The Journey of Cratus, The Last Titan
An autobiography of Cratus's life, clandestinely disguised as a fictional account.
It covers the events of his most recent life focused largely in two parts, his birth and life in Ottoman Greece in the years leading up to the Greek Revolution, the first about his nearly centuries long journey through the Dreaming into the Deep Dreaming to find the Pool of Counted Sorrows and eventually getting his Lightning Bolt.
Followed by his lull in New York, rising tensions of the Arcadian return, the Selkie getting murdered on the Night of Iron Knives and the war up to its conclusion.
It's a very descriptive narrative, Cratus writes very much unlike how he speaks. It has a lot of vivid description and prose mixed.
The art of the cover is of a young Greek man who has the statue of the Titan, Cratus, looming over him made of stone gripping the lightning bolt tightly.
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Public Reaction
While nominated for a Hugo Award, it did not win.
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