The Mercy of Gods
✍ Scribed by James S. A. Corey
- Book ID
- 115297611
- Publisher
- Orbit
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 329 KB
- Series
- The Captive’s War
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780316525572
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
How humanity came to the planet called Anjiin is lost in the fog of history, but that history is about to end.
The Carryx—part empire, part hive—have waged wars of conquest for centuries, destroying or enslaving species across the galaxy. Now, they are facing a great and deathless enemy. The key to their survival may rest with the humans of Anjiin.
Caught up in academic intrigue and affairs of the heart, Dafyd Alkhor is pleased just to be an assistant to a brilliant scientist and his celebrated research team. Then the Carryx ships descend, decimating the human population and taking the best and brightest of Anjiin society away to serve on the Carryx homeworld, and Dafyd is swept along with them.
They are dropped in the middle of a struggle they barely understand, set in a competition against the other captive species with extinction as the price of failure. Only Dafyd and a handful of his companions see past the Darwinian contest to the deeper game that they must play to survive: learning to understand—and manipulate—the Carryx themselves.
With a noble but suicidal human rebellion on one hand and strange and murderous enemies on the other, the team pays a terrible price to become the trusted servants of their new rulers.
Dafyd Alkhor is a simple man swept up in events that are beyond his control and more vast than his imagination. He will become the champion of humanity and its betrayer, the most hated man in history and the guardian of his people.
This is where his story begins.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
“Nwoka’s debut feels like a dream, or a fable, or something in between . . . Recommended for fans of Nnedi Okorafor’s *Remote Control* or Nghi Vo’s *The Empress of Salt and Fortune*.” —Ashley Rayner, *Booklist* "[God of Mercy] owes a debt to Chinua Achebe’s *Things Fall Apart*, revising that no