Tendai Huchu
Author of The Library of the Dead
About the Author
Series
Works by Tendai Huchu
Corialis {short story} 1 copy
The Sale {short story} 1 copy
Ghostalker {short story} 1 copy
Secrets of the first school 1 copy
Associated Works
The Apex Book of World SF: Volume 5 (Apex World of Speculative Fiction) (2018) — Contributor — 45 copies, 9 reviews
The Year's Best African Speculative Fiction 2021: Volume One (2021) — Contributor — 34 copies, 2 reviews
Professor Charlatan Bardot's Travel Anthology to the Most (Fictional) Haunted Buildings in the Weird, Wild World (2021) — Contributor — 22 copies, 3 reviews
Sunspot Jungle: Volume Two: The Ever Expanding Universe of Fantasy and Science Fiction (2018) — Contributor — 22 copies
The Goddess of Mtwara and Other Stories: The Caine Prize for African Writing 2017 (2017) — Contributor — 15 copies, 1 review
Sauúti Terrors: Short Stories from the Unique Universe Created by Contemporary African Writers (2026) — Contributor — 9 copies, 1 review
Omenana to Infinity — Contributor — 6 copies
Omenana to Infinity: Speculative Fiction Anthology — Contributor, some editions — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Huchu, TL (for SF/F works)
- Birthdate
- 1982
- Gender
- male
- Agent
- Jamie Cowan
- Nationality
- Zimbabwe
- Places of residence
- Bindura, Zimbabwe
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK - Associated Place (for map)
- Zimbabwe
Members
Reviews
The publisher's summary of 'Library Of The Dead' doesn't do it justice. Doesn't even seem to be describing the same book. Rather than tell you what it is, they want to tell you what it's like, claiming that this is like 'Rivers of London', 'Sixth Sense' and 'Stranger Things' only set in contemporary Edinburgh and using Zimbabwean magic. Almost all of that is wrong and none of it acknowledges how original this book is.
'The Library of the Dead' isn't set in contemporary Edinburgh. It's set in show more an alternative, probably near-future, Edinburgh where the use of magic has been institutionalised, monetised and regulated, where there has been some sort of apocalyptic, probably climate-related disaster that has reshaped parts of the city and is set some years after the English King re-united Scotland with his Kingdom by force.
Where Peter Grant in 'Rivers Of London' is an adult leading a relatively comfortable life, with a career in the Met, backed up by the rich and powerful Folly and has (very) close relationships with the local River Godesses, Ropa is a teenage girl who has dropped out of school to earn enough from her ability to carry messages from the dead to the living to pay the rent on the crappy caravan she and her gran and her little sister live in and put food on the table. She spends a lot of her time dealing with the reality of poverty and has no one to back her up.
It's true that she does use Zimbabwean magic, inherited from her gran, but that's not all she uses and one of the unresolved mysteries running in the background is who Ropa's father was and what other powers she might possess.
So, what 'Library of the Dead' really is is a piece of speculative fiction, set in a possble future Edinburgh where magic is taken for granted and owned by the people with money and no one cares what happens to people like Ropa and the other kids who are scratching a living in within sight of Edinburgh's grand architecture.
Ropa made the book for me. She's not a primadonna. She barely has an education. She doesn't seem to be magically powerful. She's just keeping her he'd down and doing what she has to make ends meet and to prevent her gran and her sister being evicted because the rent hasn't been paid. I liked the grim reality of that.
What changes Ropa's life and creates the story for the first book in the series, is that Ropa, reluctantly af first, agrees to look into what is happening to some of the kids in her caravan park. They've been disappearing and coming back... empty.
Following up on this brings Ropa into conflict with powerful establishment-protected, magic-users, into contact with a secret Library for magic users in the heart of Edinburgh, and into the clutches of something truly evil that sees her as prey.
I admired the originality of the world that T. L Huchu has created. I'd like to go there again and learn more about it. Most of all, I liked Ropa for her loyalty to her family and her refusal to be ground down by the circumstance of her life or by the efforts of her enemies.
At first, I thought 'The Library Of The Dead' would by a Young Adult book. If it is, it's a grim one and one that this reader - who hasn't deserved being called young in a very long time - found very satisfying.
I thought there were places when the pacing was a little uneven but the key scenes in the story worked really well and the characters were believable and engaging.
It was a good start to a series I'd like to read more of.
I began reading 'The Library Of The Dead' as an audiobook but ended up sending it back and carrying on with the ebook. The narrator, Tinashe Warikandwa, was fine on the dialogue, although not that good at differentiating character voices, but once there's any description of anything abstract, she seemed to lose touch with the rhythm of the prose.
Click on the SoundCloud link to hear a sample. Your experience may be different to mine.
https://soundcloud.com/pan-macmillan/thelibraryofthedead-clip show less
'The Library of the Dead' isn't set in contemporary Edinburgh. It's set in show more an alternative, probably near-future, Edinburgh where the use of magic has been institutionalised, monetised and regulated, where there has been some sort of apocalyptic, probably climate-related disaster that has reshaped parts of the city and is set some years after the English King re-united Scotland with his Kingdom by force.
Where Peter Grant in 'Rivers Of London' is an adult leading a relatively comfortable life, with a career in the Met, backed up by the rich and powerful Folly and has (very) close relationships with the local River Godesses, Ropa is a teenage girl who has dropped out of school to earn enough from her ability to carry messages from the dead to the living to pay the rent on the crappy caravan she and her gran and her little sister live in and put food on the table. She spends a lot of her time dealing with the reality of poverty and has no one to back her up.
It's true that she does use Zimbabwean magic, inherited from her gran, but that's not all she uses and one of the unresolved mysteries running in the background is who Ropa's father was and what other powers she might possess.
So, what 'Library of the Dead' really is is a piece of speculative fiction, set in a possble future Edinburgh where magic is taken for granted and owned by the people with money and no one cares what happens to people like Ropa and the other kids who are scratching a living in within sight of Edinburgh's grand architecture.
Ropa made the book for me. She's not a primadonna. She barely has an education. She doesn't seem to be magically powerful. She's just keeping her he'd down and doing what she has to make ends meet and to prevent her gran and her sister being evicted because the rent hasn't been paid. I liked the grim reality of that.
What changes Ropa's life and creates the story for the first book in the series, is that Ropa, reluctantly af first, agrees to look into what is happening to some of the kids in her caravan park. They've been disappearing and coming back... empty.
Following up on this brings Ropa into conflict with powerful establishment-protected, magic-users, into contact with a secret Library for magic users in the heart of Edinburgh, and into the clutches of something truly evil that sees her as prey.
I admired the originality of the world that T. L Huchu has created. I'd like to go there again and learn more about it. Most of all, I liked Ropa for her loyalty to her family and her refusal to be ground down by the circumstance of her life or by the efforts of her enemies.
At first, I thought 'The Library Of The Dead' would by a Young Adult book. If it is, it's a grim one and one that this reader - who hasn't deserved being called young in a very long time - found very satisfying.
I thought there were places when the pacing was a little uneven but the key scenes in the story worked really well and the characters were believable and engaging.
It was a good start to a series I'd like to read more of.
I began reading 'The Library Of The Dead' as an audiobook but ended up sending it back and carrying on with the ebook. The narrator, Tinashe Warikandwa, was fine on the dialogue, although not that good at differentiating character voices, but once there's any description of anything abstract, she seemed to lose touch with the rhythm of the prose.
Click on the SoundCloud link to hear a sample. Your experience may be different to mine.
https://soundcloud.com/pan-macmillan/thelibraryofthedead-clip show less
Excellent! I've been looking for more character driven urban fantasy, and Ropa's adventures hit the spot. I love how snarky and annoyed she is, how true blue to family and community, how resilient in the face of grinding poverty. I find her very relatable in our currently crumbling society and I'm interested to learn more about the dystopian background of her world. I'm intrigued by the magical system and delighted by the list of great mbiru players that she drops throughout the book.
This book is a fun read and with a colorful and creative story. I especially enjoyed the ghosts, which felt quite realistic (despite the fact that they’re ghosts). I think the mechanics of the magical elements also worked well. The story is relatively fast-paced, and there are enough interesting turns of events to keep it exciting. I enjoyed Huchu’s descriptions of the setting, which added a lot of color to the story and really drew me into the world. My only gripe with the plot of this show more book is that some of the elements, like the ghosts and the evil plot, felt disjointed from each other, and I almost wish the author had chosen to focus on just one instead of mixing them together.
I also really enjoyed the narrator, Ropa. She is snarky, quick-witted, and self-assured, and her voice felt authentic and consistent. Fans of strong independent female characters will enjoy Ropa. She’s a complex, multi-dimensional character with a rough side and a dark past, but also a lot of heart and kindness, as demonstrated by her close relationships with her family and friends. Her speech patterns and use of slang and casual language lend an air of authenticity and spontaneity to her voice which I really appreciated.
Overall, I think the story is enjoyable, and I would definitely recommend it to a younger reader or to a person who enjoys YA and is looking for a series to dive into. The writing style was a bit too easy for my personal preference - I like to be challenged a bit when I read - but I think if I had read this book at a younger age I would have liked it a lot, which is why I’ve given it four stars show less
I also really enjoyed the narrator, Ropa. She is snarky, quick-witted, and self-assured, and her voice felt authentic and consistent. Fans of strong independent female characters will enjoy Ropa. She’s a complex, multi-dimensional character with a rough side and a dark past, but also a lot of heart and kindness, as demonstrated by her close relationships with her family and friends. Her speech patterns and use of slang and casual language lend an air of authenticity and spontaneity to her voice which I really appreciated.
Overall, I think the story is enjoyable, and I would definitely recommend it to a younger reader or to a person who enjoys YA and is looking for a series to dive into. The writing style was a bit too easy for my personal preference - I like to be challenged a bit when I read - but I think if I had read this book at a younger age I would have liked it a lot, which is why I’ve given it four stars show less
The publisher's summary of 'Library Of The Dead' doesn't do it justice. Doesn't even seem to be describing the same book. Rather than tell you what it is, they want to tell you what it's like, claiming that this is like 'Rivers of London', 'Sixth Sense' and 'Stranger Things' only set in contemporary Edinburgh and using Zimbabwean magic. Almost all of that is wrong and none of it acknowledges how original this book is.
'The Library of the Dead' isn't set in contemporary Edinburgh. It's set in show more an alternative, probably near-future, Edinburgh where the use of magic has been institutionalised, monetised and regulated, where there has been some sort of apocalyptic, probably climate-related disaster that has reshaped parts of the city and is set some years after the English King re-united Scotland with his Kingdom by force.
Where Peter Grant in 'Rivers Of London' is an adult leading a relatively comfortable life, with a career in the Met, backed up by the rich and powerful Folly and has (very) close relationships with the local River Godesses, Ropa is a teenage girl who has dropped out of school to earn enough from her ability to carry messages from the dead to the living to pay the rent on the crappy caravan she and her gran and her little sister live in and put food on the table. She spends a lot of her time dealing with the reality of poverty and has no one to back her up.
It's true that she does use Zimbabwean magic, inherited from her gran, but that's not all she uses and one of the unresolved mysteries running in the background is who Ropa's father was and what other powers she might possess.
So, what 'Library of the Dead' really is is a piece of speculative fiction, set in a possble future Edinburgh where magic is taken for granted and owned by the people with money and no one cares what happens to people like Ropa and the other kids who are scratching a living in within sight of Edinburgh's grand architecture.
Ropa made the book for me. She's not a primadonna. She barely has an education. She doesn't seem to be magically powerful. She's just keeping her he'd down and doing what she has to make ends meet and to prevent her gran and her sister being evicted because the rent hasn't been paid. I liked the grim reality of that.
What changes Ropa's life and creates the story for the first book in the series, is that Ropa, reluctantly af first, agrees to look into what is happening to some of the kids in her caravan park. They've been disappearing and coming back... empty.
Following up on this brings Ropa into conflict with powerful establishment-protected, magic-users, into contact with a secret Library for magic users in the heart of Edinburgh, and into the clutches of something truly evil that sees her as prey.
I admired the originality of the world that T. L Huchu has created. I'd like to go there again and learn more about it. Most of all, I liked Ropa for her loyalty to her family and her refusal to be ground down by the circumstance of her life or by the efforts of her enemies.
At first, I thought 'The Library Of The Dead' would by a Young Adult book. If it is, it's a grim one and one that this reader - who hasn't deserved being called young in a very long time - found very satisfying.
I thought there were places when the pacing was a little uneven but the key scenes in the story worked really well and the characters were believable and engaging.
It was a good start to a series I'd like to read more of.
I began reading 'The Library Of The Dead' as an audiobook but ended up sending it back and carrying on with the ebook. The narrator, Tinashe Warikandwa, was fine on the dialogue, although not that good at differentiating character voices, but once there's any description of anything abstract, she seemed to lose touch with the rhythm of the prose.
Click on the SoundCloud link to hear a sample. Your experience may be different to mine.
https://soundcloud.com/pan-macmillan/thelibraryofthedead-clip show less
Lists
At the Library (1)
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Also by
- 25
- Members
- 2,743
- Popularity
- #9,358
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 102
- ISBNs
- 80
- Languages
- 3
























