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Sean Cordry
Author
Kokopelli's Thunder: Fall of the Anasazi
A legendary Native American character, his son, and their pterodactyl must stop a Mayan witch from acquiring the ultimate power. Featuring dark magic, gritty action, and a complex plot, this genre-bending story flashes back and forth between the 12th century and the 20th century revealing the secret of how an entire civilization vanished over night. It is 1938 in New Mexico's Chaco Canyon as Zed Moonhawk helps train a group of Civilian Conservation Corpsmen who are excavating and rebuilding Anasazi ruins. Moonhawk is exceptionally skilled at his masonry work--as well he should be. After all, he was there when the massive structures were erected eight hundred years earlier. Zed Moonhawk is the legendary figure known as Kokopelli. Cursed with eternal life, Zed and his twelve-year-old son, Turq, are the last of the Anasazi. For centuries, their people dominated the southwestern landscape with the help of the last pteradons on the planet--until the evil Mayan witch Rooshth appeared and virtually erased the Ancient Ones from history. But now she is back and still obsessed with the powerful magic embodied in a sacred Anasazi stone tablet. Rooshth wants to raise her son from the dead, a dark desire that refuels the final battle in a centuries-old war between Zed and Rooshth.
Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

In this debut fantasy novel, vengeance drives a deathless witch and her cursed son across the ages in search of themissing pieces of a magical tablet.

Deftly seesawing between pre-Columbian America and 1938 New Mexico, Cordry’s action-packed thrill ride boasts anextraordinary universe populated with everything from mighty pterodactyllike creatures to sexually aggressive desertnymphs (“ ‘Say my name again,’ she pleaded, thrusting shoulders forward to push her breasts together. ‘I like it whenyou say my name’ ”). The trouble starts when a woman named Rooshth gives birth to a strange, frightening demon childthat spooks the residents of her tribal village to their cores. Convinced that the child is bad news, the village eldersdecide to excise the boy from their midst with a cleansing infanticide. It’s the wrong move, however, as Rooshth (alsoknown as “Lonely Mother”) isn’t the kind of woman to let something like that happen. Defying the gods themselves, sheproceeds to murder everyone involved in the plot. Escaping north, she’s determined to find the cure for her infant son’soffensive affliction. In this enchanted world, however, her quest begins to stretch out across eons. Cordry’s strong,vigorously told narrative melds this ancient world with that of the 20th century, where two devoted pals unknowinglyhold the key to Lonely Mother’s odyssey. The author parallels this central drama with the story of the “quetz’al”—giantreptilian flyers who share an uneasy bond with the people of New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon. Tribesmen, granteddominion over the terrible creatures by the gods, use them as the ultimate air force against any and all enemies. But whena small band of quetz’al decides to cap off a feast of bison with human flesh, they inadvertently cross paths with Rooshthand son, and all hell breaks loose. Overall, this unusual mix of elements results in a highly imaginative action-adventureyarn featuring vivid, gory action scenes (“Unaware of the blood pouring from the back of his skull, he stood on hisknees, wobbly and clutching his chest”).

A dark, engaging fantasy tale.

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