![]() ![]() Fans of seedy westerns will greatly enjoy this tale of gold-tusked hippos and the miscreants who ride them. The tight pace, complex relationships, and twisting motivations of the characters keep the reader engaged, and the alternate history of American hippo farming is clearly illustrated without clumsy exposition. After assembling a team gathered from the highest echelons of western novel archetypes-with some modern twists, including a genderless demolitions expert and a heavily pregnant assassin-Houndstooth develops a plan that will satisfy the requirements of the job and allow him to take revenge on the people who burned down his ranch 10 years before. Right now the area is used for riverboat gambling, but the government wants to open it as a trade route down to the Gulf of Mexico, so former hippo breeder Winslow Houndstooth is hired to herd the feral animals into the gulf. In this alternate late 19th century, imported hippos have taken over the Harriet area (“not quite a lake and not quite a marsh”) of the Mississippi River. Sarah Gailey's wildfire debut River of Teeth is a rollicking alternate history adventure that Charlie Jane Anders calls 'preposterously fun.' In the early 20th Century, the United States government concocted a plan to import hippopotamuses into the marshlands of Louisiana to be bred and slaughtered as an alternative meat source. ![]() ![]() Gailey’s debut novella is as intricate as her scheming characters’ plotting. ![]()
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