Fourth Realm Trilogy

The Fourth Realm Trilogy refers to the trilogy of books written by pseudonymous author John Twelve Hawks and published between 2004 (in the UK, 2005 in the US) and 2009. The trilogy has been translated into 25 languages and has sold more than 1.5 million books.[1]

The three novels describe parallel universes, including one controlled by a shadow group called The Brethren using the Vast Machine.[2] The Traveler was a critical success and international bestseller - with the intriguing life of the elusive author increasing reader interest in the books.[3][4] As of February 2010, the identity of John Twelve Hawks has yet to be confirmed.[5] Stand-ins represent Twelve Hawks on book tours, some declaring "I am John Twelve Hawks".[6]

Books

In order of publication:

  • The Traveler, John Twelve Hawks (ISBN 978-0-375-43440-2, published June 2005 by Doubleday)[3][7]
  • The Dark River, John Twelve Hawks (ISBN 978-0-385-51429-3, published July 2007 by Doubleday)
  • The Golden City, John Twelve Hawks (ISBN 978-1400079315, published September 2009 by Doubleday)[2][6]
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gollark: Then Firefox, which is essentially an OS itself at this point, takes another 5s or so.
gollark: My laptop takes 25 seconds or so to boot into a desktop.
gollark: Windows booting in less than 5 seconds on a 7200RPM HDD? I don't believe you.
gollark: My Void-running Pi boots in... I think < 5 seconds, unlike the Raspbian ones running osmarksrobot™.

References

  1. "Warner Bros Acquires 'Fourth Realm' Trilogy". March 23, 2012.
  2. Moul, Francis (January 24, 2010). "'Golden City' rages against technology". Lincoln Journal Star.
  3. Wittes Schlack, Julie (November 29, 2005). "Futuristic 'Traveler' takes a dark and mystical trip". Boston Globe.
  4. Bedford, Rob (December 4, 2005). "Interview with John Twelve Hawks". SFF World. Archived from the original on January 26, 2010.
  5. "Those remaining literary recluses in full". The Guardian. 1 February 2010.
  6. Kellogg, Carolyn (August 25, 2009). "John Twelve Hawks will (not exactly) appear". Los Angeles Times.
  7. Memmott, Carol (June 27, 2005). "Cryptic 'Traveler' has book world buzzing". USA Today.
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