![]() The spectacle was indeed wondrous, but they were also 10,000 feet above sea level, and the air was thin at that altitude. The view must have been breathtaking in more ways than one. From that vantage point, some 3,000 feet below them, the Americans beheld the Valley of Mexico spread out like a lush green carpet. David Twiggs’ First Division, the leading element of Scott’s army, reached to the crest of a ridge that formed the base of a snow-capped volcano known to the Mexicans as Popocatepetl. General Winfield Scott’s army climbed through the mountains of central Mexico, an arduous trek that included blistering hot days and bitterly cold, rain-drenched nights. The social commentary hits the nail on the head.U.S. "The dialogue is clever and the satire spot-on. – Nicholas Kaufmann, bestselling author of The Hungry Earth Also, as a cat owner, I felt a lot of this deep in my soul!" I've long thought Heuler deserved a larger audience, and this funny, accessible novel should be what finally draws them in. "Whimsical, satiric, and bursting with imagination, The Splendid City is the novel we've all been waiting for from Karen Heuler, one that takes all the ingredients she's honed over decades of publishing quality literary and fantasy fiction and distills it into a perfect nugget of a novel. – Yume Kitasei, author of The Narrow Road to the Deep Sky "A fun, whimsical, fantastical satire that rips open the absurdity of everything yet still somehow manages to leave the beating heart intact." – Chandler Klang Smith, author of The Sky Is Yours ![]() In a world filled with malevolent surveillance drones and animatronic President heads, a gun-toting cat with a hair-trigger temper and a witch with an inconvenient penchant for the truth have to contend with a reality that makes them look sensible by comparison. but Karen Heuler's specialty is accomplishing the impossible. "It might seem impossible to see the humor in the nightmarish absurdities, disinformation, paranoia, and fanaticism of contemporary life. – Ann VanderMeer, Award Winning Editor of The Big Book of Modern Fantasy Heuler’s excellent imagination and biting humor brings it all together. Seriously, the best political fiction sneaks its way into our hearts and minds rather than hitting us on top of our heads. This novel is so much fun and yet there is a deeper, darker story here. "The Splendid City is a splendid read indeed! How can anyone resist talking cats? I know I can’t. – Gregory Norman Bossert, filmmaker, writer and World Fantasy Award winner "With its whimsy, compassionate characterizations, and sly satire, The Splendid City recalls the best of Terry Pratchett. – Brian Evenson, World Fantasy Award winner of Song for the Unraveling of the World Satirical, and yet somehow more than just a satire, the joy of The Splendid City lies in the quirky and all-embracing exuberance of Heuler's imagination." "A sly and wild and funny book which uses witches, talking robotic heads, water shortages, the internet, a revolution, and a cat who used to be human (and who is now pretending to be a human with a skin condition) to cheerfully dissect the travails of what it is like to live in contemporary America. – Paul Tremblay, author of The Cabin at the End of the World and The Pallbearers Club "Karen Heuler's soaring imagination is matched only by her integrity of vision and humanity. You'll find witches, cats, animatronic politicians and much more besides - plus sinister undertones combined with laugh-out-loud surrealism." The writing is engaging and smooth, with excellent banter, as the communal power of women works to find a purpose in a crazy world." In this world without a moral center, Eleanor, a witch, and her black cat familiar, Stan, who walks on two legs and packs a gun, much like Behemoth from Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, are called to solve a mystery. "Karen Heuler’s The Splendid City is a wonderful fabulation, both humorous and contemplative, about the desperate state of US politics and society.
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