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The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters (Chapter 9 Provocateur)
The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters (Chapter 9 Provocateur)
Jan 16, 2026 12:40 PM

Author:G.W. Dahlquist

The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters (Chapter 9 Provocateur)

The adventure continues in The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters chapter 9, Provocateur, the penultimate instalment of the ebook serial of G.W Dahlquist's fantastic fantasy novel.

After witnessing the horrifying experiment on the cabal's victims and the hideous transformation of Angelique, Cardinal Chang looks up to see Miss Temple in a feathered mask, the tell-tale scarring around her eyes - has she been subjected to 'the process'. . . ?

'If HBO are looking for a project to follow Game of Thrones, they need seek no further . . . an epic'Scotsman

'Fantastic. Somewhere between Dickens, Sherlock Holmes and Rider Haggard. I was in seventh heaven' Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth

'A page-turner, a rollicking ride. As stupendous as it is stupefying' Giles Foden, Guardian

G. W. Dahlquist is a novelist and playwright. When he fell asleep during a snowstorm, his first book The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters came to him in a dream. He is the author of the acclaimed The Dark Volume and The Chemickal Marriage. Originally from the Pacific Northwest, he now lives in New York.

Reviews

Fantastic. Somewhere between Dickens, Sherlock Holmes and Rider Haggard. I was in seventh heaven

—— Kate Mosse author of Labyrinth

A page-turner, a rollicking ride . . . stupendous

—— Giles Foden , Guardian

A novel of desire, sensation and desperate jeopardy . . . genuinely exciting and intriguing

—— Time Out

An erotically charged, rip-roaring adventure for adults with scarcely a dull moment to be had . . . keep[s] the reader on the edge of his seat

—— Daily Mail

An epic tale of love and war, full of colour.

—— Choice, July 2012

Peter Stenson has done the near impossible in delivering a savage fire-storm of a page-turner while also enabling a hard and earnest look at addiction and love. I tore through Fiend with the crazed fervor of an addict, but like all great stories these characters lingered in my thoughts long after I turned the last beautiful and brutal page.

—— Alan Heathcock, author of Volt

With a pared down snappy writing style, Fiend opens an exciting new chapter for modern horror.

—— Big Issue in the North

There is something witty or striking on almost every page

—— Mail on Sunday

Martin Amis's new novel shows a regathering of his artistic energies

—— Guardian

The buzzing sense of fresh, limitless erotic licence is captured brilliantly...he is beginning to write with Old Master assurance on the important subjects... If Amis keeps writing like this about death, he can still prove everyone wrong

—— The Times

The recent death of Iain Banks left a gaping hole in contemporary literature, but nowhere was the loss felt more than in his native Scotland. Banks took ordinary situations and rendered them extraordinary; a talent that fellow Scot Sue Peebles, whose first novel won both the Scottish and Saltire book awards, shares in spades… The "sacred geometry" of ageing and the timeless measuring out of love are what sustain this subtle, beautiful book.

—— Catherine Taylor , Guardian

Deeply humane tale of memory, loss and the struggle to understand a family’s past… It’s a novel of generous warmth

—— Ben Felsenburg , Metro Herald

A beautiful, brilliant novel destined to cement Sue's place as one of the leading lights of the Scottish literary scene

—— Waterstones

Peebles' keen eye for social observation adds a comic touch to the narrative, expertly showing how black humour is used in bleak times.

—— Rowena McIntosh , The Skinny

Peebles writes poetic prose, capturing Aggie's imaginative character and her need to find meaning in the puzzle of circumstances she finds herself in. The insight into dementia and its impact upon a family is poignant, with Aggie desperate to recapture the history of a beloved Gran who is disappearing in front of her eyes. The novel strongly evokes the Scottish countryside, its link to the past and the secrets it keeps. The story may be a slow burner, but keep going because its gentle pace builds up to a satisfying conclusion

—— Penny Batchelor , We Love This Book
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