Wednesday, September 19, 2012 | By: Patrick

Guest Blog: Margaret Weis


Like many speculative fiction readers of my generation, I fell in love with the fantasy genre at the age of 12 when I first read Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman's Dragons of Autumn Twilight. The rest, as they say, is history!

Her latest SFF novel was Shadow Raiders (Canada, USA, Europe) and it was published last year. This is her first ever blog post and I'm pleased that it's happening on the Hotlist!

For more information about the author, check out her official website.

Enjoy!
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THE BOOK I'D LIKE TO WRITE, BUT MY AGENT WOULD HAVE HEART FAILURE

I really want to write a western.

Many years ago, for a YA nonfiction book Frank and Jesse James, I researched the border wars between Missouri and Kansas during the Civil War. I grew up in that area and the period fascinates me. I occasionally dream about writing a novel about William Clark Quantrill and those who rode with him: Frank and Jesse James, Cole Younger and his brothers, Bloody Bill Anderson.

Okay, I'm exaggerating in the title. My agent is a wonderful person and I know she'd do her damndest to sell a western for me. But I realize it would be easier to sell if Jesse James toted a magical six-shooter and he was helping the cattle ranchers get rid of a dragon holed up in the hills north of Abilene.

And if by some miracle the book did get published, my fans probably couldn't find it because the bookstores would shelve it under westerns, which is generally a bit of hike from the fantasy aisles.

My daughter and I wrote two paranormal romance novels. Some bookstore managers shelved them under my name, which is in the fantasy section, so the romance readers missed them. Others placed the novels in the romance aisle, which was fine, except that now the fantasy fans had no clue they were out there.

And I've had fans who have no idea I've written anything else besides Dragonlance, because they are shelved in the Dragonlance section, which is subsection of the fantasy section, which is a subsection of the fiction section.

I remember the bookstore of my childhood. It was in downtown Kansas City, the only bookstore downtown. The store was called "Time to Read" and it featured pornographic magazines in the front of the store. In the back of the store was a wonderful fiction section. The only category was Fiction. The authors were arranged in alphabetical order. There was Dumas with Doyle--D'artagnan and Sherlock Holmes. Asimov with Alcott--robots and Little Women. Steinbeck and Stout--George and Lennie, Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin. A wonderful feast of different books to tempt the reader to try something of everything.

I understand why bookstores have all these categories. They're making it easy for the fans to go straight to their section where they know they're going to find books they like. But in that process, think of all they are missing!

I wonder what would happen today if bookstores got rid of the categories. Jumble all the fiction together like that old bookstore of the sixties--a fantasy novel next to a western, a horror novel on the shelf below, a romance novel on a shelf above and maybe Hamlet in between. Encourage the reader to browse through the wonders of fiction of every genre.

Don't get me wrong. I love writing fantasy novels. And I’m not worried about those who look down their literary noses at genre writers. (Which included my own mother, who was very proud of my work, but always wanted me to be the next Katherine Ann Porter.) I've heard authors debate that by segregating books into genres, we are encouraging that sort of snobbery. But don't we do that even among ourselves. Who among us hasn't faintly sneered as we hurried past the romance aisle?

I had fun writing those romance novels and maybe I will write that western someday. Now I think of it, Jesse James and dragons is an interesting idea.

I wonder where the bookstores would shelve it.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012 | By: Patrick

More inexpensive ebook goodies!

You can now download Saladin Ahmed's collection of short stories, Engraved on the Eye, for 3.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

Stories to Captivate the Imagination: Welcome to the worlds of Saladin Ahmed.

A medieval physician asked to do the impossible. A gun slinging Muslim wizard in the old West. A disgruntled super villain pining for prison reform. A cybernetic soldier who might or might not be receiving messages from God. Prepare yourself to be transported to new and fantastical worlds.

The short stories in this collection have been nominated for the Nebula and Campbell awards. They’ve been reprinted in The Year’s Best Fantasy and other anthologies, recorded for numerous podcasts, and translated into several foreign languages. Now they are collected in one place for the first time. Experience for yourself the original voice of one of fantasy’s rising stars!

The Prisoner of Heaven



Well, as you know, Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Shadow of the Wind just might be the best novel I have ever read. And although the sequel, The Angel's Game, could never hope to live up to the lofty expectations generated by its predecessor, it was nevertheless an awesome read in its own right. Enter the third installment, The Prisoner of Heaven, and I must admit I have seldom been so excited to read a book!

But could Carlos Ruiz Zafón's latest live up to such expectations? Though I felt it was way too short, The Prisoner of Heaven should satisfy all those who enjoyed its predecessors!

Here's the blurb:

The internationally acclaimed New York Times bestselling author Carlos Ruiz Zafon takes us into a dark, gothic Barcelona and creates a rich, labyrinthine tale of love, literature, passion, and revenge in which the heroes of The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game must contend with a nemesis that threatens to destroy them.

Barcelona, 1957. It is Christmas, and Daniel Sempere and his wife, Bea, have much to celebrate. They have a beautiful new baby son named Julian, and their close friend Fermin Romero de Torres is about to be wed. But their joy is eclipsed when a mysterious stranger visits the Sempere bookshop and threatens to divulge a terrible secret that has been buried for two decades in the city's dark past. His appearance plunges Fermin and Daniel into a dangerous adventure that will take them back to the 1940s and the early days of Franco's dictatorship. The terrifying events of that time launch them on a search for the truth that will put into peril everything they love and ultimately transform their lives.

Full of intrigue and emotion, The Prisoner of Heaven is a majestic novel in which the threads of The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game converge under the spell of literature and bring us toward the enigma hidden at the heart of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books, a collection of lost treasures known only to its few initiates, and the very core of Carlos Ruiz Zafon's enchanting fictional world.

I loved the way Zafón linked The Angel's Game to The Shadow of the Wind at the end of the second book. It was done subtly and poignantly, and it was a very satisfying way to bring the story to an end. But since a few years have passed since the second installment was published, and since both novels are complex and convoluted affairs, it would have been good for The Prisoner of Heaven to include summaries of the previous books. Especially since this third volume acts as some sort of bridge between the first two installments and what will come after. The author claims that one can read the books in whatever order they choose, that each book is a self-contained tale, but I feel that one must read them in the order they were released to catch all the nuances so that you can only shake your head in wonder when you realize how various things are connected.

Once again, Zafón takes us back to Barcelona, this time in 1957. As is usually his wont, the author's evocative prose offers a wealth of insight into that period of time. As was the case in both The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game, he paints a vivid picture which allows the reader to be transported back in time and truly experience what Barcelona was like in the late 50s.

In the first two volumes, Zafón's narrative sucked you right into those convoluted tales of love, deceit, mystery, and betrayal from the very first page. As a sort of transition novel in the series, The Prisoner of Heaven is not as complex. To a certain extent, it is Fermin Romero de Torres' back story. But it also bridges The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game, paving the way and setting the stage for what will happen next.

One would think that this could be construed as a negative point, but the characterization is once more "top notch" and the way the author tied so many plotlines from the previous installments together makes The Prisoner of Heaven a real page-turner.

Familiar faces like Daniel, his father, and Bea make a number of appearances, and Zafón also has a number of surprises in store for us. Be that as it may, as is often the case when he's in a scene, it's Fermin who steals the show for the better part of the book, be it in the flashback sequences recounting his time in prison or in "real time" as he's getting ready to become a married man.

Simultaneously funny, tragic, and moving, Carlos Ruiz Zafón's intelligence, wit, humor, and deft human touch are once again the ingredients that make The Prisoner of Heaven such a memorable read. The author sure knows how to pull on those heartstrings.

The pace is perfect, which means that you'll get through the relatively short 278 pages in no time. The downside is that we must now wait a few years to discover what's next for Daniel and Fermin and the rest of the characters.

Although The Prisoner of Heaven is nowhere near as good as The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game, it remains a touching and remarkable tale that makes you beg for more. Fans of Carlos Ruiz Zafón will devour this one!

The final verdict: 8.5/10

You can read an extract from the novel here.

For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

And here's the book trailer:



There is also a free short story titled "Rose of Fire" available for free on the internet.

Here's the blurb:

Set at the time of the Spanish Inquisition in the fifteenth century, “Rose of Fire” tells the story of the origins of the mysterious labyrinthine library, the Cemetery of Forgotten Books, which lies at the heart of Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s novels The Shadow of the Wind, The Angel’s Game, and now The Prisoner of Heaven.

Follow this link to read the short story online.
Monday, September 17, 2012 | By: Patrick

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now download Lois McMaster Bujold's Beguilement for 0.99$ here. You can also get the second volume of The Sharing Knife series, Legacy, for the same price here.

Here's the blurb for Beguilement:

Troubled young Fawn Bluefield seeks a life beyond her family’s farm. But en route to the city, she encounters a patrol of Lakewalkers, nomadic soldier–sorcerers from the northern woodlands. Feared necromancers armed with mysterious knives made of human bone, they wage a secret, ongoing war against the scourge of the "malices," immortal entities that draw the life out of their victims, enslaving human and animal alike.

It is Dag—a Lakewalker patroller weighed down by past sorrows and onerous present responsibilities—who must come to Fawn’s aid when she is taken captive by a malice. They prevail at a devastating cost—unexpectedly binding their fates as they embark upon a remarkable journey into danger and delight, prejudice and partnership . . . and perhaps even love.

Teaser extract from J. M. McDermott's NIRVANA GATES


Nirvana Gates is a new novella set in the ongoing Fathomless Abyss series. With this one, J. M. McDermott expands this growing shared-world collective created by Phil Athans, J.M. McDermott, Mike Resnick, Brad R.Torgersen, Jay Lake, Mel Odom, and Cat Rambo.

So that potential readers could learn more about this shared-world collective, I invited a few of its creators to tell us more about it:

ABOUT THE ABYSS

The Fathomless Abyss is an experiment in group-self-publishing.

Philip Athans, author and series editor: With the “E-book Revolution” in full force, authors, publishers, and readers alike are starting to not only question the previous generations’ definitions of what a book is, how much it should cost, who gets paid what and when, and so on, but a lot of us are starting to venture into the uncharted waters of the future of publishing. This whole thing is a bit of a flyer—an experiment in how a group of creative people can work together to develop something that would be in equal parts too ambitious (too many personalities and too much up-front money) and too small-scale (novellas in the 20,000-30,000 word range as opposed to novels of 90,000 or more words) for “traditional” publishers.

J.M. McDermott, author: He puts the words “traditional” in quotation marks. Look, Phil ran one of the largest publishing houses in fantasy fiction for years, as managing editor of Wizards of the Coast’s fiction line. This is a very traditional project, indeed, though it is part of a different set of traditions. The word “Indie” used to mean something about hand-stapled, un-conglomerated, original, and experimental works that the mainstream media delivery mechanisms couldn’t handle well with existing systems. We’re following the traditions of the Indie houses, experimenting and iterating. The only difference, now, is that we are delivering electrons instead of photocopied ’zines, or hand-stapled chapbooks, furtively left on coffee shop tables, hoping someone else will catch the story, catch the idea. Unfortunately, it’s easier than ever to play into this tradition—no walking around and hand-selling to record stores and coffee houses that have seen it all, heard it all—and we’re simply not the DIY people of ten and twenty years ago. But, we’re putting out quality product in an innovative way, attempting to do more than what the major categories of markets permit with their marketing budget and sales force and distribution networks. We are traditional publishing. It’s a tradition even older than what we call publishing. We’re hustlers of fiction. We’re hustling.

Athans: We started with the germ of an idea that I’d been mulling over for years: A (literally) bottomless pit opens up to reveal whole cultures clinging to the sides of it, people of various sorts making their way in this hostile environment. When I ran that past “the collective,” the germ started multiplying and mutating as files and notes were passed through cyberspace, ending up as the first draft of a world “bible” that got us started with short stories. Those stories were collected in Tales From the Fathomless Abyss, the first release in the series.

Cat Rambo, author: I find writing in this world weirdly freely because the premise is so wacky that I can do anything. While things have to have resonance, some underlying sense of meaning, you can still go in directions that you couldn't in fiction tending harder to the realist tradition.

McDermott: Everywhere in the world, all the time, there are these weird situations where people just go missing. Sometimes the body is found. Sometimes the person is found. Sometimes there’s just a puff of wind carrying a name searchers shout a while and then it’s as gone as the person. Where do they go? Where do all these people go?

Sometimes people disappear, and there isn’t a trace in this world. It isn’t rational to say it, but maybe there is more to this world and life of ours than what is merely rational. There is an abyss. People fall in sometimes, from all over. People get stuck and don’t come back out. And, if they do make it, their visions of an underworld—fae, inferno, yomi-no-kuni—are interpreted away as dream visions or theologies or near death experiences.

The abyss is a near death experience.

Athans: I acted as the series editor as well as one of the authors, so when it came time to start scheduling novellas, I put my money (or, more accurately, time) where my mouth is and volunteered to kick it off. That novella is Devils of the Endless Deep. After some negotiations and reconfiguring of schedules, and so on, J.M. McDermott got to the finish line next with Nirvana Gates, and I’ve only just received the first draft of A Seed on the Wind by Cat Rambo, which will be up for sale in October.

Rambo: I’ve been enjoying seeing what other people come up with and how we play off each other’s creations. It’s experimental in so many senses of the world, from writing to collaborative process to new publishing model.

McDermott: I’ll ride along until it’s not fun anymore. It’s been lots of fun, so far. It’s always nice to work out in indie publishing and have a fantastic cover and editor, right away. I’m waiting to decide what I will write next until after I read Cat Rambo’s novella. Her short story was strong, and I incorporated it into my own novella. What’s been really fun, for me, has been looking for ways to play with someone else’s toys. It’s been a huge challenge, but it’s also been huge fun. Publishing explodes and flowers and explodes again. I’m not too concerned about that. I just keep writing what interests me, and so far this project has really interested me.

Athans: I can’t wait to see where the rest of the authors, Mel Odom, Mike Resnick & Brad R. Torgersen, and Jay Lake take us next, but the potential for exploration in this wild fantasy setting, as it is with this just as wild post-apocalyptic publishing business, is truly fathomless.

Here's the blurb for Nirvana Gates:

She was born there, in the Smog, every day breathing more smoke than air. She was strange, even in a bottomless hell full of creatures from a million worlds. She was doomed to a life of servitude. She was lonely. She was worried about her dying father. She was suspicious of her lying mother. She was scared. She was getting angry.

And she wanted answers.

The Fathomless Abyss can open any time and anywhere, and things fall in, or crawl in, from a million worlds across a million years. Deep in the bottomless expanse of this impossible world lies a doorway to truth, or an entrance to an even worse hell.

Join ground-breaking fantasist J.M. McDermott, author of Last Dragon and the Dogsland Trilogy for a trip deep into the nightmare of self, and the burning desire for redemption.

Enjoy!
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One of them finished his tea. He put on small goggles over his eyes to peer down at me.

“What a filthy, ashy thing,” he said. “Its family keep chickens up there in the Smog, I understand?”

“We are ashegglers. My father keeps the chickens. My mother and I…” The pain in my leg silenced me. The guard had pinched me again with a metal glove over my wound. It reopened. I was bleeding again. My blood was tinged with black and green, but it was red like anyone’s. I didn’t deserve to be treated this way.

I bowed my head and waited for them to decide.

“Why do you think it did what it did to our brother?”

“It is Tabagie.”

“It was inside the house.”

“It hurt no guards to enter as a guest.”

“It was a thief.”

“It struck the house first, then our brother.”

“Thieves do not strike down houses.”

“The weapon was something special and rare.”

“No, there must be something else. Look at it. It would speak to us?”

I would before, but now I will not.

“It would speak to us?”

I kept my eyes down.

Let the guard strike me, then. Let them beat me down to a pulp.

“No?”

Let them kill me.

“Our brother was known for his good relations with the Tabagie. He was kind. This is what happens. Tabagie kills him. It cannot be blamed for its actions. It is Tabagie.”

“It is.”

“It was in a gold master’s house.”

“Yes.”

“It does what is in nature for Tabagie. Evil, sick, twisted…”

“No, it has reason. It has mind. It is smart to wear a mask in the Smog, sew it tight.”

“Spiders build gossamer webs of beauty and grace. They have no more mind than the flies they devour.”

“If a beast bites your brother, you kill it.”

“But if it has a brain, if it is no beast…?”

“Kill it.”

“No, speak with it. Learn what happened. Witness reports are confused. We knew our brother. He had…”

“Do not speak ill of the dead.”

“I speak truth in deliberations. Our brother had…”

“Do not say it.”

“There were no younglings kneeling at his forge. When the time for mates came, he would dance with none. Such a noble man, yet he had…”

I turned to the guard. “Must I stand here and listen to this?” I whispered.

The guard said nothing to me. He was a human with pale skin and blond hair. I was larger than this man. I was probably stronger than him. I could try to escape, even with my leg.

Maybe they wouldn’t come after me while they are too busy deliberating my fate.

“We know our brother is dead. Tabagie must know their place. Set an example. We should throw it over the edge.”

“It went over the side already, but did not die. Cut off its head.”

“Too messy. Stinky Tabagie blood hard to wash off the stone. Throw it over the side again. This time, if it is saved, it is fate.”

“Sell it to slavers. It is big, strong. Fetch a good price, and it goes away down the side.”

“Our brother is dead. It must die. Over the side, or the killing stone.”

“Let us decide later. Take it away.”

“It will die.

“Later it will die. Let it go back for now. We must ponder.”

Ser Patrek of King's Mountain


For those people who still doubt that Ser Patrek of King's Mountain in the #1 NYT bestselling A Dance With Dragons by George R. R. Martin is really me, GRRM recently appeared on Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! on NPR and laid the matter to rest.

You can listen to the radio show here.

You can also read the transcript, from which this extract was taken:

SAGAL: Isn't it true that there's a character in your latest book that's there because you lost a bet about a football game?

MARTIN: Yes, in a way, yes, it is. That's true.

(LAUGHTER)

SAGAL: Well what happened?

MARTIN: Well there's this guy named Patrick St. Denis, who runs a fantasy website called Pat's Fantasy Hotlist. And Pat is a big Dallas Cowboys fan. So we would have a standing bet for a number of years about whether the Dallas Cowboys or the New York Giants would do better.

And I won the bet the first two years. But finally, in the third year the Cowboys finished ahead of the Giants. And what I had to do if he won the bet was to kill him horribly within the books.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: So I invented a character called Ser Patrek of King's Mountain and described his heraldry as looking somewhat like the heraldry of the Dallas Cowboys with the silver star on a white field. And then I had him ripped apart by a giant.

(LAUGHTER)

(APPLAUSE)

SAGAL: Which he found very enjoyable.

MARTIN: Yeah, he seemed to get a kick out of that.

(APPLAUSE)

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I may be wrong, but I think this might be the first time GRRM went public with truth regarding Ser Patrek of King's Mountain and his bloody demise!

It was a fine death. . . And yes, I did get a kick out of that! A little less about the the fact that it is implied that I was on my way to rape a woman. . . But heck, you can't win them all!!! :P
Sunday, September 16, 2012 | By: Patrick

Guest Blog: Myke Cole



I recently invited SFF authors to write guest blogs for the Hotlist, and a few of them have agreed to do so. The first to step up to the plate was Myke Cole, author of what is still the speculative fiction debut of the year (in this house at least), Shadow Ops: Control Point (Canada, USA, Europe).

For more information about the author and his novels, check out his official website.

Cole wrote an interesting piece on leadership. . .

Enjoy!
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When you work in and around government, the military and corporate America, people talk a lot about leadership. Actually, that’s an understatement. In major bureaucracies, “leadership” is practically fetishized. You can’t swing a sock without hitting a program manager saying that the attribute they most look for in new hires is “leadership.”

For years that term bothered me. It felt nebulous, protean. One man’s leader is another man’s demagogue. What does it mean to really be a leader? What were the specific attributes that one looked for when grooming the leaders of tomorrow? Nobody could ever tell me.

But now, after a year and a half of full time writing, I think I’m starting to get a window on what it might actually mean.

Here’s one thing I never expected to happen when I got a book deal with a major New York publishing house: arguing a plot/character point with an editor with over 20 years experience picking winning horses and creating literary successes, and having her shrug, smile and say, “Okay, it’s your book.”

And not because she agreed with me, but because ultimately, it’s my name going on the cover. I am the creative nucleus of the project. I am in charge.

I win. I rule. I call the shots.

And that’s fucking terrifying.

Because it also means that if dialogue rings hollow, if the plot holes are big enough to admit a Komatsu Superdozer, then that’s also on me. Nobody is going to write a one star amazon review complaining about how badly editorial fucked this up, or how the art department blew it on the cover, or how marketing failed to get behind the project.

They will blame the author.

That’s me, in case you were wondering.

Beta-readers and friends can give me input. My agent and my editor can help me solve thorny problems, make suggestions on how to make a character’s arc more satisfying, or advise me to abandon an ill-advised plot path and start fresh with something more interesting. But these are suggestions. In the end, I make the call, and I own the consequences and all the friends or institutional connections in the world can’t change that.

That’s the most terrifying thing about being a writer.

And it is also the most terrifying thing about being an officer. I think a lot of writers who sign contracts with big publishing houses expect a huge apparatus to kick in. The machine is oiled by years of experience bringing authors to the marketplace and making sure they sell. After all, if the books don’t sell, the publisher doesn’t make money, so they’ve got a vested interest in your success, right?

The same holds true for newly minted officers. The military is centuries old. It’s a well-oiled machine designed to take in fresh-eyed academy graduates and make sure they know where they’re headed and how to get there. The wolf is the pack and the pack is the wolf. There’s nothing to be gained by letting the new guy fall on his face.

But that’s exactly what happens all the time.

Because officers are leaders. They are ultimately responsible for the units they command. They take credit for the success of their subordinates, but they also answer for their failures. When the big questions are asked, all eyes snap back to you. You are the one who has to make the call, and you are the one who has to answer for the results. Your senior non-commissioned officers will counsel you, make suggestions, give you the benefit of their many years of experience. But in the end? Just like that editor, they will shrug their shoulders and say, “It’s your ship, sir.”

And that’s the irony of this experience of writing full time. Because now I finally understand what leadership is, both in the military and in the arts: It is, first and foremost, ownership. It’s a total personal stake in work. It’s genuinely believing that a project belongs to you in every aspect, and that nobody has more responsibility than you to make it as perfect as possible. It’s the bone-deep sense that even though you are part of a team, you are still personally on the hook for ensuring that every aspect of the work (even aspects over which you have little control) is done to standard: standards that you set, because you are that vested in the success of the work.

The best writers I know fret over covers they haven’t designed. They are willing to go to the mat with a proofreader over the placement of a comma. They will spend days emailing back and forth with their editor over a character’s hair-color. Because it’s their baby, and by God it WILL BE PERFECT.

The best officers are the same way. They track paperwork from end-to-end even when they would be well within their rights to send it off and forget it. They spend hours reading policy manuals that only relate tangentially to their work, because, hey, tangentially related IS STILL RELATED. They know the personal quirks, phobias and goals of every one of their crew, not because they’re nosy, but because they want to help them to do their best work. It’s THEIR SHIP and by God it WILL BE PERFECT.

The relationship between a leader and their project/task, done right, seems closest to the relationship between a parent and a child. At some point, you have to parade your unit or send your artwork out to an audience to be judged. But until the moment that happens? You cannot rest, because good enough is never good enough.

Being a professional writer is nothing like I’d thought it would be. Being a military officer is nothing like I’d thought it would be. Both are eerily similar in defying my expectations.

If you want to do either, and do it right, you’d better be ready to own it down to the thread count.
Saturday, September 15, 2012 | By: Patrick

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now download J. S. A. Corey's Gods of Risk, an Expanse novella, for 2.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

As tension between Mars and Earth mounts, and terrorism plagues the Martian city of Londres Nova, sixteen-year-old David Draper is fighting his own lonely war. A gifted chemist vying for a place at the university, David leads a secret life as a manufacturer for a ruthless drug dealer. When his friend Leelee goes missing, leaving signs of the dealer's involvement, David takes it upon himself to save her. But first he must shake his aunt Bobbie Draper, an ex-marine who has been set adrift in her own life after a mysterious series of events nobody is talking about. Set in the hard-scrabble solar system of Leviathan Wakes and Caliban's War, Gods of Risk deepens James S. A. Corey's acclaimed Expanse series.

Black Library Expo 2012


The Black Library Expo is the biggest Black Library event ever held outside of the UK, and the first of its kind in Canada. Hosted by Chestermere Public Library across Thanksgiving weekend (October 6th and 7th), eight of Black Library’s authors will be on hand for signings, seminars and general good times. This is a must for any fan of the Warhammer or Warhammer 40,000 universes our side of the Atlantic. Pre-release titles and event exclusive products will be available direct from the Black Library sales area during the Expo. Numbers are strictly limited, with only 450 available for purchase for each day.

For more information about the event, check out the official website.

And here's a little chat with author Nick Kyme to help promote the Black Library Expo!
---------------------

On a scale of 1 - 10, how much are you looking forward to coming to Canada for the Black Library Expo?

Ha, ha - I couldn't possibly limit it to a scale only going up to 10. This is a massively exciting trip to a wonderful and beautiful country. I'm so looking forward to meeting the lovely Canadian fans and checking out the jaw-dropping scenery. Turn the dial to max, then break it by turning it up some more and you'd still be falling short on how much I'm looking forward to this!

Very Important Question: Timmy’s or ‘bucks?

I'm going with Timmy's. Doughnuts and Timbits to die for (and, weird as it sounds, great lettuce!).

How did you get in to writing for Black Library?

My writing career began with Games Workshop. I wrote short stories for a magazine called Inferno! which was the predecessor of Hammer& Bolter. Like a lot of these things, once you've got your foot in the door it gets easier. I think I had three or four short stories published, which was really good learning experience.

I actually then came to work for Games Workshop as a Layout Designer for White Dwarf magazine. I didn't really have that much design experience, but I think they liked me, and after various interviews for various positions they eventually gave me the layout job. I still really wanted to write, so was allowed to develop into more of a layout designer/staff writer. From there I became a journalist for White Dwarf, which included some photography and a lot of travelling. Soon after, an editorial position came up with Black Library, so I applied and haven't looked back since.

My desire to write novels was still strong, but being an editor was something of a double-edged sword where getting published with Black Library was concerned. In order for the opportunity to come up I had to wait for something that no one else wanted to do (which took around a year and a half) and hope the editors liked my ideas. It took a lot of determination, practice and perseverance. I didn't push it, but kept my head down, did a good job and seized my opportunity when it arose.

What would you consider your proudest professional moment so far?

Obviously becoming senior range editor was an extremely proud moment; a lot of hard work went into realising that ambition. Killing off the opposition helped, I was the last man standing in the Thunder Dome... Seriously, though, I evolved and developed into the role, calling on where my skills and interests laid.

In terms of my writing, the publication of Salamander, which is into its fourth printing now - I was really proud of that. It has had a good buzz amongst the fans, too, which is great.

What are you working on right now?

Right now, I've got a few things in the works. I've just finished my first Time of Legends novel, an epic, The Great Betrayal, and first of the War of Vengeance saga. Then I'm writing Scorched Earth, a Horus Heresy novella that will shed some light on the fate of Vulkan no less! I'm also writing a bunch of short stories for Tome of Fire, my Salamanders short story collection and the unofficial 'fourth' book in the Salamander trilogy (that's why it's unofficial), and a one-off piece starring the Deathwatch called Machine Spirit. There are novels slated too, but I can't reveal anything about them at the moment.

Who is the most underrated villain in Warhammer, and why?

I'd say Heinrich Kemmler, the Lichemaster. He may look like a stinky old tramp that hides in the woods and sees dead people but he's actually pretty awesome. Not only is he guided by the will of Nagash, he's also got Krell, an ancient and supremely powerful cheiftain that once fought Sigmar, as a bodyguard. He takes on all comers too, skaven, wood elves, the empire, dwarfs - don't pick a fight with Kemmler because he will bring the wrath!

Do you have the coolest job ever?

No, Batman has the coolest job ever, keeping the streets of Gotham City safe and beating down on douche bags... Ahem... yes, it is pretty cool, but then I guess if you're doing what you're passionate about and love, and getting paid for it then that would be the coolest job ever to whoever was doing it. It's the people what make it though, and I am really blessed to work with a great bunch of folks, both on and off the actual writing of the novels. Live your life, enjoy your work is what I say.

Let's imagine that you're a man of the Empire, and you're stuck in a stone keep in the middle of nowhere. Orcs are attacking from the left, Dark Elves from the right, and the Skaven have overrun the cellars. All you have with you is a dwarf axe, a musket, three matches and a large keg of rum. What do you do?

Get boozed up on the rum, smack myself over the head with the axe haft (that's what the rum is for, to dull the pain), come too, realise that I'm Sigmar reborn and remember my vast army is waiting for my signal just beyond the rise, fire the musket (using the matches) and then descend on the foes of the Empire with furious vengeance, thus wiping the stain of their existence from the land. Huzzah!

This week's New York Times Bestsellers (September 10th)

In hardcover:

George R. R. Martin's A Dance With Dragons is down one spot, finishing the week at number 6. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Dean Koontz’ Odd Apocalypse is down four positions, ending the week at number 11.

Christie Golden's Jaina Proudmore: Tides of War debuts at number 13. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Deborah Harkness’s Shadow of Night is down two spots, finishing the week at number 15. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Terry Brooks' Wards of Faerie is down sixteen spots, finishing the week at number 19. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

R. A. Salvatore's Charon's Claw is down six positions, ending the week at number 25. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Richard Kadrey's Devil Said Bang debuts at number 30.

In paperback:

George R. R. Martin's A Game of Thrones is down one spot, finishing the week at number 6.

George R. R. Martin's A Clash of Kings is up two positions, ending the week at number 9.

George R. R. Martin's A Feast for Crows is up two positions, ending the week at number 10.

Stephen King's 11/22/63 maintains its position at number 10 (trade paperback).

Erin Morgenstern's The Night Circus is down four positions, ending the week at number 12 (trade paperback).

David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas maintains its position at number 14 (trade paperback).

Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game is down five spots, finishing the week at number 19.

Jim Butcher's Ghost Story is down ten positions, ending the week at number 29.

Seth Grahame-Smith's Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter returns at number 31.

Ernest Cline's Ready Player One returns at number 32 (trade paperback).

Deborah E. Harkness' A Discovery of Witches is down four spots, finishing the week at number 34.
Thursday, September 13, 2012 | By: Patrick

Terry Brooks contest winner!

This lucky winner will get his hands on my review copy of Terry Brooks' Wards of Faerie! For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The winner is: Colby Rapp, from Kitchener, Ontario, Canada

Many thanks to all the participants!
Wednesday, September 12, 2012 | By: Patrick

More inexpensive ebook goodies!


You can now download Brandon Sanderson's excellent Legion for only 2.99$ here.

Here's the blurb:

Brandon Sanderson is one of the most significant fantasists to enter the field in a good many years. His ambitious, multi-volume epics (Mistborn, The Stormlight Archive) and his stellar continuation of Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series have earned both critical acclaim and a substantial popular following. In Legion, a distinctly contemporary novella filled with suspense, humor, and an endless flow of invention, Sanderson reveals a startling new facet of his singular narrative talent.

Stephen Leeds, AKA “Legion,” is a man whose unique mental condition allows him to generate a multitude of personae: hallucinatory entities with a wide variety of personal characteristics and a vast array of highly specialized skills. As the story begins, Leeds and his “aspects” are drawn into the search for the missing Balubal Razon, inventor of a camera whose astonishing properties could alter our understanding of human history and change the very structure of society. The action ranges from the familiar environs of America to the ancient, divided city of Jerusalem. Along the way, Sanderson touches on a formidable assortment of complex questions: the nature of time, the mysteries of the human mind, the potential uses of technology, and the volatile connection between politics and faith. Resonant, intelligent, and thoroughly absorbing, Legion is a provocative entertainment from a writer of great originality and seemingly limitless gifts.
Monday, September 10, 2012 | By: Patrick

Quote of the Day

One mustn't dream of one's future; one must earn it.

- CARLOS RUIZ ZAFÓN, The Prisoner of Heaven (Canada, USA, Europe)

Very good read so far! I wish there were detailed plot summaries of both The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game out there, for this third installment ties up its predecessor in unexpected ways. . .

Brent Weeks contest winner!

Our winner will receive a complimentary copy of Brent Weeks' The Blinding Knife, courtesy of the folks at Orbit! For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The winner is:

Adeline Taylor, from Escalon, California, USA

Many thanks to all the participants!
Sunday, September 09, 2012 | By: Patrick

The Dirty Streets of Heaven



When it was announced that Tad Williams' next project would be an urban fantasy series, I was intrigued. I had no doubt that Williams could pull it off and come up with something good. Over the course of his career, the author has proven time and time again that he was versatile. And yet, Williams would now play in a much different sandbox. His latest work would be compared to those of bestselling machines such as Charlaine Harris and Jim Butcher. The question was: Could Tad Williams play with the big girls? Sorry, folks, but other than Butcher, female authors dominate the charts when it comes to urban fantasy.

The answer is yes, at least in terms of quality and originality. Time will tell if the urban fantasy crowd will give it a shot and dig it, or if it will mostly be Williams' existing fans that will move units of this novel. Still, The Dirty Streets of Heaven could well be the author's most accessible book to date.

Here's the blurb:

Bobby Dollar would like to know what he was like when he was alive, but too much of his time is spent working as an extremely minor functionary in the heavenly host judging recently departed souls.

Until the day a soul goes missing, presumed stolen by ‘the other side’.

A new chapter in the war between heaven and hell is about to open. And Bobby is right in the middle of it, with only a desirable but deadly demon to aid him
.

The worldbuilding is intriguing. Although it must be said that Williams doesn't offer more than a few glimpses here and there. Hence, not a whole lot is unveiled regarding Heaven and Hell, Angels and Demons, and their eternal struggle. I enjoyed the glimpses we got from the futuristic and bureaucratic Heaven, and I would have loved to learn more about their hierarchy. Having said that, those glimpses make you want to beg for more, so Williams sure knows how to tease and ensure that we'll be there for the second volume! Another seemingly odd decision, at least by urban fantasy's standards, was to set the action in the fictitious Bay area town of San Judas. I figure that there must be a reason for this, but nothing in The Dirty Streets of Heaven hints at what it could be.

The first person narrative of Angel Doloriel, also known as Bobby Dollar, makes for an entertaining ride. As the main protagonist, Boddy Dollar may not be as endearing as Butcher's Harry Dresden or Vaughn's Kitty Norville. But like them, he's not always the sharpest tool in the shed and given the chance he certainly grows on you. The supporting cast is comprised of a number of interesting men and women, both from Heaven and Hell. Especially Sam and Casimira, both of whom have more depth than meets the eye. However, the whole Good vs Evil love affair was so clichéd that I'm persuaded Tad Williams has something unexpected in mind. Otherwise, that plotline is too easy, and Williams is not known for taking the path of least resistance.

The pace is great. Indeed, the rhythm is crisp, making The Dirty Streets of Heaven a real page-turner. Urban fantasy is known for relatively slender novels, forcing Williams to write with a much tighter focus than is usually his wont. A single POV precludes the high number of extraneous storylines that characterize Tad Williams' epic fantasy dootstopper works and keeps the spotlight on a single character through whose eyes the readers witness everything which is taking place. Hence, those SFF fans who found Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, Otherland, and Shadowmarch long-winded and slow-moving at times might enjoy Tad Williams' first foray into the urban fantasy subgenre. Like the author's short fiction, The Dirty Streets of Heaven is quite different than his past novel-length works.

Some people have mentioned that this book is kind of a huge departure for Tad Williams in style and tone, and that it may not be suitable for all audiences. Such claims leave me shaking my head in bewilderment. WTF??? Because people swear and a penis makes an appearance or two? Come on, man! This is ridiculous! Although many of Williams' novels/series have cross-over appeal for a younger audience, I've always been under the impression that he writes more or less for a grown-up audience. After all, The Dragonbone Chair and its sequels made George R. R. Martin realize that fantasy for adults could still be written and published. I mean, these so called "young adults" so many people appear so concerned about, well they hear profanities all day long in school and everywhere else, and they have access to free porn on the internet. Do you really believe that reading a few paragraphs about and man and a woman engaged in sexual intercourse will shock them out of their minds??? If so, perhaps you are the one with a problem? Or perhaps you are of the Brandon Sanderson inclination and you won't put up with swear words and sex in books, but blood and gore and graphic violence are quite all right for kids?

No worries, folks. Bobby Dollar is indeed rough around the edges, but coarse language never becomes an issue. As for the sex, there is something like two quick scenes and it's nothing to write home about. When I read about the fuss this was generating, I was afraid that Williams had turned into Laurell K. Hamilton and that we'd get stuck with a bizarre love triangle between a sexy girl and a dark and handsome emo vampire and a muscular werewolf with a 12-inch cock. Fortunately for us, that's not the case. So please don't let such claims keep you from giving The Dirty Streets of Heaven a shot. It's another smart and entertaining read!

My only problem with the book was that the ending was rushed. The Dirty Streets of Heaven is essentially a vast introduction for what is to come. As such, it paves the way for the rest of the series by introducing the key players and laying a lot of groundwork. Problem is, the novel doesn't offer much in terms of resolution. Indeed, it's not as self-contained as I felt it needed to be. I felt that everything came to a head and ended too rapidly for the finale to have the sort of impact the book needed to end with a bang.

Still, with The Dirty Streets of Heaven Tad Williams demonstrated yet again the length and breadth of his talent and imagination. His first urban fantasy offering should satisfy his legions of fans and hopefully bring some new asses into the seats. The author has never written something so fast-paced and accessible. Hence, if you have been meaning to give Tad Williams a go, The Dirty Streets of Heaven might well be the perfect introduction to the author great and disparate body of work.

Will be lining up for volume 2!

The final verdict: 7.75/10

For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.
Saturday, September 08, 2012 | By: Patrick

Quote of the Day

I only had until tonight to get more answers, then I'd have to go in and face my masters--and that was really what they were, weren't they? I called them bosses and employers, but unless you're in the mob or an army under fire your bosses can't usually kill you when they get pissed at you, and no other bosses but mine and my opponents' can have your soul jerked out of your body and sent to the deepest fiery pits to suffer for eternity. Unless you work for Walmart..

- TAD WILLIAMS, The Dirty Streets of Heaven (Canada, USA, Europe)

This week's New York Times Bestsellers (September 3rd)

In hardcover:

Terry Brooks' Wards of Faerie debuts at number 3. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

George R. R. Martin's A Dance With Dragons is up one spot, finishing the week at number 5. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Dean Koontz’ Odd Apocalypse maintains its position at number 7.

Deborah Harkness’s Shadow of Night is down two spots, finishing the week at number 13. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

R. A. Salvatore's Charon's Claw is down three positions, ending the week at number 19. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Sherrilyn Kenyon's Time Untime is down seven positions, ending the week at number 32.

In paperback:

George R. R. Martin's A Game of Thrones is up one spot, finishing the week at number 5.

George R. R. Martin's A Storms of Swords is up one position, ending the week at number 7.

Erin Morgenstern's The Night Circus is up one position, ending the week at number 8 (trade paperback).

Stephen King's 11/22/63 is down two positions, ending the week at number 10 (trade paperback).

George R. R. Martin's A Clash of Kings maintains its position at number 11.

George R. R. Martin's A Feast for Crows is up one position, ending the week at number 12.

David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas is down four spots, finishing the week at number 14 (trade paperback).

Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game is up two spots, finishing the week at number 14.

Jim Butcher's Ghost Story is up two positions, ending the week at number 19.

George R. R. Martin's A Game of Thrones is up four spots, finishing the week at number 25 (trade paperback).

Deborah E. Harkness' A Discovery of Witches is down fifteen spots, finishing the week at number 30.

Justin Cronin's The Passage is down ten spots, finishing the week at number 30.