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Daniel Abraham

Author of A Shadow in Summer

130+ Works 13,031 Members 543 Reviews 23 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the names: Daniel Abraham, M.L.N. Hanover, M. L. N. Hanover

Also includes: Abraham (3)

Disambiguation Notice:

Daniel Abraham uses the pen name James S. A. Corey when writing with Ty Franck, see separate author entry.

Image credit: Photo by Liza Groen of Trombi/Locus

Series

Works by Daniel Abraham

A Shadow in Summer (2006) 1,615 copies, 69 reviews
The Dragon's Path (2011) 1,529 copies, 68 reviews
A Game of Thrones: The Graphic Novel: Volume One (2012) — Adapter — 790 copies, 29 reviews
Unclean Spirits (2008) 760 copies, 44 reviews
Hunter's Run (2008) 745 copies, 31 reviews
The King's Blood (2012) 696 copies, 28 reviews
A Betrayal in Winter (2007) 661 copies, 31 reviews
An Autumn War (2008) 598 copies, 27 reviews
The Tyrant's Law (2013) 538 copies, 26 reviews
The Widow's House (2014) 446 copies, 21 reviews
Age of Ash (2022) 443 copies, 11 reviews
The Price of Spring (2009) 441 copies, 26 reviews
The Spider's War (2016) 384 copies, 18 reviews
A Game of Thrones: The Graphic Novel: Volume Two (2013) — Author — 377 copies, 7 reviews
Darker Angels (2009) 370 copies, 21 reviews
Shadow and Betrayal (2007) 304 copies, 7 reviews
A Game of Thrones: The Graphic Novel: Volume Three (2014) — Author — 266 copies, 7 reviews
Vicious Grace (2010) 247 copies, 14 reviews
Seasons of War (2010) 199 copies, 5 reviews
A Game of Thrones: The Graphic Novel: Volume Four (2015) — Author — 182 copies, 4 reviews
Killing Rites (2011) 174 copies, 9 reviews
Blade of Dream (2023) 134 copies, 2 reviews
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 1 (2012) 128 copies, 2 reviews
Graveyard Child (2013) 99 copies, 3 reviews
Leviathan Wept and Other Stories (2010) 93 copies, 4 reviews
George R.R. Martin's Fevre Dream (2011) — Author — 60 copies, 2 reviews
The Long Price Quartet (2018) 59 copies, 1 review
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 2 (2012) — Author — 57 copies, 4 reviews
Wild Cards: The Hard Call (2011) 55 copies, 2 reviews
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 3 (2012) — Author — 53 copies, 3 reviews
Shadow Twin (2004) 34 copies, 2 reviews
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 4 (2012) — Author — 28 copies, 2 reviews
When We Were Heroes (2013) 25 copies, 4 reviews
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 7 (2012) — Author — 17 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 6 (2012) — Scenario — 16 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 8 (2012) — Author — 15 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 5 (2012) — Author — 15 copies, 1 review
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 9 (2012) — Author — 14 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 11 (2013) — Author — 12 copies
Flat Diane (2004) 12 copies, 1 review
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 10 (2012) — Author — 12 copies
Fevre Dream #1 (2010) 10 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 14 (2013) — Author — 10 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 12 (2013) — Author — 9 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 13 (2013) — Author — 9 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 18 (2014) — Author — 8 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 15 (2013) — Author — 8 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 20 (2014) — Author — 7 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 16 (2013) — Author — 7 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 17 (2014) — Author — 7 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 22 (2014) — Author — 7 copies
A Game of Thrones: The Complete Graphic Novels (2016) — Author — 7 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 19 (2014) — Author — 6 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 21 (2014) — Author — 6 copies
A game of thrones Boek 1 (2013) — Scenario — 5 copies
Hurt Me 5 copies
Fevre Dream #3 (2010) 5 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 24 (2015) — Author — 5 copies
Skin Trade #2 (2013) 5 copies
A Game of Thrones: Comic Book, Issue 23 (2015) — Author — 5 copies
A game of thrones Boek 2 (2013) 4 copies
Fevre Dream #2 (2010) 4 copies
Fevre Dream #6 (2010) 4 copies
Skin Trade #3 (2013) 4 copies
Fevre Dream #8 (2010) 3 copies
Skin Trade #4 (2013) 3 copies
Skin Trade #1 (2013) 3 copies
A game of thrones Boek 8 (2014) 2 copies
A game of thrones Boek 3 (2013) 2 copies
A game of thrones Boek 4 (2013) 2 copies
A game of thrones Boek 5 (2013) 2 copies
A game of thrones Boek 7 (2016) 2 copies
Juego de tronos 2 copies
Skin Trade #1 (2013) 2 copies
Game of Thrones 10 (2014) 1 copy
Dogs 1 copy
Juego de tronos (2015) 1 copy
Locust-mind 1 copy
Game of Thrones 11 (2014) — Scenario — 1 copy
Game of Thrones 12 (2014) — Scenario — 1 copy

Associated Works

Rogues (2014) — Contributor — 1,473 copies, 53 reviews
The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories (2011) — Contributor — 968 copies, 22 reviews
Songs of Love and Death: All Original Tales of Star Crossed Love (2010) — Contributor — 810 copies, 37 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Second Annual Collection (2005) — Contributor — 579 copies, 11 reviews
The New Weird (2008) — Contributor — 569 copies, 13 reviews
Inside Straight (2008) — Contributor — 553 copies, 31 reviews
Down These Strange Streets (2011) — Contributor — 548 copies, 22 reviews
Unfettered: Tales by Masters of Fantasy (2013) — Contributor — 469 copies, 14 reviews
Steampunk II: Steampunk Reloaded (2010) — Contributor — 332 copies, 5 reviews
The Book of Swords (2017) — Contributor — 326 copies, 9 reviews
The Book of Dragons: An Anthology (2020) — Contributor — 300 copies, 8 reviews
Deuces Down (2002) — Contributor — 265 copies, 2 reviews
Suicide Kings (2009) — Contributor — 242 copies, 6 reviews
The Dark (2003) — Contributor — 215 copies, 4 reviews
Vanishing Acts: A Science Fiction Anthology (2000) — Contributor — 183 copies, 2 reviews
The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Volume 2 (2008) — Contributor — 177 copies, 4 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror 2008: 21st Annual Collection (2008) — Contributor — 176 copies, 5 reviews
Eclipse 3: New Science Fiction and Fantasy (2009) — Contributor — 171 copies, 4 reviews
The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror 2011 Edition (2011) — Contributor — 131 copies, 7 reviews
Logorrhea: Good Words Make Good Stories (2007) — Contributor — 131 copies, 2 reviews
Fearsome Journeys (2013) — Contributor — 121 copies, 1 review
The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction: Volume 3 (2009) — Contributor — 106 copies, 3 reviews
The Best of Subterranean (2017) — Contributor — 94 copies, 8 reviews
Fantasy: The Best of the Year, 2008 Edition (2008) — Contributor — 67 copies, 2 reviews
The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Volume 12 (2018) — Contributor — 47 copies, 2 reviews
The Stories: Five Years of Original Fiction on tor.com (2013) — Contributor — 40 copies
Golden Reflections (2011) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews
Last Drink Bird Head : A Flash Fiction Anthology for Charity (2009) — Contributor — 33 copies, 1 review
Full House (2022) — Contributor — 29 copies
Best Short Novels 2005 (2005) — Contributor — 21 copies
Clarkesworld: Issue 071 (August 2012) (2012) — Columnist — 19 copies, 4 reviews
Clarkesworld: Issue 073 (October 2012) (2012) — Columnist — 16 copies, 3 reviews
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 32 • January 2013 (2012) — Contributor — 11 copies
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 24, No. 10 & 11 [October/November 2000] (2000) — Contributor — 10 copies, 1 review
Clarkesworld: Issue 075 (December 2012) (2012) — Contributor — 8 copies
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 19: Enemy of the Good (2009) — Contributor — 7 copies, 1 review
Songs of Love and Darkness (2012) — Contributor — 7 copies
Apex Magazine 47 (April 2013) (2013) — Contributor — 6 copies
Clarkesworld: Issue 069 (June 2012) (2012) — Columnist — 6 copies, 1 review
Clarkesworld: Issue 067 (April 2012) (2012) — Columnist — 4 copies

Tagged

A Song of Ice and Fire (71) comics (150) Daniel Abraham (52) demons (51) dragons (50) ebook (247) epic fantasy (144) fantasy (1,991) fiction (676) goodreads (66) graphic novel (241) hardcover (55) high fantasy (81) Kindle (123) library (52) Long Price Quartet (87) magic (55) own (57) owned (57) read (161) science fiction (248) Science Fiction/Fantasy (62) series (139) sf (108) sff (91) short stories (52) signed (55) to-read (1,589) unread (89) urban fantasy (210)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Abraham, Daniel James
Other names
Hanover, M. L. N. (pseudonym)
Corey, James S. A. (with Ty Franck)
Birthdate
1969-11-14
Gender
male
Education
Clarion West (1998)
Occupations
novelist
Organizations
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA)
Awards and honors
Jack Williamson Lectureship (2012)
Agent
The McCarthy Agency
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
Disambiguation notice
Daniel Abraham uses the pen name James S. A. Corey when writing with Ty Franck, see separate author entry.
Associated Place (for map)
New Mexico, USA

Members

Reviews

585 reviews
10/10
[b:The Price of Spring|6065889|The Price of Spring (Long Price Quartet, #4)|Daniel Abraham|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1388902656l/6065889._SY75_.jpg|6242207] exceeded my already high expectations. Good intentions with unintended or unimagined consequences, and all the prices paid—for old hurts, for words said and unsaid, for betrayals, for misunderstandings and misplaced affection, and for love. Always the price of love.

This book (and series) show more is peopled with characters who are wonderfully imperfect. They inspire love, fear, despair, disgust, wonder, respect, frustration, and satisfaction. They face heartbreaking choices and unbearable decisions. And they persevere. There were a number of relationships that drove the story, but the heart of it always seemed to come back to Otah and Maati. Love, trust, jealousy, betrayal—all played out between them and in their world.

A completely satisfying conclusion to an excellent series!
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I don’t read urban fantasy – or so I thought. I tried a novel or two when the bookshelves started to fill up with covers depicting women scantily clad in black leather, all with tattoos on their lower backs and weapons of one sort or another in their hands, but they seemed rather generic and – at least the ones I read – not all that well-written.

Then I heard about that M.L.N. Hanover was actually Daniel Abraham, the author of the Long Price Quartet. So far I’ve only read the first show more in that series, A Shadow in Summer, but I admired it greatly, and am looking forward to reading the next three straight in a row when time allows. So much did I like Abraham’s work that I was willing to take another chance on urban fantasy and try out the two novels in the series titled The Black Sun’s Daughter, written by Abraham’s alter ego.

I’m glad I did. The two novels published in the series to date, Unclean Spirits and Darker Angels, are a kick to read, just pure adrenaline-fueled fun. I haven’t had this much pure entertainment since I rode the Screaming Eagle at Six Flags in Gurney, Illinois a million years ago. I wish there were more books in this series available right now, because I’d swallow them whole right this minute.

Unclean Spirits starts when Eric Heller dies and leaves his entire estate to his niece, Jayné Heller (her first name is pronounced zha-nay, but it’s frequently mispronounced as plain old Jane). Jayné is just a few days shy of her twenty-third birthday when she learns that she has suddenly become wealthy – the kind of wealthy that not only doesn’t have to worry about where the next meal is coming from, but doesn’t even have to worry about keeping a roof over her head, because she can always pay cash for a house if she needs one. She meets her uncle’s lawyers and his assistant, Aubrey, all of whom seem normal. Although she’s pretty dazed at her sudden good fortune – especially given that she’s just dropped out of college, has been disowned by her immediate family, and hadn’t figured out what to do with herself when this news came out of the blue – everything seems as normal as it can seem when you’ve essentially won the lottery but lost the only relative you cared about.

That is, it seems normal until Jayné goes to her uncle’s apartment in Denver and finds a corpse in the bedroom. Things quickly get worse when the corpse opens its eyes and speaks to her. But everything’s okay; Midian is simply very, very old. In fact, he was born the year they stormed the Bastille, he explains. And oh, by the way, it was a bunch of evil wizards who killed her uncle. Jayné is dubious until four figures break into the apartment and try to kill her, and she is able to fight with a great deal more ability than she ever imagined. Between the two of them, Midian and Jayné kill the four strangers – and Jayné is now deeply into something about which she knows nothing.

Unclean Spirits tells the tale of how Jayné begins to learn who her uncle was and what magic is, and a very little bit about who she is herself. She does this while attempting to destroy the magician who killed her uncle, working with his allies. There are a number of disasters along the way, including the near death of a young man Jayné finds herself beginning to love. Relationships with others begin for the sake of convenience and turn into strong bonds of friendship and sometimes enmity. As the book ends, Jayné is still alive and has accomplished what she set out to do, but she is still almost completely ignorant about her inheritance – both in terms of what material things are out there, and in terms of what she has gained by learning of the magical world she lives in. Jayné is strong, sexy and smart, but she isn’t too much of any of these; she is far more real and vulnerable than your average heroine.

Darker Angels opens six months later. During the interim, Jayné has had her staff – her uncle’s former assistant and two men who had helped him out from time to time, one an ex-priest known as Ex and one who is – well, Chogyi Jake is hard to describe, but the feeling emanating from the character is peace, even in the context of incredible violence. The group is in Athens, Greece, performing an inventory of Jayné Uncle Eric’s possessions in his house – now Jayné’s house – magical and otherwise. They’ve been skipping from city to city around the world doing the same thing, and they’re all exhausted.

Which means they’re not really in good shape to take on a new case. But when a call comes in to Eric’s cellphone (still programmed to say “Hey, you’ve got a call” in Eric’s voice, freaking out everyone who hears it) from a former client, asking for help in New Orleans, Jayné jumps at the chance to get more information about her uncle. If it means dealing with a supernatural beastie attempting to take over a teenager’s body, well, why not perform a good deed in the meantime?

But Jayné and her group are getting involved with New Orleans voodoo, and they don’t know the territory. Legba gives Jayné a good, strong warning early on that she barely survives; but Jayné is stubborn. The group fractures under the pressure, but still the notion of helping that teenager is so compelling that Jayné can’t help but soldier on.

In this second book, each of the characters becomes more clearly defined. Ex is no longer merely the one who performs exorcisms; he is a whole person, with his own loves and past and issues. Chogyi Jake becomes something more of a mascot to the group, with the way he exudes calm, though he is still more of a cipher than the others. Aubrey and Jayné both develop and retard their relationship, much like relationships usually work.

In the meantime, the reader gets a good look at New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. And the reader gets a lesson in voodoo and the power it gives its practitioners in this alternate universe, especially to women. And it’s all written with such tension that the book nearly vibrates in your hand. I read it in less than 24 hours, barely pausing to work, eat or sleep.

So I guess I read urban fantasy after all. At least, I read it when it’s written by M.L.N. Hanover. This is great stuff, and at mass market paperback prices, you can’t afford to pass it up.
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½
Exciting, visceral, thought-provoking science fiction at its best. This novel, begun in the late 1970s by authors Martin and Dozois, languished in a desk drawer for nearly two decades than was handed over to Abraham to update and conclude. It's amazing how it doesn't feel like a multi-author work. Ramon Espejo is a mining prospector working on the distant planet Sao Paulo. Ramon's got a temper that easily goes out-of-control, and after a violent incident in a bar leaves a man dead, Ramon show more needs to escape into the planet's wilderness for some "away time". Unfortunately, the discovery he makes in the remote mountains starts him on a desperate race back to civilization with an alien threat close on his heels. What, on the surface, is ostensibly an action-packed scifi adventure has a lot more going for it. Ramon is an intensely unlikeable character, who grows on the reader as the story progresses. The settings are gritty and believable. The aliens introduced in the story are fantastic. And the issues raised -- what it means to be human, how to control one's baser instincts, how to empathize with the inhuman -- will keep you thinking long after you've finished the book.

Originally reviewed for my local library's website: http://www.lincolnlibraries.org/depts/bookguide/srec/staffrec10-01.htm
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On publishing, Daniel Abraham's debut novel was - and remains - a stark contrast to most mainstream fantasy. Leisurely, character-driven, little violence and plenty of strong female characters. This may not be for everyone, but it was a breath of fresh air for me.

The cities of the Khaiem retain trade control through the use of andats - spirits made flesh - that no one else can master. But the andats themselves chafe under Khaiem domination, as do neighboring countries. A conspiracy to show more destroy an andat's master - a "poet" - has far reaching consequences in the port city of Saraykeht.

A Shadow in Summer reminded me very much of Guy Gavriel Kay's work. Limpid, measured prose is married to a barely-magical setting, and I really enjoyed it. There's a sense of care and investment in this book that is rare in contemporary fantasy.

The characters are diverse, interesting, and it is their personal emotions and conflicts that propel the story, as much as the conspiracy itself. Abraham doesn't shy away from writing female characters, and it's a nice change.

Most intriguing of all is the andat, Seedless. Its bitter, sardonic, tortured voice is a great premise and character to hang the narrative from, and every scene featuring it is undeniably magnetic.

Despite that, this is not a book for those who like a quick moving plot. There's a sense of... fate or predestination in A Shadow in Summer (also like Kay) that gives the book a melancholy tone, and an undeniably reserved pace.

I enjoyed the characters and found spending time with them no onerous, but not everyone will feel that way. Nonetheless a refreshing read and interesting entry to contemporary fantasy.
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½

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Statistics

Works
130
Also by
43
Members
13,031
Popularity
#1,787
Rating
3.8
Reviews
543
ISBNs
288
Languages
15
Favorited
23

Charts & Graphs