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Swashbucklers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
When Cisco Collins returns to his home town thirty years after saving it from being swallowed by a hell mouth opened by an ancient pirate ghost, he realises that being a childhood hero isn't like it was in the movies. Especially when nobody remembers the heroic bits – even the friends who once fought alongside him.
Struggling with single parenting and treated as bit of a joke, Cisco isn't really in the Christmas spirit like everyone else. A fact that's made worse by the tendrils of the pirate's powers creeping back into our world and people beginning to die in bizarre ways. 
With the help of a talking fox, an enchanted forest, a long-lost friend haunting his dreams, and some 80s video game consoles turned into weapons, Cisco must now convince his friends to once again help him save the day. Yet they quickly discover that being a ghostbusting hero is so much easier when you don't have schools runs, parent evenings, and nativity plays to attend. And even in the middle of a supernatural battle, you always need to bring snacks and wipes...
File Under: Fantasy [Parenting Hacks | Candy Caning | Boss Fight | Playing with Power ]
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 26, 2021
      Hanks (Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire) combines sci-fi and fantasy elements into an energetic cross-genre romp. As teens, friends Cisco, Jake, Dorothy, and Michelle saved the town of Dark Peak, England, from the villainous Deadman’s Grin—though they have little memory of how. Single father Cisco, now in his 40s and recently divorced, returns to Dark Peak to reunite with his friends and unravel the lingering mystery from 32 years ago. But the forces of darkness are stirring once more, led by a returned Deadman’s Grin. As strange phenomena sweep the town, Cisco and friends must draw on vague memories of their previous encounter with the Deadman’s Grin to vanquish evil once more. But this task is complicated as the four find that “this saving the world stuff just too hard as an adult” and struggle to balance their mission with their parenting duties. Hanks’s worldbuilding incorporates a plethora of ’80s pop culture references and borrowed ideas from genre classics. The result is a fun if familiar backdrop to the entertaining characters and their well-wrought relationships, but the story suffers from some glaring plot holes—including why these four are the chosen ones at all. Still, readers willing to overlook the flaws are in for a quirky adventure. Agent: Sara Megibow, KT Literary.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2021
      What if you and your friends saved your town from monsters as teens but afterwards no one remembered that it really happened but you? This is the world Cisco has faced for 30 years, having narrowly defeated the terrifying Deadman's Grin only to have everyone believe the whole thing was a mass hallucination due to a gas leak. Now he and his friends must remember the past, strap on the game console weapons they made in the '80s, and try to save the world--again--all while balancing demands of adult life, parenthood, and outrunning possessed Christmas d�cor with fortysomething backs and knees complaining. References to contemporary political issues sit alongside nostalgic name drops of Ghostbusters, Star Wars, and The Goonies. The '80s trivia strikes a similar vibe to Ready Player One (2011), but here it's a window into the fantastical worlds that sit alongside our own. A heartfelt, wacky tale beginning a potential series for fans of Stephen King's IT (1986) and anyone who's wondered why there are so many unsupervised children in fantasy.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2021

      In Hanks's (Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire) contemporary fantasy, Cisco Collins returns to his childhood home in Dark Peak, England, to raise his son, reconnect to old friends, and revisit the truth about the Halloween night in 1989 when Cisco, Doc, Michelle, and Jake saved Dark Peak from the evil Deadman's Grin. Cisco seems to be the only one who remembers that night, though even his recall is spotty; now in their 40s, all four of the friends are dealing with their own kids and lost memories of their youth. When strange things start to happen again in Dark Peak, Cisco is convinced that the evil of Deadman's Grin is back. Now the four friends have one more responsibility to juggle, as they try to remember how they saved the town decades ago. Quirky characters and worldbuilding, lots of 1980s pop culture references, and themes of childhood and friendship combine in Hanks's interesting mix of sci-fi, fantasy, and coming-of-age-(again) story. VERDICT A fun romp, ideal for fans of the cultural references and humor of Ghostbusters and Ernest Cline's Ready Player One.--Kristi Chadwick, Massachusetts Lib. Syst., Northampton

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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