Author:R A Salvatore

Twenty-one years have passed since the defeat of the Empire at the Battle of Endor and the deaths of Darth Vader and Emperor Palpatine. But now the New Republic faces new threats to its peace and prosperity: a charismatic firebrand is inciting war between two planets...reports of rogue Jedi Knights practising vigilante law are sowing seeds of mistrust and fear...and beyond the Outer Rim, a mysterious alien race is mounting an invasion. Against chaos from within and an enemy unlike any other without, can the heroes who overthrew the Empire triumph again?
The collected letters of Kurt Vonnegut include some remarkable examples of epistolary eloquence… it is the tender letters to his youngest daughter, Nanette, that are the jewel of this collection
—— Jane Shilling , Sunday Telegraph SevenOne closes this volume...full of gratitude for Dan Wakefield...the editor of this labour of love that gives us one more reason to love Kurt Vonnegut
—— John Sutherland , The TimesThis collection is perhaps the best insight into the everyday needles of a prolific author you could hope to read
—— Ed Caesar , Sunday TimesSplendidly assembled and edited by Dan Wakefield . . . [Vonnegut’s] familiar, funny, cranky, acute voice . . . is chronicling his life in real time.
—— New York Times Book ReviewDroll and self-deprecating letters offer intriguing insights into Vonnegut’s life
—— Sunday TimesThis miraculous volume of selected letters provides a moving and revelatory portrait of the famed author of Slaughterhouse-Five and Cat’s Cradle. . . . Fans will find the collection as spellbinding as Vonnegut’s best novels, and casual readers will discover letters as splendid in their own way as those of Keats.
—— Publisher's WeeklyA laughing prophet of doom
—— New York TimesUnimitative and inimitable social satirist
—— Harper'sA satirist with a heart, a moralist with a whoopee cushion, a cynic who wants to believe
—— Jay McInerneySplendidly assembled and edited
—— Kurt Andersen , ScotsmanUnique
—— Doris LessingKurt Vonnegut never regarded himself as a great writer. But he did possess that undervalued gift of charm, of sociability. There are authors we admire or envy, but there are just a few we really, really love, and Vonnegut is one of them.
—— Washington Times[Reveals] Vonnegut’s passions, annoyances, loves, losses, mind and heart . . . The letters stand alone—and stand tall, indeed. . . . Vonnegut’s most human of hearts beats on every page
—— Kirkus ReviewsA well-rounded collection of letters
—— James Campbell , Guardian[The letters] have a directness and a consistency, a scruffy but ensnaring humanity… Kurt seems by turns kind, engaged, imaginative, witty, self-deprecating (“I write with a big black crayon… grasped in a grubby, kindergarten fist,”) and – on various fronts – courageous
—— Keith Miller , Daily TelegraphCrisply edited... There was something fundamentally goodhearted about Vonnegut. For all his gloom and cantankerousness, he never entirely lost his faith in human nature.
—— John Preston , Spectator






