Tim Powers
Timothy Thomas Powers (born February 29, 1952) is an American author renowned for his science fiction, fantasy, and horror novels that blend supernatural elements with historical events in what he terms "secret histories."[1] Born in Buffalo, New York, Powers moved to Southern California with his family in 1959 and earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from California State University, Fullerton, in 1976, where he formed lasting friendships and collaborations with fellow writers James Blaylock and K.W. Jeter, as well as mentorship under Philip K. Dick.[2] His debut novels, The Skies Discrowned and Epitaph in Rust, appeared in 1976 under a pseudonym, marking the start of a career that has produced over twenty novels characterized by intricate plots, vivid historical settings, and themes of mythology, time travel, and the occult.[3][1] Powers gained critical acclaim with The Anubis Gates (1983), a time-travel adventure set in Regency-era London that won the Philip K. Dick Award and is often credited as a foundational work of steampunk.[1] Subsequent standout works include On Stranger Tides (1987), which inspired the Pirates of the Caribbean film franchise; Last Call (1992), a World Fantasy Award winner reimagining the Fisher King myth in Las Vegas; and Declare (2000), another World Fantasy Award recipient that merges Cold War espionage with Islamic djinn mythology and also earned the International Horror Guild Award.[4] His style emphasizes disorienting narratives where the supernatural intrudes upon tangible history, often drawing from personal interests like poetry and Catholicism, and he has received additional honors such as another Philip K. Dick Award—for Dinner at Deviant's Palace (1985)—and multiple Locus Awards.[5][6] In recent years, Powers has continued his prolific output with the Vickery and Castine urban fantasy series, including Alternate Routes (2018), Forced Perspectives (2020), and Stolen Skies (2022), followed by the standalone My Brother's Keeper (2023).[3] His forthcoming novel, The Mills of the Gods (2025), is a supernatural tale set in 1920s Paris involving ancient gods and expatriate artists.[7] Residing in San Bernardino, California, with his wife Serena, Powers remains active as a judge for the Writers of the Future contest and a teacher at workshops like Clarion, influencing new generations of speculative fiction writers.[2]Early life and education
Childhood and upbringing
Timothy Thomas Powers was born on February 29, 1952, in Buffalo, New York, to Richard Powers, an attorney, and Noel Powers.[8] He spent his early childhood in Buffalo until the age of seven, when his family relocated to Southern California in 1959, where he would spend the remainder of his formative years.[5][2] Powers grew up in a literate household filled with books, where reading served as the primary form of recreation. His mother played a key role in nurturing his love for literature by reading aloud to the children, including works such as C.S. Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia, Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows, and G.K. Chesterton's poem "Lepanto," which left a lasting impression on him.[9] This family tradition introduced him to imaginative storytelling, and through his mother's collection of Weird Tales magazines, he encountered speculative fiction early on, particularly the works of H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard, which sparked his fascination with the supernatural and otherworldly.[9] During high school in Southern California, Powers began experimenting with creative writing, often starting ambitious projects like novels with "Book One. Chapter One" but typically abandoning them after a page or two.[9] He did complete some short stories during this period, marking his initial forays into crafting narratives influenced by his growing interest in fantastical elements.[9] These early efforts laid the groundwork for his later development as a writer of speculative fiction.Academic background
Tim Powers attended California State University, Fullerton, where he studied English literature.[4] During his time there, he formed lasting friendships with fellow students James P. Blaylock and K.W. Jeter, who would later become frequent collaborators in the speculative fiction genre.[5] These connections emerged from shared interests in imaginative writing and helped shape the informal literary circle that influenced his early development.[10] Powers earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1976, marking the completion of his formal undergraduate education.[8] This academic foundation provided him with a strong grounding in literary analysis and historical contexts, elements that would become central to his approach to blending fact and fantasy in his novels.[11] His university experience thus laid the groundwork for a career that emphasized rigorous research alongside creative storytelling.[2]Writing career
Early publications
Tim Powers' first professional publication was limericks in Amra V2n50 (May 1969), followed by the poem "Ode to Maldronah," published in Weirdbook Three (1970), a small-press magazine focused on weird fiction and poetry.[12][13] This appearance marked one of his initial forays into print, though his first professional prose sales came later in the decade through Laser Books, a short-lived imprint of Doubleday aimed at original science fiction paperbacks. At age 23, Powers sold two novels to Laser: The Skies Discrowned (May 1976), a space opera involving political intrigue and enslavement on a mining world, and Epitaph in Rust (September 1976), a post-apocalyptic adventure, credited under the name Timothy Powers.[14][1][15] These quick-turnaround works, written under deadline pressure, represented his entry into the genre market but were later revised and republished due to their youthful haste.[16] Powers faced significant challenges in breaking through, including early rejections that began at age 15 with a slip from The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.[17] He endured multiple rejections in the 1970s before his Laser sales, a common hurdle for aspiring writers in the competitive science fiction field, often relying on small presses for initial opportunities.[15] Following Laser's closure in 1978, Powers persisted with submissions, leading to his debut major novel, The Drawing of the Dark (1979), published by Del Rey Books. This historical fantasy is set amid the 1529 Siege of Vienna, blending Arthurian legend with supernatural elements as an American legionnaire uncovers mystical forces tied to ancient kings and brewing wars.[18] The novel showcased his emerging interest in weaving historical events with fantastical intrigue, though it initially received modest attention in a market dominated by space opera.[19] Breakthrough came with The Anubis Gates (1983), published by Ace Books, a time-travel fantasy involving Egyptian sorcery, werewolves, and 19th-century London poets like Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The novel's intricate plot and rigorous historical integration earned it the 1983 Philip K. Dick Award for distinguished original science fiction paperback.[20] This accolade solidified Powers' reputation, transitioning him from small-press obscurity to wider recognition in speculative fiction circles.[1] Prior to this, his career had been marked by persistent submissions and revisions, reflecting the era's demanding path for genre authors seeking mainstream viability.[16]Major works and series
Tim Powers' major works from the late 1980s onward increasingly incorporated interconnected supernatural elements, evolving from his earlier standalone novels into series that blend historical events with occult mythology.[4] On Stranger Tides (1987) is a pirate adventure set in the early 18th-century Caribbean, where puppeteer John Chandagnac is shanghaied into a quest for the Fountain of Youth led by the pirate One-Eye, encountering voodoo spirits, zombies, and the historical figure Blackbeard in a tale of supernatural intrigue and betrayal. The novel's themes of immortality and Caribbean mysticism directly inspired the 2011 film Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. The Fault Lines trilogy, set against the backdrop of Southern California and Las Vegas mythology, reimagines Arthurian legends and occult practices in a modern context. Last Call (1992), the first installment, follows professional gambler Scott Crane, who discovers his role as a reincarnated Fisher King in a high-stakes poker game using Tarot cards that determines control over Las Vegas's supernatural underworld, blending Jungian archetypes, Grail quests, and ritual magic. Expiration Date (1993) shifts to Los Angeles, where young Kootie Roy inhales the ghost of Thomas Edison, drawing pursuit from ghostly factions vying for the inventor's spirit in a chaotic chase through haunted sites like the L.A. River and the Queen Mary ship. The trilogy concludes with Earthquake Weather (1997), which unites characters and plotlines from the prior books in a battle against eldritch forces threatening California's spiritual landscape, incorporating weather magic and fragmented identities. Declare (2000), a standalone supernatural spy thriller, weaves Cold War espionage with Arabic mythology, centering on British agent Andrew Hale's encounters with djinn during World War II operations in Iraq and later missions involving the real-life Soviet defector Kim Philby, whose betrayal is tied to ancient supernatural pacts.[21] The novel won the 2001 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel. The Vickery and Castine series introduces modern ghostly pursuits along California's infrastructure. Alternate Routes (2018) features ex-Secret Service agent Sebastian Vickery and FBI agent Ingrid Castine navigating phantom cars and spectral entities on Los Angeles freeways, uncovering a conspiracy involving ancient relics and UFO-like apparitions tied to haunted roadways.[22] In Forced Perspectives (2020), the duo, now fugitives with enhanced ghostly sensitivity, confronts Satanic cults, the La Brea Tar Pits, and a rising submerged city off San Pedro, racing to prevent a Silicon Valley technomancer from harnessing millions of souls for a apocalyptic entity.[23] Across these works and series, Powers establishes a shared universe where supernatural forces are intrinsically linked to California's geography—from the occult undercurrents of Las Vegas deserts and L.A. highways to broader metaphysical intrusions—creating a cohesive mythology of hidden histories and regional hauntings.[4]Recent and upcoming publications
In recent years, Tim Powers has continued to produce works that blend supernatural elements with historical and contemporary settings, often exploring themes of addiction, loss, and hidden occult forces. His 2016 novel Medusa's Web, published by Corvus, centers on a family uncovering a parasitic form of magic tied to spider-like webs that enable time-displaced communication, drawing connections between modern internet culture and the shadowy underbelly of 1920s Hollywood, including figures like Rudolph Valentino. The following year saw the release of the novella Down and Out in Purgatory (Subterranean Press, 2017), a standalone fantasy narrative framed as a road trip through fragmented realms of the afterlife, where a man seeks vengeance against a deceased foe amid surreal, metaphysical landscapes inspired by Catholic theology and personal hauntings.[24] Powers extended his Vickery and Castine series—initiated with Alternate Routes (2018)—through subsequent installments that maintain the protagonists' encounters with ghostly "odhs" and covert government operations, culminating in Stolen Skies (Baen Books, 2022), which incorporates extended novel-length elements involving an ancient relic, extraterrestrial threats, and pursuits across California and beyond.[25] In 2023, Powers delivered My Brother's Keeper (Baen Books), a gothic horror novel reimagining the Brontë family's dynamics through a lens of lycanthropy, family curses, and Victorian-era spiritualism, where Emily Brontë grapples with supernatural afflictions tied to a secretive religious sect combating werewolves in 19th-century Yorkshire.[26] In 2024, Powers published the short story Empty Chamber (Charnel House, August 2024), a 10,000-word tale set in 1910 London involving a mysterious unoccupied stone chamber.[27] Looking ahead, The Mills of the Gods is slated for publication in December 2025 by Baen Books, promising a supernatural adventure set in 1925 Paris that intertwines time manipulation, divine reincarnation battles, and romantic intrigue against the backdrop of historical events like the city's expatriate artist scene.[28] This body of work reflects a trend in Powers' output since the late 2010s toward integrating contemporary or near-modern settings with deep historical anchors, allowing his secret history methodology to address current anxieties like digital disconnection and familial legacy while evolving beyond purely period-bound narratives.Literary style and themes
Secret history methodology
Tim Powers employs a secret history methodology that reinterprets documented historical events by attributing unexplained gaps or anomalies to supernatural causes, thereby constructing parallel narratives where the occult operates alongside verifiable reality. This technique posits that major historical occurrences, such as espionage operations during World War II and the Cold War, may have been influenced by otherworldly forces, ensuring that all factual elements align precisely with established records while the fantastical elements fill in the interstices. For example, in Declare, Powers integrates real intelligence activities with occult dimensions drawn from biblical lore, treating supernatural entities as covert actors in geopolitical conflicts.[29][30] Central to this approach is Powers' meticulous research process, which involves deep dives into archival materials, historical texts, and on-location visits to authenticate settings and events. He consults primary sources like period documents and eyewitness accounts to map out timelines and biographies, then weaves supernatural threads into these frameworks without altering known facts. This includes site visits to key locations, such as those in Southern California for his modern-set works and the historical districts informing the Fault Lines series' Las Vegas backdrop, where he incorporates details from the city's development in the mid-20th century. Such rigor ensures the narratives feel like plausible extensions of history rather than inventions.[29][31] A hallmark technique within this methodology is the integration of real historical figures as active participants in supernatural scenarios, lending immediacy and credibility to the fantastical. Powers selects individuals whose documented eccentricities or unexplained actions can be recontextualized through occult involvement, such as Aleister Crowley entangled in espionage intrigues in Declare or Lewis Carroll navigating time-altered Victorian England in The Anubis Gates. This method transforms biography into a vehicle for the uncanny, where figures like poets, spies, and occultists confront hidden metaphysical threats.[30][31] Powers' secret history methodology has significantly shaped the historical fantasy subgenre, establishing a template for blending rigorous historiography with speculative elements that prioritizes plausibility and intellectual engagement. His works, beginning with The Anubis Gates in 1983, prefigure and influence later authors who explore similar fusions, such as Susanna Clarke's nods to Powers' integration of Romantic-era history and mythology in Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. By treating the supernatural as a concealed historical force, Powers elevates fantasy beyond escapism, inspiring a lineage of novels that interrogate the boundaries between fact and the unseen.[32]Recurring motifs and influences
Tim Powers' works frequently explore motifs of addiction and redemption, often intertwined with supernatural forces that test characters' moral and spiritual resolve. In Last Call (1992), the protagonist Scott Crane grapples with alcoholism as a literal embodiment of spiritual possession, where poker games serve as ritualistic battles for the Fisher King archetype, drawing on Arthurian legends to symbolize the quest for immortality and personal salvation. This theme recurs across the Fault Lines trilogy, including Expiration Date (1993) and Earthquake Weather (1997), where addiction manifests as consumption of ghosts or souls, representing a Faustian bargain that demands redemption through sacrifice and confrontation with one's inner demons.[9] Ghosts and the undead appear as persistent, often malevolent entities in Powers' narratives, embodying unresolved histories and liminal states between life and death. In the Vickery and Castine series, beginning with Alternate Routes (2018), protagonists navigate Southern California's haunted freeway systems, where spectral hitchhikers and undead remnants exploit modern infrastructure as portals for possession and revenge. These ghosts are not mere apparitions but active agents of disruption, reflecting Powers' interest in how the supernatural lingers in contemporary urban decay.[33] Powers often portrays California, particularly Southern California, as a mystical landscape infused with occult undercurrents, where everyday locales like Las Vegas casinos or Los Angeles freeways become arenas for mythic confrontations. This motif transforms the state's cultural sprawl—Hollywood glamour, desert isolation, and urban sprawl—into a tapestry of hidden ley lines and enchanted territories, as seen in Dinner at Deviant's Palace (1985) and the Fault Lines series.[5] Powers' friendship with Philip K. Dick profoundly shaped his depiction of paranoid alternate realities, where ordinary events mask conspiratorial supernatural layers, echoing Dick's explorations of perception and hidden truths in works like VALIS (1981), which features a character inspired by Powers himself. Additionally, C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams influenced his integration of Christian supernaturalism, viewing pagan myths as anticipations of biblical truths; this is evident in the redemptive arcs and archetypal battles against demonic forces across his oeuvre.[34][35] Biblical and mythological elements are reimagined in modern contexts throughout Powers' novels, blending Judeo-Christian lore with global folklore to underscore themes of exile and divine conflict. In Declare (2000), djinn—interpreted as fallen angels bound to stones—drive a Cold War espionage plot tied to biblical events like the Flood, forcing characters to reclaim faith amid apocalyptic stakes. Arthurian legends recur as foundational myths, particularly the wounded Fisher King in The Drawing of the Dark (1979) and Last Call, where grail quests symbolize healing a fractured world through heroic intervention.[36][9][37] Poetry and poets often serve as conduits for supernatural forces in Powers' narratives, reflecting his personal interest in Romantic literature; this is prominent in works like The Anubis Gates (1983), featuring time-travel among Victorian poets, and The Stress of Her Regard (1989), which entwines the lives of Byron, Shelley, and Keats with mythic entities.[5] Powers' writing has evolved from 19th-century historical fantasies, such as The Anubis Gates (1983) with its time-traveling sorcery amid Romantic poets, to 20th- and 21st-century settings infused with technological supernaturalism. Later works like the Vickery and Castine series incorporate digital-age hauntings and UFO lore alongside occult rituals, shifting from period-specific magic to hybrid myths where smartphones and satellites intersect with ancient entities, reflecting a broader canvas of enduring cosmic struggles.[31]Professional collaborations and teaching
California speculative fiction circle
In the late 1970s, Tim Powers formed an informal writing group with fellow California State University, Fullerton alumni James P. Blaylock and K.W. Jeter, building on their earlier collaborations from the early 1970s where they shared and critiqued manuscripts.[38] This Southern California circle of speculative fiction writers fostered a creative environment through mutual exchange of ideas, often drawing from historical and fantastical elements to shape their narratives. The group frequently socialized with Philip K. Dick, who informally mentored them as protégés during the last decade of his life, attending gatherings that influenced their approaches to genre-blending fiction.[38] Powers, Blaylock, and Jeter critiqued each other's work in casual settings, honing their craft amid the vibrant Orange County literary scene of the era. This camaraderie extended to collaborative inventions, such as the fictional Romantic poet William Ashbless, co-created by Powers and Blaylock, whose purported writings appeared in their novels and joint pamphlets like The Complete Twelve Hours of the Night (1986). A hallmark of their collaboration was the coining of the term "steampunk" by Jeter in a 1987 letter to Locus magazine, retroactively describing the Victorian-era speculative works they had been producing, including Jeter's Infernal Devices (1987).[39] Their mutual borrowing of motifs, such as elaborate Victorian machinery and alternate histories, permeated novels like Powers' The Anubis Gates (1983), Blaylock's Homunculus (1986), and Jeter's Morlock Night (1979), establishing a shared aesthetic that influenced broader speculative fiction.[40] These interactions not only amplified their individual themes of hidden histories and supernatural intrusions but also laid foundational groundwork for the steampunk subgenre.Academic and mentoring roles
Powers taught part-time at Chapman University, where he instructed courses in fiction writing, including speculative genres.[41] He also taught creative writing at the Orange County High School of the Arts, focusing on novel writing, poetry, and the origins of fiction, often drawing from historical and imaginative elements in his lessons.[16] Additionally, Powers delivered a guest lecture at California State University, Fullerton, in 2012, discussing his novel On Stranger Tides and his approach to blending history with fantasy.[11] As a judge for the L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future contest since the mid-1980s, Powers has provided detailed feedback to emerging authors, helping them refine their speculative fiction submissions.[2] He continues to serve in this role as of 2025.[2] He has also instructed at workshops such as Clarion and the contest's annual event, where he co-taught with figures like Algis Budrys starting around 1985.[10] Powers' mentorship emphasizes rigorous historical research to ground fantastical narratives and imaginative plotting to create believable worlds. In teaching, he advises students to outline plots meticulously, viewing characters as "employees" assigned specific roles rather than free agents, ensuring narrative consistency.[42] During workshops, he shares anecdotes from his process, such as spending a year researching historical details for authenticity, and recounts successes like guiding student Nicola Griffith in 1988 at Clarion, whose subsequent novel Ammonite was nominated for a Nebula Award.[42]Personal life
Family and residence
Tim Powers married Serena Batsford, a legal secretary, in 1980.[8] The couple resides in Muscoy, a rural unincorporated community near San Bernardino in Southern California, where they have lived since the late 1990s.[5][10] Powers conducts much of his work from a home office in their residence, which serves as a dedicated space for writing and research amid stacks of historical and esoteric texts that inform his novels.[9] His daily routine typically involves writing around 1,000 words per session, often at night to minimize distractions from household elements like pets or calls, followed by iterative revisions of his manuscripts.[9] This setup allows him to immerse himself in the detailed historical and mythological investigations central to his secret history narratives.Religious and personal beliefs
Tim Powers was raised in a Roman Catholic family following his family's relocation to California in 1959. He has described himself as a practicing Catholic whose faith informs his worldview without overt proselytizing in his work. Powers has cited C.S. Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet trilogy as a significant influence, appreciating its blend of science fiction and Christian themes, though he avoids embedding explicit messages in his own novels. As a devout Catholic, Powers holds traditional beliefs in the reality of angels and demons as spiritual entities engaged in a cosmic struggle, distinct from the supernatural intrusions he fictionalizes—such as portraying genies in Declare as stray angels that can be warded off by baptism. This personal conviction underscores his view that occult practices are harmful in both literature and life, reflecting Catholic teachings on spiritual warfare. In terms of personal habits, Powers ceased drinking alcohol around the mid-1990s, a decision he mentioned in a 2015 interview as having occurred twenty years earlier. This abstinence aligns with broader themes of restraint and consequence in his writing, though he has noted a casual depiction of alcohol use among his characters.Awards and recognition
Major literary awards
Tim Powers has received numerous accolades in the speculative fiction genres, with over a dozen major award wins and nominations across his career, solidifying his status as a prominent figure in fantasy and horror literature.[6] His breakthrough recognition came with the 1983 Philip K. Dick Award for The Anubis Gates, honoring the novel as the best original science fiction paperback published that year. He won a second Philip K. Dick Award in 1986 for Dinner at Deviant's Palace.[43][6] Powers secured the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel twice: first in 1993 for Last Call, praised for its innovative blend of poker mythology and supernatural elements, and again in 2001 for Declare, which reimagines Cold War espionage through a lens of occult djinn lore. He also won the World Fantasy Award for Best Collection in 2012 for The Bible Repairman and Other Stories.[44][6] In 2001, Declare also earned the International Horror Guild Award for Best Novel, acknowledging its chilling integration of supernatural horror into historical intrigue.[45] Powers has garnered multiple Locus Awards, including wins for Best Fantasy Novel in 1993 for Last Call and in 1998 for Earthquake Weather, as well as the 1996 Locus Award for Best Horror/Dark Fantasy Novel for Expiration Date; he received a nomination for Best Fantasy Novel in 2007 for Three Days to Never. He won the Locus Award for Best Collection in 2012 for The Bible Repairman and Other Stories. In 2025, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from Writers of the Future.[46][47] These awards have notably advanced Powers' career, enhancing his visibility and influence within speculative fiction circles.[6]Critical acclaim and legacy
Tim Powers has received widespread praise from fellow authors for his innovative blending of historical research with supernatural elements in speculative fiction. China Miéville has described The Anubis Gates as a profoundly influential work from his youth, praising its intricate time-travel plot, monstrous creatures, and systematized magic that left a lasting impact on his own writing.[48] Reviews in major publications have echoed this acclaim; for instance, The Guardian has called Powers a "grand master" of the genre for his ability to weave authentic historical details into fantastical narratives.[49] Powers' works have been incorporated into academic curricula exploring postmodern fantasy and genre fiction. At institutions like MIT, his novels feature in courses on fantasy literature, where they serve as exemplars of urban and historical fantasy that challenge traditional boundaries between history and the supernatural.[50] Powers' legacy endures through his foundational role in the steampunk subgenre and the popularization of secret histories in speculative fiction. Alongside Blaylock and Jeter, he is credited with originating steampunk in the 1970s and 1980s, as seen in works like The Anubis Gates, which inspired later revivals by blending Victorian-era aesthetics with magical realism.[51] His secret history approach—positing supernatural explanations for real historical gaps—has influenced countless authors and revitalized the subgenre, emphasizing rigorous research over pure invention. The 2011 film adaptation of On Stranger Tides into Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides introduced his ideas to a broader audience, amplifying his impact beyond literary circles.[49] Despite his dominance in genre fiction, Powers remains underrepresented in mainstream literary awards, a point noted by critics who argue his innovative style deserves wider recognition outside speculative circles.[52] This gap underscores a broader tension between genre boundaries and literary prestige, yet his influence persists in shaping modern fantasy's intersection with history and the occult.Bibliography
Novels
Tim Powers's novels are renowned for their intricate blending of historical events, mythology, and the supernatural, often constructing "secret histories" where occult forces subtly shape real-world occurrences. His works frequently draw on exhaustive research into folklore, poetry, and esoterica, creating immersive narratives that span time periods from ancient civilizations to modern America. Most of Powers's novels have been published by Tor Books, though his recent Vickery and Castine series and the forthcoming The Mills of the Gods appear under Baen Books. The following is a chronological list of his full-length novels, grouped by series where applicable, with publication details and brief non-spoiler descriptions.Early Standalones
- The Skies Discrowned (1976, Laser Books; revised as Forsake the Sky in 1986, Ace Books): A swashbuckling adventure in a decadent future society, where a young nobleman navigates political intrigue and rebellion after being framed for murder.[1]
- An Epitaph in Rust (1976, Laser Books; revised in 1989, Ace Books): In a post-apocalyptic California, a scholarly monk embarks on a quest for knowledge amid ruins and strange cults, blending survival tale with philosophical undertones.[1]
- The Drawing of the Dark (1979, Del Rey): Set in 16th-century Vienna during the siege by Ottoman forces, an American soldier becomes entangled in a mystical prophecy involving ancient brews and Arthurian echoes.[1]
- The Anubis Gates (1983, Ace Books; revised 1984): A modern scholar is thrust into 19th-century London via time travel, encountering werewolves, sorcerers, and a plot tied to ancient Egyptian gods.[1]
- Dinner at Deviant's Palace (1985, Ace Books): In a dystopian, post-nuclear Los Angeles overrun by an alien cult, a former musician undertakes a perilous rescue mission infused with redemptive themes.[1]
- On Stranger Tides (1987, Ace Books): Caribbean pirates in the 18th century pursue the Fountain of Youth, clashing with voodoo practitioners, zombies, and rival seekers in a tale of magic and betrayal.[1]
The Stress of Her Regard Sequence
- The Stress of Her Regard (1989, Ace Books): Romantic poets Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and John Keats grapple with seductive, vampiric entities from classical mythology that threaten their lives and creativity.[1]
- Hide Me Among the Graves (2012, William Morrow): A sequel set in 1860s London, where the Rossetti family confronts resurgent supernatural forces linked to the earlier novel's lamiae, amid themes of artistic inspiration and familial bonds.[1]
Fault Lines Series (1992–1997)
Powers's Fault Lines trilogy explores interconnected California mythologies, drawing on tarot symbolism, ghostly hauntings, and archetypes to weave a loose narrative arc across Las Vegas and Los Angeles settings.- Last Call (1992, Morrow): A poker game in Las Vegas reveals a supernatural underworld where a man's past confronts him through mythic figures and a battle for spiritual sovereignty.[1]
- Expiration Date (1993, Tor Books): A boy who consumes the ghosts of the dead becomes a pawn in a contest involving historical spirits and occult rituals in contemporary Los Angeles.[1]
- Earthquake Weather (1997, Tor Books): Amnesiac characters piece together a conspiracy blending fairy lore, pagan gods, and seismic prophecies in a climactic resolution to the series.[1]
Later Standalones
- Declare (2000, Tor Books): A Cold War spy thriller reimagines historical events through djinn lore and biblical motifs, following an intelligence officer's encounters with otherworldly entities in the Middle East and Europe.[1]
- Three Days to Never (2006, Subterranean Press; Tor Books hardcover): A family secret involving Charlie Chaplin and remote viewing technology draws in Israeli agents and ghostly pursuers in a race against time.[1]
- Medusa's Web (2016, Tor Books): Siblings inherit a Hollywood mansion haunted by spider-like entities that manipulate perception and history through early internet precursors and film noir echoes.[1]
- My Brother's Keeper (2023, Baen Books): Centered on the Brontë family in 19th-century Yorkshire, the novel examines a supernatural curse involving werewolves, ghostly influences, and clashing occult factions on the moors.[1]
Vickery and Castine Series (2018–2022)
This urban fantasy series follows ex-agents Sebastian Vickery and Ingrid Castine as they evade government forces while confronting ghostly and extraterrestrial threats in a modern American landscape laced with occult undercurrents, published by Baen Books.- Alternate Routes (2018): A disgraced Secret Service agent drives a supernatural evasion service on Los Angeles freeways, allying with a partner to escape spectral pursuers tied to ancient Native American spirits.[53]
- Forced Perspectives (2020): The duo delves into Los Angeles's hidden history, from 1960s counterculture to Egyptian mythology, to thwart a mind-controlling conspiracy involving historical cults.[23]
- Stolen Skies (2022): Vickery and Castine pursue an ancient relic to banish invading alien entities responsible for UFO abductions, traversing desert monoliths and Hollywood cult sites.
Forthcoming
- The Mills of the Gods (2025, Baen Books): Set in 1920s Paris, an expatriate American illustrator uncovers a supernatural web of romance, ancient grudges, and dramatic intrigue while working on a mysterious assignment.[54]