THE DESTROYER OF WORLDS by Matt Ruff in Stock and Shipping

29th Dec 2024

The Destroyer of Worlds by Matt Ruff

Preorders for the signed limited edition of The Destroyer of Worlds by Matt Ruff have shipped, and we still have copies available. As you’ll see below, the book received great reviews from Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and Kirkus.

Our edition includes a full-color wraparound dust jacket, black-and-white endsheets, and nine black-and-white interior illustrations by David Palumbo. In addition, the interior design contains two columns per page, in homage to the pulps

About the Book:

In his novel Lovecraft Country, the basis for the celebrated HBO series, Matt Ruff introduced us to the Turners, a black family living in 1950s Chicago, and their twin struggles against the occult Order of the Ancient Dawn and the more mundane terrors of Jim Crow-era racism. Now, in The Destroyer of Worlds, Ruff continues the story and explores the meaning of death, the hold of the past on the present, and the power of hope in the face of uncertainty.

It is the summer of 1957. Korean War veteran Atticus Turner and his father, Montrose, travel to North Carolina to retrace their ancestor’s escape from slavery into the Great Dismal Swamp. But an encounter with an old nemesis turns their historical renactment into a life-and-death pursuit.

Back in Chicago, Atticus’s uncle George fights for his own life. Diagnosed with cancer, he strikes a devil’s bargain with the ghost of Hiram Winthrop, who promises a miracle cure—but to receive it, George will first have to bring Winthrop back from the dead.

Meanwhile, Atticus’s fifteen-year-old cousin Horace, reeling from the killing of a close friend, joins his mother, Hippolyta, and her friend Letitia Dandridge on a research trip to Nevada for The Safe Negro Travel Guide. But Hippolyta has a secret—and far more dangerous—agenda that will take her and Horace to the far end of the universe and bring a new threat home to Letitia’s doorstep.

Hippolyta isn’t the only one keeping secrets. Letitia’s sister, Ruby, has been leading a double life as her white alter ego, Hillary Hyde. Now, the supply of magic potion she needs to transform herself is running out, and a surprise visitor throws her already tenuous situation into complete chaos.

All these troubles are eclipsed by the return of Caleb Braithwhite. Stripped of his magic at the end of Lovecraft Country, he’s found a way back into power and is ready to pick up where he left off. But first he’s got a score to settle…

Features Include:

  • Oversized 7 x 10 trim size
  • Printed on 70# Husky in two colors
  • Interior design with two columns per page, in homage to the pulps
  • A Full-color wraparound dust jacket
  • Black-and-white endsheet illustration
  • Nine interior black-and-white illustrations

The Lettered Edition will include the following features:

  • Hand bound in leather and cloth;
  • Black-and-white endsheet illustration, printed on Mohawk paper;
  • Stamped with three colors of foil;
  • The dust jacket art from the signed limited edition will be inserted as a gatefold in the book proper;
  • Housed in a custom traycase;

Lettered: 26 signed copies, specially bound, housed in a custom traycase: $850

Limited: 400 signed numbered hardcover copies: $175

From Publishers Weekly:

“Ruff’s sequel to 2016’s Lovecraft Country delivers another virtuoso blend of horror, action, and humor. It’s now 1957 and Ruff’s African American protagonists are still trying to survive and build meaningful lives in a racist country, a challenge complicated by their discovery of the existence of other worlds and people with magic powers… Ruff makes the most of his inventive concept and his care in crafting memorable characters means that the fates of even minor cast members make an impact. Fans will find this a worthy sequel.”

From Library Journal:

“Readers can expect the same genre-blending, dark humor, and creepy atmosphere from the first book, but this time Ruff presents each character and their compelling journey in alternating chapters. As the narratives overlap and come together, readers will be held captive until the thrilling conclusion. This series excels in how it continues to draw parallels between its pulpy plot and the entire civil rights movement. The cosmic dilemmas make for a great read, but the unease is amplified by readers’ knowledge that these Black characters are about to be thrust into a very real fight for freedom.”

From Kirkus:

“Be warned: This is a follow-up to Lovecraft Country, the 2016 novel, not the HBO adaptation, so what you saw on TV won’t help much here. But there’s still outrageous trickery, sharp period detail, and chilling perils… Where its predecessor was constructed of separate stories focusing on different family members, this book operates with more interwoven narratives that Ruff manages to yoke together into one ripping yarn with shocks and surprises at every turn.”