Amberville (Mollisan Town Quartet Series #1)

Amberville (Mollisan Town Quartet Series #1)

by Tim Davys
Amberville (Mollisan Town Quartet Series #1)

Amberville (Mollisan Town Quartet Series #1)

by Tim Davys

eBook

$4.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

“Audacious . . . [a] giddy thrill.” — Los Angeles Times

 “Weird? Obviously. But oddly gripping and convincing. … Skip that evening Scotch and read this one stone-cold sober—it’s plenty trippy as is.” — Washington Post

Amberville, Tim Davys’s first novel about Mollisan Town and its stuffed animal inhabitants, is both a noir novel with an unusual cast and an utterly original meditation on good and evil. In the words of Brad Meltzer (bestselling author of The Book of Lies), “When you’re tired of run-of-the-mill fiction, it’s time to read Amberville… a mystery that’s completely original.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061853623
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 02/24/2009
Series: Mollisan Town Quartet Series , #1
Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
Sales rank: 1,028,866
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Tim Davys is a pseudonym. He is the author of Amberville, Lanceheim, Tourquai, and Yok, the four books in the Mollisan Town quartet. He lives in Sweden.

Read an Excerpt

Amberville

Chapter One

Early one morning at the end of April there was pounding on the door to Eric Bear and Emma Rabbit's apartment on brick-red Uxbridge Street. The morning rain had let up, the wind had died down, and the sun was shining anew over Mollisan Town.

"Shut up and stop pounding," mumbled Eric Bear to himself, pulling the blanket over his head.

But the blanket was too thin; the pounding on the door echoed painfully inside the bear's head.

It was impossible to fall back asleep.

Yesterday had turned into a late and wet one. It had been the kind of evening when each and every stuffed animal seemed to have decided to go out. The restaurants up in Lanceheim were packed; along bright-violet Pfaffen-dorfer Tor the animals were thronging all the way from the Concert Hall, and the crowding at the bars along mustard-yellow Krünkenhagen was worse than on North Avenue during rush hour. Mammals and reptiles, fish and fowl, imaginary animals and even the occasional insect: all kinds of stuffed animals crowded into Lanceheim.

"Follow me!" Eric cried out when the animals on the sidewalk threatened to divide the group.

There had been five of them. Wolle Toad, Nicholas Cat, and a project leader from the advertising agency Wolle & Wolle whose name Eric didn't know.

But it was Philip Baboon who walked at Eric's side. This evening Baboon was the object of everyone's attention. He represented the shoe company Dot. They had been searching for a new advertising agency for several months, and Wolle & Wolle were on their way to winning the pitch. Now only that last little push was required.

Eric Bear was ready to push.

Eric set his sights on a restaurant which was not too far away. From a distance he saw the neon sign's bold yellow letters which read: "Parrot's Bar & Grill."

"Parrot's," said Eric to Philip Baboon. "Never had a boring moment there."

In fact, Eric Bear had never even heard of the place, and he would most likely never be able to find it again. But the cursive neon letters reminded him of the Art Deco of his childhood, and anyway, up here one restaurant was pretty much like any other.

"Just so there aren't any decadent females at Parrot's," Baboon said, giggling nervously. "I haven't been out in almost twenty years, I don't want to run into any... voluptuaries... the first thing I do."

Philip Baboon was wearing a gray suit, a white shirt, and a dark-blue tie.

Over dinner he had related that his greatest interests were balance sheets, rates of turnover, and the snails he collected on the beach in Hillevie. Baboon still had his briefcase in hand as he walked beside Eric Bear. He would carry it the entire evening, as if it were a life buoy.

It was obvious to everyone that Philip Baboon wanted nothing more than to meet decadent females.

"Voluptuaries?" laughed Eric Bear. "I'm sure there might well be that sort at Parrot's, unfortunately."

Philip Baboon shivered with expectation.

A new series of brutal poundings was heard from the outside door.

Why don't they ring the doorbell, like normal stuffed animals?

Eric Bear turned over in bed. Under the blanket he could smell his own breath. Gin martinis and vodka. Stale gin martinis and vodka. Had he been smoking yesterday? It felt like it on his tongue.

When they'd left Parrot's Bar & Grill—because there hadn't been any females who were sufficiently decadent for Baboon's taste there—they were all thoroughly intoxicated. They ended up at a jazz club. A dark, cellar space which couldn't possibly be in Lanceheim, but rather up in Tourquai.

"I know that we shouldn't talk shop," said Eric Bear.

He had a hard time talking without slurring. He and Baboon were sitting across from each other at a small, round table in a corner of the place. Eric sat on a chair, Baboon was reclining on a hard bench next to the wall. A saxophone was screeching from the stage and maybe someone was sitting on Baboon's lap? It was so dark, it was hard to be sure.

"I know that we shouldn't talk shop, but we're the only ones left, aren't we? You've decided on Wolle and Wolle?"

"On Tuesday," said Baboon.

At least Eric thought that's how he replied.

"Tuesday?"

"But we demand a ceiling," said Baboon.

Or else he said something else. On the stage the saxophone had been joined by a trumpet, and it was impossible to hear what anyone said.

"Is that a panda sitting on your lap, Baboon?" asked Wolle Toad.

Bear didn't know where the toad had appeared from. But Baboon had been found out, and he rose from the bench. The following moment he fell down backwards again. With the panda on top of him.

"I have never touched any panda!" he shouted.

Then Eric knew that Wolle & Wolle would have Dot as a new account.

"I'm coming!"

Eric threw off the blanket and sat up in bed. The bedroom was swaying. The noise from the door was getting louder.

He had a vague recollection that Emma had left the house almost an hour earlier. She rented a studio in the south end of Amberville, down toward Swarwick Park. There she worked as long as the sun was standing in the east, and she liked to get going early in the morning. Eric was slower. More precise, he said.

More vain, she said.

The bear stood up and pulled on the underwear and shirt that were lying on the floor beside the bed. Those were the clothes he'd had on yesterday. They stank of sweat, smoke, and stale booze. With a sigh he went slowly out through the dining room.

The blinds had been drawn in the bedroom, but the sun was sparkling happily from a blue sky through the windows in the living room. The nostrils of Eric's cloth nose expanded and unconsciously his small, round ears moved forward. He dared not even guess who might be at the door; they seldom had uninvited guests. He furrowed his cross-stitched eyebrows and reached for his aching head. At the same time there was an amused curiosity in his small, black-button eyes.

Amberville. Copyright © by Tim Davys. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

What People are Saying About This

Brad Meltzer

“When you’re tired of run-of-the-mill fiction, it’s time to read AMBERVILLE. These are stuffed animals like you’ve never seen: deep, dark, and, somehow, utterly believable. Lucky us—a mystery that’s completely original.”

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews