A young man looking for death finds purpose in a world beyond our own
in this sweeping fantasy from Greg Keyes (The Briar King, Newton's
Cannon).
Errol Greyson hadn't intended to commit suicide. Or so he told himself.
But waking up after his "cry for help" trapped in the body of a
wood-and-metal construct magically animated by Aster--the strange girl
from school--was not a result he could have imagined.
Aster's wild explanations about needing help on a quest to find the
water of health that would cure her father seemed as unreal as her
description of Errol's own half-dead existence, his consciousness stuck
in an enchanted automaton while his real body was in a coma from which
it might never wake. And of course, they would need to recruit a girl
who had been dead for thirty years--a virgin, no less--to lead them
through something called the Pale, beyond which a bunch of magical
kingdoms existed. Plus, the threat that Aster could turn him off like a
light switch, sending him into a hellish oblivion, was a convincing
incentive to cooperate.
It all seemed quite mad: Either Aster was nuts, or Errol was
hallucinating. But if it meant a new chance at life, he reckoned it was
worth playing along.