Last Exit
3.5/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this ebook
From the co-author of the bestselling This Is How You Lose the Time War.
Gaiman’s American Gods meets King’s The Dark Tower in this electric, captivating road trip across America and alternate realities to stop the apocalypse, from a Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author.
Imagine that the American highway system is a vast magical network binding city to city. By soaking up magic from intentionally directionless travel, initiates can slip into alternate realities. Stray too far from our America, though, and things get weird. And dangerous. And terrifying.
When visionary mathematician Zelda Qiang was in college, she learned how to travel from one alternate reality to another. Her response was to take her friends on a road trip to strange new worlds. Six of them set out. Only five returned. Zelda’s lover, Sal, betrayed them: she walked into the jags―sharp cutting shadows like cracks in space―and didn’t come back.
Now Zelda still walks the road alone, a wandering magus keeping the jags from breaking through. But now Sal is coming back―with Dark Things in tow.
Max Gladstone
Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Award–winning author, MAX GLADSTONE, has been thrown from a horse in Mongolia and once wrecked a bicycle in Angkor Wat. He is the author of many books, including Last Exit, Empress of Forever, the Craft Sequence of fantasy novels and, with Amal El-Mohtar, the viral New York Times bestseller This Is How You Lose the Time War. His dreams are much nicer than you’d expect.
Read more from Max Gladstone
This Is How You Lose the Time War Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Last Exit Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sunspot Jungle, Vol. 2 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Long List Anthology: More Stories from the Hugo Award Nomination List Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Last Exit
22 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Wonderful! Alternative reality lesbian witches meet Stephen King and American Gods, navigating the depth and weight of history and the future and hope.
Real and raw and ultimately uplifting. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5So, when I started this novel my expectations were rather high, and I thought that I was in the right frame of mind to get the most out of it (I want pure, bracing, gloom out of my cosmic horror). Having wrapped it up I find myself counting the issues with this story. Don't get me wrong, I can respect Gladstone's seriousness of intent, and I think that each individual chapter is impeccable from the quality of the prose, but I have doubts as to whether this all really aggregates into a successful novel. This is not to mention that the machinery used to drive the plot forward can be a little too obvious, that some of the symbolism is a little too heavy handed, and that I have questions about worldbuilding. Should you then read this novel? You should probably give it a try if dark fantasy or Max Gladstone are already flavors you enjoy.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5dense angst. close to the end, and the angst is so thick, it's almost unreadable. sad, as the book started with such promise
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was a hard read. Especially the first half or so, it's a long slog through a whole lot of real-world awful, with a tone of complete despair and exhaustion. Eventually, there starts being more to the plot, and the ending is ultimately satisfying, but the setting is very definitely "after everything went to shit and the heroes lost". I'm glad I finished it... but I'm not sure I would have started it if I knew how dark it is. I do like the characters, though, their tangled relationships and the different ways they see the world. And the magic system is interesting.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Books with alternate worlds have always been a draw for me. I was immediately engulfed in this story. When describing it to my fellow librarians I said, it was like if The Stand by Stephen King and Imajica by Clive Barker were rewritten together by Neil Gaiman. It's a complex, gorgeously written story about a woman named Zelda who reunites her friends from college after ten years to travel to an alt world where they lost their friend and Zelda's love named Sal. Sal has made her presence know to Zelda and Sal's niece, June. Though Sal seems to be more of a monster now than the woman they all loved. Once they enter the alternate worlds, they are pursued by a shadow faced man they refer to as "the cowboy" due to his white Stetson hat. The cowboy is hellbent on stopping their rescue of Sal and uses trickery and lies to find ways to stop their group from meeting its goal. All in all a wonderfully imaginative story. It is a "dense" story, very metaphysical and descriptive narrative. It did take some time to get through but overall very worth it!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Change of pace for Gladstone, towards urban fantasy not entirely dissimilar in theme from Jemisin’s most recent but also very different. The protagonist can walk to alternate worlds, but stopped when she lost her beloved Sal and now just tries to fight off the rising rot in her own America, which is much like ours. But when her attempts to apologize to Sal’s mother land her with Sal’s niece instead, and the monster that ate Sal starts coming after her, she decides to make one final push to fix what she broke.