Both familiar and fantastic, Clark T. Carlton begins the epic Antasy
saga with Prophets of the Ghost Ants, exploring a world in which food,
weapons, clothing, art--even religious beliefs--are derived from
Humankind's profound intertwining with the insect world.
In a savage landscape where humans have evolved to the size of insects,
they cannot hope to dominate. Ceaselessly, humans are stalked by night
wasps, lair spiders, and marauder fleas. And just as sinister, men are
still men. Corrupt elites ruthlessly enforce a rigid caste system.
Duplicitous clergymen and power-mongering royalty wage pointless wars
for their own glory. Fantasies of a better life and a better world serve
only to torment those who dare to dream.
One so tormented is a half-breed slave named Anand, a dung-collector who
has known nothing but squalor and abuse. Anand wants to lead his people
against a genocidal army who fight atop fearsome, translucent Ghost
Ants. But to his horror, Anand learns this merciless enemy is led by
someone from his own family: a religious zealot bent on the conversion
of all non-believers . . . or their extermination.
A mix of Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shadow of the Apt, Katherine Addison's
The Goblin Emperor, and Phillip Pullman's Golden Compass, this is a
powerful new addition to the genre.