Niilo Sevänen’s Eternal Winter series pre-empted in three-volume deal in Germany

Show-stopping news from Germany: Bastei Lübbe has pre-empted Niilo Sevänen‘s Eternal Winter series in a three-volume deal.

Author Niilo Sevänen

Described as Umberto Eco meets George R.R. Martin and mixing historical facts with Finnish myths and classical tropes of the fantasy genre in an atmospheric background, The Path of Eternal Winter is one of the most interesting contemporary fantasy titles from the Nordics and has been collecting raving reviews since its release. This is Niilo Sevänen‘s debut as novelist, but the public may recognise his name as the frontman of the melodic death metal band Insomnium. As the subject matter of Eternal Winter is also the theme of Insomnium‘s most successful album, the book has been turning heads and gathering international attention since the news of its publication reached the Insomnium fandom, which counts over 80.000 followers worldwide, and is currently on tour in Europe.

The series mixes an extensive background research on real historical events and Finnish folklore and an entertaining prose resulting in a page-turning read that wraps together a well-structured plot, an entertaining style and great marketing potential.

In The Path of Eternal Winter (Eternal Winter #1) it is the year 1007, it has been winter for seven years and we follow Orpheus, a lute player who is fond of taverns and drinking rather than responsibilities and hardships, but he is left with no choice but to take on custody for little Halla, his niece, who is being chased by mercenaries. The pair embark on a perilous escape, which results in an even more dangerous journey towards a destroyed Rome.

The Path of Eternal Winter (Ikitalven polku, Gummerus 2024)

On a parallel storyline, we follow Duchess Theofanu as she tries to track down her son, who went missing when the world froze over years before. Rumor has it that the Eternal Winter came about when a witch was summoned in Ireland and she traveled to Rome, bringing destruction, and ultimately taking the throne, but nothing is known of the fate of the troops that defended the Holy City. 

Who is the Witch, that some call the Anti-Christ, and where does she come from? And why does an eerie crow haunt Halla’s dreams, suggesting she should meet the Witch?

The Chasm of Eternal Winter (Eternal Winter #2) will be out in autumn 2025, picking up where The Path of Eternal Winter left us hanging, and we genuinely can’t wait.

Part of the German deal is also The Gate of Eternal Winter, a novella exploring the lore behind the series also published in audio format by Gummerus.

Bastei Lübbe is one of the major publishers in Germany, ranked as the largest independent publisher of the country and the 3rd largest audiobook publisher in Germany. Their extensive list includes best-selling authors like Dan Brown, among others.

Rock on, and don’t miss out on this title!

Free by Eppu Nuotio & Sanna Pelliccioni on display in Haapsalu

Free, the latest illustrated children’s book by Eppu Nuotio and Sanna Pelliccioni (ill.) is the protagonist of an exhibition in Haapsalu, organised by the Finnish Institute in Estonia.

The event description on the official Finnish Institute in Estonia website

In Free, it is a warm summer day, and a very special one. A human chain is formed to peacefully manifest for peace, and it is also the day a little girl has lost a key, and sets out to find it. Over the course of the day, as everyone joins the chain, she also learns that any lock will open if you find the right key and that there’s power in joining forces to change the world.

Human chains are a peaceful form of demonstration with examples all over the world. For the Baltics, the most notable example is the human chain formed on August 23, 1989: on that day over 2 million people joined a Baltic-wide human chain demonstrating for peace and independence.

To celebrate 35 years from the event, an exhibition with Free as its protagonist is being hosted at the REaD bookshop in Tallinn.

Free is part of an illustrated children’s books trilogy by Eppu Nuotio and Sanna Pelliccioni with a focus on history and historical events seen through the eyes of children. The first instalment of the series, Sent Across The Sea, won Sanna Pelliccioni the Plaque Award by the Biennal of Illustrations Bratislava for her illustrations, marking the first Finnish win in decades.

Don’t miss out on this title!

We’ll Just Ride Past sold to Poland

We’ll Just Ride Past by Ellen Strömberg is travelling to Poland, where it will be published by Dwie Siostry.

We’ll Just Ride Past continues its journey out into the world as the Polish rights to the work have been acquired by Dwie Siostry.

We’ll Just Ride Past won the August Prize, the most prestigious literary prize in Sweden, in 2022 and its rights has already been sold for ItalianKoreanSlovenian and Catalan. In We’ll Just Ride Past we follow Manda and Malin, two best friends in a small town where nothing ever happens. The girls are known as the Bicycles, because they’re always riding around looking for excitement, be it people to hang out with, a party, a little love – anything goes. One day Malin develops a crush on a guy working at the local pizzeria, and a series on events – both fun and not so fun – begins to unfold. We’ll Just Ride Past is an accurate portrayal of a moment in life where it’s perfectly normal to change style and music taste every week and the world awaits.

We’ll Just Ride Past (Vi ska ju bara cykla förbi, S&S 2022)

 Dwie Siostry is a highly acclaimed Warsaw-based publishing house specialised in high-quality children’s and YA literature. It is the Polish home of, among others, A Giraffe’s Heart Is Unbelievably Large.

Warmest congratulations to the author and the publisher!

Fishing for the Little Pike travels to Spain

Fishing for the Little Pike by Juhani Karila is now travelling to Spain, where it will be published by Deleste.

Fishing for the Little Pike by Juhani Karila continues its journey into the world, and is now travelling to Spain, where it will be published by Deleste.

Fishing for the Little Pike (Pienen Hauen Pyydystys, Siltala 2019)

Fishing For the Little Pike is Juhani Karila’s debut novel and it follows Elina Ylijaako, a young woman who is under the spell of a curse that forces her to travel back to her home village in the Finnish Lapland to fish a specific pike from a specific pond every year, or she and her first love will die. This year, however, the supernatural gets in the way in the form of a mythological creature haunting the pond, all while a detective is on her trail as she is suspected of murder. Funny, surprisingly wise and proudly weird, Fishing For the Little Pike was an instant hit upon its release, and it has so far travelled to 17 language territories. In Finland, it is published by Siltala. The book has received great critical acclaim, and was recently awarded the Silver Foreword Indies Award.

Deleste is a newly founded publishing house with great literary ambitions: its catalogue includes Dino Pesut, Dinçer Güçyeter, the winner of the Leipzig Book Fair Prize 2023, and Semezdin Mehmedinović, among others.

We are delighted to give Karila a spot in such great company!

Merja Mäki and Harry Salmenniemi will be featured as author highlights at the Helsinki Book Fair

Merja Mäki and Harry Salmenniemi will be featured as author highlights at the upcoming Helsinki Book Fair this autumn.

Merja Mäki, author of award-winning Before the Birds and Wept Another, will be discussing her books and talking to readers on October 24th , 18.00-19.00 while Harry Salmenniemi, author of several well-loved short stories collection and of Heartmist, will be featured on October 25th, 15.30-16.30.

Author highlights are an established and appreciated way to bring readers and authors together, and are considered one of the high points of the Helsinki Fair.

Wept Another (Itki toisenkin, Gummerus 2023)

Wept Another, Merja Mäki’s latest book, follows Larja, a young Karelian teacher who comes back home after a training camp. It is 1942, and peace has descended momentarily on this borderland contended between Finland and the Soviet Union, and nothing is at it was: Larja soon learns that her buabo Matja, the village’s most-respected professional lamenter, is deathly ill, and her little sister Pola carries a secret deep within her heart. As Larja cares for her ailing grandmother, she listens to the messages the trees are sending her on the northern winds and discovers that she too has the gift of wailing. However, it requires great courage to accompany the dead to the other side. After a Finnish man steps into her life, Larja finds herself again torn between two different worlds. Still, love knows no borders and the winds blow as they see fit. Can Larja answer the wind’s call and weep another day?

Heartmist (Sydänhämärä, Siltala 2023)

In Heartmist, a week before the writer’s second baby is due to be born, his firstborn gets seriously ill and is taken to the intensive care unit. The father keeps vigil by his son’s bed in the hospital and at home, observing everything around them. Things must be done without thinking. You must go on, days on end, each day filled to the brim with tasks. When his son starts to get better, the writer is grateful and surprised, and understands that he doesn’t under – stand life at all. At home, the everyday goes on with its nappies, cooking and washing. Deep feelings are impractical in the day-to-day living. They have too many dimensions. Everyday holds destruction and chaos, both of which need to be in order. Touching, poetic and warm, Heartmist is a novel of ordinary and extraordinary life, and an ode to its beauty.

Looking forward to seeing our authors on stage!