In the internationally bestselling The Bone Season, Paige Mahoney escaped the brutal penal colony of Sheol I, but now her problems have only just begun: many of the fugitives are still missing and she is the most wanted person in London...
As Scion turns its all-seeing eye on Paige, the mime-lords and mime-queens of the city's gangs are invited to a rare meeting of the Unnatural Assembly. Jaxon Hall and his Seven Seals prepare to take centre stage, but there are bitter fault lines running through the clairvoyant community and dark secrets around every corner...
Then the Rephaim begin crawling out from the shadows. But where is Warden? Paige must keep moving, from Seven Dials to Grub Street to the secret catacombs of Camden, until the fate of the underworld can be decided. Will Paige know who to trust? The hunt for the dreamwalker is on.
Industry Reviews
A riveting page-turner Mail on Sunday The Mime Order picks up a scant half-hour from the end of The Bone Season, thrusting readers back into the world of Paige and a more detailed journey through future London. The novels are hugely imaginative, and the mash-up of sub-genres - part Hunger Games dystopia, part urban fantasy - comes from two formative experiences that Shannon had Independent on Sunday The Mime Order ... is, if anything, more accomplished and imaginative than The Bone Season. I am clearly not the target audience, but, crikey, I'll be second in the queue for Book III ... I'm left wondering where Paige and Shannon will go next. She's dropped hints about Sheol II being in France, and Americans not subscribing yet to the Scion doctrines - is Paige heading to Paris or Washington? Wherever she does go, I will follow Scotland on Sunday At its best The Bone Season was a triumphant blend of Orwellian dystopia and China Mieville nonconformity ... There is enough here to be stuck to the page like a book binder's glue. Shannon's ability to take classic tropes, such as forbidden love and dystopian societies, and give them a well-knuckled twist is to be admired - books one and two have demonstrated that she looks set to become a trailblazer for young talent Independent Shannon's haunting dystopian universe is rich in detail, consistent, suffused with familiar afternotes. Just when the bloodshed seems over the top, she turns to shimmering descriptions of Paige's dangerously illicit tie to Warden. When Paige seems toughest, Shannon reminds us of her empathy for the downtrodden. "Hope is the lifeblood of revolution," Shannon writes. "Without it, we are nothing but ash, waiting for the wind to take us" Like Paige Mahoney, Shannon now has proven staying power. Her fans will be calling for more NPR Books A gripping sequel US Weekly London already has a long history of memorable ne'er-do-wells - Jack the Ripper, anyone? - but author Samantha Shannon adds dark, shady corners and an amazingly rich and unruly underworld to the city in The Mime Order ... The potential for world-building that Shannon showed in Bone Season begins to bear fruit in significant narrative fashion with Mime Order ... If anyone was wondering how Shannon would stretch this story into seven books, the gut punch of the last line in The Mime Order will instead have them on tenterhooks for the next five USA Today Once it gets going, about halfway through, it goes hell-for-leather, all poltergeists and grisly murders and pitched battles in the catacombs of Camden Sunday Times