> Skip to content
  • Published: 15 May 2010
  • ISBN: 9780553591385
  • Imprint: Random House Worlds
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 464
  • RRP: $16.99
Categories:

Shadow Magic



For readers of fantasy, here is the follow-up novel to Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett's critically acclaimed debut, Havemercy--now in mass market paperback.

Led to victory by its magic-fueled Dragon Corps, Volstov has sent a delegation to its conquered neighbors to work out the long-awaited terms of peace. Among those in the party are the decorated war hero General Alcibiades and the formerly exiled magician Caius Greylace. But even this mismatched pair can’t help but notice that their defeated enemies aren’t being very cooperative. The hidden truth is that the new emperor is harboring a treacherous secret—and once it is revealed, Alcibiades and Caius may be powerless to stop it. 

With their only ally an exiled prince now fleeing his brother’s assassins, the countryside rife with terror, and Alcibiades and Caius all but prisoners, it will take the most powerful kind of magic to heal the rift between two strife-worn lands and unite two peoples against a common enemy: shadow magic.

  • Published: 15 May 2010
  • ISBN: 9780553591385
  • Imprint: Random House Worlds
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 464
  • RRP: $16.99
Categories:

About the authors

Jaida Jones

Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett wrote their first novel together, Havemercy, over the Internet—Jones in New York and Bennett in British Columbia. They now shuttle between apartments in Brooklyn and Victoria, B. C., and which makes their collaboration much easier.
About Danielle Bennett


Photo © Matthew Lichtash

Jaida Jones and Danielle Bennett wrote their first novel together, Havemercy, over the Internet—Jones in New York and Bennett in British Columbia. They now shuttle between apartments in Brooklyn and Victoria, B. C., and which makes their collaboration much easier.
Author Q&A
ABOUT THE WRITING PROCESS:

Music listened to during writing:
Regina Spektor. "Begin to Hope" came out that summer and it was the soundtrack to the book–until both our roommates were driven completely insane and never wanted to hear even a few bars of “Après Moi” again.

Writing habits:
Forgetting to eat. While writing Havemercy, both of us would be glued to the computer, forgetting all necessary social and hygienic propriety (if we ever knew it to begin with).

Best moment in the writing process:
Danielle — Waking up in the morning to see that Jaida had sent me literally fifteen pages, all of them brilliant, and having to sit down with a cup of tea in my pajamas to try and wrangle what came next.
Jaida — Getting the next part from Danielle to read something that I completely wasn't expecting, and having the characters suddenly react spontaneously to a situation I was just as surprised by as they were.


ABOUT THE BOOK:

Favorite scene/bit in the book:
Jaida — Definitely the final battle scene. I remember working on it up until the very last second before class, and knowing if I didn't just get the scene finished, I wouldn't be able to make it through the day. It was a moment I'd actually been dreading, because it was all action and I didn't trust myself to juggle so much, but once I sat down and started it, it immediately became my favorite scene to write.
Danielle — It's hard not to pick the final battle scene also, but just to be different I'm going to go with the ballroom scene, if only because I have a deep and abiding love for political intrigue. Not that I consider myself smart enough to always pull it off, but the many layers of what's really going on with the magicians, not to mention Thom and Rook, all the things left unsaid never fail to delight me.

Favorite character in the book:
Jaida — Rook. It’s so much easier to write an angry potty-mouth than someone who's actually eloquent.
Danielle — Balfour. I love everyone so much, but I spent a lot of time thinking about the littlest Airman and in the end found I'd grown quite attached, bless him.

The one line high-concept:
Metal Dragons.

What’s next:
We're working on a semi-sequel to Havemercy about the other side, the Ke-Han. Hopefully there will be a full incorporation of Japanese folk legends, culture shock, and cross-dressing!


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Book currently on nightstand:
Danielle — Guy Gavriel Kay's Ysabel
Jaida — Salman Rushdie's Haroun and the Sea of Stories (I re-read it every year)

Favorite band/musical group:
Danielle — Right now, I'm in love with a Japanese band called Bump of Chicken. I think the story behind their name is that they wanted to give their listeners goose bumps, only something got lost in the translation.

Spend way too much money on:
Jaida — Coats. This as you can imagine is not very useful in NYC in the summer when it's 95 degrees and almost 100% humidity.


From the Hardcover edition.

Praise for Shadow Magic

  • "The sequel delivers plenty of thrilling action...but the characters are the real draw here. Foppish, shrewd Caius and stolid, uncompromising Alcibiades make an entertaining sideshow, while the delicate, meaningful changes of Mamoru and Kouje virtually sing. A must-read for Havemercy fans that also stands strikingly well on its own." --Booklist