Collector's Insight
Collecting Children of Time: Adrian Tchaikovsky's Arthur C. Clarke Award-Winning Saga
A guide to first editions, specialist press exclusives, and the secondary market for one of modern SF's most celebrated series
Adrian Tchaikovsky's Children of Time series transformed him from a fantasy author into one of British science fiction's biggest names. Here's what collectors need to know about tracking down first editions, signed limiteds from specialist presses, and where values currently sit.
Adrian Tchaikovsky is now one of the most collected living authors in British science fiction and fantasy — and one of the most prolific. In little more than fifteen years he has gone from a respected niche fantasist to a Clarke- and BSFA-winning name whose books are chased in trade first editions, tiny small-press limitations, and lavish signed hardbacks from specialist binders. This is a collector's map of that whole output: where the true firsts hide, which limitations actually matter, and where values currently sit.
Why Tchaikovsky rewards the collector
Few modern genre writers reward a collector quite like Adrian Tchaikovsky. Part of it is sheer volume; mostly, though, it is shape. His career splits cleanly into an early "midlist" phase — when his books were issued quietly, often in formats that gave no hint of future desirability — and a later phase in which he became one of Britain's most decorated genre authors and the object of dedicated limited-edition programmes.
The pivot was Children of Time. The opening volume took the Arthur C. Clarke Award in 2016 and effectively promoted Tchaikovsky from a fantasy writer best known for the insect-kinden Shadows of the Apt sequence into one of the defining SF voices of his generation. That trajectory matters enormously to collectors: early printings of that first book were produced in comparatively modest numbers before the award recognition drove demand sharply upward, so the pre-award state carries a real premium.
The second thing every collector should internalise is a quirk at the very start of his career: his breakthrough fantasy series, Shadows of the Apt, was published as paperback originals. There were no first-issue hardbacks of those ten novels on release. The "true first" of his 2008 debut is therefore a mass-market paperback — cheap in reading condition, genuinely scarce in fine or signed state, and impossible to own as a period first-printing hardback because none was made until 2022. Almost everything interesting about collecting him flows from tensions like that: cheap trade editions versus scarce signed states, mainstream Pan Macmillan runs versus 100-copy small-press printings, and a still-rising reputation pulling up the value of the early, unglamorous impressions.
His later career has been remarkable for its breadth. Alongside Children of Time, he has built an unusually wide, interlocking shelf — The Final Architecture, Dogs of War, Echoes of the Fall, The Tyrant Philosophers, Made Things and Service Model — plus a run of shorter works latterly reissued under the Terrible Worlds: Revolutions banner. It is the intersection of trade first editions and small-press limited runs that defines the collecting landscape.
A word on values throughout: what follows describes a fluid secondhand market, not fixed prices, and is guidance rather than appraisal or investment advice. Figures are broad observations of asking and realised prices in the UK/US trade and move constantly with condition, inscription, and supply.
A brief life
He was born Adrian Czajkowski in Woodhall Spa, Lincolnshire, in June 1972, of Polish descent, and adopted the "Tchaikovsky" spelling for his books on the reasonable grounds that his surname would defeat most British and American readers. He read zoology and psychology at Reading, worked for years as a legal executive in Leeds, and only turned to writing full-time in late 2018; the University of Lincoln awarded him an honorary doctorate in 2019. His zoological training is the through-line of the work — insect-people, uplifted animals, distributed intelligences, alien ecologies — and it is what makes a Tchaikovsky collection feel like one evolving project rather than a scatter of unrelated titles.
How he has been published — and why it matters
Knowing the publisher pattern is half the collecting battle:
- Tor UK (Pan Macmillan) — his "house" for the epic fantasy: Shadows of the Apt, Echoes of the Fall, Guns of the Dawn, The Doors of Eden, and Children of Time itself. His early US fantasy came via Pyr.
- Head of Zeus (AdAstra imprint) — the Dogs of War / Bioforms trilogy, Cage of Souls, and the Tyrant Philosophers.
- Solaris (Rebellion) — most of the standalone novellas (Ironclads, Walking to Aldebaran, Firewalkers, One Day All This Will Be Yours, And Put Away Childish Things) and the Redemption's Blade shared world.
- Tordotcom / Tor.com (US) — Spiderlight, Made Things, Elder Race, The Expert System's Brother and its sequel.
- NewCon Press — the small-press home of the Apt short-fiction collections and his first single-author collection. These are the true small-press collectables, printed in tiny signed/numbered states.
- The Broken Binding and Anderida Books — the specialist booksellers/binders behind the recent signed, sprayed-edge hardback programmes, including the first-ever hardcover editions of Shadows of the Apt and enhanced editions across the Children of Time and Final Architecture sequences.
- Subterranean Press — the American fine-press house, latterly issuing a career-spanning best-of collection.
- Black Library — his Warhammer 40,000 and Age of Sigmar tie-in work.
The short version: the mainstream Pan Macmillan / Head of Zeus / Solaris trade editions are your reading-and-signing copies; the NewCon Press, Broken Binding, Anderida, and Subterranean items are the scarce ones.
The work, series by series
Shadows of the Apt (2008–2014) — Tor UK / Pyr
The decalogy that made him. A world of "kinden" — human peoples who each take the traits and totemic "Art" of an insect (Beetle, Wasp, Mantis, Spider, Ant and many more), split between the mechanically minded Apt and the magic-touched Inapt. The spine is the ageing Beetle spymaster Stenwold Maker trying to rouse the fractious Lowland city-states against the industrialised, expansionist Wasp Empire. It grew out of a university role-playing game Tchaikovsky ran called "Bugworld."
Publication order (all Tor UK, original cover art by Dominic Harman):
- Empire in Black and Gold (2008) — the debut. Stenwold sees the Wasp threat no one else will. ISBN 9780230704138.
- Dragonfly Falling (2009) — the assault widens; the war proper begins.
- Blood of the Mantis (2009) — a race to recover the stolen Shadow Box before the Emperor can use it.
- Salute the Dark (2010) — the first arc's climax; the Wasp armies march on Collegium.
- The Scarab Path (2010) — a change of register, east to the desert city of Khanaphes and older powers.
- The Sea Watch (2011) — Collegium menaced from beneath the waves.
- Heirs of the Blade (2011) — Tynisa's story carries the narrative into the Commonweal.
- The Air War (2012) — total war returns; aerial combat and new Imperial weapons.
- War Master's Gate (2013) — Empress Seda's hunt for ancient power beneath the Mantis forests.
- Seal of the Worm (2014) — the apocalyptic finale.
Collector notes. Because books 1–10 were paperback originals, the desirable "true first" is the 2008–2014 Tor UK paperback — cheap in reading condition. The premium items are:
- Signed, lined and dated first-printing paperbacks, especially of Empire in Black and Gold. Flat-signed near-fine firsts of the debut typically ask roughly £40–90; inscribed or "doodled" copies, and matched signed sets of the first three books, command more. A signed first of the debut is the keystone of any Tchaikovsky collection.
- The Broken Binding hardcover special editions (from 2022). In partnership with Tor, these appeared as signed royal-format hardbacks with foil-blocked boards, sprayed (yellow, book-themed) edges, a ribbon marker and a "hidden" design under the jacket — historically significant as the first hardcover appearance of the Apt novels. Issued to subscribers of the shop's "Dragon's Hoard" collection and via a dedicated mini-subscription, they sold out fast; complete signed matched sets now trade well above issue price.
- US Pyr editions exist for the early titles and are a modest completist side-interest, generally cheaper than the UK firsts.
If you buy nothing else, a fine signed first-printing Empire in Black and Gold plus the Broken Binding hardcover set is the definitive Apt holding.
Tales of the Apt (2016–2018) — NewCon Press
The small-press companion series and, pound for pound, the scarcest core Tchaikovsky collectables. They gather his Apt-world short fiction (much of it previously scattered) and add new material, with cover art by Jon Sullivan.
- Spoils of War (2016) — war-focused tales.
- A Time for Grief (2017) — "peacetime" stories; the human cost after the fighting, from many minor-character viewpoints.
- For Love of Distant Shores (2018) — four linked adventures of the maverick academic Doctor Phinagler; three of the four original to the book.
- The Scent of Tears (2018) — a shared-world anthology edited by Tchaikovsky, topped and tailed by his own stories, inviting other leading fantasists (John Gwynne, Frances Hardinge, Juliet E. McKenna, Justina Robson, Tom Lloyd, David Tallerman, Peter Newman, Keris McDonald, Joff Leader) into the setting.
Collector notes. NewCon issued these as signed hardbacks in limited states of 100 numbered copies each, with the option of matching-numbered sets across all four volumes — the ideal target. The Scent of Tears is signed by Tchaikovsky as editor. Given the run sizes, these rarely surface and are the hardest core-canon items to complete; the numbered signed hardbacks carry clear premiums over the (inexpensive, easy-to-find) trade paperbacks. A matched signed/numbered set of all four is a genuine achievement.
Children of Time (2015–2026) — Tor UK / Tor Books
The breakthrough, and still the series that draws the most collecting interest. A far-future saga of terraforming, generation ships, and uplift gone sideways: a human experiment meant to elevate monkeys instead produces a civilisation of sentient spiders, and later books widen the canvas to other uplifted intelligences and the ragged remnants of humanity.
- Children of Time (2015) — winner of the 30th Arthur C. Clarke Award (2016).
- Children of Ruin (2019) — BSFA Award for Best Novel.
- Children of Memory (2022).
- Children of Strife (2026).
Collector notes. The original UK edition of the first volume came from Tor UK (Pan Macmillan), with Tor Books handling the US market. The award recognition in 2016 is the key inflection point: trade hardbacks and paperbacks issued before the Clarke announcement are scarcer than the many later reprints and carry a meaningful premium, particularly in first-state, unclipped dust-jacketed hardback form. As the series' reputation grew, so did specialist-press interest — The Broken Binding and Anderida Books have both produced enhanced signed editions here — a pattern that has since repeated across nearly all his series. Post-award reprints are common and generally hold lower long-term value than true firsts.
Echoes of the Fall (2016–2018) — Tor UK
An entirely separate, self-contained fantasy trilogy (with a few Easter eggs for Apt readers). A Bronze Age world of shapeshifting animal-totem clans; the heroine Maniye is daughter of both Wolf and Tiger and can take either form. Cover art by Neil Lang.
- The Tiger and the Wolf (2016) — winner of the British Fantasy Award (Robert Holdstock Award) for Best Fantasy Novel.
- The Bear and the Serpent (2017) — Maniye heads south into a dynastic civil war as an ancient threat stirs.
- The Hyena and the Hawk (2018) — the return of the mind-destroying "Plague People."
Collector notes. Unlike the Apt books, these appeared in hardcover first editions from Tor UK, making them straightforward first-edition targets. The Tiger and the Wolf is the one to prioritise — a first-in-series and an award-winner. Signed trade hardbacks turn up periodically through UK signings and shops such as Forbidden Planet and Goldsboro; unsigned firsts remain affordable.
Dogs of War / Bioforms (2017–2025) — Head of Zeus
A near-future-to-far-future SF trilogy about "Bioforms" — genetically engineered, uplifted animals built as weapons — and what personhood really rests on. Influenced, by his own account, by Wells's The Island of Doctor Moreau and Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men.
- Dogs of War (2017) — Rex, a dog Bioform, leads a squad (with the bear Honey and the distributed-intelligence Bees) and confronts the ethics of his own existence. BSFA Best Novel nominee.
- Bear Head (2021) — Honey's story continues, largely on a colonised Mars, amid media manipulation and questions of free will.
- Bee Speaker (2025) — set generations later; Earth has collapsed into a neo-feudal dark age while Mars thrives, and a distress call from Earth's remnant Bees draws a Martian rescue mission. Named by New Scientist among the best SF of 2025.
Collector notes. First editions are Head of Zeus hardbacks; Dogs of War (2017) is the key first-in-series. Note that in March 2026 Head of Zeus reissued Dogs of War and Bear Head with new cover art to match Bee Speaker — the text is unchanged, but the original 2017/2021 jackets now define the "first state" for jacket-conscious collectors, so secure original-jacket firsts before the reissues muddy identification. Signed firsts are readily obtainable given his heavy UK signing schedule.
The Expert System's Brother (2018–2021) — Tordotcom
A two-book SF sequence about Handry, exiled from his village on a bio-engineered world where humans survive only through symbiotic "Expert System" implants.
- The Expert System's Brother (2018)
- The Expert System's Champion (2021)
Collector notes. US Tordotcom editions; modest collectability, mainly of interest to completists and to those who like the Tor.com novella-and-short-novel line as a set.
The Final Architecture (2021–2023) — Tor UK / Orbit
His big modern space opera. Humanity survives the near-destruction of Earth by the Architects — moon-sized alien entities that reshape inhabited worlds into art — thanks to "Intermediaries" like Idris Telemmier, engineered to commune with them. When the Architects abruptly vanish and then return, Idris's discoveries may decide the fate of the galaxy's fractious powers.
- Shards of Earth (2021) — BSFA Award for Best Novel.
- Eyes of the Void (2022).
- Lords of Uncreation (2023).
Collector notes. As a recent, commercially prominent series, trade firsts are plentiful and affordable — which makes the enhanced editions the collector's real quarry. Both The Broken Binding and Anderida Books have produced signed, numbered, sprayed-edge hardbacks across the trilogy, usually allocated by subscription or lottery rather than open retail; that is exactly why secondary listings are sparse and prices swing when copies surface. Matched-number sets across all three volumes are the prize.
The Tyrant Philosophers (2022–present) — Head of Zeus
His most acclaimed recent fantasy project: a secondary world under the heel of the "Palleseen," a coldly rationalist imperial regime bent on "perfecting" and standardising everything, magic included.
- City of Last Chances (2022) — a mosaic novel of a conquered city; widely praised and Hugo-recognised.
- House of Open Wounds (2024) — a field-hospital novel following the Palleseen war machine.
- Days of Shattered Faith (2025).
Shorter work in the sequence includes a 2025 novella. Collector notes. Head of Zeus firsts; this is the recent fantasy most likely to appreciate, given its critical standing. First-in-series City of Last Chances is the one to secure signed and in first state, and The Broken Binding has produced sprayed-edge signed editions in this line that tend to sell out.
Standalone novels
The standalones hold both bargains and a couple of quietly desirable items.
- Guns of the Dawn (2015, Tor UK) — a Napoleonic-flavoured flintlock fantasy; gentlewoman Emily Marshwic is conscripted into a brutal war between Lascanne and revolutionary Denland. British Fantasy Award finalist. His first true standalone, underrated; first-edition hardbacks and signed copies remain affordable and are a smart early buy.
- Spiderlight (2016, Tor.com) — a subversive quest fantasy that turns the "party of adventurers" trope inside out. Note the publishing history: it was first serialised in Aethernet magazine in 2013 before the 2016 book edition (ISBN 9780765388360), so the book is not strictly the text's first appearance — a nuance for the completist.
- Cage of Souls (2019, Head of Zeus) — a dense far-future "dying Earth" novel narrated from a prison island beneath a swollen red sun. Arthur C. Clarke Award finalist; a strong standalone SF collectors should not overlook.
- The Doors of Eden (2020, Tor UK) — a parallel-worlds technothriller braided with vignettes of divergent evolutionary histories. Winner of the Sidewise Award for alternate history; Philip K. Dick Award finalist. One of the more sought-after standalone firsts.
- Ogres (2022, Solaris) — a novella-length class-war fable in a world where ogres rule.
- Recent SF standalones, listed for completeness: Alien Clay (2024), Service Model (2024) and Shroud (2025) — widely available in first edition and increasingly issued in signed and sprayed-edge states by his publishers and by The Broken Binding.
Novellas — mostly Solaris and Tordotcom
A prolific, award-attracting novella writer. Solaris later gathered several under umbrella "Terrible Worlds" titles (including Terrible Worlds: Revolutions), but the collector's interest is in the standalone first editions.
- Ironclads (2017, Solaris) — class-conscious military SF in a near-future, post-Brexit Britain of mecha-armoured officer castes.
- Walking to Aldebaran (2019, Solaris) — astronaut Gary Rendell lost inside an alien artefact; darkly funny body-horror. Issued as a signed limited edition of 1,000 copies alongside the trade hardback — the signed limitation is the collectable state and is now hard to find.
- Made Things (2019, Tordotcom) — tiny animated homunculi and a city thief.
- Firewalkers (2020, Solaris) — climate-collapse SF; young technicians sent into a lethal solar-farm wasteland.
- One Day All This Will Be Yours (2021, Solaris) — a wry time-travel novella.
- Elder Race (2021, Tordotcom) — a stranded anthropologist mistaken for a wizard; a clever fantasy/SF "equipoise." Hugo Award nominee for Best Novella and one of his most beloved shorter works — the novella first edition most worth owning signed.
- And Put Away Childish Things (2023, Solaris) — a dark portal-fantasy riff.
Collector notes. The two to prioritise are the signed limited Walking to Aldebaran (for scarcity) and a first-edition Elder Race (for reputation). The rest are affordable, attractive small hardbacks; buying the Solaris novellas as a signed run is an achievable, satisfying sub-collection.
Collections and short fiction
- Feast and Famine (2013, NewCon Press) — his first single-author collection (ten stories, including an Apt tale), in the publisher's Imaginings series, cover by Jim Burns. Issued as a signed, dust-jacketed hardback limited to 125 copies (plus ebook). Genuinely scarce, and one of the best "sleeper" items in his bibliography.
- Short Changes (2020, self-published) — a self-issued gathering; mainly of completist interest.
- The Best of Adrian Tchaikovsky (Subterranean Press) — a large career-spanning collection (37 stories, 600-plus pages). Subterranean's signed/limited fine-press states are the American collector's natural target; watch for the numbered/lettered issues.
- Precious Little Things (2017/2019) — a chapbook (Birmingham SF Group) and later a Tor.com short; the sort of ephemeral small-press item completists chase.
Much of his short fiction is otherwise scattered across anthologies (Alchemy Press, NewCon Press, Solaris Rising and others) and magazines; his own website has historically catalogued where individual stories appeared.
Shared-world and tie-in work
Worth knowing, though generally lower on the priority list:
- The Bloody Deluge (2014, Abaddon) — an Afterblight Chronicles novella.
- Even in the Cannon's Mouth (2016) — part of the Monstrous Little Voices Shakespearean shared world.
- Redemption's Blade (2018, Solaris) — first book of the multi-author After the War shared world (continued by Justina Robson).
- Warhammer 40,000 — Day of Ascension (2022, Black Library), concerning the Genestealer Cults, plus short fiction. Warhammer: Age of Sigmar — novellas and short work such as On the Shoulders of Giants.
Collector notes. Black Library titles have their own collector ecosystem and occasional limited editions; Day of Ascension is the notable Tchaikovsky 40K first. The shared-world novellas are inexpensive but can be surprisingly hard to find in nice condition.
Editions, print runs and market values
The market splits into a few clear tiers, and knowing which tier a copy sits in is what separates a fair price from a foolish one.
| Edition type | Typical source | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Trade first editions (UK/US) | Tor UK / Tor Books / Head of Zeus / Solaris | First-state, unclipped dust jackets are the entry point; condition and price-clipping affect value significantly |
| Signed limited / numbered editions | Specialist presses (The Broken Binding, Anderida Books; NewCon Press for the Apt material) | Often issued in runs of roughly 350–400 copies — but the NewCon Apt collections are far scarcer at 100 copies each — frequently with new artwork, slipcases and sprayed edges |
| Matched numbered sets | Collector-assembled or press-curated | Sets sharing one limitation number across a whole series carry an additional premium |
| Award-tie-in reprints | Mainstream publisher | Post-award reprints are common and generally hold lower long-term value than true firsts |
Specialist-press editions typically feature numbered limitation pages, author signatures and premium binding, and are usually allocated by subscription or lottery rather than open retail — a key reason secondary listings are sparse and prices can swing sharply when copies do surface. At the time of writing there are few or no active public listings for the scarcest limited editions, which reflects that scarcity rather than a lack of demand.
Based on recent private-sale and auction activity, indicative ranges are:
| Configuration | Approximate range |
|---|---|
| Trade first edition, fine/fine | £40–90 |
| Specialist-press signed limited, single volume (~350–400 copies) | £120–220 |
| NewCon Press Apt collection, signed/numbered (100 copies) | Premium over the above, given the smaller run |
| Matched numbered full-series set | £600–2,000+ depending on completeness and series |
A note on condition. These figures assume near-fine to fine throughout. Jacket price-clipping, sun-fading, bumped corners or damaged slipcases reduce value substantially; pristine, unread copies with intact limitation pages and slipcases command the top of any range. As with any limited-edition speculative market, prices are approximate and move with the author's ongoing critical and commercial trajectory — which, in his case, is still climbing, so the early "midlist" impressions (2008–2015) are the ones most likely to keep rising.
A collecting strategy
If you are building this deliberately, a sensible order of priority:
- Signed first-printing Empire in Black and Gold (2008 Tor paperback original). The cornerstone — his debut in true first state, ideally signed.
- The NewCon Press Tales of the Apt signed/numbered hardbacks (100 copies each), matched-numbered if possible. The scarcest core items; buy on sight.
- A first-state, unclipped Children of Time (2015), ideally a pre-Clarke printing — the pivotal SF collectable.
- The Broken Binding Shadows of the Apt hardcover set — the first-ever hardcovers, signed, sprayed edges; a coherent set with real secondary demand.
- Specialist-press limited runs of Children of Time and The Final Architecture, assembled with matching or consecutive numbering where you can.
- Feast and Famine (125 signed copies) and the signed limited Walking to Aldebaran (1,000) — the two most collectable non-Apt limitations.
- First-in-series award winners in first edition: The Tiger and the Wolf (BFA), Shards of Earth (BSFA), Dogs of War (original jacket), City of Last Chances.
- Standalone firsts with award pedigree: The Doors of Eden (Sidewise), Cage of Souls (Clarke shortlist), Guns of the Dawn.
- The Solaris/Tordotcom novellas as an affordable signed run, with Elder Race the priority.
Because he is a living author who signs heavily at UK conventions, unsigned trade firsts of most titles will likely stay cheap, while fine, dated, first-printing signed copies of the early and scarce items are what appreciate. Completeness matters too: partial sets are far harder to sell at a premium than fully matched runs, and matched-number sets across an entire specialist-press series routinely fetch a set-level premium over the sum of the parts.
Bibliography
Children of Time (Tor UK / Tor Books): Children of Time (2015) · Children of Ruin (2019) · Children of Memory (2022) · Children of Strife (2026).
The Final Architecture (Tor UK / Orbit): Shards of Earth (2021) · Eyes of the Void (2022) · Lords of Uncreation (2023).
Shadows of the Apt (Tor UK, paperback originals; US: Pyr): Empire in Black and Gold (2008) · Dragonfly Falling (2009) · Blood of the Mantis (2009) · Salute the Dark (2010) · The Scarab Path (2010) · The Sea Watch (2011) · Heirs of the Blade (2011) · The Air War (2012) · War Master's Gate (2013) · Seal of the Worm (2014). Hardcover special editions: The Broken Binding / Tor, 2022 onward.
Tales of the Apt (NewCon Press; signed ltd. 100 numbered copies each): Spoils of War (2016) · A Time for Grief (2017) · For Love of Distant Shores (2018) · The Scent of Tears (2018, anthology ed. Tchaikovsky).
Echoes of the Fall (Tor UK, hardcover firsts): The Tiger and the Wolf (2016, BFA winner) · The Bear and the Serpent (2017) · The Hyena and the Hawk (2018).
Dogs of War (Head of Zeus): Dogs of War (2017) · Bear Head (2021) · Bee Speaker (2025). Dogs of War and Bear Head reissued with new jackets, March 2026.
The Expert System's Brother (Tordotcom): The Expert System's Brother (2018) · The Expert System's Champion (2021).
The Tyrant Philosophers (Head of Zeus): City of Last Chances (2022) · House of Open Wounds (2024) · Days of Shattered Faith (2025) · Novellas: Lives of Bitter Rain · Pretenders to the Throne of God (2025).
Standalone novels: Guns of the Dawn (2015, Tor UK) · Spiderlight (2016, Tor.com; serialised 2013) · Cage of Souls (2019, Head of Zeus) · The Doors of Eden - Limited Edition (2020, Tor UK, Sidewise winner) · Ogres (2022, Solaris) · Alien Clay (2024) · Service Model (2024) · Shroud (2025).
Novellas: Ironclads (2017, Solaris) · Walking to Aldebaran (2019, Solaris; signed ltd. 1,000) · Made Things (2019, Tordotcom) · Firewalkers (2020, Solaris) · One Day All This Will Be Yours (2021, Solaris) · Elder Race (2021, Tordotcom, Hugo nominee) · And Put Away Childish Things (2023, Solaris).
Collections: Feast and Famine (2013, NewCon Press; signed ltd. 125) · Short Changes (2020, self-published) · The Best of Adrian Tchaikovsky (Subterranean Press).
Shared-world / tie-in: The Bloody Deluge (2014, Abaddon; Afterblight Chronicles) · Even in the Cannon's Mouth (2016; Monstrous Little Voices) · Redemption's Blade (2018, Solaris; After the War) · Day of Ascension (2022, Black Library; Warhammer 40,000) · Warhammer: Age of Sigmar short work.
Disclaimer: Valuations are estimates based on recent secondary-market activity and should be treated as guidance only. Market conditions change; always verify current prices with specialist dealers before buying or selling.
Disclaimer: Valuations are estimates based on recent secondary market activity and should be treated as guidance only. Market conditions change; always verify current prices with specialist dealers before buying or selling.
