The Choir Boats: Volume One of Longing for Yount
By (Author) Daniel A. Rabuzzi
Illustrated by Deborah A. Mills
ChiZine Publications
ChiZine Publications
1st October 2009
Canada
Paperback
280
426g
When emissaries from a world called Yount offer Barnabas a chance to redeem himself, he accepts their priceto voyage to Yount with the key that only he can use to unlock the door to their prison. But bleak forces seek to stop him: Yount's jailer, a once-human wizard who craves his own salvation, kidnaps Barnabas's nephew.
Praise for Daniel A. Rabuzzi
[Rabuzzi exercises] an exuberance, an ebullience, a delight in language.
Mythopoeic Society
An ambitious chimera of a tale. Rabuzzi instills his prose with considerable wit, humor and a joyous use of language, his love of literature and history filling every page.
The Crows Caw
(A)n auspicious debut . . . a muscular, Napoleonic-era fantasy that, like Philip Pullmans Dark Materials series, will appeal to both adult and young adult readers. Theres a Dickensian vibrancy . . . to Rabuzzis book; its filled with outsized characters, colorful slang, outrageous coincidences, buried secrets, stunning revelations, and star-crossed lovers.
Paul Witcover, Realms of Fantasy Magazine
The Choir Boats mixes all the best elements of folklore, Georgian romance, and fantasy to produce an eloquently crafted tale. . . . The tale is a significant contribution to the field of fantasy. . . . The Choir Boats is Gullivers Travels crossed with The Golden Compass and a dollop of Pride and Prejudice. Rabuzzi has a true sense of wonder. . . . I cannot praise Daniel Rabuzzi or The Choir Boats enough. This story is unique (and) an instant classic of fantasy, and perhaps even the co-progenitor (with Novik, Clarke, and a few others) of a new subgenre in speculative fiction.
John Ottinger, Grasping for the Wind
Its clear that Rabuzzi had an immense amount of fun writing the book, and I think most readers who enjoy a fantastical and playful yarn will have as much fun reading it. Its a story that can be read aloud or to oneself, breezed through quickly or slowly savored a chapter a night. The novel will appeal to both young and older readers.
Katherine Petersen, The Specusphere
Daniel A. Rabuzzi studied folklore and mythology in college and graduate school, and keeps one foot firmly in the Other Realm. His fiction and poetry have appeared in Sybils Garage, Shimmer, ChiZine, Lady Churchills Rosebud Wristlet, Abyss & Apex, Goblin Fruit, Mannequin Envy and Scheherezades Bequest. He has also had twenty scholarly and professional articles published on subjects ranging from fairytale to finance. A former banker, Daniel earned his doctorate in 18th-century history, with a focus on issues of family, gender and commerce in northern Europe. He is now an executive at a global non-profit organization that provides educational materials to children from under-resourced and traditionally marginalized communities. Daniel lives in New York City with his wife and soul-mate, the artist Deborah A. Mills, along with the requisite two cats. Contact Daniel at www.DanielARabuzzi.com.