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1''The Anubis Gates'' is Creator/TimPowers' breakout novel, first published in 1983.
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3Literary scholar Brendan Doyle is hired by reclusive millionaire J. Cochran Darrow to provide color commentary on a sight-seeing expedition into the year 1810 through one of the eponymous Gates, a series of gaps through time accidentally created in the 19th century by a cadre of Egyptian sorcerers attempting to overthrow the British Empire. The expedition attracts the attention of the sorcerers, who kidnap Doyle to find out where the travellers come from and how they found out about the Gates. He escapes, but not until the expedition has returned to 1983 and the Gate has closed, leaving him stranded in 1810 London and having to deal with the Egyptian sorcerers, the BodySnatcher Dog-Face Joe, the mystery of the reclusive poet William Ashbless, and the discovery that there was more to the original sight-seeing expedition than he was told.
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5!!This novel provides examples of:
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7* AndYouThoughtItWasAGame: Coleridge plays an important role in the climax of the story, all the while convinced he's just having a particularly vivid drug trip.
8* AntiMagic: The Antaeus Brotherhood have a technique for diverting magical attacks away from themselves.
9* BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy: Creator/LordByron and Creator/SamuelTaylorColeridge become entangled in the magical goings-on.
10* BodySnatcher: Dog-Face Joe, who uses ancient Egyptian magic to swap bodies with new victims each time his current body becomes too hairy to hide. [[spoiler:One of his victims is Doyle, who ends up in the body history knows as William Ashbless. He even pulls this on Darrow right before his historically-recorded execution, but it doesn't save him in the end.]]
11* BodySurf: Dog-Face Joe has to do this, because any body he stays in too long will start growing hair all over.
12* CastFromHitPoints: Trying to use serious magic in the 19th century tends to have severely deleterious effects on the physical health of the caster.
13* ChekhovsGun: Powers sets up a ''lot'' of dominoes in chapter two. Some of them are pretty obvious (rumours of a [[BodySurf body-surfing]] serial killer running amok in 1810? No ''way'' Doyle will [[LawOfConservationOfDetail somehow solve that problem]]); others, a lot more subtle.
14* ColdBloodedTorture: Happens to Doyle [[spoiler:twice. The second time is strongly implied to be horrific and mostly happens offscreen except for the screaming. We do, however, get a roster of the body parts he's now ''missing''.]]
15* CompoundInterestTimeTravelGambit: Averted by Darrow's plan. Scheming to travel into the past and invest his wealth there, he also intends to [[spoiler:become immortal and watch over his investment, taking full advantage of his economic foresight]], rather than trust in compound interest alone.
16* CounterfeitCash: One of several plots by the Egyptian villains has them trying to throw the UK into crisis by pouring counterfeit money into the banking system.
17* CreatorInJoke: When Tim Powers and Creator/JamesPBlaylock were in college together, they invented a fake poet named "William Ashbless" to satirize the quality of their college's literary magazine. In ''The Anubis Gates'', he appears as a major character [[spoiler: and turns out to, himself, be a fake identity adopted by the past-stranded and body-swapped protagonist]].
18* TheCuckoolanderWasRight: The fate of [[spoiler: Doctor Romany]] after having been damaged, defeated, and marooned in the (further) past.
19* CueTheSun: [[spoiler: The boat of the sun god Ra emerges from the tunnels into the Thames, turns to the east and dematerializes, leaving behind a miraculously restored Ashbless, just as the sun peeks over the horizon.]]
20* DesignatedBullet: Jacky is out to avenge Dog-Face Joe's murder of Colin Lepovre by shooting Joe with the same gun that killed Colin.
21* DisneyVillainDeath: In a variation, the leader of the Egyptian sorcerers is last seen falling ''upward'' out of sight, as a side-effect of his long use of magic is that his personal gravity has been inverted (to be precise, his body is now more strongly attracted to the moon than to the earth).
22* EarnYourHappyEnding: Doyle goes through absolute hell, but ends the story in a much better place than where he started it.
23* EyesNeverLie: Beth Tichy recognises a monster as her fiancé, transformed, by the expression in his eyes -- [[spoiler:just after she shoots it]].
24* FamilialBodySnatcher: Darrow/Dundee's game plan for living his way back to the 20th century while becoming the wealthiest and most powerful man in the world along the way. [[spoiler:"Too bad" he dies before getting around to siring any offspring to start the chain with.]]
25* FreakyFridaySabotage: Dog-Face Joe's modus operandi, poisoning himself before stealing another body.
26* AGlassInTheHand: Subverted: the protagonist tries to break a beer mug in his hand to show how tough he is and intimidate his way out of an awkward situation, but discovers, to his embarrassment and onlookers' amusement, that he isn't quite strong enough. Still defuses the awkward situation, though.
27* GoldfishPoopGang: Doctor Romany. He's not a nice guy and neither are [[MakeWrongWhatOnceWentRight his aims]] or [[KickTheDog his means]], but after watching all of his increasingly-desperate plans come apart on him, it's hard not to see him as a little pathetic.
28* GrandTheftMe: Dog-Face Joe does this, and [[spoiler: Darrow]] plans on doing it (with his own son, no less).
29* HistoricalFantasy: It starts in the late 1990s, but the majority of the plot takes place in Victorian England.
30* HistoricalHeroUpgrade: James Stuart, Duke of York, albeit offstage. His enmity leads to...
31* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: The Duke Of Monmouth
32* IKnowYoureInThereSomewhereFight: How Doyle overcomes [[spoiler: replicant mindslave Byron]]. While he ''thinks'' that what he wants to do is obey his master's sinister commands, Doyle knows what he really wants to do is [[spoiler: write poetry]].
33* ImAHumanitarian: Implied of Horrabin.
34* ImMrFuturePopCultureReference: A character adopts the alias "Creator/HumphreyBogart" in early-19th-century London. A variation in that the character is not himself a time traveller, but picked up the name from another character who is.
35* InThePastEveryoneWillBeFamous: Largely averted, as the only real historical figure Doyle encounters is the one Darrow's expedition deliberately set out to meet, Coleridge. [[spoiler:Byron's clone is arguable, since he's not the real Byron, but the fact that the conspirators happened to choose a famous historical figure to clone entirely by chance does tend toward the trope.]]
36* LaserGuidedKarma: By the end of the book, every single one of the villains is dead.
37* TheMagicGoesAway: A massive magical event in the backstory seriously damaged magical potency, and it's steadily faded ever since.
38* ManchurianAgent: The protagonist foils a plot of this nature.
39* MonsterClown: Horrabin, who tortures and mutilates the beggars who serve under him, is implied to have some of them ''cooked and eaten'', and voluntarily serves the villains.
40* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast:
41** Horrabin
42** For that matter, the [[EvilSorcerer ancient Egyptian sorcerer]] who sent Doctor Romany to England in the first place is pretty nasty, justifiably so given that his true name is ''Khaibitu-em-Betu-Tuf''. Quite literally, ''[[EldritchAbomination Shadows of Abomination.]]"
43* NoOntologicalInertia: The Egyptian sorcerors have been sustaining themselves with magic for so long that giving it up would cause CriticalExistenceFailure. Their leader exploits this to stop his minions from cutting their losses and abandoning the plan.
44* ObfuscatingDisability: Doyle pretends to be mute in order to hide his conspicuous American accent.
45* OneDialogueTwoConversations: The protagonist has been mugged by men [[TimeTravellersAreSpies who think he's a sorcerer]] moments before he was supposed to return to the present; when he wakes up, groggy and thinking he's in 1983, he demands that he get a phone call to his boss.
46--> '''Doyle''': Well, call him up, then. [[NumberOfTheBeast His number's]] in [[Literature/TheBible the book.]]
47* OurHomunculiAreDifferent: The magical substance paut can be used to create living humanoid beings. Horrabin makes very small servants called the Spoonsize boys for various acts of espionage (and also to serve as the "puppets" in his Punch and Judy show), and the full replica of a human called a ka is fashioned from the same stuff.
48* PowerAtAPrice: Prolonged use of sorcery causes a mystical realignment from the Earth to the Moon. For most of the sorcerers who appear in the novel, the main effect is that it has become physically painful to come into contact with the ground, requiring various inventive methods of locomotion such as swings, stilts, or special shoes. Their leader, who's been at it for centuries, is now more strongly aligned to the Moon to the Earth, and has to stay indoors when the Moon is above the horizon to avoid being sucked away into space.
49* ProphecyTwist: At the beginning, Doyle recalls what he knows about Ashbless, including the discovery of his corpse. [[spoiler:At the end, having become Ashbless, Doyle heads out to where he's supposed to die. However, earlier in the story, the villains made a replica of him - which Doyle encounters there and kills in the same manner that Ashbless was supposed to be killed. He leaves the body there to be discovered and walks away, much more optimistic.]]
50* PublicSecretMessage: Time travelers in the early 19th century get each other's attentions on busy city streets by whistling [[Music/TheBeatles Beatles]] songs.
51* PunchClockVillain: Richard, the old gypsy who works for Doctor Romany, is very much in on all of his evil schemes, but pretty much a decent guy. Early on in the book, he merely watches as Romany tortures Doyle for information, but when he himself recaptures Doyle later on, he decides to let him go rather than turn him back over to his boss. He also interferes with the attempt to murder Byron in cold blood. [[spoiler:When Romany is eventually exiled to the past, his reaction is pretty much relief, and he merely gathers up his people and leaves.]]
52* RightInFrontOfMe: The scene in which William Ashbless is introduced to his wife-to-be, immediately after saying something he would have worded much more carefully if he'd known who she was.
53* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Darrow arranges for a bunch of ludicrously-wealthy people to be taken back in time to attend a lecture by Coleridge... only to learn the time portal took them back to a week ''before'' that lecture took place. Coleridge is in the building, however, and Doyle suggests that the poet might be able to give an ''impromptu'' lecture for the right price. Before Coleridge can object, Darrow offers him a hundred pounds (bear in mind, that's a hundred pounds ''in 1810 money''). The scene cuts to Coleridge giving a lecture to the assembled travelers.
54* SecretHistory: How Doyle gets around YouAlreadyChangedThePast. Since [[spoiler: he turns out to be the only source for Ashbless' life]], he doesn't need to do what the history books say; he just has to ''remember'' what the history books say so he can recite them as BlatantLies later.
55* SexlessMarriage: Darrow/Dundee and Claire, much to her displeasure.
56* TheSlowPath:
57** One of the villains gets stranded in the past and has to come back the long way, winding up as a mad old coot who appears in the story ''before'' the fateful time journey, making incomprehensible prophecies and mocking the ambitions of his younger self.
58** Another villain ''deliberately'' strands himself in the past (having come up with an unpleasant but effective plan for remaining youthful), with the intention of using his historical knowledge to accumulate wealth and power on his way back to the present.
59* SpookySeance: In a NoodleIncident, a seance was being conducted at the site of one of the gaps in time. As these gaps cause magic to start working in their vicinity, this seance presumably got results; just what result, no one knows, as the participants were all found dead the next day, sitting around their ouija board with horrified looks on their faces.
60* StableTimeLoop: [[spoiler:Doyle creates one when, having become Ashbless, he copies Ashbless's poetry from memory in the place and at the time Ashbless is supposed to have written it. He has a brief panic when he realizes that this means nobody ever actually ''wrote'' the poems, but calms down and concludes that, as long as they exist in ''some'' form, history won't care.]]
61* StopWorshippingMe: The Egyptian villains' plan is intended to make worship of the ancient Egyptian gods the world's dominant religion. The Egyptian gods' interventions in mortal events tend to hinder the villains and help the protagonist Ashbless.
62* SweetPollyOliver: The fiancée of one of Dog-Face Joe's victims adopts a male persona and infiltrates London's underworld to hunt him down.
63* TakeALevelInBadass: Doyle, roughly about the same time that he accepts that he's stuck in 1810.
64* ThatOldTimePrescription: Doyle survives Dog-Faced Joe's FreakyFridaySabotage by eating a large quantity of charcoal from a fireplace as he knows that activated charcoal is used to treat strychnine poisoning in the 20th century.
65* TimeTravel: via the titular gates, a harmonic series of episodic fissures that appear up and down the time stream from an initial temporal accident like the ripples resulting from a rock thrown into a pond.
66* TongueTrauma: Dog-Face Joe mutilates his own tongue whenever he's about to abandon a body, so that his victim can't go talking about what just happened [[spoiler:in the brief time remaining before the poison he takes at the same time does its work]].
67* TooKinkyToTorture: Effectively what happens when kidnappers attempt to put [[ArtisticStimulation opium-addict]] Creator/SamuelTaylorColeridge out by spiking his tea with laudanum. Instead of falling asleep, Coleridge briefly becomes a BadassBookworm.
68* TrickedOutTime:
69** Dog-Face Joe avoids his historically-recorded fate, after one of the time-travelers tells him about in payment for services rendered, by setting up a situation in which he appears to die as history records but actually escapes into another body at the last moment. He also changes up his method of FreakyFridaySabotage so that the distinctive trail of bodies he was leaving behind him ceases with his "death".
70** In the final confrontation, the villains attempt to bribe Doyle over to their side by offering to rescue his wife by tricking out the road accident that killed her.
71* UnexpectedlyRealMagic: In a NoodleIncident, a group of dabbling amateur spiritualists were holding a SpookySeance near one of the time gateways when it opened up. Proximity to such open gateways causes magic, most of which has [[TheMagicGoesAway long since faded from the world]], to become locally functional again. This is implied to be why the seance's participants - none of whom were prepared for a ''successful'' outcome - were all found dead the next morning, with looks of shock and horror about ''what'' they had summoned on their faces.
72* UnusualEuphemism: Jacky describes the events of the climax as "surviving the condensed works of Dante".
73* WriteBackToTheFuture: The protagonist sends a message from the past to himself, jotting a note on a book in PigLatin. This isn't so much an attempt to convey information -- he'd already seen the note, and been surprised by it, at a previous point in his time-traveling adventure -- so much as a way to self-seal a StableTimeLoop and ensure his earlier self will pay attention to that particular book.
74* YouAlreadyChangedThePast: Played with. [[spoiler:The past is going exactly the way it's supposed to - it's just that the identities and motives of the people involved aren't exactly what historians will record.]]
75* YourDaysAreNumbered: Doyle tells someone he cares about the exact date and cause of her death in a drunken argument. He finds it very hard to live with himself afterwards. However the brave way in which she faces her fate gives him the courage to face his own fate later.
76* YouCantFightFate: Any attempt to change history will result in, at best, a case of YouAlreadyChangedThePast. (But [[spoiler:what history says about your fate doesn't always mean what it seems to mean, because history is sometimes misguided, never comprehensive and momentous shifts often hinge on tiny actions that no one either noticed at the time or bothered to record later]].)
77* YouWillBeBeethoven: [[spoiler:"William Ashbless" is actually Doyle.]]

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