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Summary
Summary
Fate decides where you go when you die. Renai makes damn sure you get there
Renaissance Raines has found her place among the psychopomps--the guides who lead the souls of the recently departed through the Seven Gates of the Underworld--and done her best to avoid the notice of gods and mortals alike. But when a young boy named Ramses St. Cyr manages to escape his foretold death, Renai finds herself at the center of a deity-thick plot unfolding in New Orleans. Someone helped Ramses slip free of his destined end--someone willing to risk everything to steal a little slice of power for themselves.
Is it one of the storm gods that's descended on the city? The death god who's locked the Gates of the Underworld? Or the manipulative sorcerer who also cheated Death? When she finds the schemer, there's gonna be all kinds of hell to pay, because there are scarier things than death in the Crescent City. Renaissance Raines is one of them.
Author Notes
BRYAN CAMP is a graduate of the Clarion West Writer's Workshop and the University of New Orleans' MFA program. He started his first novel, The City of Lost Fortunes, in the backseat of his parents' car as they evacuated for Hurricane Katrina.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
The savory second book in Camp's Crescent City series (following The City of Lost Fortunes) is that rare, welcome sequel that can be enjoyed just as easily as a standalone story. Renaissance "Renai" Raines has guided souls to the Underworld for the five years since her death and resurrection. When mysterious teenager Ramses St. Cyr escapes from destiny-and from Renai-she's thrown into a tangled world of New Orleans gods, magic, and dangerous deals. Renai's second outing is as raucous as her first, and the magic is just as double-edged and slippery. Camp crafts a journey through New Orleans's spirit underworld that's whimsical as well as grim and sometimes horrific. Renai is a real standout of a heroine, a powerful African-American woman cutting through bad or desperate situations in living and dead realms of increasing chaos, armed with snark, courage, and a storm of magic drawn from deep within her. This will be a feast for all lovers of urban and dark fantasy. Agent: Seth Fishman, Gernert Company. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Renaissance ""Renai"" Raines has been dead for five years, and her daily afterlife is a bit dull. She listens to the special radio station that broadcasts the names of the people dying that day in New Orleans, and picks one. As a psychopomp, she works with her partner, Salvatore, who is alternately a raven and a dog, to collect the soul and escort it to the Gates of the Underworld. It's uneventful until the day she picks the name Ramses St. Cyr, both because a god though she's not sure which one offered her a favor to look after the boy, and because the name sparked a memory from when she was alive. Then Ramses slips free of his destined death, and Renai finds herself embroiled in a plot between assorted supernatural beings, expanding her understanding of both the afterlife and her place in it. Though it can be read as a standalone, the second Crescent City book (after The City of Lost Fortunes, 2018) once again displays Camp's ability to weave different mythological beliefs together in fascinating ways. Readers will relate to Renai as she learns her most trusted guides are unreliable in this fast-paced urban fantasy.--Frances Moritz Copyright 2019 Booklist
Kirkus Review
A brainy, awesomely resourceful heroine makes her way through a supernatural doppelgnger of New Orleans to track down a missing soul and, in the process, save both her world and ours from unimaginable catastrophe.Readers of Camp's debut, The City of Lost Fortunes (2018), may remember a captivating, tough-talking young woman named Renaissance "Renai" Raines, who died in 2011 and reawakened a few weeks later in a "new realitywhere myths walked the streets of New Orleans and magic was possible." Renai's role in this fascinating if macabre realm is as a "psychopomp," whose task, roughly speaking, is to break apart the mortal coils of the dead and lead what remains of their souls into the Underworld. With guidance from a talking raven named Salvatore, Renai's been gradually shaking away her awkwardness with this uneasy calling; that is, until one soul destined for passage belonging to an adolescent boy named Ramses St. Cyr vanishes from the site of a drive-by shooting along with the rest of what should have been his dead body. And so with Sal and another talking bird named Cordelia by her side (or, more precisely, on her shoulders), Renai mounts her ghost motorcycle to probe the corners of her shadow universe to find Ramses. Along the way she interrogates shape-shifters, tricksters, and a wily sorcerer named Jack Elderflower, who has somehow managed to cheat death without having a soul. The more she finds out, the more questions she has; most of them having to do with whatever consequences could ensue for both the living and the dead if Ramses continues to avoid his ultimate fate. In this second installment of his Crescent City urban fantasy series, Camp raises the stakes and broadens the scope of his alternate world; at times his impulse to further explain the nuances of this world make his new book a bit slower going than its predecessor. But the richness and inventiveness of Camp's vision and the vivacity, warmth, and compassion of his leading woman keep you alert to whatever's happening next.As with the real New Orleans, once you leave this creepier but just as colorful variant, you'll be eager to go back. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Caught up in machinations of trickster gods, Renaissance Raines died in The City of Lost Fortunes, then was resurrected as a psychopomp, one of the guides who leads souls through the Seven Gates of the Underworld. Trying to stay under the radar of both the living and the immortal, Renai nonetheless lands smack in the middle of another mystery affecting the mortal world and Underworld alike. Teenager Ramses St. Cyr was slated to die, but he escaped his foreseen death-and not for the first time. It would take a higher power to make that happen, and Renai must discover who that is, whether god or man. For now, the Gates of the Underworld are locked, and the spirits are not leaving New Orleans. It takes all of Renai's skills, along with otherworldly assistance from men and gods alike, to uncover who's trying to unleash destruction, and save all the souls she has yet to guide. Camp's prose is suspenseful and rich with feeling, highlighting an incredible heroine. VERDICT Full of magic and numerous mythologies but still tied to the lush New Orleans setting, this Crescent City is one readers will not want to leave. [See Prepub Alert, 11/19/18.]-Kristi Chadwick, -Massachusetts Lib. Syst., Northampton © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Excerpts
Excerpts
When Death comes, he carries a tool for harvesting grain slung over his shoulder, his skeletal form swallowed by a billowing black cloak. And she descends from the heavens astride a magnificent horse, blood-flecked armor glinting in the light of a battlefield sunset, to carry a fallen warrior away to an everlasting feast. And he leads the way to the Scales of Judgment with his human arms stretched wide in welcome, while his scavenger's eyes stare down the length of his jackal's muzzle, weighing and hungry. And she waits--either hideously ugly or unspeakably beautiful depending on the way you lived your life--on the far side of a bridge that is either a rainbow or the Milky Way or both, a span that is either treacherous and thin as a single plank of wood, or wide and sturdy and safe, whichever you have earned. They are sparrows and owls, dolphins and bees, dogs and ravens and whippoorwills. They are the familiar faces of ancestors who have gone before, they are luminous beings of impossible description, and they are the random firings of synapses as the fragile spark of life fades to nothing. He is a moment all must experience. She is a figure to be both feared and embraced. They are the concept that rules all others; a constant, like entropy, like the speed of light. Death is both an end and a transition. Simultaneously a crossing over and the guide on that journey, one that is unique to each individual and yet the same for all. Death is able to be every one of these and more--all at once without conflict or contradiction--because death is the end of all conflicts, is beyond contradictions. Both nothing and everything. The only thing Death has never been is lonely. One of those many contradictions, a young woman named Renaissance Raines, waited for death in a neighborhood dive bar named Pal's, scratching the label off a warm half-finished bottle of Abita with her thumbnail, unnoticed and sober and bored. She sat in one of the high-backed swivel chairs at the long bar that took up most of the main room, facing a back-lit altar of liquor bottles that glowed beneath a couple of flat-screen TVs and the chalkboards advertising drink specials. The wall behind her held a few small, two-person tables that were empty in the early afternoon but wouldn't stay that way for much longer. Bright blue walls rose to a high orange ceiling illuminated by lights that tapered down to points in a way that reminded Renai of spinning tops. The life of the bar shifted around her--the electronic jingle and chirp of the digital jukebox in the corner, the brash, too-loud laughter coming from the handful of mostly white college kids playing air hockey in the back, the warmer, subdued conversation between a quartet of locals, an older black couple, a white woman holding a tiny, trembling dog, and a middle-aged Native American guy bellied up to the bar, a swirl of cigarette smoke in the air, the soft whir of ceiling fans overhead--and though breath filled her lungs and blood pulsed in her veins, she was as a ghost to all of it. She spoke to no one, shared no one's companionable silence, sent no texts to check on anyone's arrival, made no attempts to catch a stranger's eye. If anyone looked at Renai long enough to really see her--her dark brown skin taut with youth and free of laugh or frown lines, her full cheeks that dimpled with the slightest of smiles, her loose coils of hair, usually allowed to hang down along her jawline but today pulled and wound into a bun on each side of her head, her slender runner's frame lost in the depths of a thick leather jacket despite the heat that still hadn't relaxed its grip even in late October--they'd wonder if she was old enough to drink the beer in her hand. She knew nobody would, though. Most people didn't really seem to notice her at all these days. She hadn't gotten carded when she came in, no one had stopped her when she'd slipped behind the counter and taken a beer from the cooler. If she took her hand off the bottle and left it on the counter, the bartender would scoop it up and drop it in the trash. If she switched chairs to sit right next to the locals--or even leaned in between them--so long as she didn't touch them, they'd keep talking as if she wasn't there. If she interrupted, if she tapped someone on the shoulder, if she shattered one of the TVs with a thrown glass and shrieked with all her might, they'd see her, briefly, giving her the unfocused, confused look of a person shaken awake. Excerpted from Gather the Fortunes by Bryan Camp All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.