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Palaces of the Crow

A speculative historical thriller from the Hugo and Locus Award winner

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Palaces of the Crow

By: Ray Nayler
Narrated by: Eunice Wong
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'an extraordinary science fiction novel' SFX MAGAZINE
'constantly surprising, moving and thought-provoking' GUARDIAN
'a must-read author' SFF WORLD
'perhaps the only writer today cooking up Le Guin's special sauce of liberation frustration and revolutionary blues' LOCUS

June 1941, Eastern Europe. As the German blitzkrieg tears across a divided continent, four young lives are thrown into chaos: Neriya, a young Jewish girl who dreams of becoming a scientist; Czesław, an underage Polish deserter fleeing the Red Army; Kezia, a Roma horse trader whose family is on the run from Soviet collectivisation; and a nameless,, abandoned boy who cannot speak.

Driven deep into the Lithuanian woods, they form an unbreakable bond with one another and with a flock of crows whose uncanny intelligence hints at a secret older and stranger than they could ever have imagined.©2026 Ray Nayler (P)2026 Orion Publishing Group Limited
20th Century Genre Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Science Fiction
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Critic reviews

This is an extraordinary science fiction novel that deftly deals with the nature of consciousness (Jonathan Wright)
[A] constantly surprising, moving and thought-provoking novel. (Lisa Tuttle)
A brilliant . . . blend of history and fantasy . . . Nayler's tale is packed with human brutality and the nobility of animals and their complex minds, never descending into sentimentality . . . [an] impressive novel
An impassioned paean to togetherness even in the midst of the chaotic isolation of war and to the power of storytelling to keep memory and hope alive
Summing up then, despite its different setting, Palaces of the Crow is yet another affecting and effective novel from Ray. It is rather emotional, perhaps his most affecting story to date. Like before, with Ray's previous books, Palaces of the Crow made me sad, it made me angry, and yet made me think. All of this together means that Palaces of the Crow is another book by Ray that hits the ball out of the park for me. Still a must-read author. (Mark Yon)
A story skilfully sown with dramatic surprises . . . [Palaces of the Crow] presents an extraordinary alien intelligence that happens to make its home here on Earth
It shouldn't surprise anyone that the crows come out looking better than their human counterparts in Nayler's latest work of speculative fiction
Over the last four years, Ray Nayler has become one of the most consistently fascinating science fiction writers working today
A searing epic about the horrifying costs of war and the terrifying process of sanitising the past to protect the guilty and the complicit; it wraps readers in its intensity from the first page. Highly recommended
Ray Nayler's Palaces of the Crow is an evocative and deeply human portrait of survival and awe along the Eastern European front of WWII
All stars
Most relevant
Set in some of the darkest times of the last century, this book points to the horrors and the decency within us, and the value of the natural world, which some might call sacred. Urgent and important, as we face the rise of fascism and the like in our own time.

A desperate warning from our past; an urgent call for a return to common humanity,

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