Days of magic, nights of war

cover image

Where to find it

Information & Library Science Library — Juvenile

Call Number
J Barker
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Clive Barker, author of The Thief of Always, delivers an epic battle filled with fantasy and adventure that readers won't want to put down!

All things in their time . . .

Candy Quackenbush's adventures in the Abarat are getting stranger by the hour. Why has the Lord of Midnight sent his henchman after her? Why can she suddenly speak words of magic? Why is this world familiar?

Candy and her companions must solve the mystery of her past before the forces of Night and Day clash and Absolute Midnight descends upon the islands.

A final war is about to begin. . . .

Don't miss this second book in Clive Barker's New York Times bestselling Abarat series.

Contents

  • Prologue: Hunger
  • Part 1 Freaks, Fools and Fugitives
  • 1 Portrait of Girl and Geshrat p. 11
  • 2 What There Is to See p. 16
  • 3 On the Parroto Parroto p. 25
  • 4 The Scavengers p. 31
  • 5 The Speaking of a Word p. 36
  • 6 Two Conversations p. 42
  • 7 Something of Babilonium p. 47
  • 8 A Life in the Theatre p. 56
  • 9 Again, the Criss-Cross Man p. 61
  • 10 "The Freaks Are Out! The Freaks Are Out!" p. 74
  • Part 2 Things Neglected, Things Forgotten
  • 11 Traveling North p. 81
  • 12 Darkness and Anticipation p. 86
  • 13 The Sacbrood p. 94
  • 14 Lament (The Munkee's Tale) p. 107
  • 15 The Pursuer p. 118
  • 16 The Wunderkammen p. 126
  • 17 The Star-Striker p. 138
  • 18 Departure p. 144
  • 19 Life and Death in Chickentown p. 150
  • 20 Malingo Alone p. 159
  • 21 Night Conversations p. 166
  • 22 A Death Sentence p. 174
  • 23 Dreamer to Dreamer p. 180
  • 24 Husband and Wife p. 189
  • 25 Fates p. 194
  • 26 Kaspar Is Visited p. 203
  • 27 Abduction p. 216
  • 28 A Summoning p. 231
  • Part 3 A Time of Monsters
  • 29 The Captain Converses p. 239
  • 30 The Beasts of Efreet p. 244
  • 31 News in Nonce p. 254
  • 32 Events at the Threshold p. 261
  • 33 A Visit to Marapozsa Street p. 265
  • 34 Secrets and Meat Loaf p. 278
  • 35 Two in Nineteen p. 283
  • 36 The Bridegroom Unearthed p. 290
  • 37 The Owner of the Dead Man's House p. 298
  • 38 Midnight's Heart p. 306
  • 39 Dragon Bones p. 314
  • 40 A Tale of Endless Partings p. 321
  • 41 An Ambitious Conjuration p. 333
  • 42 The High Maze p. 340
  • 43 The Dark Denied p. 349
  • 44 The Prince and the Beast-Boy p. 360
  • 45 A Decision p. 364
  • Part 4 The Sea Comes to Chickentown
  • 46 Departures p. 373
  • 47 Something in the Wind p. 384
  • 48 Stirring the Waters p. 390
  • 49 Into the Hereafter p. 397
  • 50 Father and Daughter p. 413
  • 51 Into the Wormwood p. 419
  • 52 The Secret of Secrets p. 430
  • 53 The Warship Unmade p. 439
  • 54 The Living and the Dead p. 450
  • 55 The Beginning of the End p. 457
  • 56 Down and Down p. 464
  • 57 "Never Fear ..." p. 468
  • 58 The Return of the Sea p. 477

Sample chapter

Abarat: Days of Magic, Nights of War Part One Freaks, Fools and Fugitives Nothing After a battle lasting many ages, The Devil won, And he said to God (who had been his Maker): "Lord, We are about to witness the unmaking of Creation By my hand. I would not wish you to think me cruel, So I beg you, take three things From this world before I destroy it. Three things, and then the rest will be wiped away." God thought for a little time. And at last He said: "No, there is nothing." The Devil was surprised. "Not even you, Lord?" he said. And God said: "No. Not even me." -- From Memories of the World's End Author unknown (Christopher Carrion's favorite poem) Chapter One Portrait ofGirl and Geshrat Let's get our photograph taken," Candy said to Malingo. They were walking down a street in Tazmagor, where -- this being on the island of Qualm Hah -- it was Nine O'clock in the Morning. The Tazmagorian market was in full swing, and in the middle of all this buying and selling a photographer called Guumat had set up a makeshift studio. He'd hung a crudely painted backcloth from a couple of poles and set his camera, a massive device mounted on a polished wood tripod, in front of it. His assistant, a youth who shared his father's coxcomb hair and lightly striped blue-and-black skin, was parading a board on which examples of Guumat the Elder's photos were pinned. "You like to be pictured by the great Guumat?" the youth said to Malingo. "He make you look real good." Malingo grinned. "How much?" "Two paterzem," said the father, gently pressing his offspring aside so as to close the sale. "For both of us?" Candy said. "One picture, same price. Two paterzem." "We can afford that," Candy said to Malingo. "Maybe you like costumes. Hats?" Guumat asked them, glancing at them up and down. "No extra cost." "He's politely telling us we look like vagabonds," Malingo said. "Well, we are vagabonds," Candy replied. Hearing this, Guumat looked suspicious. "You can pay?" he said. "Yes, of course," said Candy, and dug in the pocket of her brightly patterned trousers, held up with a belt of woven biffel-reeds, and pulled out some coins, sorting through them to give Guumat the paterzem. "Good! Good!" he said. "Jamjam! Get the young lady a mirror. How old are you?" "Almost sixteen, why?" "You wear something much more ladylike, huh? We got nice things. Like I say, no extra charge." "I'm fine. Thank you. I want to remember this the way it really was." She smiled at Malingo. "Two wanderers in Tazmagor, tired but happy." "That's what you want, that's what I give you," Guumat said. Jamjam handed her a little mirror and Candy consulted her reflection. She was a mess, no doubt about it. She'd cut her hair very short a couple of weeks before so she could hide from Houlihan among some monks on Soma Plume, but the haircut had been very hurried, and it was growing out at all angles. "You look fine," Malingo said. "So do you. Here, see for yourself." She handed him the mirror. Her friends back in Chickentown would have thought Malingo's face -- with his deep orange hide and the fans of leathery skin to either side of his head -- fit only for Halloween. But in the time they'd been traveling together through the islands, Candy had come to love the soul inside that skin: tenderhearted and brave. Guumat arranged them in front of his camera. "You need to stand very, very still," he instructed them. "If you move, you'll be blurred in the picture. So, now let me get the camera ready. Give me a minute or two." "What made you want a photograph?" Malingo said from the corner of his mouth. "Just to have. So I won't forget anything." "As if," said Malingo. "Please," said Guumat. "Be very still. I have to focus." Candy and Malingo were silent for a moment. "What are you thinking about?" Malingo murmured. "Being on Yzil, at Noon." "Oh yes. That's something we're sure to remember." "Especially seeing her . . ." "The Princess Breath." Now, without Guumat requesting it, they both fell silent for a long moment, remembering their brief encounter with the Goddess on the Noon-Day island of Yzil. Candy had seen her first: a pale, beautiful woman in red and orange standing in a patch of warm light, breathing out a living creature, a purplish squid. This, it was said, was the means by which most of the species in the Abarat had been brought into Creation. They had been breathed out by the Creatrix, who had then let the soft wind that constantly blew through the trees and vines of Yzil claim the newborn from her arms and carry them off to the sea. "That was the most amazing -- " "I'm ready!" Guumat announced from beneath the black cloth he'd ducked under. "On the count of three we take the picture. One! Two! Three! Hold it! Don't move! Don't move! Seven seconds." He lifted his head out from under the cloth and consulted his stopwatch. "Six. Five. Four. Three. Two. One. That's it!" Guumat slipped a plate into his camera to stop the exposure. "Picture taken! Now we have to wait a few minutes while I prepare a print for you." "No problem," Candy said. "Are you going down to the ferry?" Jamjam asked her. "Yes," said Candy. "You look like you've been on the move." "Oh, we have," said Malingo. "We've seen a lot in the last few weeks, traveling around." "I'm jealous. I've never left Qualm Hah. I'd love to go adventuring." A minute later Jamjam's father appeared with the photograph, which was still wet. "I can sell you a very nice frame, very cheap." "No, thanks," said Candy. "It's fine like this." She and Malingo looked at the photograph. The colors weren't quite true, but Guumat caught them looking like a pair of happy tourists, with their brightly colored, rumpled clothes, so they were quite happy. Photograph in hand, they headed down the steep hill to the harbor and the ferry. "You know, I've been thinking . . ." Candy said as they made their way through the crowd. "Uh-oh." "Seeing the Princess Breath made me want to learn more. About magic." "No, Candy." "Come on, Malingo! Teach me. You know all about conjurations -- " "A little. Just a little." Abarat: Days of Magic, Nights of War . Copyright © by Clive Barker. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Days of Magic, Nights of War by Clive Barker 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.

Subjects

Subject Headings A:

Other details