The Day Watch
The Day Watch book cover

The Day Watch

Mass Market Paperback – International Edition, December 30, 2008

Price
$6.62
Publisher
Seal Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400025138
Dimensions
4.2 x 1.1 x 6.9 inches
Weight
9.9 ounces

Description

Sergei Lukyanenko was born in Kazakhstan and educated as a psychiatrist. He began publishing science fiction in the 1980s and is today the most popular science fiction writer in Russia. He is a prolific writer, the author of over 25 books. The first three volumes of the Night Watch Quartet have sold over two million hardcovers between them. Doubleday Canada will publish the third installment in the series, The Twilight Watch in summer 2007 and the fourth, The Last Watch , in 2008. He lives in Moscow. From the Trade Paperback edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PROLOGUE The entrance did not inspire respect. The coded lock was broken and not working, the floor was littered with the trampled butts of cheap cigarettes. Inside the lift the walls were covered with illiterate graffiti, in which the word ‘Spartak’ figured as often as the usual crude obscenities; the plastic buttons had been burned through with cigarettes and painstakingly plugged with chewing-gum that was now rock-hard.The door into the apartment on the fourth floor was a good match for the entrance: some hideous old kind of Soviet artificial leather, cheap aluminium numbers barely held up by their crookedly inserted screws.Natasha hesitated for a moment before she pressed the doorbell. She must be insane to hope for anything from a place like this. If you were so crazy or desperate that you decided to try magic, you could just open the newspaper, switch on the TV or listen to the radio. There were serious spiritualist salons, experienced mediums with internationally recognised diplomas . . . It was all still a con, of course. But at least you’d be in pleasant surroundings, with pleasant people, not like this last resort for hopeless losers.She rang the bell anyway. She didn’t want to waste the time she’d spent on the journey.For a few moments it seemed that the apartment was empty. Then she heard hasty footsteps, the steps of someone in a hurry whose worn slippers are slipping off their feet as they shuffle along. For a brief instant the tiny spy-hole went dark, then the lock grated and the door opened.‘Oh, Natasha, is it? Come in, come in . . .’She had never liked people who spoke too familiarly from the very first meeting. There ought to be a little more formality at first.But the woman who had opened the door was already pulling her into the apartment, clutching her unceremoniously by the hand, and with an expression of such sincere hospitality on her ageing, brightly made-up face that Natasha didn’t feel strong enough to object.‘My friend told me that you . . .’ Natasha began.‘I don’t know, I don’t know about that, my dear,’ said her hostess, waving her hands in the air. ‘Oh, don’t take your shoes off, I was just going to clean the place up . . . oh, all right then, I’ll try to find you a pair of slippers.’Natasha looked around, concealing her disgust with difficulty.The hall wasn’t so very small, but it was crammed incredibly full. The light bulb hanging from the ceiling was dull, maybe thirty watts at best, but even that couldn’t conceal the general squalor. The hallstand was heaped high with clothes, including a musquash winter coat to feed the moths. The lino of the small area of floor that could be seen was an indistinct grey colour. Natasha’s hostess must have been planning her cleaning session for a long time.‘Your name’s Natasha, isn’t it, my daughter? Mine’s Dasha.’Dasha was fifteen or twenty years older than her. At least. She could have been Natasha’s mother, but with a mother like that you’d want to hang yourself . . . A pudgy figure, with dirty, dull hair and bright nail varnish peeling from her fingernails, wearing a washed-out house coat and crumbling slippers on her bare feet. Her toenails glittered with nail varnish too. God, how vulgar!‘Are you a seer?’ Natasha asked. And in her own mind she cried: ‘What a fool I am.’Dasha nodded. She bent down and extracted a pair of rubber slippers from a tangled heap of footwear. The most idiotic kind of slippers ever invented — with all those rubber prongs sticking out on the inside. A Yogi’s dream. Some of them had fallen off long before, but that didn’t make the slippers look any more comfortable.‘Put them on!’ Dasha suggested joyfully.As if hypnotised, Natasha took off her sandals and put on the slippers. Goodbye, tights. She was bound to end up with a couple of ladders. Even in her famous Omsa tights with their famous Lycra. Everything in this world was a swindle invented by cunning fools. And for some reason intelligent people always fell for it.‘Yes, I’m a seer,’ Dasha declared as she attentively supervised the donning of the slippers. ‘I got it from my grandma. And my mum too. They were all seers, they all helped people, it runs in our family . . . Come through into the kitchen, Natasha, I haven’t tidied up the rooms yet . . .’Still cursing herself for being so stupid, Natasha went into the kitchen, which fulfilled all her expectations. A heap of dirty dishes in the sink and a filthy table — as they appeared, a cockroach crawled lazily off the table-top and round under it. A sticky floor. The windows had obviously not been spring-cleaned and the ceiling was fly-spotted.‘Sit down.’ Dasha deftly pulled out a stool from under the table and moved it over to the place of honour — between the table and the fridge, a convulsively twitching Saratov.‘Thank you, I’ll stand.’ Natasha had made her mind up definxaditely not to sit down. The stool inspired even less confidence than the table or the floor. ‘Dasha . . . That’s Darya?’‘Yes, Darya.’‘Darya, I really only wanted to find out . . .’The woman shrugged. She flicked the switch on the electric kettle — probably the only object in the kitchen that didn’t look as if it had been retrieved from a rubbish tip. She looked at Natasha.‘Find out? There’s nothing to find out. Everything’s just as clear as can be.’For a moment Natasha had an unpleasant, oppressive sensation, as if there wasn’t enough light in the kitchen. Everything went grey, the agonised rumbling of the refrigerator and the traffic outside on the avenue fell silent. She wiped the icy perspiration from her forehead. It was the heat. The summer, the heat, the long journey in the metro, the crush in the trolleybus . . . Why hadn’t she taken a taxi? She’d sent away the driver with the car — well, she’d been embarrassed to give anyone even a hint of where she was going and why . . . but why hadn’t she taken a taxi? From the Trade Paperback edition.

Features & Highlights

  • The second installment of the phenomenal Russian quartet
  • The Night Watch
  • vampire novels set in a richly realized post-Soviet Moscow. The second book in the internationally bestselling fantasy series,
  • The Day Watch
  • begins where
  • The Night Watch
  • left off, set in a modern-day Moscow where the 1,000-year-old treaty between Light and Dark maintains its uneasy balance through careful vigilance from the Others. The forces of darkness keep an eye during the day, the Day Watch, while the agents of Light monitor the nighttime. Very senior Others called the Inquisitors are the impartial judges insisting on the essential compact. When a very potent artifact is stolen from them, the consequences are dire and drastic for all sides. The Day Watch introduces the perspective of the Dark Ones, told in part by a young witch who bolsters her evil power by leeching fear from children’s nightmares as a counselor at a girls’ summer camp. When she falls in love with a handsome young Light One, the balance is threatened and a death must be avenged.
  • The Day Watch
  • is replete with the thrilling action and intricate plotting of the first tale, fuelled by cunning, cruelty, violence, and magic. It is a fast paced, darkly humorous, haunting world that will take root in the shadows of your mind and live there forever.
  • From the Trade Paperback edition.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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This review is injurious to the causes of Light and Dark

The previous book left us with an unbalanced Moscow. The forces of Light gained a powerful ally in the form of Svetlana Nazarova, a potential Great Sorceress. Even before she knew she was an Other - one of that mysterious class of beings who can work magic, who can curse, bless and change their shapes - she was able to create a curse that very nearly destroyed Moscow. She, and the city, were saved through the bravery of Anton Gorodetsky and the Night Watch, who guard against the excesses of the forces of Darkness. In the end, the Light prevailed.

But this battle between Light and Dark is far from over....

As with The Night Watch, this volume contains three books. In the first, a young witch named Alisa Donnikova has overreached herself. In a fight with the Night Watch, Alisa poured every last drop of her magical energy into supporting her fellow Day Watch members, an act of selflessness that nearly cost her her life. Burned out, she's directed to take a break at a children's summer camp in the Crimea. Posing as a camp counselor, she would be in a prime position to feed off the nightmares of impressionable young girls.

A word about Others and their powers. The foundation of an Other's power comes from humans. While any Other has her own reserves to call on, she may... feed on the normal people around her. The Light Others take happiness and joy - literally. Have you ever been feeling really good, and then somehow the feeling just drains away? That's what the Light Others do, and it powers them to no end. Much like a flowering shrub, pruning someone's happiness doesn't make it go away forever, and it may even come back greater, but still - in order to become stronger, the Light Others have to weaken people.

Those on the side of the Dark, on the other hand, feed off of fear and anger, but when they do, that fear and anger remain. It's like warming yourself by the fire - as long as you keep feeding it, it'll keep you warm. A Dark Other at the height of his power could probably super-charge himself just by going to a snowed-in airport for a day. Believe me. This stew of rage and frustration is a little too much for Alisa, however - she must subsist on the "thin broth" that is children's nightmares.

While she's there, however, her plan hits a snag in the form of a handsome, solid, beautiful man named Igor. Despite herself, she falls in love with him, and she falls hard.

The fact that he's a Light Other doesn't come up until it's much too late.

The second story brings a mysterious figure to Moscow. Vitaly Rogoza has no memory of who he is or where he came from. All he knows is that he has to go to Moscow, and that he has power - the power of a Dark Other. Despite his personal amnesia, he has no trouble ingratiating himself with the Moscow Day Watch, and soon discovers that his power appears to have no upper limits. Why this should be, no one knows. Is he some Dark magician, beyond classification? Or is he something else entirely - something new and terrible? Whatever he is, what is his goal, and what is his link to the theft of Fafnir's Talon, a Dark artefact of unspeakable power?

The third story brings it all together - the sad fate of Alisa Dinnokova, the theft of the Talon, and thhe rise and fall of the Great Sorceress Svetlana Nazarova. What's more, the greater plans of the Light and the Dark are laid bare - and changed forever.

As before this book is heavily laden with tthe philosophy of Good versus Evil, Light and Dark. More importantly, it addresses the issues of freedom, a central tenet to the forces of Darkness. How free, they ask, can we really be?

The Light wants to make humanity better. They believe that, given the right influences and incentives, humanity can be great. But they need to be guided. Molded. Shaped. Consequently, the Light occasionally embarks on grand, world-changing plans, few of which actually work out the way they intend.

The Dark, on the other hand, worships freedom. Every person, they say, should be free to choose his or her own path. If that path means doing good, then so be it. If it means doing evil, well, that's cool too. The point is that every person is capable of deciding how their lives should be led, and no one - human or Other - should be able to take that freedom away from them.

It's one of the oldest questions there is - how much freedom do we really deserve? And it's a question that can never be definitively answered. But in these books, it's fun to watch it play out.
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