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Michael Cisco

Reviewed by
Paul Charles Smith
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Michael Cisco Michael Cisco earned a PhD in English literature from New York University. His first novel, The Divinity Student, received the International Horror Writers Guild Award for best first novel. His nonfiction appears in reference books published by Chelsea House and the Gale Group. He lives in New York City. Read excerpts of his novels at Michael Cisco's website.



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The San Veneficio Canon — (1999) Publisher: Struck by lightning, resurrected, cut open, and stuffed full of arcane documents, the Divinity Student is sent to the desert city of San Veneficio to reconstruct the Lost Catalog of Unknown Words. He learns to pick the brains of corpses and gradually sacrifices his sanity on the altar of a dubious mission of espionage. Without ever understanding his own reasons, he moves toward destruction with steely determination. Eventually he find himself reduced to a walker between worlds — a creature neither of flesh nor spirit, stuffed with paper and preserved with formaldehyde — a zombie of his own devising. The line twixt clairvoyance and madness is thinner than a razor blade. In 1999, The Divinity Student captured the attention of fans of dark fantasy everywhere, eventually winning the International Horror Guild Award for best first novel. Now, The Divinity Student has been paired with its sequel, The Golem, for a must-have book — The San Veneficio Canon. Michael Cisco has created a city and a character that will live in the reader's imagination long after this book has been read...


The Divinity Student
The Divinity Student paired
with its sequel, The Golem

Other Novels: Michael Cisco The Tyrant

The Tyrant
— (2003) Publisher: A new novel from Michael Cisco, the International Horror Writer's Guild Award for Best First Novel of 1999. "Michael Cisco's works immerse the reader in worlds that are not simply dreamlike in the quality of their imagination but somehow manage to capture and convey the power of the dream itself. The Tyrant is his masterpiece." ~ Thomas Ligotti


The Traitor — (2007) Publisher: "Michael Cisco's The Traitor is a sinister, hilarious, and profound story, hallucinatory in its language magic... Lovers of dark fantasy will find something utterly unique and compelling here." ~ Jeffrey Ford


fantasy book reviews Michael Cisco The TraitorThe Traitor

A good friend of mine who has excellent taste recommended The Traitor to me. I had heard of Michael Cisco, mostly through people like Jeff Vandermeer and Jeffrey Ford saying nice things about his work, but until now I hadn’t read any of his novels. With strong recommendations from three people who opinions I rate highly I expected quite a lot, and I have to admit I wasn’t disappointed.

The Traitor is written as a first person narrative by Nophtha, the traitor of the title, as he awaits death in his jail cell convicted of acts of treason. Noticed by his uncle as a child as a blank, he is initiated as a spirit eater, a shunned and despised part of society who eats the spirits of the dead by drawing them into themselves to prevent the disease and chaos that occurs if too many are left free. He becomes one of the most important spirit eaters in the capital, more out of chance than actual ambition, and is forced by the authorities to hunt down Wite, a rogue soul burner, but when they meet he abandons his life and betrays his people to follow Wite.

The account we are given is supposed to be about Wite, our protagonist being told to spread his word, and his dying writings are his own testament to the impossible things he has seen Wite do, his miracles. He tries to make it as impersonal as possible, as he tells us early on it isn’t supposed to be about him, and his own name doesn’t even feature in the novel until almost two thirds of the way through. He even betrays himself though, as he can’t help but talk about himself throughout the narrative. He tells us he will not tell us about his family, or his wife, or his feelings towards Wite’s cousin, but in turn he tells us about all of these things. Despite this, Nophtha comes across as a character with almost no sense of self, and it is no surprise that he is drawn to someone like Wite who has no qualms at all about imposing his will on others, even to the point of taking their lives.

At times Cisco chooses style over sense, so the book can be difficult to follow leading to comparisons with writers like Gene Wolfe, but if there are comparisons it is in the way that both writers are unwilling to accept tradition lines between “literary fiction” and “genre fiction”. Like Wolfe, Cisco is obtuse in order to force the reader to draw his own conclusions about the reliability of Nophtha’s testimony. It can be heavy going at times, but like a lot of good writing that is not straightforward, it rewards hard work in trying to find our own sense of meaning instead of being force-fed by the author.

The Traitor is a wonderfully dark tale of bleak morality, betrayal, fanaticism, and disdain for society and humanity in general. Even though it is dark, it is also very funny at times as most of the characters that Nophtha meets or associates with tend to be society’s outsiders or misfits. One of my favourite books of the nearly forty I have already read this year, and both a novel and writer deserving of more wider read. Easy to recommend to those who don’t mind a book that requires you to think for yourself every now and then. —Paul Charles Smith 
FanLit thanks Paul Charles Smith from Empty Your Heart of Its Mortal Dream for contributing this guest review.


Michael Cisco Secret HoursSecret Hours — (2007) Publisher: 134 pp. Introduction by Robert M. Price. 14 short stories, some horrific, some fantastic, some uncategorizeable, but all haunting and unsettling. Some stories include a brief introduction by the author. The collection consists of several Lovecraftian tales: The Chaos Into Time / The Firebrands of Torment / I Will Teach You / The Water Nymphs / What He Chanced To Mould In Play / Translation (which also tips the hat to Arthur Machen and William S. Burroughs); also the remainder of the tales are evocative of Cisco' s own unique haunting style: Two Fragments / The Depredations of Mur / Dr. Bondi's Methods / For No Eyes / He Will Be There (a tribute to THE KING IN YELLOW by Robert W. Chambers, with a nod to Ramsey Campbell) / The Night of the Nights / The Death of Edgar Allan Poe / Ice Age Of Dreams (with varying influences of T.E.D. Klein and Arthur Machen, and dedicated to Thomas Ligotti). Color cover, endpapers and several interior illustrations by Harry O. Morris, and an interior illustration by Jason C. Eckhardt and by Thomas Brown.


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