Book 1 of Imajica
Language: English
2 of 1992 Locus Award for Best Horror/Dark Fantasy Novel Contemporary Dominions Epic Erotic passion Fantasy Fantasy - Epic Fiction Fiction - Horror Horror Horror - General Library - Science Fiction and Fantasy Modern fiction Novel Science Fiction Science Fiction & Fantasy _isfdb
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: Sep 2, 1991
Description:
Review
"Barker's most ambitious work to date...rapturously full of emtions." -- _-- _L.A. Life
"Exhilarating...[a] masterpiece." -- _-- _USA Today
"Mesmerizing invention." -- _-- _Publishers Weekly
"Spellbinding." -- _-- _The Atlanta Journal
"Wonderfully entertaining...Clive Barker is a magician of the first order." -- _-- _New York Daily News
"[A] dazzling metaphysical epic-adventure...An astonishing feat of the imagination...Barker's best yet." -- --Kirkus Review
Product Description
The magical tale of ill-fated lovers lost among worlds teetering on the edge of destruction, where their passion holds the key to escape.
There has never been a book like Imajica. Transforming every expectation offantasy fiction with its heady mingling of radical sexuality and spiritual anarchy, it has carried its millions of readers into regions of passion and philosophy that few books have even attempted to map. It's an epic in everyway; vast in conception, obsessively detailed in execution, and apocalyptic in its resolution. A book of erotic mysteries and perverse violence. A book of ancient, mythological landscapes and even more ancient magic.
Review
"Barker's most ambitious work to date...rapturously full of emtions." -- _-- _L.A. Life
"Exhilarating...[a] masterpiece." -- _-- _USA Today
"Mesmerizing invention." -- _-- _Publishers Weekly
"Spellbinding." -- _-- _The Atlanta Journal
"Wonderfully entertaining...Clive Barker is a magician of the first order." -- _-- _New York Daily News
"[A] dazzling metaphysical epic-adventure...An astonishing feat of the imagination...Barker's best yet." -- --Kirkus Review
Product Description
The magical tale of ill-fated lovers lost among worlds teetering on the edge of destruction, where their passion holds the key to escape.
There has never been a book like Imajica. Transforming every expectation offantasy fiction with its heady mingling of radical sexuality and spiritual anarchy, it has carried its millions of readers into regions of passion and philosophy that few books have even attempted to map. It's an epic in everyway; vast in conception, obsessively detailed in execution, and apocalyptic in its resolution. A book of erotic mysteries and perverse violence. A book of ancient, mythological landscapes and even more ancient magic.