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The Book of Atrix Wolfe: 30th Anniversary Edition
Patricia A. McKillip
[STARRED REVIEW] “McKillip’s signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale. ” —Foreword
This brand new edition celebrates the 30th anniversary of a classic, luminous novel. In McKillip’s (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld) stunning cinematic prose, the human world and the realm of faeries dangerously entwine through chaotic magic. Discover the spellbinding legend of generational atonement and redemption between a reluctant mage, a powerful wizard, a struggling heir, fae royalty, and a mysterious scullery maid.
This brand new edition celebrates the 30th anniversary of a classic, luminous novel from the World Fantasy Award–winning author Patricia A. McKillip (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld). In McKillip’s stunning cinematic prose, the human world and the realm of faeries dangerously entwine through chaotic magic. Discover the spellbinding legend of generational atonement and redemption between a reluctant mage, a powerful wizard, a struggling heir, fae royalty, and a mysterious scullery maid.
When the White Wolf descends upon the battlefield, the results are disastrous. His fateful decision to end a war with powerful magic changes the destiny of four kingdoms: warlike Kardeth, resilient Pelucir, idyllic Chaumenard, and the mysterious Elven realm.
Twenty years later, Prince Talis, orphaned heir to Pelucir, is meant to be the savior of the realm. However, the prince is neither interested in ruling nor a particularly skilled mage. Further, he is obsessed with a corrupted spellbook, and he is haunted by visions from the woods.
The legendary mage Atrix Wolfe has forsaken magic and the world of men. But the Queen of the Wood, whose fae lands overlap Pelucir’s bloody battlefield, is calling Wolfe back. Her consort and her daughter have been missing since the siege, and if Wolfe cannot intervene, the Queen will keep a sacrifice for her own.
This edition includes an original introduction and cover art by World Fantasy, Ditmar, and BFA Award-winner Kathleen Jennings.
[STARRED REVIEW] “McKillip’s signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale, wherein memories of ‘barren crags and ancient forests, winds scented with honey, wolf, wildflowers, swift water so pure’ can be summoned as a force for good, and love is an articulation of guileless recognition of another.”
—Foreword
“Driven by a formless fury when the prince of Kardeth refuses to halt his invasion of the kingdom of Pelucir, the great mage Atrix Wolfe creates a fearful hunter, ‘a warrior with no allegiance but to death.’ But the ensuing massacre of both armies and the king of Pelucir appalls the mage, and he flees to the mountains to live in wolf form among wolves until, 20 years later, the queen of the Woods demands that he seek out her daughter, who disappeared at the time of the great bloodbath. The ensuing story involves aspiring mage Talis Pelucir, son of the slain king, and Saro, a young, mute scullery maid in the castle of Pelucir whose background is unknown. Steeped in medieval legends of the wild huntsman, living trees, and shape changers, McKillip’s tale is decidedly atmospheric, complex, compelling, and filled with rich imagery.”
—Booklist
“No writer has better captured the elusive power of language than Patricia A. McKillip. The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a shimmering tale of language, power, magic, and soul.”
—Rambles
“Prince Talis, heir to the Pelucir throne, has been away from his homeland studying magecraft. At the wizards’ college, he discovers a mysterious book of spells whose words carry hidden meanings. Returning to Pelucir, Talis encounters the Queen of the Woods, who is looking for her daughter, Sorrow, lost ever since the mage Atrix Wolfe misused his magic to divert a war. Now Talis and Atrix must solve the riddle of Sorrow’s existence, and rid the world of the evil that Atrix conjured. . . . Connoisseurs of fine fantasy will delight in this expertly wrought tale.”
—Publishers Weekly
“The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a spell woven from moonlight, dirty pots, golden leaves, and shadows. Patricia McKillip describes magic I can believe in—the magic of place, captured in the stones of a wall, the wood of a door, the light shining through a window, the reflection in a pot of water. Her magic is founded in love and power and pain. Far more than a tale of battling kings—this is a story of the workings of the human heart. Such pleasure to read!”
—Pat Murphy, Nebula and Hugo Award winning author of The Adventures of Mary Darling
“It is always a joy to read Patricia McKillip’s work, and The Book of Atrix Wolfe is particularly rich in its fairy-tale motifs, imagery and language. Evocative details invite readers to appreciate Prince Talis’s wonder at forest depths and mountain heights, share the smells and sounds of Saro’s life in the castle kitchen, and recognize the pain of memories that linger long after a battle ends. By grounding the varied human and Otherworldly societies in specific landscapes and hinting at their collective past, the novel explores the difficulty of reaching a shared understanding of history. Yet McKillip offers wonder and words as hope. As in McKillip’s other works, this novel’s language is beautiful, making visible and magical what is usually overlooked or seen as ordinary. The Book of Atrix Wolfe thus demonstrates the power of words and stories to recover the past and create the future, a tale that repays rereading, as that hope is more relevant now than before.”
—Ann F. Howey, author of Afterlives of the Lady of Shalott and Elaine of Astolat
“Patricia A. McKillip is one of the finest writers of fantasy fiction of all time. In Tachyon’s beautiful 30th anniversary edition McKillip’s rich prose is on full display in this powerful novel of war and remembrance, magic and forgiveness.”
—Audrey Taylor, author of Patricia A. McKillip and the Art of Fantasy World-Building
“A man who lives among wolves and hides from his magical mistake from the past finds his talents again needed among humans when a queen asks him to search for her missing daughter. His quest leads to unexpected love and adventure in McKillip’s gentle fantasy.” —Midwest Book Review
“This is a beautifully written book. It is a quick, easy read and I really enjoyed my time with it. The story unfolds in a way that kept me interested, and it was definitely a good example of McKillip’s whimsical, otherworldly imagination. I recommend this book to anyone who liked any of McKillip’s other work, or enjoys authors like Robin McKinley, Charles de Lint, or Peter S. Beagle.”
—Superstardrifter
Patricia Anne McKillip, widely considered one of fantasy’s finest writers, was the bestselling author of more than thirty adult and children’s fantasy novels, including The Riddle-Master of Hed, Harpist in the Wind, and The Bards of Bone Plain. McKillip received three World Fantasy Awards, for The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, Ombria in Shadow, and Solstice Wood; for the latter, she also received the Mythopoeic Award. Born in Salem, Oregon, McKillip lived in Germany, the UK, and the Catskills in New York.
Praise for Patrica A. McKillip
“McKillip’s is the first name that comes to mind when I’m asked whom I read myself, whom I’d recommend that others read, and who makes me shake my grizzled head and say, ‘Damn I wish I’d done that.’”
—Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn
“I read, and reread McKillip eagerly. She reminds me that fantasy is worth writing.”
—Stephen R. Donaldson, author of the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant
“Patricia McKillip is the real thing and always has been. She shows the rest of us that magic can be made with words and air; that is it worth doing and worth doing well.”
—Ellen Kushner, author of Swordspoint and Thomas the Rhymer
“Ever since finding and loving The Riddle-Master of Hed many years ago, I have read everything Patricia McKillip has written. You should too.”
—Garth Nix, author of Sabriel and the Keys to the Kingdom
“Some authors we read for their characters and their plots, others for the beauty of their language. I read Pat McKillip for all three.”
—Charles de Lint, author of The Riddle of the Wren and The Blue Girl
“World Fantasy Award winner McKillip can take the most common fantasy elements, dragons and bards, sorcerers and shape-shifters and reshape them in surprising and resonant ways.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
The Book of Atrix Wolfe: 30th Anniversary Edition
Patricia A. McKillip
[STARRED REVIEW] “McKillip’s signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale. ”
—Foreword
This brand new edition celebrates the 30th anniversary of a classic, luminous novel. In McKillip’s (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld) stunning cinematic prose, the human world and the realm of faeries dangerously entwine through chaotic magic. Discover the spellbinding legend of generational atonement and redemption between a reluctant mage, a powerful wizard, a struggling heir, fae royalty, and a mysterious scullery maid.
The Book of Atrix Wolfe: 30th Anniversary Edition
by Patricia A. McKillip
ISBN: 978-1-61696-400-9 (print); 978-1-61696-401-6 (digital)
Published: February 25, 2025
Available Format(s): trade paperback; digital
This brand new edition celebrates the 30th anniversary of a classic, luminous novel from the World Fantasy Award–winning author Patricia A. McKillip (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld). In McKillip’s stunning cinematic prose, the human world and the realm of faeries dangerously entwine through chaotic magic. Discover the spellbinding legend of generational atonement and redemption between a reluctant mage, a powerful wizard, a struggling heir, fae royalty, and a mysterious scullery maid.
When the White Wolf descends upon the battlefield, the results are disastrous. His fateful decision to end a war with powerful magic changes the destiny of four kingdoms: warlike Kardeth, resilient Pelucir, idyllic Chaumenard, and the mysterious Elven realm.
Twenty years later, Prince Talis, orphaned heir to Pelucir, is meant to be the savior of the realm. However, the prince is neither interested in ruling nor a particularly skilled mage. Further, he is obsessed with a corrupted spellbook, and he is haunted by visions from the woods.
The legendary mage Atrix Wolfe has forsaken magic and the world of men. But the Queen of the Wood, whose fae lands overlap Pelucir’s bloody battlefield, is calling Wolfe back. Her consort and her daughter have been missing since the siege, and if Wolfe cannot intervene, the Queen will keep a sacrifice for her own.
This edition includes an original introduction and cover art by World Fantasy, Ditmar, and BFA Award-winner Kathleen Jennings.
[STARRED REVIEW] “McKillip’s signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale, wherein memories of ‘barren crags and ancient forests, winds scented with honey, wolf, wildflowers, swift water so pure’ can be summoned as a force for good, and love is an articulation of guileless recognition of another.”
—Foreword
“Driven by a formless fury when the prince of Kardeth refuses to halt his invasion of the kingdom of Pelucir, the great mage Atrix Wolfe creates a fearful hunter, ‘a warrior with no allegiance but to death.’ But the ensuing massacre of both armies and the king of Pelucir appalls the mage, and he flees to the mountains to live in wolf form among wolves until, 20 years later, the queen of the Woods demands that he seek out her daughter, who disappeared at the time of the great bloodbath. The ensuing story involves aspiring mage Talis Pelucir, son of the slain king, and Saro, a young, mute scullery maid in the castle of Pelucir whose background is unknown. Steeped in medieval legends of the wild huntsman, living trees, and shape changers, McKillip’s tale is decidedly atmospheric, complex, compelling, and filled with rich imagery.”
—Booklist
“No writer has better captured the elusive power of language than Patricia A. McKillip. The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a shimmering tale of language, power, magic, and soul.”
—Rambles
“Prince Talis, heir to the Pelucir throne, has been away from his homeland studying magecraft. At the wizards’ college, he discovers a mysterious book of spells whose words carry hidden meanings. Returning to Pelucir, Talis encounters the Queen of the Woods, who is looking for her daughter, Sorrow, lost ever since the mage Atrix Wolfe misused his magic to divert a war. Now Talis and Atrix must solve the riddle of Sorrow’s existence, and rid the world of the evil that Atrix conjured. . . . Connoisseurs of fine fantasy will delight in this expertly wrought tale.”
—Publishers Weekly
“The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a spell woven from moonlight, dirty pots, golden leaves, and shadows. Patricia McKillip describes magic I can believe in—the magic of place, captured in the stones of a wall, the wood of a door, the light shining through a window, the reflection in a pot of water. Her magic is founded in love and power and pain. Far more than a tale of battling kings—this is a story of the workings of the human heart. Such pleasure to read!”
—Pat Murphy, Nebula and Hugo Award winning author of The Adventures of Mary Darling
“It is always a joy to read Patricia McKillip’s work, and The Book of Atrix Wolfe is particularly rich in its fairy-tale motifs, imagery and language. Evocative details invite readers to appreciate Prince Talis’s wonder at forest depths and mountain heights, share the smells and sounds of Saro’s life in the castle kitchen, and recognize the pain of memories that linger long after a battle ends. By grounding the varied human and Otherworldly societies in specific landscapes and hinting at their collective past, the novel explores the difficulty of reaching a shared understanding of history. Yet McKillip offers wonder and words as hope. As in McKillip’s other works, this novel’s language is beautiful, making visible and magical what is usually overlooked or seen as ordinary. The Book of Atrix Wolfe thus demonstrates the power of words and stories to recover the past and create the future, a tale that repays rereading, as that hope is more relevant now than before.”
—Ann F. Howey, author of Afterlives of the Lady of Shalott and Elaine of Astolat
“Patricia A. McKillip is one of the finest writers of fantasy fiction of all time. In Tachyon’s beautiful 30th anniversary edition McKillip’s rich prose is on full display in this powerful novel of war and remembrance, magic and forgiveness.”
—Audrey Taylor, author of Patricia A. McKillip and the Art of Fantasy World-Building
“A man who lives among wolves and hides from his magical mistake from the past finds his talents again needed among humans when a queen asks him to search for her missing daughter. His quest leads to unexpected love and adventure in McKillip’s gentle fantasy.”
—Midwest Book Review
“This is a beautifully written book. It is a quick, easy read and I really enjoyed my time with it. The story unfolds in a way that kept me interested, and it was definitely a good example of McKillip’s whimsical, otherworldly imagination. I recommend this book to anyone who liked any of McKillip’s other work, or enjoys authors like Robin McKinley, Charles de Lint, or Peter S. Beagle.”
—Superstardrifter
Patricia Anne McKillip, widely considered one of fantasy’s finest writers, was the bestselling author of more than thirty adult and children’s fantasy novels, including The Riddle-Master of Hed, Harpist in the Wind, and The Bards of Bone Plain. McKillip received three World Fantasy Awards, for The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, Ombria in Shadow, and Solstice Wood; for the latter, she also received the Mythopoeic Award. Born in Salem, Oregon, McKillip lived in Germany, the UK, and the Catskills in New York.
Praise for Patrica A. McKillip
“McKillip’s is the first name that comes to mind when I’m asked whom I read myself, whom I’d recommend that others read, and who makes me shake my grizzled head and say, ‘Damn I wish I’d done that.’”
—Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn
“I read, and reread McKillip eagerly. She reminds me that fantasy is worth writing.”
—Stephen R. Donaldson, author of the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant
“Patricia McKillip is the real thing and always has been. She shows the rest of us that magic can be made with words and air; that is it worth doing and worth doing well.”
—Ellen Kushner, author of Swordspoint and Thomas the Rhymer
“Ever since finding and loving The Riddle-Master of Hed many years ago, I have read everything Patricia McKillip has written. You should too.”
—Garth Nix, author of Sabriel and the Keys to the Kingdom
“Some authors we read for their characters and their plots, others for the beauty of their language. I read Pat McKillip for all three.”
—Charles de Lint, author of The Riddle of the Wren and The Blue Girl
“World Fantasy Award winner McKillip can take the most common fantasy elements, dragons and bards, sorcerers and shape-shifters and reshape them in surprising and resonant ways.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
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