse and to leave no witnesses behind, Trent is unable to kill the couple he encounters, who apparently have the same mission. Trent's discovery that Thornton is a shape changer and that Bethany possesses magic that can reanimate the dead is something he takes in stride, for Trent has found that he cannot permanently die; he returns from death a few minutes later with no evidence of being wounded. As he gets more deeply involved in the search for "the box," Trent realizes that he has been fighting on the wrong side all his life but fears it may be too late for him to switch. VERDICT Featuring a deathless "hero," a werewolf-turned-zombie, and an immortal Black Knight as just some of its characters, this smartly told series opener by Kaufmann (Hunt at World's End, writing as Gabriel Hunt) brings new twists to many of the standard tropes of urban fantasy.
“Reinvents the urban fantasy genre.” Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling
“As we race to a truly apocalyptic conclusion you'll root for the very human protagonists of this very inhuman world.” David Wellington, author of 13 Bullets
“Whedonesque romance, inventive mythology, and badass monsters!” Christopher Golden, New York Times bestselling co-author of Father Gaetano's Puppet Catechism
“Cazy, dark inventiveness on every page. Reminiscent of Roger Zelazny's Amber books.” Mike Carey, author of Devil You Know
An amnesiac discovers he can't stay dead in Kaufmann's entry into the urban-fantasy realm. Trent, a man who has no last name and no past that he can remember, dies often but fails to remain dead. Every time someone murders Trent, he pops back to life. Most would think that's a pretty decent deal, but Trent is filled with remorse because his rebirth is contingent on someone else dying: usually, the person who is closest to him at the time. That's bad enough when it's the one who kills him, but sometimes an innocent gets the short end of the stick, and, no matter what Trent is, he does have a conscious. He also has a short memory that goes back no more than a year in the past; that's when Underwood, the shadowy individual who has made him part of his team, found him and gave him a home in a dirty room with a single bed. Underwood promises to find out who Trent really is and why he can't die but keeps putting it off. While Trent is on a mission to retrieve a box that Underwood wants, he blunders into a battle between a pair of odd individuals and a flock of murderous gargoyles. That's where Trent meets Thornton, the undead werewolf, and Bethany Savory (yes, that's her name), a tiny woman with pointy ears. They lead Trent to others who are on the same quest, including magicians, vampires and various magical creatures. Together they all face a terrible power backed by a growing army of the dead in a battle to save New York, thus setting up a future confrontation in a story yet to come. Although Kaufmann writes well, unlike the innovative works of masters of the genre like Mike Carey and Neil Gaiman, his work tends to rely heavily on clichéd, by-the-numbers plotting.