Wednesday, 30 April 2008

An Interview with Marie Brennan...

Marie's historical fantasy novel, Midnight Never Come, will be released by Orbit later this month. It's her third book (but her first with them). When I saw the press release months ago on their site, and then visited Marie's site (full of wonderful essays and general interesting content), I knew I had to interview her. I did, though, sort of forget the question every reviewer asks: What can you tell us about your books? Below is the Publisher's Weekly starred review, so you know what we're talking about! ;)

"[T]his rich historical fantasy portrays the Elizabethan court 30 years into the reign of the Virgin Queen, often called Gloriana. Far below ground, her dark counterpart, heartless Invidiana, rules England's fae. Brennan (Warrior and Witch) pairs handsome young courtier Michael Deven, an aspiring agent under spymaster Sir Francis Walsingham, with bewitching fae Lune, who attempts to avoid Invidiana's wrath by infiltrating Walsingham's network in mortal guise. History and fantasy blend seamlessly as Deven and Lune tread their precarious tightropes between loyalty and betrayal. Brennan's myriad fantastical creations ring as true as her ear for Elizabethan and faerie dialogue. With intriguing flashbacks to historical events and a cast of deftly drawn characters both real and imagined, Brennan fleshes out the primal conflict of love and honor pitted against raging ambition and lust for power in a glittering age when mortals could well be such fools as to sell their souls forever."

--

Hi Marie, thanks for taking part, and welcome to my blog! You should, of course, ignore the grouchy elf in the corner with a pipe... and help yourself to cookies (the food of authors)...

Many thanks for having me. I apologize for the wordiness of my answers, but you asked some thought-provoking questions!

What is it about Elizabethan times, and probably Elizabeth in particular, do you think, that makes setting faery tales there so successful?

You may have heard of a little play called A Midsummer Night's Dream, by this guy William Shakespeare ...

Written with some help from The Doctor? Yeah, I know the one!

Honestly, it wasn't just him. Fairies showed up all the time in Elizabethan literature, and so I think that makes the period a natural habitat for the subgenre. Plus it's kind of a matter of "two great tastes that taste great together;" the Elizabethan period is really popular, and so are fairies, so of course people combine them.


That's the logic I followed when I had bread and butter pudding on toast the other day -- considering the time of morning, "logic" may not have come into it, though! Does setting a story in the past allow you more lee-way with the facts, or is there something fun about working within a world you already know and then twisting it into something new? And what additional risks are there with historical fantasy?

There are three parts to that, and I'll answer the second part first: working within the real world and then twisting it is what I love about urban fantasy. Whether it's "closed" or "open" -- whether the average character on the street knows about the supernatural -- I really enjoy watching real things interact with invented ones.

But dealing with the facts is, for me, one of the major risks of historical fantasy. I got, shall we say, a little bit obsessive researching Midnight Never Come. The Internet and my university's library provided me with oceans of information, and then once I knew stuff, I couldn't make myself ignore it, even if no other human being reading the book would ever know the difference. Elizabeth's coronation procession didn't go down Candlewick Street; ergo, I had to revise my plans for that bit. I wanted a particular flashback scene to take place in the early part of the sixteenth century, but the closest annular or total solar eclipse over London was in 1547, so into 1547 the scene goes. Leeway? Not hardly.

Is it ridiculous? Of course. On the other hand, it's part of the pleasure. Being able to weave my story into the known facts without jostling any of them out of place is bizarrely fun, despite the work.

The other risk I run by interacting with real history is, who's responsible for what? I don't ever want to write the sort of story where it turns out all the important stuff was instigated or accomplished by the fae, because that diminishes the real people involved. Novels where the vampires or the magicians or whoever are pulling all the strings behind the scenes just don't interest me. So Invidiana has power, and affects what's going on -- but she's one player out of many in the game.

Having never read your work before, how would you describe what makes your writing different/similar to other authors?

You know, they often tell you to put a bit in your query letters saying what authors your work resembles, but I never did, because I have no idea what to say

I've seen two comparisons to Neil Gaiman so far, probably because of Neverwhere, with the hidden world of London Below. I'm briefly exhibiting a distinct resemblance to Elizabeth Bear, since we're doing the volcano movie thing -- her own Elizabethan historical faerie novel, Ink & Steel, is coming out a month after mine. That's all concept-level stuff, though, all surface resemblances. I don't think I write much like Neil Gaiman or Elizabeth Bear.

I'd like to think my academic background and the way I use it distinguishes me from a lot of other writers. I come from archaeology, anthropology, and folklore, which gives me both fodder for and ways to think about what I write. Theory rarely if ever drives my fiction -- that way, all too often, lies inaccessible writing with too much thinking, not enough explosions -- but it's there, in the back of my mind, making me question the implications of what I have put on the page.

As you're about to leave the country soon, research is obviously very important for you – do you find that with just your historical fiction, or in all your writing? Even when you are creating new worlds, do you find yourself creating a rich history for it?

The research I do for non-historical fiction is more of the "how" sort, instead of the "what." I need to know how things work so that I can represent them properly, whether it's rowing a Viking longship or poisoning somebody with soup. Because there's always going to be a reader out there who's well-educated about, oh, basket-making, who will be more than happy to e-mail you if you get a detail wrong. I do everything in my power to get it right.

For invented settings, I do indulge in rich worldbuilding. I've published half a dozen short stories in the Nine Lands, a world I've been embroidering for years now; eventually there will be novels, too. The different countries there are based on mashups of real-world things I've studied, and I'm trying to make them as anthropologically real as I can. So I can tell you about the old Sahasraran notions of kingship and voice and how that connected to one aspect of their religion, and then how the royal line got slaughtered in a series of wars with the Elesie and the ground of Anahata was sown with salt -- and I can also tell you about their festival for the early harvest and their ritual calendar and oh yeah I've been meaning to work out the symbolic meanings of the eight flowers used in it. Not because readers need to hear all about that, but because it will shape how I write stories -- even ones that have nothing to do with their flower calendar.

Neil Gaiman says that books have genders, irrespective of that of the author that wrote them... what gender would you say your books are?

After the things I've learned in graduate school, I'm sorely tempted to say my books are tobelija or fa'afafine or some other third gender, just to remind folks that gender isn't a binary.

Okay, I actually just went and looked up Gaiman's statement, because I couldn't figure out how to answer this without first figuring out what he meant by it. To some extent he's talking about the audience for a book, and in that sense I suppose I write "feminine" books, because I'm pretty sure I have more female readers than male -- but that statement bothers me because it reflects in part the tendency of many male readers to not read novels about female characters or by female authors, regardless of content. Gaiman's also talking about the type of story, and in that sense I might write more masculine books, since I loves me some adventure and some fight scenes. I like what he says, too, about which relationships in a story are important; it makes me think of Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond Chronicles, where so many of the interesting relationships, romantic and otherwise, are between Lymond and the women around him. From that angle, I'd say I'm fascinated by cross-gender connections, especially when they aren't romantic.

So, after that long-winded bit of rambling, I think I'm back to where I started: I don't know, except maybe I choose option C.

Faery or fairy? And why?!

I think there's a tendency in fantasy to spell it "faerie" in an attempt to separate it from the Victorians and their trivial little flower fairy concept. I actually put a decent bit of thought into this when I started Midnight Never Come, because of course back in the Elizabethan period they spelled things any which way: faerie, faery, fairie, fairy, whatever you like. The first version is how it's spelled for Edmund Spenser's poem The Faerie Queene, so that's what I went with. (Now the real question is whether I'll change it as the series goes along, so that by the time of the Victorian book I hope to write, it will be spelled "fairy.")

From what culture comes your favourite mythology, and what is your favourite folklore/faery tale? Why do those types of tales appeal to you so?

I'm a dilettante, really. At one time or another I my life I've been moderately well-read on classical, Egyptian, Norse, Celtic, Mesoamerican, Japanese, and Hindu religion. "Favorite" would depend on the mood I'm in; if it's cheerful black-humour fatalism I'm after, then all hail the Norse! Strongly narrative stories that all link into one enormous soap opera? Classical! Bloody tales about how sacrifice keeps the world in motion? Off I go to Central America. (Or at least to books about it.)

If I had to name off a favorite piece of folklore and I wasn't allowed to think about it too much (since that would just paralyze me from making a choice at all), I'd say the Scottish ballad "Tam Lin." I first encountered it in Diana Wynne Jones' novel Fire and Hemlock -- which is also the book that turned me from someone who writes into a writer -- and I've always liked the way it features a proactive, no-nonsense heroine. And, of course, faeries.

“Fairy tales” of the Grimm sort tend to have a moral – what would you say the moral of Midnight Never Come is?

The funny thing about fairy tales is that almost none of them involve fairies.

Lots of the fairy godmothers or wicked fairies you find in their books are actually replacements for witches, that got scrubbed out when the Grimms were cleaning up the stories for children. (They revised their collection endlessly; I'm too lazy to look up the exact number, but I think the Kinder- und Haus-märchen went through something like seven or eight different editions.) And in fact the Grimms didn't call them fairy tales; the title of their collection is usually translated as "Children's and Household Tales." We get that term from the French contés des feés. And Perrault, a French writer, was the worst offender for the moral lessons -- he would tack on a little rhyme at the end, telling you what you ought to have learned from the story.

Stories involving fairies are more often classed as legends, and there are a lot of differences between the two. (I promise, I'm going somewhere useful with this folklore lesson.) Fairy tales usually take place "once upon a time" in a made-up kingdom that never gets named, and their moral lessons mostly got added by nineteenth-century collectors who decided they should be for children and therefore educational. Legends, on the other hand, take place in a specific real-world location -- on top of this hill, or near that oak tree on the cliff -- often at a specific time, and they serve, not as moral lessons, but as warnings. Don't be on that hill under the full moon, or the fairies will strike you blind. Don't dance near that oak tree, or you'll be snatched away as a fairy bride. Etc.

So that's a long-winded way of explaning my answer that the lesson of Midnight Never Come, like that of most fairy legends, is that getting involved with fairies is dangerous business.

What was the first thing you ever wrote, and how good was it?!

It really depends on how you want to define "the first thing I ever wrote." The first story I remember committing to paper? Atrocious, I'm sure, because it was for an assignment in second grade. I noodled around with other decreasingly atrocious things all through elementary school, junior high, high school -- then round about my senior year that I got two ideas which felt fundamentally different in my head. One of those became the first novel I ever finished, and that wasn't bad at all, because finishing what I started was the last basic skill I picked up. I went back a few years later and revised that book substantially, but the ideas didn't really change, and I still hope to publish it someday.

The second of those two ideas, for the record, was the second novel I ever finished -- and that was Doppelganger.

In 2009, from Orbit, you have a book called And Ashes Lie, with a picture of the Great Fire of London, and ominous blood-like ink, dripping the words “Coming soon...” What can you tell us about that book and its relationship to Midnight Never Come? My history is a little flaky, but that Fire was a little later, right...?

1666. (And yes, they found that year ominous back then, too.)

The idea is for there to be a series of Onyx Court books, each essentially stand-alone, but all centering around this faerie court of London. So far the only other one I'm contracted for is And Ashes Lie, but I hope to continue on with a book every century or so.

So it's a sequel of sorts, with continuity among the faerie characters, but definitely something that a person could pick up without having read Midnight Never Come. It'll cover the period from 1640 to 1666 -- in other words, the English Civil War, the Interregnum (when they chopped the head off Charles I and drove Charles II into exile), the Restoration of the monarchy, and then the Great Plague and the Great Fire. It's an action-packed span of time; if Midnight Never Come is my Elizabethan faerie spy novel, And Ashes Lie is my Stuart faerie disaster novel.

I can't wait! On your current site, you have a lot of really interesting essays on the writing process for your novels, as well as the road to publication, grammar, reviews, etc, but I hear there are plans to give you an even more interactive site... what kind of stuff will that include, and how important do you think the Web is to an author?

I'm not sure how much I should say publicly about the upgrades, since I don't know how much of it will happen for real. But at the very least the site will be chock-a-block with extra information about Midnight Never Come -- think of it like DVD extras, giving you trivia or pictures or the half-a-dozen Deven scenes from Act One that I had to replace entirely. I like information-rich sites, where I can learn extra things about a story that's really engaged my attention.

As for its importance . . . I'm young enough that I grew up with computers and had Internet access from the age of fourteen, so to me it's not some newfangled thing; it's a way of life. It offers a lot of ways for an author to communicate with readers, but more than that, it offers ways for readers to communicate back -- a two-way street. And that can be critically useful for an author, in terms of fostering reader engagement. Before the Internet, I think it was easy to think of authors as just names on covers, maybe an author photo at the back; you didn't know them as people. Now you can Google them and find their journals, complete with rambling entries about car trouble and pictures of their cats with bacon taped on. (John Scalzi is going to a special feline hell someday.)

That isn't to everyone's taste. Some authors are uncomfortable being out there in that fashion, or feel like it's an obligation instead of a pleasure. And it can be a heck of a time suck, as many will attest. An Internet presence won't generally make your books sell if you aren't a good writer. But if you are, the Web can connect you to the readers who will most enjoy your work, and that's incredibly valuable.


Well, thank you very much for taking part, Marie! It's been fun and I've learnt a lot (always a good thing)! :) I'm currently reading Marie's novel, and I'm really enjoying it thus far. To find out more about Marie visit her site -- you really should.

Monday, 28 April 2008

A Few Upcoming Releases...

A few bits and bobs I've been meaning to cover...

Publishing Schedules:

Via SFScope: Editorial Director Lou Anders has posted Pyr's list of upcoming Fall/Winter 2008/2009 books. Some of those upcoming books include book 3 of Joe Abercrombie's The First Law; book 3 of Justina Robson's Quantum Gravity; book 1 of Tom Lloyd's Twilight Reign; Anders's own Fast Forward 2 (the original anthology); book 2 of Sean Williams's Books of the Cataclysm; Mike Resnick's newest Starship book; and books 2 and 3 of Kay Kenyon's The Entire and the Rose. In fact, of the ten books listed, it looks like there is only one original, stand-alone novel (of course, only time will tell): End of the Century by Chris Roberson. The other book on the list that isn't part of a series is Ian McDonald's Cyberabad Days, which is a new collection of eight stories which include one Hugo nominee and one Hugo winner, and a 25,000-word original novella.

Good stuff!

I'm shamefully behind on my reviews of some Pyr books I've had for a bit too long; but reviews will be coming soon. It has been arranged. (Muahaha, as they say). I'm very keen to catch up on books I've neglected, and I was shocked by how many Pyr titles are waiting for their review -- and a read, in some cases. It's really stupid of me since all the Pyr titles I've read so far, I have loved. A very good imprint.

Sam Smith has also posted Orbit UK's Autumn 2008 publishing schedule out, and there are some good titles there, too, though like Pyr, many are the continuations of earlier Orbit series. Nonetheless, good stuff! :) Titles include: Terry Brooks' The Gypsy Morph; Karen Miller's The Riven Kingdom; Ian Irvine's The Destiny of the Dead; Jo Graham's Black Ships; David Farland's Worldbinder; Pamela Freeman's Deep Water; and more: books by Jennifer Fallon, Jacqueline Carey, Russell Kirkpatrick, Charles Stross, Marienne de Pierres, Kelley Armstrong, Shaun Hutson, Lillith Saintcrow, Jennifer Rardin and Patricia Briggs.

That is a lot of books! I currently have one of them, and the current schedule is awesome enough that by the time I've finished reading them, the Autumn 2009 schedule will be here! ;)

Acquisitions:

Orbit are also thrilled to announce the acquisition of Jim Butcher’s Codex Alera sequence in a major four book deal. Jim Butcher is the bestselling and critically-acclaimed author of the Dresden Files series, featuring wizard-detective, Harry Dresden, which has sold over 150,000 copies for Orbit and was recently televised by the SciFi Channel.

The Codex Alera is a series of epic fantasy novels set in a world where courage and ingenuity may yet triumph over magic and power. For a thousand years, the people of Alera have united against the aggressive races that inhabit the world, using their unique bond with the furies - elementals of earth, air, fire, water, and metal. But now, Gaius Sextus, First Lord of Alera, grows old and lacks an heir. Ambitious Lords manoeuvre to place their Houses in positions of power, and a war of succession looms on the horizon.

Far from city politics in the Calderon Valley, young Tavi struggles with his lack of furycrafting. At fifteen, he has no wind fury to help him fly, no fire fury to light his lamps. Yet as the Alerans’ most savage enemy - the Marat - return to the Valley, his world will change. Caught in a storm of deadly wind furies, Tavi saves the life of a runaway slave. But Amara is actually a spy, seeking intelligence on possible Marat traitors to the Crown. And when the Valley erupts into chaos - when rebels war with loyalists and furies clash with furies - Amara will find Tavi invaluable. His talents will outweigh any fury-born power - and could even turn the tides of war.

The Codex Alera series will start with Furies of Calderon, to be published by Orbit in summer 2009...

Technohorror author and horror industry entertainment journalist Gabrielle S. Faust announces the release of the first novel in her apocalyptic vampire series, Eternal Vigilance, Book One: From Deep Within the Earth, by publisher Immanion Press (Stafford, UK), owned and operated by legendary fantasy author Storm Constantine.

Eternal Vigilance (April 21st release), described as “if Anne Rice went cyberpunk”, is the futuristic tale of the vampire Tynan Llywelyn. After a century of Sleep, Tynan has awoken to find the world he once knew utterly obliterated by a brutal war of epic proportions. In a new apocalyptic society, bitterly divided by magic and technology, the Tyst Empire has found that a hundred years of global domination is not enough to sate their thirst for power. They have discovered the secret of the vampire race and have designed a plan to seize their own sinister form of immortality with the help of an ancient vampiric god. The Phuree, a rebel uprising that has been engaged in a bloody war with the Tyst since the beginning of the new regime, have obtained the knowledge of Lord Cardone's plans and have allied themselves with the remaining Immortal clan. The powerful Phuree oracle, Nahalo, has had a vision that in Tynan alone lays the power to defeat the vampiric god and the dictatorship. Cast into the midst of a global war between magic and technology, mortals and vampires, in a new world he is still struggling to define, Tynan must make the harrowing decision to save the world he so bitterly detests or stand and watch as humanity is destroyed by a primordial evil beyond all imagining.

And gorgeous artwork! This looks like a very cool book, and after a quick perusal of the author's website, this has gone up high on my "must get" list.

Awards:

The Nebula winners are in:

Best Novel: The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon
Best Novella: "Fountain of Age" by Nancy Kress
Best Novelette: "The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate" by Ted Chiang
Best Short Story: "Always" by Karen Joy Fowler
Best Script: Pan's Labyrinth by Guillermo del Toro


That's really all I have time for now. I'm off Waking the Dead. The last time I said that someone asked "some kind of witch are you?" Erm. No. Never really very good at that whole dread necromancer thing! It's a TV series -- and not some strange re-vivification documentary, either!

Sunday, 27 April 2008

The Night Watch


The Night Watch
Sergei Lukyanenko
Arrow Books

554 pages
2007

The Night Watch is one of the first fantasies to do really well in Russia; both the original book (the first in the series) by Sergei Lukyanenko, and the film based upon the first story of this book were huge hits.

The war between Light and Dark has been done so many times before, of course. Susan Cooper's young adult series, The Dark is Rising, in particular, also focuses on the bureaucratic truces that exist between the Light and Dark (though with added Merlin and Celtic mythology). Lukyanenko does it differently enough -- and with enough style -- that it doesn't really matter.

In a post-Cold War Russia, the Night Watch and the Day Watch co-exist, Good and Evil respectively -- though things aren't quite as clear cut as that. Anton is a junior member of the Night Watch, that is, until, completely out of the blue, his superior officer orders him on a mission tracking a vampire -- the only creatures in The Night Watch that have no choice over their allegiance: they are of the Dark -- and the boy she is trying to feed on, a boy whose choice between Light and Dark will shape the lives of millions...

Andrew Bromfield translated this from Sergei Lukyanenko's Russian original, and I think he did a mixed job. With translations there's always the fine line between respect to the original, and making sense (both culturally, and, lexically) to the new audience. The "Twilight", if paying proper attention to the Russian "Sumrak ", would not really be a proper translation. "The Gloom" would -- and this is what the film uses. But which sounds better? Personally, I prefer the "Twilight"! So, good for Bromfield. There were other times, though, and it's hard to tell whether this is author or translator, when the writing was quite clunky in places.

I did enjoy the parallels between the truce of the Others and the Cold War, though whether anyone would comment on them if it weren't written by a Russian author, I don't know!

I often found the conclusions of the stories a little anti-climatic. Particularly in the third story, when Anton has amassed a great, ah, mass of power from people and is undecided on what to use it on; Svetlana is about to re-write the destiny of somebody and change the world forever; a huge storm is coming in on Moscow; and Anton has also been given carte blance to do whatever he likes, without fear of reprisal, from the legendary (and evil ... ahem, Evil) leader of the Day Watch... Great build up of tension -- and then a powerful character turns up, reveals it's not what you think it is, oh no; it's all part of a clever plan, which no one (including the reader) knew anything about. (The powerful guy setting up the clever plans which nobody knows anything about until the last page, is always the same person).

Still, while this novel was a bit frustrating in places, it was on the whole, a good read. Interesting characterisations, a good setting, and no vampire sex/"it's not sex if the vampire drinks my blood while we're having sex, because that's just a strange feeding habit". This review comes over a bit more negative than I planned, so heed this: The Night Watch is a good book, and undoubtedly the best book in translation I've read by a Russian author who smokes a pipe.

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Thursday, 24 April 2008

Interesting ShareWare Experiment by Scalzi: "Alien Sex Story"...

Hmm. If "Alien Sex Story" doesn't get me some Google hits, I don't know what will ;) With the recent SFSignal Mind Meld asking "Is the short story market in trouble?", there was a lot of talk about the Internet as a market itself. Well, John Scalzi has just gone and posted his short story -- which has only previously been released in a limited edition thing to 80 people -- as a downloadable pdf file. He's encouraging people to read it, and, if they like it and support the endeavour, to donate a small amount to him.

He'll be keeping track of the statistics, how much it makes, how many downloads it gets, etc, and I'm really interested to see how this works out. We could see a lot more authors doing this. Some already do, of course, but not as a market, itself, necessarily.

Half the money goes to charity, and half to John's plumber. I'm off now to read the story -- which has proved very popular -- and I'm very optimistic about the venture.


ETA: While I wholeheartedly support this charity, and am very pleased that people are giving more than they normally would, I'm not sure that the results will now give that accurate an analysis of what people are willing to pay for a short story downloaded from the author's site. Charity is more important than that, though, of course.

ETA Again: Turns out I'm a week behind the rest of the world ;)

As of 8:30pm (Eastern), 4/23/08, “Alien Sex Story” has grossed $436.43. Not Radiohead money, but you know, not bad. $146.68 of that came from people using the Amazon honor payment system, and the rest from people using PayPal. The highest amount contributed was $20; the lowest amount offered was sixty cents. 292 people downloaded the short story package, which is a number I find surprisingly low, given the site racks up 30k+ visitors daily; of those it appears about a third paid for the story, which is an extremely high percentage of willing payers. The average payment per contributor was about $4.50.


How does $436.43 compare with what I could get for the story on the open market? Actually, very well. The story is about 7,400 words long, so in a week of shareware release, I’ve been paid 5.9 cents a word, which is right in line with what the “Big Three” science fiction magazines pay: my Writer’s Market has Analog at 6 cents/word, Asimov at 5 cents/word, and Fantasy & Science Fiction at 5 to 9 cents/word. And consider that the story is still on the market — that is, that people continue to be able to find it, read it and pay for it. It’s not unreasonable to assume more people will read it and pay for it as time goes on — probably not as much or as regularly as in this first week, when I’ve drawn attention to it. But from the point of view of whether or not I’d make what I’m make sending it to the print magazines, everything else from this point is gravy.

Giving Away Some Books...

It's been one of those rare times lately where I've had more Internet time to write reviews than before, but less time to do any actual reading. It worked well to clear my review backlog ever so slightly, but now I have nothing to review!

I was going through my bookshelf's deciding what to read, and I found a few books that I've never gotten round to (even pre-blogging!), or have duplicates of. Anyone want them?!

They are:

Legacies by L.E. Modesitt Jr.
The Mark of Ran by Paul Kearney
Legend by David Gemmel
The King Beyond the Gate by David Gemmel
Beowulf by Caitlin R. Kiernan
A Sorcerer's Treason by Sarah Zettel
Gaea: Beyond the Sun by P.D Wilson

I have to admit, they aren't the choicest ones, though most are quite good, I think. Dark Wolf will be guest reviewing some books for me at some point in time -- he gets the best of my books! ;) If you'd like to guest review for me at all, by the way, drop me a line -- the one to the right (the same one you can send me your address if you want any of these!).

I do get enough books though, that I think it will take me a lifetime to review, so I tend to pay more attention to the ones that interest me most (obviously!) -- there's bound to be something I'm not interested in that you'd like...

Tuesday, 22 April 2008

The Briar King


The Briar King
Greg Keyes
Tor UK

552 pages
2003

Thanks to a very serious debilitating illness (known as "man-flu", to some) I couldn't sleep over the weekend. I managed to get a fair bit of reading done, and The Briar King, the first in a High Fantasy series was, erm, rather high on the list...

From a somewhat slow beginning (where I also struggled slightly with the way some characters speak), The Briar King very quickly built up in intensity. I think it's because the beginning was rather cliché. The Good Guys finally overcoming the Bad Guys, with a bit of back-history about the struggle, is nothing we haven't seen before. In fact, a lot in The Briar King seems at first rather conventional. Skip forward two millennia and you have the kingdom on the brink of war, the young knight with a destiny, the young princess with a destiny, the young priest with a destiny (and lots of outdated maps) and various other characters running around unaware of their probably imminent death.

But The Briar King is much, much better than that. It will sound silly, but it was the characterisation of the characters that really made them stand out. Having a princess in a fantasy novel isn't unusual. Having a non-spoiled princess I liked, with an interesting story and journey, is. And that's pretty much Keyes' style: the subtle twists on more traditional fantasy elements, and the clever re-imagining in a way that makes it truly his own.

I really liked the way Keyes wove bits of folklore -- some with references to our own world, such as The Briar King (maybe The Green Man?), and some invented -- into the story. There are also mentions of a Virgenya as the story starts, and a great queen, Elizabeth Dare, in a cleverly played hint of an alternate reality Elizabethan Earth. As the book starts, 2000 years after the great war of the prologue, the Church (singular) frowns very much upon heathen worshipping -- but, and this is really cool, accepts that other gods/powers existed, and has incorporated the worthy into the church theology as saints and demi-gods. Faneways can be walked that allow the novice to receive some kind of power -- different for each person -- from the saints' sedos -- a residuary of power that gradually fades. Even within the Church, it's acknowledged that not all the saints are necessarily "good" -- and some rather dubious characters, including a cabal of killer-priests are endowed with powers.

With all that folklore, very few believe The Briar King actually exists. A theme of the novel is the search for knowledge -- knowledge that hasn't been corrupted by time, or over-zealous priests -- and it becomes very clear that the folklore has rather more than a nugget of truth in it.

This was an engaging novel, fun, quick-witted, and realistically imagined. While there were some flaws, The Briar King is still one of the best High Fantasy novels I've read for years. I'm hoping the same will apply to the sequels...

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Sunday, 20 April 2008

The Steel Remains


The Steel Remains
Richard Morgan
Gollancz Books

409 pages
August 2008 (UK)

I have to admit, I'm one of those bloggers who hadn't really paid that much attention to Morgan's upcoming release, his first fantasy, The Steel Remains. Then I realised I was getting a copy, started it ... and never looked back!

Arceth, a black kiriath/human half-breed, abandoned by her kind, left with a bunch of technology she doesn't understand, to advise a human emperor she doesn't trust. Egar the Barbarian, a nomad who misses the civilisation of the city, and the reputation he earned there. And Ringil Eskiath, son of an important family, hero of Gallows Gap, and a hated degenerate by most of the people he saved...

I hadn't expected the humour. And the humour is what makes this one for me. While I'm all for gritty takes on fantasy, a book as gritty as The Steel Remains wouldn't work without the dark, always slightly cynical, humour, and I laughed out loud more times in The Steel Remains than I have in a fantasy novel for a while. That said, sometimes I felt that certain scenes might have been a bit coarse -- which is fine, save that those scenes didn't really advance the story that much. Sex scenes are fine, and most are in this book, but do I really want to know precisely what Ringil can do with his glans?!

Morgan also plays with a lot of things that aren't really that common in fantasy -- the aftermath of a horrible war, rather than the glorious march towards one; ethnic cleansing, etc. While this can, undoubtedly, be taken as a political comment, I don't think it was overdone -- and when it was, the character would tell themselves to shut up and make a joke of it. The casting of some main characters - heroes of a sort -- as homosexual worked really well, and wasn't just a token effort.

There are definite science-fiction overtones, too, which is probably what you'd expect from a "Richard Morgan novel in a fantasy setting". The "magic" is often more of a technological type -- science and magic are seen as pretty much indistinguishable, save by the Kiriath. There is a distinction, though, with gods/demons walking the earth. One element I really enjoyed was learning more about the history of the battles between the dwenda and the kiriath, and that humanity is only the latest to people that world.

Something I liked about the language used in dialogue was it's modernness. While "thee"s and "thou"s have their place, a novel like this is more suited towards the "yeah"s and "okay"s that everyone uses, even "the 50s".

The characterisations were excellent -- often built up slowly, throughout the novel, through flashbacks or (humourous) introspection. The worldbuilding was also above par, with a very interesting history attached. I'm loathe to make comparisons to other authors, but a lot of people at the end of the review will probably be thinking "hmm, Joe Abercrombie..." which is very true, except that, personally, I think this a stronger start to the trilogy than Joe's first (which I loved).

Morgan has come at the fantasy field with a brutality, unflinching discussion of tough topics, and a sheer energy that people have become accustomed to in his SF – is the fantasy market up to it, though? Hell, yeah! This one comes out in August -- so imagine how pleased I was to get an early copy, except ... that just means I have to wait longer for the next instalment!

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Friday, 18 April 2008

Confessor


Confessor
Terry Goodkind
"Oh No, Not Another One" Books

Before I start, I should point out that this is not a review. I don't write reviews. While there may be some elements of a review within my review (that is not a review), such as, for example, reviewing certain elements of the book, I don't write reviews.

Lots of things are concluded in this conclusion to the Sword of Truth series. In fact, so conclusive is it, that every character to ever appear in the Sword of Truth shows up in this novel. (Even the dead ones, and the characters created by accidental typo). This creates a quite full cast, and is rather useful when Richard needs to make a speech and can't find people to criticise.

I've heard some people criticise Mr. Goodkind -- in particular, a harlot named Alice, who stinks of calumny -- but really I can't see why. After being attacked by nigh infinite numbers of Imperial Order troops in the previous volumes, it was refreshing to see Richard is just as good at football as he is at mass-murder.

Gang rape me if this isn't the best novel I haven't read this year.

ETA: OK, I was feeling a bit silly!? (And I don't have time to write a proper review of a real book -- which would have been The Steel Remains). I'm no Alice, either...

Chopin
Bach

Thursday, 17 April 2008

Would Fantasy Be As Fun If It Was "Appreciated" by the Critics?

A recent article by Mark Chadbourn discussed fantasy and perhaps why the critics don't always "get it". Jo Fletcher, the editor at Gollancz, has a very interesting comment about Terry Pratchett:

"For years I have been asking why one of the greatest satirists who ever lived - in this country or any other - is consistently ignored by those who ought to be lionising him. I'm talking about Terry Pratchett, who may have the financial rewards commensurate with his talent - but where are the Booker prizes, or the Whitbreads? Where are the literary accolades? Whenever he's interviewed, it's usually with a faint air of surprise that someone who writes fantasy can be so erudite and funny."

Mark then goes on to say:


Yet like romance, fantasy also suffers from near invisibility in the cultural landscape. Its detractors point at pot-boiling adventure stories and mock notions of escapism - as if all fiction doesn't allow some avenue for escape. Certainly the genre has struggled to match its popularity with the kind of credibility that has been bestowed on, say, the crime genre.

While I agree that fantasy is often mocked in general culture (and that Terry Pratchett doesn't get recognised enough by, erm, "recognisers"), I'm not sure that a financial reward isn't a bad reward at all! Not just from the money point of view -- it means people are reading his work, and such a large volume of people, too. Authors like that kind of thang, I'd imagine.

A lot of people read science-fiction and fantasy. A lot of the most popular TV shows are also SFF-related. While fantasy doesn't always get the recognition it deserves, and is ridiculed sometimes, I'm more than happy to keep it as my favourite genre :)

I do think the comment about surprise being shown that people who write (and, for that matter, read) SFF can be erudite and funny, rather than (just) nerds, is perceptive, though. A lot of distant family members' response to my blog was, 1) a blog? Oh. The Internet... Geek!, and 2) you still read that stuff? Lots of comments about growing up, and childishness, and "living in the real world" followed ;)

Fantasy has a lot of popular appeal -- since when has anyone cared what "the critics" thought ... says me ... on my book-reviewing blog... Any thoughts?

Wednesday, 16 April 2008

Book Swede on Facebook! & Other Bits

I finally went ahead (with the news that Orbit will soon have a Facebook page) and got myself an account! It's rather time-consuming, but fun :) Anyway you can find me here; add me as friend, and you can throw a sheep at me or fight my Slayer...

Be warned though, from this example of my slaying powers: Your Renegade Slayer served a bowl of pain to Jennifer's Merciless Slayer. The pain was brought. So was the funk...

Oh yeah!

On there, I added Kevin Andrew Murphy as a friend. His characters, Rosa Loteria and The Maharajah, are in the Wild Cards novel I recently reviewed, Inside Straight, though Kevin doesn't actually write them in that one. He does however, in the next book: Busted Flush.


He also added:

"I've also done the Rosa and Maharajah entries for the American Hero website, which is currently in its final week of confessionals, paralleling events in Inside Straight in real time.

A bunch of fans are posting in character as fans from the Wild Cards universe, so if you want to get into the fun, this is the last week. I and some of the other authors are also responding as their own characters."

:)

Over at the frankly splendiferous blog, Realms of Speculative Fiction, there's a -- I'll say it again -- quite frankly awesome post about SFF sites of interest. I was honoured to be included in that list, so, if you want to find some new blogs -- both old and just starting up -- check them out! (And read their other posts, too.)


Graeme has just reviewed The Steel Remains by Richard Morgan, a book I absolutely loved (due August) -- review soon :) I'll also be doing an interview with Richard (with Robert), but more on that later.

Tuesday, 15 April 2008

Empress


Empress
Karen Miller
Orbit Books

688 pages
3rd April 2008

In our interview, Karen said that she wanted to show "that she can sing in a different key"... Well, Empress is very much in a different key from her earlier work! Some will like it, some won't. In terms of characterisation and plot, it's vastly different from the Kingmaker, Kingbreaker series -- though whether different is superior...

Empress tells the tale of a girl, Hekat, a she-brat, sold into slavery (which comes as a relief to her...), who escapes, believing herself to be a chosen tool of the gods, and, in the city of Et-Raklion, first with her skill with a knife, then her seeming power as a tool of the gods, rises and rises in power and status ... until she ends up as Empress, the most powerful person in the world. The humble-origins-destined-for-greatness them is explored in Empress, but with a lot of twists as religion is thrown strongly into the mix, too. Magic very clearly comes from the gods, or at least agencies that present themselves as gods, and Godspeakers -- priest types -- are very powerful people ... except that Hekat, a slave girl with a strange amulet, can survive a pit of scorpions -- the totem animals of the gods -- where the priests cannot...

I don't like Hekat. It's taken me a while to decide that, and I expect it will probably be true of a lot of readers. Where Asher was an affable friendly type, Hekat is the opposite: secretive, ambitious and, perhaps, every so slightly scary. She determinedly believes that she has been chosen by the gods to lead her people, steals, kills and is generally cruel to those around her; she's also quite insane (at least, by modern standards), I think. It's not hard to see why she's like that, of course, and one thing that I really liked about Empress was it's harsh unflinching take on her life, and it seems that throughout the novel, Karen is deciding just how much damage she can do to one character! From a life in a squalid village, where the term "father" is replaced with fearing "the man", where slavers come to buy their children. So much cruelty is thrown at Hekat -- and is expected in that world -- that it's easy to see why Hekat is such a damaged creature.

But I still don't like her, and I can't identify with her.

While it was interesting to read about her exploits, to be slightly taken aback at her constant vehemence, her madness, and I don't think her story could be told without those things, I still think it's a problem when I feel nothing for character. For me, that was a bit of a disappointment. Miller stayed away, though, from the strong-female butt-kicking, clad in leather, rolling around in mud with mercenaries type, and indeed a lot in Empress is stuff we don't always see so often in fantasy. It's definitely at the gritty end of the spectrum, indeed, but I think moments of levity were needed and not always provided, though Karen did say that moments of lightness and warmth were more abundant in the latter two volumes of the trilogy.

And so, the final line, with me not really knowing what to say. I did enjoy Empress, but it's a tough read. I still think that I enjoyed the Asher series more, and I really think it's due to getting on better with the characters, enjoying the time reading them more, but Empress, nonetheless, has proven a strong start to this new trilogy, and from what I've heard, it looks like I might have more fun reading the next volumes.

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Monday, 14 April 2008

"The Name of the Wind" on NYT Bestseller List...

Congratulations to Pat! I had the pleasure of interviewing the Rothfuss a while back -- the funniest replies ever! -- and I enjoyed The Name of the Wind myself, so it's great to see it doing so well :)


(Decorated by Pat! Click to "embiggen", or go here to congratulate him and check out his blog)

Saturday, 12 April 2008

D or d

I got thinking about words today, and realised that I'm rather addicted to them; I use them all the time, can't go without them, and like to find as many new ones as possible. I've only just realised how many Word of the Day things I am actually subscribed to (a lot)!

I like to know where they come from, any cool stories they have behind them; words which have changed meaning are a particular favourite -- nice, for example, did use to mean precise, fastidious -- seen in Shakespeare with "how do you stand on nice points" and still seen in such use today in "makes a nice distinction between..." Before even that, though, it meant, rude, garish, etc (or something like that; I can't quite remember)...

Anyway, I found this by chance on Wikipedia, and will now be using this word:


Dord


"On July 31, 1931, Austin M. Patterson, Webster's chemistry editor, sent in a slip reading "D or d, cont./density." This was intended to add "density" to the existing list of words that the letter "D" can abbreviate. The slip somehow went astray, and the phrase "D or d" was misinterpreted as a single, run-together word: dord. (This was a plausible mistake because headwords on slips were typed with spaces between the letters, making "D or d" look very much like "D o r d".) A new slip was prepared for the printer and a part of speech assigned along with a pronunciation. The word got past proofreaders and appeared on page 771 of the dictionary around 1934.


On February 28, 1939, an editor noticed "dord" lacked an etymology and investigated. Soon an order was sent to the printer marked "plate change/imperative/urgent". The word "dord" was excised and the definition of the adjacent entry "Dore furnace" was expanded from "A furnace for refining dore bullion" to "a furnace in which dore bullion is refined" to close up the space. Gove wrote that this was "probably too bad, for why shouldn't dord mean 'density'?"'


Indeed why shouldn't it! :) Somethings I really like about English is 1) it's flexibility, the ability to assimilate/steal words from other languages and, 2) I have to like it; it's the only one I speak!

I've invented a few words, mostly for coursework when I couldn't come up with a word which properly described what I was trying to convey. (Malamused, is my favourite of those.) Which brings me onto...

Have any of you invented words? Want to? Submit them in the comments and I'll arrange a suitable prize for the winner! ;) It'll probably be a book of some sort, funnily enough... It can have a cool meaning, or can just sound nice, etc, but perhaps unlike dord, I'd prefer some reasons and maybe a definition... Nonsense is a reason, though.

My favourites at the moment are, bamboozled, flabbergasted, serendipity, Brodbingnagian ... as you can tell, I go for sound and look above obvious meaning, but that's just me! =] Also let me know your favourites...

Friday, 11 April 2008

The Demon and the City


The Demon and the City
Liz Williams
Night Shade Books

374 pages
February 2008

When I reviewed Snake Agent, the first in the Detective Inspector Chen series, you might remember how much I loved it. The clever blend of science fiction with unusual fantastical elements -- a bureaucratic Chinese Hell -- interesting characters and a lot of style really won me over. Would The Demon and the City do the same for me?

Well, mostly yes.

With Chen out of the city enjoying a long-deserved rest, Zhu Irzh, demon of Hell, former member of it's Vice squad -- now assisting police officer on Earth -- is left in charge... But is it really a good idea to leave a demon -- even if it does have the character flaws of mercy and a conscience -- in charge of murder investigations... particularly when he becomes a suspect...

In Snake Agent I had a lot of fun seeing a Chinese Hell; in this sequel we get to see a lot more of Heaven -- and guess what: it's less than perfect... In fact, Heaven is about to crash down on Singapore 3 with devastating results...

One thing that I suspected would be a flaw was the fact that Chen -- one of my favourite characters in Snake Agent -- isn't in this book so much. He might be credited with "guest star" were this a film, and with Williams' quick, short chapters (some only a page in length) that dart back and forth between villain and hero, anti-hero and other people who defy classification, it certainly feels like a film, and a rather good one at that. But back to my original point: I didn't miss Chen at all! He's a great character, certainly, but when you leave a demon like Zhu Irzh, he's just going to take over. Witty, funny, and just plain bad, occasionally; he stole all the scenes he was in.

Interestingly, I thought the premise was better in this novel, but that, in just a few places, the execution fell a little flat. For someone as talented as Liz Williams, I mean. After all, in The Demon and the City, unlike Snake Agent, there were moments in this book where I actually put it down for things like eating and sleeping...

The Demon and the City isn't quite the read that Snake Agent was, but nevertheless, it's still a very good one, and this series is a one of a kind. Williams juggles so many things together -- things that shouldn't work -- and, as usual, pulls it off with a flourish.

The layout of the title on the cover is a bit different on the version I got sent, but I prefer the version above as it shows more of that great artwork! That would have me picking up and buying the book without a second thought...

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Thursday, 10 April 2008

Death Star Earth...

Some cool, but quite scary, science news via New Scientist: The most powerful laser ever created is "the brightest light in the Universe since the Big Bang".


The incredible temperatures and pressures it generates when it hits a target will let scientists explore conditions found in exploding stars and the cores of giant planets. The awesome power of the laser can be focused on a spot just one-tenth the width of a human hair, producing a light intensity higher than anything that has occurred in the universe since the big bang.

"My astrophysicist friends tell me that near a gamma-ray burst, they surmised that the [light] intensity probably gets to 1020 watts per square centimetre during the explosion," Ditmire told New Scientist. Light from the Texas Petawatt laser can reach about 100 times that level, he says.

Er, yeah. I'm very pro-science, but still ... gamma ray bursts kill planets (including us, should we be so unlucky), and this is 100 times more powerful...

So, we blow Pluto to pieces first (not even a planet, I mean, come on, it deserves to die), then we get Mars. That'll show the god of war who's really boss. After that, the sky's not really the limit.

This could make a cool science fantasy/fiction story, though... Yeah, with a Dark Lord who trains this laser beams on planets and disturbs the Force, and ... oh ... damn ...

Lord of Light


Lord of Light
Roger Zelazny
Gollancz Books

OK, this isn't an official review as such -- someone recommended I read Lord of Light a while back, and it wasn't that long ago that I got around to it... and, wow. My back-pile is large enough that unless I've been sent it, I rarely review things I've bought myself, so this book is good!

I have to admit when I started I was a little dubious that, even with an introduction from George R.R. Martin calling it one of the top five SF novels ever written, and the multiple awards it had won (Zelazny owned half the Nebula Awards in existence at one point, and many Hugo's!), that it could be that good. Well, it is.

Lord of Light draws heavily upon the Hindu religion, and is very much a science fantasy -- while it was science that got them there, the people who have taken on the Aspects of the Hindu gods -- Brahma, Shiva the Destroyer, etc -- are, pretty much, gods. They live in a Celestial City and war with demons. I'm reminded of Arthur C. Clarke's famous observation that "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic". They colonised the planet and gradually began to think of themselves as the Hindu gods.

It's beautifully written, and what's more, it's very good fun.

When I picked up my copy it must have been a special edition reprint because, apart from the above cover art looking completely different to the normal edition, the book had rounded edges and the blurb was written horizontally across the back. And it looks great.


His followers called him Mahasamatman and said he was a god. He preferred to drop the Maha- and the -atman, however, and called himself Sam. He never claimed to be a god. But then, he never claimed not to be a god.

I really should have read this book earlier; it's already (after three re-reads in three days!) one of my favourite SF reads ever! No joke. The Gollancz SF Classics range is fairly well established in the UK, but I'm ashamed to admit this is my first read of one of them. Hopefully, it won't be the last.

PS: This book has an "unforgivable pun" which I missed the first couple of times I read it... let me know if you find it...

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US


Wednesday, 9 April 2008

What Was The Book That Hooked You?

On fantasy, that is.

I have difficulty deciding whether it was something earlier, like Lewis Carrol's Alice in Wonderland, C.S Lewis' Narnia or something more typically fantasy, such as David Eddings Belgariad or Raymond E. Feist's Magician, still a brilliant book, in my opinion.

So what hooked you?

As a kid, I never really read that many "younger" books; it's only now that I find myself revisiting those classics like Susan Coopers The Dark is Rising (turned into a crappy movie, very recently), etc. I find myself reading more YA/children's books than I ever did when I was the right age in the first place!

This isn't the post I intended for today, by the way. That one has grown rather more than expected, and I'm hoping to get authors participating, too. One word: mythology...

Tuesday, 8 April 2008

Blog Changes (aka Messing Around with Stuff I Don't Understand!)

You might have noticed I spent a bit of time yesterday messing 'round with this blog's template, changing stuff, adding a little. I apologise to anybody who viewed the blog at certain random times when I had removed stuff like say, posts, and the nav bar at the top, and generally fiddled with stuff, often to the detriment rather than the, erm, opposite. (Let me know of a better word, and you could win a thing!)

There's now a little star rating thing, because it looks kinda sweet, and I had an email from someone, complaining that they couldn't be bothered to comment (instead, sending an email with general abuse is so much easier...), so I thought a quick rating thing for lazy people might be better ;) By the way, Hal Duncan really knows how to reply to nasty emails!

It seems to have worked, as yesterday, I got rather higher numbers of visitors than usual ... then again, that could be due to the fabulous Karen Miller (see below)... I'm currently working on two interviews at present, both great fun, one of which will be open for your question submissions -- more on that in the future...

Anyway, please let me know what you think of the small changes :) I've added a favicon to make this blog stick out a bit in a long list of favourites ... and just because it looks nice =] It's a Swedish flag, as a actual Swede (ruttabugger or whatever it's called in the rest of the world) was rather difficult to make that small and still tell what it is. The Swedish flag should confuse people (those that do not know the long running joke that only I know) into thinking I'm Swedish, or have a webiste about books on swedes.

Two very cool blogs: Realms of Speculative Fiction, and Dark Wolf's Reviews. Check 'em out.

PS: Forgive the hodge-podge nature of this post; I'll have something proper tomorrow!

Monday, 7 April 2008

The Blood King


The Blood King
Gail Z. Martin
Solaris Books

624 pages
4th February 2008

Last month, I reviewed The Summoner, which although quite full of generic fantasy tropes, and clearly aimed as a stable, core-market book, (though with nicer than usual artwork) was nevertheless fun to read. The Blood King is, essentially, more of the same.

Which is not to say that's a bad thing, but with this sequel, and Tris' return to Margolan to defeat his murdering brother, Jared, and the suitably mad/evil firemage, Foor Arontala, there was the opportunity to do something a bit different. Instead, The Blood King unfolds with a (admittedly fun) inevitability, and everything I expected to happen, particularly towards the end of the book, happened.

While The Blood King, as with it's prequel, doesn't do that much new, it is still a fun read, and Martin improves her characterisation a lot in this book, particularly with regards to the sellsword, Vahanian, as we learn more about his past, and why he's such a cynic. The pacing is a bit slow in the first half, though this is countered by how much we learn about the Summoner's powers, and all the pieces being put in place for the final conflict to stop Jared and Arontala raising the ancient evil, The Obsidian King, to destroy the world. Which, as I've said before, everybody, be they mad bad guys or not, should realise is a bad thing.

One of my favourite scenes in this book was the meeting of the Blood Council -- the vayash moru (vampires, if you remember). While they are basically still your typical vamps, learning a bit more about their history within a fantasy setting was interesting, and book three, Dark Haven, should hopefully build on this. However, the unexpected romance between the good guy, Tris, and the good girl, Kiara, worked better in The Summoner, in my opinion. Then, they realised something was going on, but were too busy preparing for war ... now they're at war, and deciding it's time to announce their feelings. Still, I suppose they were expecting to die...

Overall, The Blood King isn't a bad read. It's not wildly inventive, it ends just as you expect, but it is good fun, and it's a good-fun enough read that I'll be back for more.

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Saturday, 5 April 2008

An Interview with Karen Miller...

Karen Miller's latest novel, the first in her new trilogy will be published by Orbit this summer. I've chatted to Karen before about her previous duology, the Kingmaker, Kingbreaker series which I really enjoyed. She kindly agreed to let me question her some more, about Empress and other things...


Welcome back, Karen. Needless to say, there are still virtual cookies available! :)

Thank you, Chris, and thanks for asking me. As for the virtual cookies, well, they're the only kind I can eat, so thanks! *g



Quite alright! Could you tell us a little about Empress? (I like to be original in my opening questions)...

Well, Empress is the first book in the Godspeaker trilogy (my first trilogy, yikes!). Actually, I tend to think of my stories in acts, like plays, so it's Act 1 in a 3 act play.

It's the story of a young girl from an exceedingly harsh background, who discovers the power that lies within her and rises to greatness against enormous odds. It's the story of a young man, who's also been touched by power and greatness. It's about his relationship with her, and her relationship with the god they worship ... which isn't at all a kind or benevolent deity. It's about family, and lacking family, and making your own family, and faith, and how people can sometimes be blinded by their beliefs. It's about power and ambition and the sacrifices we make to get what we want, and how more than just you pay the price for those sacrifices.

It's set in a world that's very different from the world of the Kingmaker, Kingbreaker books. I had a lot of fun researching of a variety of ancient cultures, to get a feel for that kind of total otherness.



Of course, Empress was called Empress of Mijak in your native Australia – this is the second time the name's of your books have been altered! Do you mind at all?

Not in the least. The other 2 titles in the trilogy remain the same -- so that's nice. *g*



And what can we look forward to in the concluding volumes of The Godspeaker series? How far written are the two books?

Both books are done. Bk 2, The Riven Kingdom, was released last December here in Australia, and bk 3, Hammer of God, is due for release here in June.

As for what you can look forward to ... well, trying to avoid spoilers ... the landscape widens to include a new location and a new set of characters with their own problems, in bk 2. The characters from bk 1 are also there, but the focus shifts. And then in bk 3, two worlds collide. *g* More angst, families, trouble, dilemmas, consequences and action. Various chickens come home to roost.



The magic system in Godspeaker is quite different to the Kingmaker/Kingbreaker duology and religion also plays a much larger part – was this a conscious move away, and what risks were involved?

Not conscious insofar as I made up this story to deliberately get away from the world of Lur. It's just the story that wanted to be told next. So I guess the differences grow out of that. These are brand new people, in a brand new environment. I did work hard to make sure I wasn't repeating myself, because that is a danger, always, when you're writing. Also, I did want to have a bit of a play with some religious themes, in this trilogy, and that wasn't the focus of the first two Kingmaker, Kingbreaker books. So yes, the religious themes in this trilogy are definitely a conscious decision. And I guess the magic grows directly out of that.

I feel there are huge risks in this story, and in this trilogy. For a start, Mijak is such a hugely different world from a lot of mainstream fantasy, and what I've done before. And it's not a pretty or comfortable world, either. It's dark and violent and confronting. But that's the way the story went, so I did have to take a deep breath and follow it. Hekat's a confronting character, too. The world of Mijak isn't as user friendly as the world of Lur, and so that's a huge risk in terms of upsetting readers. I knew it when I was writing it, and frankly I've scared myself stupid with this. Even though early feedback has been good, I'm still terrified. I tend to live my writing life in a perpetual state of terror -- I'm always convinced I haven't done a good enough job.

There's more lightness and warmth in bks 2 and 3 of this trilogy, with the new characters coming in. But that doesn't alter the fact that bk 1 is pretty damned full-on! *g* And there are moments all the way through the trilogy that aren't for the faint-hearted or the squeamish.

But I think that if you're not risking something, if you're not challenging yourself, as a writer, then ultimately you're short-changing readers. And I guess I also wanted to show that I can sing in more than one key.




Do you like Hekat? Would you, if you met her, I mean.

Gosh, I don't know.

As a writer, I get very invested in all of my characters. I tap into aspects of myself for each and every one of them -- a bit like an actor does. For an actor to successfully play a role, be it the hero or someone with more shades of gray, he or she needs to find that tiny part of themself that coincides with that character. And I think it's the same for a writer. In many ways, we're actors playing a one-person show with a huge cast. So when I'm being Hekat, I need to really be
her, be inside her, make her part of me and me part of her. And since she's not a person who's filled with self-loathing, then I can't be full of self-loathing when I write her. So, when I write her, I really like her and I completely understand who she is and where she's coming from.

Of course, given what she gets up to, that could say some very disturbing things about me ... *g*

If I met her as she is, without knowing her from the inside ... I don't know. Probably I'd find her problematical.



You were, in 2007, the UK's best selling début SFF writer: before that, you also did excellently in Australia -- how has international bestseller-dom affected you?

In terms of every-day living, it hasn't affected me at all. I still have to clean out the kitty litter tray. *g*

From a writing perspective, while I am thrilled beyond the telling, in truth it's scared me a lot. A great many people loved the first two Kingmaker, Kingbreaker books and wrote to tell me so, and also to say that they'll buy my next books too. And I find that makes me feel hugely responsible for not wasting their money. As a writer, I feel it's important that I write the stories in my head, in the way that I feel they should be written, but at the same time I really, really don't want to disappoint the people who have made this journey possible for me in the first place -- the wonderful book-buying public. I know that I can't realistically hope to please all of the people all of the time, but emotionally that's a little harder to deal with. I just don't want to disappoint, and that's a chance with every book I write. Not only with content/theme, but also with execution. There's a truism that says art's never finished, it's only ever abandoned, and that is true to an extent. But no kidding, I'm still writing/polishing a book to the bitter end, when my editor has to prise the galleys out of my cold, clutching fingers. I have even been known, in the past, to ring up the typesetter and dictate a final line!

It's hard to move on, sometimes, knowing that if I only had a little bit more time I could just make it ... better.



What are your all-time favourite five books? What book is, in your opinion, the most under-rated/under-read book of all time?

Wow. Okay. In no particular order:

The Game of Kings, by Dorothy Dunnett

The Long Winter, by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Grand Sophy, by Georgette Heyer

The Warrior's Apprentice, by Lois McMaster Bujold

Jingo, by Terry Pratchett


Not an under-read book, but an under-read author: Reginald Hill, who writes British police procedurals. I know he's popular, but I also know a great many people haven't read him. They might have seen the tv adaptations of his series (Dalziel and Pascoe) but his stuff is so exquisitely written I often have to stop and have a moment of heavy breathing. *g*


Also, Kage Baker. She's got an amazingly inventive mind, fabulous characters, a wicked sense of humour and a terrific series in The Company books. I'm a huge fan, and I wish more people were aware of just how great she is. She does wonderful things with time travel, history and corporate politics.


Dave Duncan. He writes swashbuckling adventure fantasy better than just about anyone I know. He's a beautiful stylist, he has a dry wit and a sly twinkle in his eye. Most recently, his Alchemist books (The Alchemist's Apprentice, The Alchemist's Code) are playing with an alternate reality Venice, complete with magic, mayhem and mystery. They're delighful. I can't recommend this writer highly enough.



If you could co-write with one author ever – alive and dead --, who would it be and why?

Even if I could, I wouldn't. I'm too bloody-minded and selfish to ever consider inflicting myself on another writer.



You've recently written a Stargate novel (a series I really need to watch more of at some point...): could you tell us a little about the novel, and how this came about? What other SF&F TV and films do you enjoy?

The most recent Stargate novel I wrote was 'Do No Harm'. That's due for publication in May 2008, I believe. Do No Harm is set at the end of season 3 (I'm a super fan of the earlier seasons). It's a stand-alone adventure that also has a connection to one of my all-time favourite episodes ever, A Matter of Time (from season 2, in which we get to learn a few very significant things about Jack O'Neill, and have a tragic ending, which I love!). It also introduces a one-off character from season 7, who for various reasons has become a bit of a fan favourite. I know I loved him, which is why I included him. Anyhow -- Do No Harm is the story of what happens to SG-1 and Doctor Janet Fraiser when they find themselves in the middle of a medical crisis on a planet that Washington deems a high priority target. It's also about Jack and how he has, or hasn't, dealt with what happened in A Matter of Time. It was a lot of fun to write, but it was also very hard, because it involved actual science. There's a reason I write fantasy novels -- I don't do science! So this was a killer. But I think it works, and I think it did me good to really push myself, in terms of the scientific content. Plus I just have the most fun playing in that sandbox, with those characters. I love them.

As for other media sf I love, well, in no particular order: Star Trek (all the incarnations), SG Atlantis, Babylon 5, Farscape, New Dr Who, new Battlestar Galactica, Space Above and Beyond, Life on Mars, Star Wars, Firefly, Buffy, Angel, Torchwood, the first Matrix film, the first 2 Terminator films, the first 2 Alien films, Bladerunner, The Abyss, Strange Days, Independence Day ... just off the top of my head. *g*



What curious writerly quirks/rituals do you have? I had a friend who maintained she had to eat quiche often, but I think that was just a (strange!) excuse. Or is it in fact a writer's secret that I have stumbled upon and must keep secret?

If the quiche thang's a secret, nobody told me. *g*


Mainly, I like to write in the dark, with a low light burning and movie/tv soundtracks playing. Basically I like to cocoon myself in a kind of warm, dark bubble so the outside world doesn't intrude. Which isn't to say I *can't* work under other conditions, because I can and I have. But when I get to call the shots, that's how I like to write.



I'd like to thank you very much for taking part, Karen! :) (I should also add that, when I sent the questions out to Karen, she very kindly put up with the debacle of unattached files, files that were incompatible, and the fact that this part of the interview I've just added on, because I forgot to thank her!) Thank you. ;)

Friday, 4 April 2008

The Winner of "The Execution Channel" is...


Travis Dunn of Oklahoma, USA. Congratulations! Thanks to everyone who entered, better luck next time (which, hopefully, will be soon, but, for a load of contests, constantly, visit Robert!) :) Thanks also to Orbit for supplying the book!


I am currently reading about Russian vampires (fiction) and Russian Rasputin (non-fiction); anybody able to guess what the first book is? So far, it is very, very good.


And!; My Pile o' Shame grows smaller! Thanks to Graeme (who I can't link to, beacuse, like all Blogger blogs, they've suddenly been filtered on this cruddy computer -- I can still write posts, fortuneately, just can't see them when they go up!) I've got hold of a copy of The Briar King by Greg Keyes..., but those Russian vamps won't let me go yet -- I will get to it, though! I've also had news of an awesome ARC that's coming my way, and I have an interview coming this weekend with Karen Miller where we talk all things Empress (and cookies). Review pending. That is, of Empress, not the cookies, unless you'd like to see this blog diversify?!?


:::I am writing this in a grotty, cramped, unfamiliar office. With nought but coffee stains, lots of clocks, and some nice Monet prints, for company. Oh, and Rasputin:::

Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Inside Straight


Inside Straight
Ed: George R.R. Martin.
Tor Books

384 pages
January 2008

The Wild Cards series has always been one that I've heard about, one that was very well received, and I really liked the idea of a book written by many different authors, including new talent. Sadly, I was a bit disappointed by Inside Straight, the 18th Wild Card novel, despite it having some really commendable points.

It's over fifty years since the mysterious alien virus killed off 90% of the people it infected, left most of the rest deformed "freaks", and left just a few percent, Ace's, with special powers. Inside Straight features an essentially new cast of characters (though the old ones are referenced often by the younger generation of Ace's). And now, in 2008, a reality TV show, American Hero, a reality TV show with Ace's as the stars, is about to begin... The early Ace's used their powers to help the world, and became legends; in their shadows, decades later, the next generation will be TV personalities...

Inside Straight did a good job of commenting on the public being more interested in superhero "freaks" battling it out on a reality TV show, than a crisis in the rest of the world, but the first part of the novel moved too slowly and left me a bit frustrated. Although the scheming and the back-biting that went on behind the scenes of the reality show was quite interesting, and often funny, it went on a bit long, and, even though these people had special powers, if I'd wanted to see this I could have just watched Big Brother or American Idol (more fun than our UK counterpart, by the way!) rather than read a SF novel.

Of much more interest to me were the scenes in a quite alternate Egypt. I liked the way mythology was played around with there, too -- the alien virus from the previous books having turned some of the Ace's into Living Gods, with attributes similar to the gods of mythology, and Thoth and Osiris show up, which is always good. Speaking of the virus, with Inside Straight being the book to introduce new people to the Wild Cards alternate universe, it would have been good to see more about the virus -- why some people died, others being horribly ruined, and a rarer few got special powers. I can understand why the authors didn't necessarily want to reiterate stuff that might have been shown in earlier novels, but it would have been useful, and interesting, for a newbie.

If I hadn't read the blurb (and known about it before!) I'd not have realised that nine different authors worked on this project. The different parts and characters are woven together seamlessly. When I reviewed Hunter's Run, a collaboration of three writers (two of which, George R.R. Martin & Daniel Abraham, write in Inside Straight), I commented on how surprised I was at how well the different pieces from different authors went together. With nine writers, that's even more of a phenomenal achievement.

The comments, throughout the book, on the public being more interested in superhero "freaks" battling it out on a reality TV show, than a crisis in the rest of the world, were clever and funny. The Middle East "situation" also plays a large part in this novel, Inside Straight opening in fact, with an assassination that is about to cause havoc ... which, of course, the general public care nothing about, being more interested in whether Drummer Boy will make out with every girl in the American Hero house. I also really liked the "blog posts" by Jonathan Hive (Daniel Abraham) in general, as they brought a kind of over-arching narration to the whole thing. He was, with the rather strange but cool ability to turn bits (or the entirety) of his body into wasps, and a sour disposition, one of my favourite characters.

I think it was the hype that did this one in for me. A lot of things in Inside Straight are brilliant, but I had higher expectations than perhaps were fair. It's a good book, with generally interesting characters, a good second half (after the quite slow first), and is very cleverly written. But, and this really annoys me, I'm still ever so slightly disappointed.

For an alternative take, see the excellent reviews at Fantasy Book Critic & Graeme's Fantasy Book Review :)

For more information:

Amazon UK
Amazon US

Tuesday, 1 April 2008

More "Who" News....

From the SFX website:


One of next year’s Doctor Who TV movies will be a crossover with Battlestar Galactica, climaxing with a massive battle between the Cylons and the Cybermen.

"It was only logical that out two biggest ratings hits should come together,” announced spokesman Flora Lopi of the US SCI Fi Channel. "It’s going to be very exciting to see the Doctor and his new companion Avril D’Abord fighting alongside the Galactica crew."

No further clues were given about the nature of the plot, but it is believed that Number Six will be revealed to the mysterious female hand which picked up the Master’s ring at the end of "The Last of the Time Lords".


Well, isn't this good, thrilling April Fool's news?