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Amberlough: Book 1 in the Amberlough Dossier Paperback – 13 Feb. 2018

4.2 out of 5 stars 263 ratings

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A double-agent sacrifices all his ideals in order to save his smuggler lover before a government coup takes over their decadent city in Lara Elena Donnelly's glam spy thriller debut, now a Nebula finalist for Best Novel!

"Exploring the roots of hatred, nationalism, and fascism, while at the same time celebrating the diversity, love, romance, fashion, and joy the world is capable of producing." --Bookriot

In Amberlough, amidst rising political tensions, three lives become intertwined with the fate of the city itself.

The Smuggler: By day, Aristide Makricosta is the emcee for Amberlough City's top nightclub. By night, he moves drugs and refugees under the noses of crooked cops.

The Spy: Covert agent Cyril DePaul thinks he's good at keeping secrets, but after a disastrous mission abroad, he makes a dangerous choice to protect himself...and hopefully Aristide too.

The Dancer: Streetwise Cordelia Lehane, burlesque performer at the Bumble Bee Cabaret and Aristide's runner, could be the key to Cyril's plans--if she can be trusted.

As the twinkling marquees lights yield to the rising flames of a fascist revolution, these three will struggle to survive using whatever means -- and people -- necessary. Including each other.

"James Bond by way of Oscar Wilde." --Holly Black

"Sparkling with slang, full of riotous characters, and dripping with intrigue, Amberlough is a dazzling romp through a tumultuous, ravishing world." --Robert Jackson Bennett, winner of the Shirley Jackson Award and the Edgar Award

"Astonishing first novel!" --World Fantasy Award-winning author Ellen Kushner

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Review

"James Bond by way of Oscar Wilde." --Holly Black

"Donnelly blends romance and tragedy, evoking gilded-age glamour and the thrill of a spy adventure, in this impressive debut. As heartbreaking as it is satisfying." -Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Donnelly's striking debut brings a complex world of politics, espionage, and cabaret life to full vision. The emotional journeys of the characters as they struggle to survive in a society under siege by dark forces will strike a chord with readers as they race to the story's conclusion." --Library Journal, starred review, Debut of the Month

"A tightly woven and diverse cast of spies, criminals, cabaret bohemians, and lovers struggles to save what matters to each of them against a tide of rising fascism and violence in Donnelly's debut novel, set in a vaguely 1920s milieu....A sense of inevitable loss and futility permeates this rich drama. The fascists may never be defeated but only escaped--if the characters are willing to abandon the people they love. That dilemma will haunt them, as it haunts the reader." --Kirkus Reviews

"Amberlough grabbed me from the first page. It is beautiful, all too real, and full of pain. Read it. It will change you." --Hugo Award-winning author Mary Robinette Kowal

"An astonishing first novel!" --World Fantasy Award-winning author Ellen Kushner

"Sparkling with slang, full of riotous characters, and dripping with intrigue, Amberlough is a dazzling romp through a tumultuous, ravishing world." --Robert Jackson Bennett, winner of the Shirley Jackson Award and the Edgar Award

"It's a terrific novel. Very Evelyn Waugh meets The Sandbaggers." --John Chu, Hugo-award winning author

"A peach softens and grows sweeter until it reaches a fragile state, lasting only about six hours, during which it's actually better than perfect--and then it goes off, it's gone, it's through. In Amberlough Donnelly takes us to a city and culture just tipping from this pluperfect moment. What a rich and melancholy book; so tragic, so gay!" --Kai Ashante Wilson, author of Sorcerer of the Wildeeps and the Nebula & World Fantasy finalist for "The Devil in America"

"This is the book we need right now.
Amberlough is a gorgeous, crucial reminder that even when the Fascists take over, people will fight back - no matter how flawed or frightened or damaged they might be, or how much they risk by doing so." --Sam J. Miller, finalist for the Nebula, World Fantasy, and Theodore Sturgeon Awards and winner of the Shirley Jackson Award

"Amberlough offers a sharp, lush, sensual espionage Cabaret, a Weimar world of lovers, criminals and spies all floating toward the fire." --Max Gladstone, LAMBDA Literary Award finalist

"Intrigue and passions intertwine in Amberlough - A city on the edge of political upheaval, glittering with decadence and riddled with spies! Be careful or you too will be lost in the whirl of the kind of glamour familiar in 1930s Shanghai or Weimar-era Berlin. Donnelley's debut is powerfully seductive and wrenching." --Fran Wilde, author of Updraft

"A glittering cabaret of a novel, with show-stopping language on every page." --Lev AC Rosen, author of Depth

"Holy cow--this book is sharp, queer, sexy, and positively eviscerating. It's Cabaret meets spy novel in a lushly imagined fictional city, and a terrifyingly topical tale of fascism's rise. It's a brilliantly realized gut-punch. Highly recommended!" --James L. Sutter, co-creator of the Pathfinder RPG series

"Lust and betrayal, intrigue and treachery, feints within feints within feints--Amberlough will keep readers up late into the night. I look forward to more adventures from Lara Elena Donnelly." --D.B. Jackson, author of the Thieftaker Chronicles

"Amberlough is the stiletto-sharp tale of an intelligence agent caught between corrupt handlers, a rising fascist regime, and his doomed passion for the notorious star of a sizzling underworld nightclub. Sexy and suspenseful, with characters who play for keeps, Donnelly's debut novel mixes secrets, spying, and outlawed love like a perfectly made cocktail... one that seduces before hitting you with an unforgettable kick." --A.M. Dellamonica, LAMBDA Literary Award finalist for Child of a Hidden Sea

"Weirdly elegant, wholly engaging, Donnelly's Amberlough is a richly visualized and genuinely fascinating novel. I couldn't put it down." --Josh Lanyon, author of the Adrien English Mysteries, and USA Book News Award for GLBT Fiction and the Eppie Award winner

"If you put David Bowie, China Mieville, and Shakespeare in Love into a blender, you might get something as rich and frothy as Amberlough. An intricate tale of society where nothing is as it seems, and where the political is all-too-personal." --Cecilia Tan, author of The Struck by Lightning series

About the Author

LARA ELENA DONNELLY is a graduate of the Alpha and Clarion writing workshops. Her fiction won the Dell Magazine Award for Undergraduate Excellence in Science Fiction and Fantasy and she has been published in Icarus, Strange Horizons, Grim Corps, and Mythic Delirium. Donnelly has worked as professional fire performer, belly dancer, and is knowledgeable in aerial acrobatics and burlesque. Amberlough is her debut novel.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tor Trade
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 13 Feb. 2018
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Reprint
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 416 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0765383829
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0765383822
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 363 g
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.84 x 2.67 x 20.96 cm
  • Book 1 of 3 ‏ : ‎ Amberlough Dossier
  • Customer reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 263 ratings

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Lara Elena Donnelly
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Lara Elena Donnelly is the author of the Nebula, Lambda, and Locus-nominated trilogy The Amberlough Dossier, as well as short fiction and poetry appearing in venues including Strange Horizons, Escape Pod, Nightmare, and Uncanny.

Lara has taught in the MFA program at Sarah Lawrence College, as well as the Catapult Workshop in New York. She is a graduate of the Clarion and Alpha writers’ workshops, and has served as on-site staff at the latter, mentoring amazing teens who will someday take over the world of SFF.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
263 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book's story engaging, with one describing it as a wonderful start to a series. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its beauty and character development.

4 customers mention ‘Story quality’4 positive0 negative

Customers find the story quality of the book amazing, with one customer describing it as a wonderful start to a series.

"...It's such a good story I kept wondering what they were all doing after I finished it. A great read." Read more

"...Okay breath! Just so this novel was amazing I started it on Tuesday and finished it this morning...." Read more

"A really good first novel. I had great fun reading it...." Read more

"Wonderful start to a series!..." Read more

4 customers mention ‘Value for time’4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book worth their time and consider it a great read, with one customer noting that the story rewards the effort.

"...A great read." Read more

"...on in Amberlough so be prepared to play catch up but the story rewards the effort. I look forward to the sequel." Read more

"A tough read but a great book. Looking fwd to the sequels — after sth lighter first..." Read more

"Worth your time!..." Read more

3 customers mention ‘Beauty’3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book beautiful, with one describing it as vibrant.

"This book is beautiful and sexy and I totally adored the characters...." Read more

"...It is, however, a wonderful look at a flawed beauty, just as it comes to an inevitable end...." Read more

"...The city and it inhabitants leap off the page, bustling and vibrant from the government offices to the Bumble Bee cabaret...." Read more

3 customers mention ‘Character development’3 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book.

"This book is beautiful and sexy and I totally adored the characters...." Read more

"...one of my favourite books of 2017 is a testament to Donnelly’s fabulous characters and writing...." Read more

"Amberlough is an amazing spy adventure brimmed with exciting and unique characters, with the city being the stand out star...." Read more

Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 February 2017
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    This book is beautiful and sexy and I totally adored the characters. It's such a good story I kept wondering what they were all doing after I finished it. A great read.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 29 November 2020
    Format: Paperback
    I managed to pick Amberlough up in a bargain omnibus e-book edition of that and its sequels recently, since it's the first of a trilogy. I've only read the first one but will happily get back to the other two at some point in the near future, once I've cleared out a little more of my TBR pile.

    Amberlough is one of those fantasy novels that is not really a fantasy novel, since there's not particularly anything 'fantastic' about it in terms of its setting - no magic, for example. What it is, instead, is very similar to Weimar Germany, with a country which is in danger of being taken over by extremists who not only want to institute their form of autocratic government but who hate what they see as the decadence of the eponymous city.

    Within that setting, our protagonists are on either side of the law - one an intelligence agent and the other a black market boss and performer - and when we first meet them they're clearly involved in a relationship. When Cyril, the spy, ends up getting in too deep on a mission and sees that the people he's been sent to infiltrate know all about him and his relationships, he hatches a plot to rescue himself and his lover from what he sees as an inevitable future danger for both of them. Meanwhile Ari is trying to run his business but make plans of his own, with the lack of communication between the two men leading inevitably to both sets of plans faltering and bad things happening to the people around them.

    There's a small cliffhanger at the end of the book, though the fact it's book 1 of a trilogy makes me fairly confident that the two will be reunited again at some point. I look forward to seeing where this author takes both the overall storyline and the very realistic feeling relationship between Cyril and Ari.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 March 2021
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    I've been exclusively reading queer fiction this year, to raise my mood and this is not the queer joy I had been looking for.

    It is, however, a wonderful look at a flawed beauty, just as it comes to an inevitable end.

    Several reviews and blurbs mention John le Carré and Cabaret, both of which are apt comparators. Our three protagonists are a spy with trauma in his past; his lover, a smuggler and leading man / drag queen at the titular city's hottest club; and his leading lady, a awesome brassy broad.

    The creeping fascism coming to destroy and reshape their city isn't subtle and all three are doing the best they can with the shitty hands available to them. It's heartbreaking at so many points and needs a CONTENT NOTE for on-page torture and murder. Donnelly did an excellent job at stripping me raw yet leaving me some hope, even as so much and so many are lost.

    I'm definitely looking forward to reading both sequels. But maybe after reading something lighter first.

    (And you should definitely read the reviews by Seth Dickinson and "Optimist ♰King's Wench♰")
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 September 2019
    Format: Paperback
    A number of reviewers thought this fabulous, but I didn’t quite. It is set in a sort of fictional Central Europe in the ‘30s and concerns the rise of a Nazi-like party, and a small group of interconnected people who either collaborate or fight it. The author has clearly watched ‘Cabaret’ a lot: much of the action takes place around a Berlin-style nightclub, and concerns its performers and clients. I suspect they have also read some historical spy fiction – there is little actual spying but there is a recognisable tone. The writing is good – not as good as some have claimed, I think, but more than okay. Characterisation is good, sometimes excellent. One of the best features of the book is its depiction of a ‘scandalous’ and interesting diversity, its milieu mixing gay and straight, male and female, different ethnicities, in implicit opposition to the buttoned-up ideology of the Nazi types.

    For all that, it is somehow a bit unsatisfying. Its alternate world isn’t interesting of itself, is just a fantasised simplification of a certain moment of European history: all its detail, its coffees and newspapers and trams, is a version of what we already know from films. Yet the story lacks a certain urgency precisely because it isn’t set historically, its events not getting that extra bump from reality. Ultimately, it is left to characters to carry the weight of the book, and while they are interesting, that isn’t enough. The whole way through I felt I *should* have been enjoying it more, and when I got to the end I didn’t have an urge to buy the second book in the series.

    In an ideal world I would probably give this three and a half stars, just for being quite smart in an ocean of stupid. Here, I am giving it three because four stars would give the wrong impression. Finally, it WAS a little unsatisfying, offering neither the pleasures of historical fiction nor of alternative history, and that did matter.
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  • Alysson Oliveira
    5.0 out of 5 stars A política, assim como a vida, é um cabaré
    Reviewed in Brazil on 21 September 2017
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    É raro que um romance se assuma tão político como AMBERLOUGH, livro de estreia da americana Lara Elena Donnelly. E a autora faz isso logo de cara, e o que é mais raro e arriscado é que ela está interessada nas maquinações políticas – não necessariamente feitas apenas por políticos – e as consequências disso tudo. Poderia resultar em algo confuso, panfletário e superficial – ainda mais que ela adiciona o elemento de fantasia na trama – mas nas mãos da autora, a intriga, a narrativa e os personagens se resolvem tão bem que o resultado é instigante.

    Amberlough é tipo o filme Cabaré mas com fantasia junto. O cenário é o da ascensão de um Partido Único (The One State Party, e seus membros são chamados de Ospies), numa cidade industrial e decadente pautada por sua vida noturna extravagante. Mas o partido, que é conservador, quer tomar o poder no país todo, e para isso precisam destruir o sistema político mais libertário e progressista da cidade de Amberlough. Cyril DePaul talvez seja a pessoa certa para essa maquinação. Agente especial, frágil e complicado, ele é pego pelo partido quando o investigava, e deverá trair seus superiores ou morre.

    Cyril acaba de destruir sua cidade, mas tenta preservar o homem que ama, Aristide Makricosta – uma figura tão fascinante e exótica quanto seu nome, que trabalha no Bumble Bee Cabaret. Ele contrata uma colega de trabalho, Cordelia Lehane, para ser mediadora da relação entre os dois e se fingir de namorada de Cyril, preservando a vida dele, já que os Ospies são homofóbicos e xenofóbicos, e, para eles, o lugar de uma mulher é em casa.

    Com esses elementos, a escritora cria uma narrativa que pulsa em sua investigação de interesses e jogos políticos explorando as condições de possibilidades da ascensão de um regime fascista. Se muito lembra a Berlim dos anos de 1920, o romance também ecoa muito do nosso presente. Pessoas bem intencionadas perdem o controle de suas ações e têm de lidar com as consequências.

    A clareza com que a autora tem das maquinações políticas dentro de seu romance permite investigar como essas dinâmicas se dão num nível público e como interferem no nível privado da vida das personagens. Questão de gênero é uma das que mais interessam à autora. Fora isso, ela é capaz de evocar uma era com precisão e criar um romance repleto de imagens belas e/ou fortes que grita para ser transformado numa série que permita o capturar com a riqueza de detalhes que traz. Esse é o primeiro livro de uma trilogia, e a escritora anunciou em seu site que o próximo deve ser lançado em meados do próximo ano.
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  • Megan
    5.0 out of 5 stars LUSH AND EXCITING
    Reviewed in the United States on 29 July 2017
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    This book begins with two quotes. One from Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, and the other from Cabaret. And that sums Amberlough up pretty much perfectly. Half spy thriller, half ode to the stage, all completely amazing.

    Amberlough is a vaguely 1920s European inspired city state surrounded by a collection of vaguely European inspired city states. One of the states has come over a bit fascist and the book revolves around this fascist party, the "Ospies," rising to power in Amberlough.

    They're a rigidly conservative bunch, which does not bode well for our three protagonists. Cordelia and Aristide headline at the Bee, basically the Moulin Rouge of Amberlough, and Cyril is a government spy. Oh, Aristide is also a smuggler. Oh, and Cyril and Aristide are also having an affair. Cryil knows Ari is a smuggler and Ari knows Cyril is government but mostly they just ignore it.

    So in other words three of them are everything the Ospies hate, which already is probably making you think the book will be about Ari, Cyril and Cordelia vs. the Ospies. But Amberlough is not that kind of book. Mostly it's about the awful, inevitable rise to power of the Ospies and how the city slowly loses its colour under their grip. It's not so much about Aristide and Cyril fighting them as it is the two of them scrambling to find organise papers and passage out of the increasingly hostile city. It's about Cordelia's transformation from fun party girl to something else entirely.

    It's also a book without magic. Which is actually one of my favourite little fantasy niches; books set in completely secondary worlds but with no other fantastical elements. I like knowing for certain what the "rules" are but still have the fun of slowly piecing together a new world. And what a fun world it was to piece together! The city of Amberlough lives and breathes and it physiclly hurt me to watch her suffer under a fascist regime.

    The book is also brought to live by the prose and use of language. Donnelly basically created an entire language of slang with she almost rarely explains but at the same time is never confusing. It all makes perfect sense in context and it actually took me a good chunk of the book to realise it wasn't slang I already knew.

    The characters are fantastic, especially Aristede. The book really uses the three pov characters to explore the idea of survivial, and what lengths should a person go to to survive; basically is surviving at any cost selfish? And while where at it let's also look at how selfish love can be too.

    My only real complaint with the book is that I went in expecting a standalone. And while is does technically work as one, it was clearly written with a sequel in mind (and the author just announced its going to be a trilogy now) which is ultimately a good thing because the ending would have a been a real gut punch if that was it, but it's annoying to have to wait for any kind of real resolution.
  • Colleen Mulhall
    5.0 out of 5 stars DELICIOUS
    Reviewed in Canada on 27 June 2019
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    I need to re-read this book because it was so good. Do you want to know how words work? READ THIS BOOK.
  • MJ Walters
    4.0 out of 5 stars A very different fantasy
    Reviewed in the United States on 11 May 2018
    Format: Kindle EditionVerified Purchase
    In spite of my fascination for Weimar Berlin, I came very close to bailing on Amberlough early on.  It's a fantasy take on Germany in the 1930s, and the rise of fascism, but in spite of the familiar frame, the info dumps of names and places were so dense in the first 50 pages, that I found myself reading without a lot of comprehension. "Who is that again?" I'd wonder, knowing that to try to go back and figure it out would probably be a lost cause.

    Probably because I love the era so much, I persisted, and it did begin to pay off after that rocky beginning. I still had moments when I wasn't sure what was being discussed, but I found that I had gained the context through which I could figure it out. If that sounds like a lot of work... well it might be for some, though in the end, I didn't feel as if it was because I was enjoying the story by then, and the characters who had grown on me as I tried to sort out who they were and what they were up to.

    At the bottom it's a love story between two very different men who sometimes don't even seem to like each other very much, set in an increasingly repressive social order in which a Nazi-like government -- a group called "Ospies," short for One State Party -- is quickly seizing power through rigged elections and violence. It's also the story of a young woman who is making her way through the underside of this society, growing increasingly angry and willing to do whatever she needs to do to monkey-wrench the Ospies' plans. They're all just people, fallible, sometimes cruel or foolish, but even when you don't like them much, you care about what happens to them.

    In spite of a bit of unevenness in the narrative, the aforementioned info dumps, and a point about two-thirds of the way through where it drags a bit, it's still a compelling read if you give it a chance. But as it's the first book of a trilogy, you will find things unresolved at the end. I plan to pick up the second volume as soon as it's available, so color me sold on the universe and the characters.
  • J Bradford
    4.0 out of 5 stars very engaging
    Reviewed in Canada on 23 August 2018
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Still reading it, but I'm enjoying it - very engaging!