Before the end of this story, Juno Verdant will die.
Unfortunately, nobody bothered to tell her.
Juno works for the Company, a secret organisation responsible for keeping ghosts and other supernatural disasters from destroying reality. It’s mostly paperwork. Occasionally, it’s screaming. Often, it’s both.
As a Seer, Juno spends her days investigating hauntings and trying not to accidentally trigger prophecies simply by opening her mouth. She’s very good at her job. She’s not so great at following orders.
When an ancient power begins moving behind the scenes, it becomes clear that something is coming. Something that will cost her everything. With friends at her side and a growing talent for making powerful beings regret meeting her, Juno must uncover what’s happening before the world tears itself apart.
Equal parts absurd and heartbreaking, Those Old Gods: Juno is a queer urban fantasy where divine bureaucracy collides with grief, and laughter sits close to loss. Because sometimes the funniest thing in the room is the thing that’s breaking your heart.
Assuming, of course, you survive long enough to laugh at it.
Although this is technically the second Those Old Gods book, the short stories are not required reading to understand the story. You can start here, though reading them first may help with some of the wider world and recurring chaos.