
1300 pounds of books arrived at the warehouse today. So if you’re waiting for a book from NDM Express, it should be on the way very soon. This includes volumes 9 and 10 for the Junior Classics demi backers, leaving only the last two leather editions to complete. Which we will do, but not until after the resolution of our dispute with a certain party… Among the new books now available for purchase there include Trafalgar, Sigma Game, the second edition of Probability Zero, and Veriphysics: The Return of the Real.
In other news, JDA has a new trilogy coming out, the first volume of which is now available on Amazon.
Captain Conley of the E.A.S. Valiant is written in the mold of those classic commanding officers. A career fleet man. Competent and principled, but new to command. The Aryshan War ended months ago and now he’s leading a joint human-Aryshan crew into uncharted space. His challenge is not just what lies beyond explored territory. Half his bridge crew were the enemy a few months prior, and he has to earn the trust of people whose worlds his side bombed. That tension sits underneath every decision he makes, every order he gives. He’s not a superhero. He’s not chosen by destiny. He’s a captain trying to hold a fragile crew together while the galaxy throws things at them that nobody planned for.
Fandom Pulse also has a review of one of my favorite novels by Keigo Higashino, Journey Under the Midnight Sun.
Higashino gives us Ryōji and Yukiho only as other people see them — through detectives, classmates, coworkers, lovers, business associates, victims. Across nineteen years and five hundred pages, we never once hear either of them think. We never stand behind their eyes. We read their faces the way a stranger on a train would read them: from outside, inferring, always uncertain.
The effect is disorienting, and then it becomes frightening. In most novels, even cold ones, the reader has a home, a consciousness to rest inside, a voice that organizes the world. 白夜行 offers none. You are passed from hand to hand through people who each see a fragment: Sasagaki sees the unsolved case that will not let him sleep. A classmate sees Yukiho’s strange, perfectly maintained beauty. A colleague sees Ryōji’s quiet talent with computers. A woman sees the man who destroyed her. No one sees the whole shape. Only the reader, slowly, over years and chapters, begins to assemble the outline of what these two people are doing and what they have done to survive since that October in Osaka.
It is reading as detective work. And the thing you are detecting is terrible.
And finally, we are in the process of binding A History of the Freedom of Thought. I have the first test binding, and it is the best the Castalia bindery has produced yet, with an exquisite old-school rounded spine and the most beautiful pigskin leather you can imagine. It’s a small, slender book, but it is an absolute Pocket Venus. We are also binding a small number of books for one of JDA’s omnibuses, The Aryshan War, and he gave me permission to show the very cool endpapers which for some reason really make me want to bind a set of the Traveller Little Black Books. Pictures of both will be posted at Castalia Library when they’re finished next week.

And finally, I’d encourage those of you who enjoyed Dorian Vane to leave a review, or at least a rating there. There is an interesting discussion at Sigma Game of a comparative SSH analysis of the protagonists of the two different magic school novels.






