Backup | 
| Author: Jim Butcher Creator: Mike Mignola Publisher: Subterranean Category: Book
List Price: $20.00 Buy New: $12.85 You Save: $7.15 (36%)
New (13) Used (4) from $12.85
Avg. Customer Rating: 47 reviews Sales Rank: 770
Media: Hardcover Edition: Deluxe Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 72 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5 x 0.7
ISBN: 1596061820 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9781596061828
Publication Date: October 31, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new book! Delivered direct from our US warehouse by Expedited (4-7 days) or Standard (usually 10-14 days but can be longer). Expedited shipping recommended for speedier delivery. Over 1 million satisfied customers
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Product Description Let's get something clear right up front.
I'm not Harry Dresden.
Harry's a wizard. A genuine, honest-to-goodness wizard. He's Gandalf on crack and an IV of Red Bull, with a big leather coat and a .44 revolver in his pocket. He'll spit in the eye of gods and demons alike if he thinks it needs to be done, and to hell with the consequences--and yet somehow my little brother manages to remain a decent human being.
I'll be damned if I know how.
But then, I'll be damned regardless. My name is Thomas Raith, and I'm a monster.
So begins "Backup," a twelve thousand word novelette set in Jim Butcher s ultra-popular Dresden Files series. This time Harry's in trouble he knows nothing about, and it's up to his big brother Thomas to track him down and solve those little life-threatening difficulties without his little brother even noticing.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 42 more reviews...
Excellent December 2, 2008 In this novelette you learn that Thomas is just as much of a smarty pants as Dresden, as if you didn't know already, I mean they are related.
Awesome read. Very entertaining.
Well done--now I want a Thomas Raith series, please December 1, 2008 I've been a fan of the Dresden Files, both in book and television, since the beginning. I knew what that I was purchasing a 72 page short story with Mike Mignola (Baltimore, etc) illustrations up front, so there's no disappointment in length or format.
The story's brief. Harry Dresden's in trouble with the Stygian Sisterhood and he doesn't know it. Worse, his big brother Thomas can't tell him because it would reveal his own involvement in the Oblivion Wars. So, he goes undercover to prevent Chicago's only wizard PI from getting into trouble.
I've loved Thomas from the beginning and am delighted to see him get his own space in the Dresden Files stories. He's got a lot of humor and I think a lot of humanity for a 'monster.'
In my opinion, this is a book with a fairly focused range of appeal. Fans of Butcher and Mignola will want to grab up this lovely illustrated volume. The one 'nit' I'd pick is I wish there was just a bit more backstory so Butcher could use this book as more of an entree to the Thomas Raith stories.
Rebecca Kyle, December 2008
I'd Like to Read More... November 28, 2008 The story of Dresden's vampire brother, Thomas, is well written and a very good story. Yes, Thomas is a monster that feeds on the life force of others. Blah, blah, blah. The story is good and I would like to read more about this character.
The downside is that it is a SUPER QUICK read at 70 pages. Don't take this on a long flight thinking its going to keep you entertained. This could easily be read in an hour.
Nicely done novelette November 27, 2008 A nice story in the Dresden world. It was refreshing to see the same world from another perspective - to see how things that are known and used in all the books are totally unknown to Thomas. The comments about the tidiness and cleanliness of Harry's place and about the skull were hilarious. I would love to see more stories about the Oblivion War in the series - in short stories or in the novels. The story itself was solid enough - a bit thinner in the creation of the characters than a novel but you cannot do much more in 12 000 words. And here is where my only complaint comes: I would have given the book 5 stars if not for a small glitch: what is the target reader for it.
The story relies too heavy on back stories and even though the relevant parts are explained in short, a newcomer to the world will loose at least half of the message and meaning of the book - the small irrelevant for the story details which make this novelette a really nice read... The story would be clear -- the author did a great job with the back story but there was no way to add all of it. But most of the characters sounded too thin without the story behind them. I doubt that the goal had ever been to attract new readers with this story...
At the same time there was a bit too much back story which in some places were it was not needed (why the two brothers have the same pentacle amulet for example - if you do not know this, you are missing the whole story that fills the blank in the novelette). I do not mind reminders - I am reading way too many series so reminders are good... but they somehow felt a bit too much here.
As for the price of the book (which almost everyone complained about) - it is a normal price for a novelette/novella from Subterranean. This is what they do in the last few years so at the moment I saw the publisher name, I knew that this cannot be a novel. And the author's site was clearly saying what this will be (as was the publisher one). Amazon are well known for making mistakes in their descriptions... so I never rely on them only to tell me what a book will be...
In short: If you like the world and you can spend the money, get the story. If you do not feel that you want to pay that kind of money for such a short story - don't. Sooner or later it will get collected somewhere.
SHORTEST BOOK EVER November 27, 2008 Okay, I loved this book, I did. Except it felt like I opened it, read the first page...and I was done. Just like that. It was kind of disappointing. The pictures were okay, but they felt a little like space-fillers to stretch the book out into something a bit bigger-looking. Not that it would have looked that much thinner without them. The plot itself was boring, except for the bit with the Venatori..and I won't say more so as not to ruin it for people who haven't read it. I guess it was so as to fit within his 80 page quota, but it's just wrong to give perfect storylines to one character and then sort of wave an all new approach to the Dresden Files off. All in all, it was pretty disappointing. I'm not sorry it's part of my Dresden collection, but the next Dresden Files book should be better.
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