May Contain Traces of Magic

Tom Holt

Book 6 of J. W. Wells & Co.

Language: English

url

Publisher: Orbit

Published: May 2, 2009

Description:

Review

"Holt is, as usual, absurd, funny, and light-handed enough with the completely ridiculous bits to keep the story moving, assuring that the reader doesn’t actually notice how bizarre the story has become, or how tangled the mystery is, until it’s nearly done." —Booklist

"Holt has a touch that is equally breezy and serious: the story's twists and revelations feel like Douglas Adams emulating David Mamet." —Publishers Weekly on Falling Sideways

The best similes since Douglas Adams. Buy it for heaven's sake.” —SFX on Little People

"Uniquely twisted . . . cracking gags." —_Guardian_

"Dazzling." —_Time Out_

Product Description

From the master of comic fantasy, a new reason to find technology terrifying

There are all kinds of products. The good ones. The bad ones. The ones that stay in the garage moldering for years until your garden gnome makes a home out of it. Most are harmless if handled properly, even if they do contain traces of peanuts. But some are not—not the ones that contain traces of magic. Chris Popham wasn't paying enough attention when he talked to his SatNav. Sure, she gave him directions, never talked back to him, and always led him to his next spot on the map with perfect accuracy. She was the best thing in his life. So was it really his fault that he didn't start paying attention when she talked to him? In his defense, that was her job. But when "Take the next right" turned into "Excuse me," that was when the real trouble started. Because sometimes a GPS isn't a GPS—sometimes it's an imprisoned soul trapped inside a metal box that will do anything it can to get free. And some products you just can't return.