World Fantasy Con report 2

Well folks, it's over for another year (that makes it sound like I've been to loads of these, but this is actually my first) and it's time to give you the lowdown on what's been going on here in Columbus, Ohio. This will be a big report wrapping up both the Saturday and the Sunday.

Saturday was panel-tastic, with me attending four througout the day. First up was The Evolution of Modern Horror with Robert Fleck, Michele Freel, Mike Allen and Nick Ozment. Much was made of the move from 'religious' to secular horror, H.P. Lovecfraft and Night of The Living Dead being the big markers of the latter. A few brits were mentioned as being at the forefront of the evolution of the genre; our very own Ramsey Campbell and Allyson Bird. Next up was the panel Lost in Translation with Jetse de Vries, Jo Fletcher, Gilli Bar-Hillel, Tom Croshill, John Klima and W.J. Maryson. This was a discussion on what can be lost in translating a work from one language to another. Humour came up very often and the difficulty of translating jokes. Also, it was interesting to hear that due to a subtitle mistranslation the actor Christian Slater was, for a while, believed to be a Christian bricklayer in Israel.

12pm saw the panel on Sword and Sorcery which featured yours truly, Scott H. Andrews, Martha Wells, Howard Jones and Patricia Bray. We discussed the appeal of this genre and whether it had evolved at all, or whether people were actually still writing it. Of course, the answer is yes. Much fun was had and the panel was very well attended.

Then it was time for a spot of lunch with James Maxey and his fiance Cheryl Morgan.

5pm saw the panel The Evolving Image of Dragons in Art and Literature, featuring our very own James Maxey, Merrie Haskell, John Pitts, J. Kathleen Cheney and artist Darrell Sweet, who has a hat only slightly smaller than John Wayne's in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence. Up for discussion were the different forms of dragons, the origins and evolotion of the dragon myth and whether the image of the dragon has become a locked-in archetype of is more fluid than that.

Done with panels for the day, I hooked up with Jetse de Vries, James Maxey, Cheryl Morgan and folks for dinner at Thai restaurant where Halloween was very much in full swing. They had a piano player playing horror themes and James has a sushi dish featuring a 'dragon roll' which looked like Cthulhu, it having carrot tentacles.

Then it was back to the hotel where James, Cheryl and I discussed religion and politics and then I chatted for a good while with John Berlyne about business and things.

So, Sunday then. One panel today at 10am on the influence of EC and Mad Comics on Horror, this featuring Andy Duncan, Gini Koch, and Scott Edelman . I have never read Mad magazine or an EC comic, but the discussion was lively and particularly perked up by having the great Joe Haldeman in the audience. A writer of whom I am in particular awe.

The big bit of today has been the award ceremony. Here I was lucky enough to get to sit next to the very talented Steve Rasnic Tem, with whom I chatted about horror and the state of that particular genre. The award ceremony was very entertaining and the winners are (drum roll please):

LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT RECIPIENTS
Brian Lumley
Terry Pratchett
Peter Straub

NOVEL
The City and The City by China (I have all the awards) Mieville

NOVELLA
The Women of Nell Gwyne's by Kage Baker (Sorry, this was a brain-fried error - JO)
Sea Hearts by Margo Lanagan

SHORT STORY
'The Pelican Bar' by Karen Joy Fowler

ANTHOLOGY
American Fantastic Tales: Terror and The Uncanny from Poe to the Pulps/From the 1940s to now, edited by Peter Straub

COLLECTION
There Once Lived a Women Who Tried To Kill Her Neigbour's Baby: Scary Fairy Tales by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya
The Very Best of Gene Wolfe/The Best of Gene Wolfe by Gene Wolfe

ARTIST
Charles Vess

SPECIAL AWARD, PROFESSIONAL
Jonathan Strahan

SPECIAL AWARD, NON-PROFESSIONAL
Susan Marie Groppi for Strange Horizons


And there you have it folk. Particularly thrilled for Jonathan Strahan, who has edited our forthcoming anthology, Engineering Infinity. A very well deserved award for an astute editor.

Right, that's me signing out. I know that I said I'd take pictures but it turns out the battery in my camera is flat. However, there will no doubt be plenty of pictures of the event doing the rounds.

See you back in Blighty.

World Fantasy Con Report 1

Right folks, seeing as how I can't copy and paste blog posts for some reason, go here for my first full report from World Fantasy Con.

New Vlog Post: Pumpkin Night!

Wotcher all,

As promised, it's pumpkins today.

Slightly longer than usual - I think it weighs in at about six minutes - partly because of the time I spend travelling through time to show you my pumpkins.

Through. Time.

That's what I go through for you.



Cheers,

David

Greetings from Columbus, Ohio

Honestly, what time do you people call this? Well, it's quarter to midday where you folk are, but it's quarter to seven am here. Been up since 5am on account of the jetlag.

Got here around 8pm last night and managed to last until 10pm before my brain turned to goo. On the way in, at Newark airport, saw Brian Lumley (he of Necroscope fame) and we chatted for a while, while waiting for our connecting flight. The flight to Columbus was a twin prop, so it felt all very Indian Jones. Propellers and everything! Well cool! At the other end Farah Mendelsohn, Brett Cox, Suzie McKee Charnas and I piled into a cab.

Got to the hotel, checked in, then had a look-see to see who was around. Almost immediately saw Tim Akers (Dead of Veridon) and we chatted for a good while about books, life in general and roleplaying games. (Turns out Tim and I are massive gaming geeks). Then a quick chat with the good folks from Jabberwocky Literary Agency (Eddie and Jessie) and it was time for bed. Well it was still well early, but to me it was insane o'clock. Bumped into John Berlyne in reception and managed a bleary goodnight before I retreated to my room. So, that's how its been so far. Today, I will take in some panels, some talks and some readings and try to network. Oh yes, I'm a media type now, Right, to breakfast!

By the way, I did bring the camera but forgot the connection to the laptop. So I will take pictures but they'll be posted later.

Guest Blog: Gail Z. Martin's "Days of the Dead" Tour


Hey all,

As you may remember, Gail Z. Martin - author of The Chronicles of the Necromancer (including The Summoner, The Blood King, Dark Haven and Dark Lady's Chosen and, with Orbit Books, her new title The Sworn) - likes to celebrate Hallowe'en every year with a big ol' tour of blogland, guest-blogging hither and thither and generally getting her internet self out there.

You can go to her official Days of the Dead Tour 2010 webpage to see her progress, including guest blogs, free chapters, giveaways, and podcasts readings. You can also jump on her Twitter account (@GailZMartin), where she's answering questions from readers and throwing up trivia questions every day.

Anyway, we've been gracious enough to let Gail take over our own little soapbox for a few minutes, and are proud to present:


Do we need death to make sense
of the world in truth and fiction?


Gail Z. Martin

OK, I write about a necromancer, so maybe I spend more time thinking about death and its variations than a lot of people. As an American, I know I spend a lot more time thinking about mortality than my fellow countrymen, because “some” is a lot more than “none” and in the States, thinking about death is outsourced to insurance salesmen, morticians and the clergy, so that there is more time for everyone else to shop.

I’ve started to reconsider the wisdom of our national aversion to admitting mortality, because I do believe that a culture that is afraid to think about death becomes neurotic in other ways because of that fear. Of course, a fear of dying also spawns a lucrative side-industry in everything from vitamins to Botox to cosmetic surgery, because we want to believe that dying only happens to old people, and if we never look old we’ll never be old and so the Grim Reaper will leave us alone. (Unfortunately, this has led to an oversupply of people who now look perpetually surprised, but that’s another problem.)

Looking Surprised: The little-known antidote to death.

For a nation that believes that death is optional if you just find the right pharmaceutical, we spend an inordinate amount of waking hours indulging in fictional representations of death, while doing everything possible to avoid thinking about the real thing. We also seem to have outsourced death to Hollywood and the entertainment industry. And did I mention a national fascination (and perhaps fetish) for vampires?

V-v-v-vampires?

Halloween (in the Trick-or-Treat variety) is a huge national holiday, arguably second only to Christmas in its utterly secular and commercialized celebration, and probably larger than Christmas in the consumption of beer. Come October 31, the vast majority of American children between ages 2 and 18 will grab a pillowcase or a plastic pumpkin and go door to door begging for candy, wearing a variety of costumes that range from Disney-cute to Scream-frightful. Bars and nightclubs will host huge Halloween-themed drinking bashes where there will be plenty of costumed participants, most going for a horror-glam look. Haunted house attractions will open the first weekend in October and run through Halloween, drawing around-the-block crowds with movie-quality special effects and an ever upwards-spiraling gore factor. Party stores not only stock up on fake blood and vampire fang prosthetics, but out-do each other with seasonal decorations including mangled body parts, zombie children and full-size animated robotic movie serial killers. Catalogs offer life-size mummies, vampires in coffins, bodies in spider cocoons, and headless horsemen. Pretty much every major city and large urban cemetery boasts at least one guided ghost tour.

Hallowe'en... the free market way!

I find this all pretty interesting because all the while, “real” death is something that people here shy away from discussing. Extremely high rate of gun-related fatalities? Any discussion is likely to start a fist fight. Higher-than-necessary mortality rates due to uneven access to affordable medical care? Until the recent Health Care Reform Act to correct the problem, not something most people worried about, and now a highly controversial election issue. Teen suicide rates and infant mortality rates (both high for a developed nation)—not on the conversational topic list. Grieving a recently deceased loved one? According to some in the psychology field, you’ve got two weeks to get over it, and then you need to take a Prozac and shut up already. Cemeteries have been replaced with “memorial gardens” with mow-over plaques instead of headstones. The morgue visits the home of the newly departed in an unmarked panel van, so as not to upset the neighbors with a hearse. Viewings and memorial services take place in rented professional locations, such as funeral homes and churches, instead of the front parlor.

Somehow, I think there has to be a happy medium (no pun intended) between Victorian death-obsession and modern America’s death-aversion. I also have this nagging suspicion that the less we talk about real death, the more we seem to need to gorge on depictions of fictionalized and sensationalized mortality. Whatever you try not to think about becomes an obsession.

A couple of happy mediums.

In fiction, the way a character and his/her society views death tells us a lot about the world in which the story is set. Culture and rituals around life and death underscore a fictional world’s deepest held fears and values, and influence the decisions and behaviors of characters. We see the influence of beliefs about life and death much more clearly in fiction than we can see them in real life because we ultimately stand apart from fiction, where the familiarity of real life and our own culture make it difficult to see what’s really there. One of the things that makes writing about a necromancer and a society where ghosts, the undead and other supernatural manifestations are real intriguing for me is that it gives me an interesting sandbox to explore and think about issues that are all-too-often left undiscussed. And maybe, just maybe, the same thing is what attracts readers to the growing body of paranormal fiction as well.

"Growing" doesn't say the half of it.

Thanks for reading this post — it’s part of my week-long Days of the Dead blog tour, so please catch the rest of my posts, contests, giveaways and goodies at ChroniclesOfTheNecromancer.com and my other partner sites. You’ll also find free downloads from my books, as well as freebies from some of my author friends as Trick-or-Treat favors.

Featured treat #1: downloadable excerpt from Corvus by Paul Kearney, plus a preview chapter of my new book, The Sworn.

News from the Editor

Hi Folkses

So, I thought I'd (a), share some cover lovelies with you and (b) make you aware of some recent commissions that you may not have heard about.

In September next year, I'm delighted to be able to tell you that we will be publishing the brilliant Regicide, by Nicholas Royle. I've been a fan of Nicholas for many years now, devouring books like Director's Cut and Counterparts. Royle is a fiercely intelligent writer and Regicide is a terrifying journey through a landscape of grief and loss. Those not aware of Royle's work are in for a treat. If you like China Mieville and Neil Gaiman then you're going to love this. And here's a preview of the cover art being prepared by our very own Simon Parr:


In October 2011, I will again be bringing you an anthology of horror fiction, House of Fear, this one centered around the theme of the haunted house. We've almost locked down the list of authors for this, but just to give you a list of who we have so far: Joe R. Lansdale, Paul Meloy, Adam L.G. Nevill, Lisa Tuttle, Tim Lebbon, Sarah Pinborough, Eric Brown, Jonathan Green, Nicholas Royle, Christopher Priest, Nina Allan, Chaz Brenchley, Stephen Volk, Christopher Fowler, Garry Kilworth, Weston Ochse, Rebecca Levene.
And here's the superb cover by our designer Luke Preece:


Two more commissions I'm very excited to let you know about are Kultus, by debut novelist Richard Ford and Babylon Steel, also by a debut novelist, Gaie Sebold.

Kultus is terrific fun. David and Jenni kept asking me what I was giggling about as I read this from the subs pile. Richard Ford has written a rip-roaring steampunk adventure featuring cultists, angels and demons and a host of brilliantly written characters. If I had to compare it to anything I'd say Joe Lansdale meets China Mieville. We have the brilliant Fraser Irving working on the cover art for this right now, so we shall show you that as soon as we have it. The novel will be available in November 2011.

Gaie Sebold's novel, Babylon Steel, is one of the finest new fantasy novels I've read this year. Babylon Steel is the madam of a brothel in a fantasy world, whose past finally catches up with her. Featuring gods and monsters and an infinity of different planes of reality, this is fantasy fiction at its finest. It was also terrific to find in Gaie, a writer who writes about sex and sexual politics so well. This one is going to impress, look out for it in January 2012.

And that's it for now. New covers as and when they come in.

Happy reading.

Convention Bound

So, this week I'm off to Columbus, Ohio for the World Fantasy Convention. Friday evening I'll be signing copies of The Call of Kerberos and The End of The Line and I'm on a panel on Sword & Sorcery at 12pm on the Saturday. If you're there this weekend come and say hi. I'm the portly jet-lagged Brit looking a bit confused.

Jonathan

No Vlog Today!

Hi all,

Just to let you know that, for a number of reasons, I am cutting my vlogs down to biweekly. I have therefore decided to skip it today, and to provide you with a vlog for Hallowe'en next Friday.

For those of you who can't wait another week for their video fix, I suggest reviewing my vlogs from previous weeks, or hop across to the Abaddon blog where I have posted a video by Weston Ochse of the recent Book Signing Zombie Crawl.

Cheers,

David

At the Pub

Wotcher all,

Ben, Jenni and I have now returned from the Duke's Cut in Oxford, where we have enjoyed a "publisher's lunch" with our podcast guests.

(For those of you who don't know, our fatter, harder-drinking, heavier-smoking forebears pretty much hit the pub every Friday lunchtime; so much so that nobody in publishing ever used to try and get anything done on a Friday afternoon, which in turn justified going to the pub every Friday lunchtime. This doesn't happen so much in the hard-working, productive twenty-first century, but we do like to slope off to the pub of a Friday afternoon once in a while, when we have guests for whatever reason.)

Clockwise from front left: Jenni's back, Adam Nevill's right side, Jon Oliver,
Pat Cadigan's husband Chris Fowler (not that one), Pat Cadigan, Ben Smith's left side.

But wait! Who's that in the middle-distance?

- Ia! Ia! Mine's a Carlsberg.
- Brains.

Much great conversation was had, about convention memories, meeting our heroes, new Apple technology, art, the state of digital publishing, and the like.

Jon then took the chaps off to the Lebanese restaurant in town for lunch, and we're expecting him back any moment.

Cheers,

David

In the studio!


Pat Cadigan and Adam Nevill were in Rebellion's sound studios today, recording our podcast with Jonathan Oliver.

Jon interviewed Pat and Adam, and they discussed the horror anthology The End of the Line, and the state of the horror genre today... look out for the podcast next week!

-

Gaze into my Crystal Ball

Yes folks, unlike the Great Criswell and Russell Grant (and maybe David Icke for good measure), I can actually predict the future.

For behold, I bring to you the entire of Solaris's 2011 publishing line-up:

JANUARY

The Age of Odin - James Lovegrove - Science-Fiction
Engineering Infinity - edited by Jonathan Strahan - Science-Fiction

FEBRUARY

The Sentinel Mages - Emily Gee - Fantasy
Blood in The Water - Juliet E. McKenna - Fantasy (Mass Market Paperback, UK only)

MARCH

Loss of Separation - Conrad Williams - Horror
Cloneworld - Andy Remic - Science-Fiction

APRIL

Kings of Eternity - Eric Brown - Science-Fiction
Falconfar - Ed Greenwood - Fantasy (Mass Market Paperback)

MAY

The Noise Revealed - Ian Whates - Science-Fiction
Banners In The Wind - Juliet E. McKenna - Fantasy (Mass Market Paperback, UK only)

JUNE

Dead of Veridon - Tim Akers - Science-Fiction/Steampunk
Desdaemona - Ben Macallan - Urban Fantasy

JULY

Kings of Morning - Paul Kearney - Fantasy
The Concrete Grove - Gary McMahon - Horror

AUGUST

Sympathy for The Devil - Justin Gustainis - Urban Fantasy
The Hadrumal Crisis: Dangerous Waters - Juliet E. McKenna - Fantasy

SEPTEMBER

The Recollection - Gareth L. Powell - Science-Fiction
Regicide - Nicholas Royle - Horror

OCTOBER

Redlaw - James Lovegrove - Urban Fantasy
House of Fear - edited by Jonathan Oliver - Horror

NOVEMBER

Solaris Rising: The New Solaris Book of Science Fiction - edited by Ian Whates - Science-Fiction
Kultus - Richard Ford - Dark Fantasy

DECEMBER

Babylon Steel - Gaie Sebold - Fantasy
Theme Planet - Andy Remic - Science-Fiction

So, there you go. A vision of the future. You've never had it so good, or something.


Jonathan Oliver

"Theme Planet" Cover Teaser

Wotcher all,

Okay, even Cloneworld is months away, so this is way ahead of itself, but...

The final cover of Theme Planet, the fifth novel in Andy Remic's Combat-K series, turned up in Jon's inbox this afternoon.

Here is your extra-special double-exclusive ultra-secret teaser reveal:


Pretty sweet, huh?

As you were.

David

Corvus First Reviews In...

Wotcher all,

I love all my children equally, of course, but you have probably noticed how excited I am about Paul Kearney's upcoming Corvus. A sequal to his 2008 release The Ten Thousand, it totally works as a stand-alone book and is one of the books I've most enjoyed working on this year. You gotta read this.

At any rate, the first couple of reviews are trickling in, and I thought I'd share them with you.

The highly demanding Angus Bickerton over at Fantasy Literature has given the book four stars out of five, and comments:

Kearney pulls no punches in his descriptions of battles, and he does it better than anyone... I feel like I am in a blimp overlooking a football game, as I can see, in my mind’s eye, everything. No writer I know of has done it with Kearney’s skill, and he demonstrates so very well the horror and futility of war...

A very good read, and Kearney has once again demonstrated that he is criminally under-read.


Meanwhile, Adam Whitehead, writing for The Wertzone, has gone the whole hog and given Paul five stars out of five, and observes:

Previously Kearney has been compared a lot to Gemmell for his depiction of warfare but also his commentary on glory, honour and heroism, but there has always been a hint of Guy Gavriel Kay (or possibly early Steven Erikson) in his work, particularly his use of tragedy and the mining of characters' emotions to deliver powerful climaxes. Corvus delves into this side of his writing more deeply than before, delivering several painful gut-punches late in the book which take precedence over the, as usual, excellently-depicted battles and sieges...

A strong contender for the best epic fantasy work of 2010.


Corvus is scheduled for an October 26 release, but there have already seen sightings at high street shops, so be sure and badger your friendly local bookshop keeper about it today.

And that free chapter again, for those who are anxious to read and can't wait another week:


Cheers,

David

KRK Reviews and Kindle links

We love to hear from our fans overseas, and it seems we've got a big fan in Robert W. Berg, a writer and reviewer from New York City who blogs at RobWillReview.com.

Here's the full set of his reviews for Rowena Cory Daniells' King Rolen's Kin trilogy, Books One, Two and Three.

And these reviews co-incide nicely with an announcement I wanted to make - that after a slight delay with Amazon, all three of Rowena Cory Daniell's much-praised KRK trilogy are now available on the Kindle, both on amazon.com and on amazon.co.uk!

The King's Bastard - Kindle US Kindle UK
The Uncrowned King- Kindle US Kindle UK
The Usurper - Kindle US Kindle UK

-

Your Regularly Scheduled Vlog Post

Hi all,

This is your regularly-scheduled fourth weekly vlog post.

It's entitled, for reasons that will become abundantly clear, Working From Home:



Cheers,

David

BONUS Vlog Post!

Hey all,

If you've been reading the Twitter feed, you'll know Solaris just hit 700 followers.

Now, it's traditional on Twitter to make a fuss about reaching 100-follower milestones, and we've done so in the past by giving away free books to our 500th and 600th follower.

This seemed arbitrary and unfair, however (although this does not preclude us doing it again in future), so we have decided to instead create a bonus vlog for all to enjoy.



See you for tomorrow's regularly scheduled vlog.

Cheers,

David

Reviewy Review

Wotcher all,

Just a quickie. The reviews for Rowena's The King's Bastard keep rolling in!

Cindy Hannikman at Fantasy Book Critic has offered us this review.

If you don't like multiple story lines and melodrama occurring at every twist and turn, then this probably isn't the book for you. Just to give you a brief idea of the drama involved in King's Bastard there was: jealous siblings, a cousin who had a father who was banished, an oppressed daughter, a closeted homosexual, a love triangle, a brother who is living in his twin's shadow all the time, and a third son who was sent away to be a monk. And those are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head!

I found it a fast moving, gripping fantasy... I can't wait to see what happens in Book 2, and believe that Rowena Cory Daniels is off to a great start with this series!


Awesome.

David

New Vlog Post: The Subtitles Machine

Hey all,

So here's the third weekly vlog (in three weeks!).

This time, my subtitles machine decided it would do a better job of vlogging than I would, so I told it to go ahead.



Honestly, the way technology turns on you these days...

David

Eric Brown Interview

Wotcher!

Well, it seems I totally should have held off linking to his awesome review.

Mark Chitty over at Walker of Worlds has now posted an interview with Solaris's own Eric Brown!

Check it out here.

Eric talks about Engineman, the upcoming Guardians of the Phoenix and The Kings of Eternity, his influences, and "being a Bob Shaw sort of writer."

Enjoy.

David

Yet More Reviewspam...

Wotcher,

Bit of an unscheduled Reviewspam update, since you only had one a day or so ago, but a bunch of new reviews have landed on my lap.

First off, Angus over at Fantasy Literature gives five stars to Paul Kearney's Hawkwood and the Kings.

"Kearney’s battle scenes are the best I have ever read in fantasy, or even empirical history, and that includes the likes of Steven Erikson and George R.R. Martin... I strongly recommend readers of good epic fantasy everywhere to buy The Monarchies of God, now."

Angus then goes on to give four and a half stars to the second half of the Monarchies of God series, Century of the Soldier.

"A familiar story about the human condition that is freshly executed... Kearney’s battles are vivid, intense, alive, brutal, and bloody... The political drama is quick, intelligent and exciting."

And then Mark Chitty over at Walker of Worlds gives Eric Brown's Engineman nine out of ten.

"All in all I would highly recommend Engineman - it's got great characters, great tech and a wonderful story that is nicely wrapped up at the end. It's also the sort of sci-fi that doesn't throw the science in your face and uses it as a background detail to tell the story rather than depending on it. Another favourite of mine!"



Many thanks,

David

Interview with Paul Kearney!

'I call this my Quizzical Look.'Hi all,

With the second Macht book, Corvus, due to hit the shelves before the end of the month (and a third on the way next year), I thought I'd get in touch with Mr. Kearney at his remote fastness in Northern Ireland and try and persuade him to answer a question or two.

Fortunately, the man was only too happy to submit to my queries, and offered some insights on historical fantasy, writing about soldiers, what authors should be writing about, and Steven Erikson.

Read on...


Solaris: Hi, Paul. Thanks for taking the time to answer some questions.

You clearly have a fascination with history. Even when you’re not drawing directly on real-world events – the sacking of Constantinople, the Anabasis – your work has a strongly historical feel. So why fantasy? Why not go the route of Cornwell or Iggulden and write historical fiction?

PK: Maybe I will! I have thought about it, almost from day one in the job. In fact Richard Evans over at Gollancz was convinced I would move into historical fiction, especially after he first read Hawkwood. I guess what held me back was the knowledge that once I committed myself to a period and a set of circumstances, then I would be constrained by what actually happened. To take an example, my last but one book, The Ten Thousand had a plot that was very heavily based on the Anabasis, a piece of real history. I kept fairly close to the events of the actual history, partly as an experiment to see what it would be like, partly because the real history was a fantastic story anyway. Ultimately, I found it limiting, so for Corvus, which came next, I resolved not to be so pedantic about it, and it was definitely easier that way. So though I love history, and plunder it shamelessly for ideas, I’m still not sure about coming out of the closet and writing it without the patina of fantasy.

Solaris: If you did, what period would tempt you? Maybe one where less is known, and there is more room for conjecture? Or is there just a favourite era?

Heat Magazine: The surprising alternative to academic papers on sixteenth-century Europe.PK: My favourite eras have pretty much been in my books from the start. Sixteenth century Europe (and before that), and Classical Greece. I’ve read history books and academic papers on those eras all my life, devouring them with the same shameless rapidity as an Essex housewife will snatch a copy of Heat. I studied the Icelandic Sagas at college, and their mindset is in my work too – when you read them in the original Norse, it’s astonishing how modern the mentality of these chaps was, even down to the quips they uttered as they went into battle. Having said that, if you want to fathom the outlook of the Macht, then all you have to do is read the Anglo-Saxon Battle of Maldon. We will all go into the dark together.

If I were to write about real history, then it would have to be about common soldiers, I know that. And a great era for encapsulating that would be the fourteenth century and onwards, with the rise of the Italian city states and the professionalisation of war. Now that would be really something. I could even keep writing about a guy named Hawkwood…

Solaris: You write a lot about soldiers, actually; about their their superstitions and sentimentality. Do you think these traits are exaggerated in fiction? Or are soldiers that just do their job and are fairly rational and even-handed about it all really as rare as all that?

Like this, but a mile wide.PK: You do tend to exaggerate character traits in fiction now and again, in order to slap the reader across the face with a character and make him remember who he is in the big scheme of things. It’s not something I like doing, but I have fallen prey to it. The real soldiers I’ve known have, if you want to generalise horribly, been capable, level-headed, and possessed of a ferociously black humour. The better they are at their job, the less gladly they suffer fools, but in general they are a remarkably decent set of people, and compared to civilians, they are completely free of pretence. Plus, most of them possess a built-in bullshit detector with a mile-wide range.

Solaris: On to Corvus, then. Take us through this. It’s twenty-three years later, Rictus is a grizzled old campaigner, and this new prodigy general, Corvus, is uniting the Macht under him. I’m getting an Alexander vibe (or I suppose, more accurately, Alexander’s father Philip)?

PK: Corvus the man is inspired by Alexander the Great; that much is obvious, though the job he undertakes in Corvus the novel is that completed by Alexander’s father. So in the third book, Kings of Morning, Corvus will be leading the Macht eastwards to invade the Asurian Empire, which is still under the rule of Ashurnan. If you remember the retreat of the Ten Thousand, and some of the atrocities they committed, imagine that on a titanic scale. It isn’t going to be pretty. We’ve seen the Macht in defeat and adversity in the previous books, but in Kings, we will see what they make of victory. As with Alexander’s army, the battle with and conquest of a huge empire will rupture and disseminate Macht society across the world.

Alexander the Great's surprisingly mopey-looking creepy disembodied head.Solaris: Actually, your central protagonists – Corfe Cear-Inaf, Rol Cortishane, Rictus – all tend to be these strong, charismatic leaders, who rise above their own murky backgrounds to beat terrible odds through sheer force of personality and strategic genius. What was it like writing two such characters, on the same side of the campaign? Did they vie for “screen time” while you were writing?

PK: It brought me up short a few times, I have to admit. The thing was that I really identified with Rictus, and found it hard to figure out how I was going to portray someone whose military genius left him standing. In the end I took the example of Mary Renault. In her Alexander trilogy, which is to my mind the greatest work of historical fiction ever written (you can stuff your Wolf Hall), she wrote from the perspective of Alexander himself when he was very young, and upon his manhood, she only described him from without, through the eyes of friends and lovers. That way she kept his mystique alive, and left the questions we all have about his genius lying there. I liked that – it retains the mystery of the man. In Pressfield’s Alexander, The Virtues of War, we are given a first person view of the man himself, and it’s horrible. He lectures and pontificates and is dry as dust. You can’t break open the mind of a phenomenon like that, twenty-three centuries after his death, and expect to make him explicable.

The ageless question, beyond any Johnny-come-lately 'Ninjas vs Pirates' nonsense: Renault's Alexander or Pressfield's Alexander?So that’s what I did with Corvus – I stayed at a distance from him, decided deliberately to leave him lightly drawn, and concentrated instead on those who orbited him.

Solaris: You said very firmly after The Ten Thousand came out that it would be a stand-alone. What changed your mind? Was it just Solaris’s roguish charms, or did you have a rush of inspiration?

PK: Brutal honesty? Solaris said they liked this stuff, and how about I write another? That’s it – seriously. It was meant to be a stand-alone pure and simple. If I had known I was going to be in that world for two more books, there are definitely certain things I would have done differently. I would have beefed up the role of the Juthan, because they are going to be very important in book three, and I reckon I would have kept a few characters alive that got bumped off. But hey, war is hell.

Solaris: Well, we’re happy you managed to find two more books in there. You’ve said before that fantasy writers tend to lazily stick to the pseudo-Tolkienesque, pseudo-medieval fantasy milieu. You’ve covered classical and late-medieval; what era would you like to see more of? Stone-age fantasy? Iron age? Renaissance? Why?

Storming out of Robert E. Howard's head. His hot, sweaty, head.PK: I’d like to see more of that kind of strange otherness that literally made the hair stand up on the back of my neck when I first read Robert E Howard. I’m a massive Tolkien fan, but Howard was able to evoke an entire epoch that was weird and distant and visceral without breaking sweat. I think of him bent over his typewriter in ’twenties Texas, and I wonder to this day – where the hell did he get it from? It was effortless – at least that’s how it seems – and it stormed out of his head fully-fledged and howling. I’d like to see some modern day fantasy author go for that kind of energy – throw the world-building out the window for crying out loud – and just write a good goddamned story.

Solaris: So you’d like to see authors escaping real-world reference altogether? Interesting, given your own strongly historically-themed settings. Are you tempted to try something completely alien yourself?

PK: Nope. People tell me, when they know what I do, that I must have a great imagination, but I really don’t. I just get inspired by some fragment of history and then I run with it. To make up everything, and I mean everything, in the way guys like Erikson do, is unfathomable to me. I come up with the story first, and the world comes later. And I want to get that world out there as fast as I can, so that it can keep up with the story I want to tell. So for me, the worldbuilding comes last. Is that heresy for a fantasy author to admit?

Solaris: Not at all. Having mentioned Erikson... he’s been quoted citing you as an inspiration, and calling you one of the “best writers of fantasy around.” Care to comment on his own work?

PK: Steve’s books leave my jaw bumping along the floor in awe. I remember when I first picked up Gardens of the Moon, and just the opening of the book had me gritting my teeth and thinking you son of a bitch – because he had the courage to get in there, dark and dirty, and chuck his world at the reader with almost a sneer. He takes no prisoners, and expects those who read his work to be paying attention. It takes real bravery on the part of an author to do that. And despite what I said about world building in the previous question, I think Erikson’s is so deep and real that it permeates every page of his books, and gives his world a rock solid gravitas that never – and I mean never – falters or stumbles. He simply never drops the ball. With Erikson, you don’t see the wizard behind the curtain, and there aren’t many writers I can think of today who manage that.

Solaris: Alright, that’s us about done. Before we sign off, do you have anything you want to say?

PK: Just keep her between the hedges.



On which slightly odd note, we signed off. Paul's latest work, Corvus, will be hitting the shelves in a bookstore near you in the next few weeks, but you can have a taster in the form of the free sample chapter right now.

Corvus can be read as a stand-alone book without any difficulty, or you can start with the first book in the Macht series, The Ten Thousand, which is available right now in good book stores and online.



If you want to try some of Paul's other works, the Monarchies of God series has now been collected in two omnibus editions, Hawkwood and the Kings and Century of the Soldier, out now; Hawkwood and the Kings is also now available as an eBook on Kindle, and Century of the Soldier is due to go up in the next week or so.



To find out more about Paul Kearney and his books, please visit his website, Paul Kearney Online, where he provides free extracts from his books and maintains a forum for readers.

Cheers,

David

Vlog Part Deux: Learn with Dave

Wotcher all.

Second Vlog done! Woot!

Now with a new educational function!



Enjoy.

David

Never have so many , owed so much Reviewspam, to so few



Just some quickies.

Cathy Green over at SFRevu has written a very thoughtful review of Shine:

"Bad things happen to people and circumstances are hardly ideal, but most feature people in less than ideal situations working to make the best of less than ideal situations on both large and small scales and mostly succeeding."

Tyson and Yagiz over at the Speculative Book Review have both reviewed The King's Bastard:

"By the end of The King's Bastard I was ready for more. Even though Solaris has plans to release the trilogy in consecutive months, it is a long time to wait for what just might be one of my favorite books of the year. It is definitely one of the strongest debuts of the year."

Finally, Kerl at UN:BOUND has reviewed The Usurper:

"The Usurper makes a truly great read. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!"

So that's nice.

Poe Week!

Hey all,

Over at Innsmouth Free Press they're celebrating Poe Week later this month. For now, they're asking for submissions for their Poe Haiku competition. There are some pretty neat prizes, too.

Why do I mention this? Well, what better way to celebrate Poe Week than with a copy of Ellen Datlow's Black Quill and Shirley Jackson Award-Winning Poe-themed short story anthology, Poe.

< /CHEEKY >

That is all.

Cheers,

David

A Desk... made of books!

Check this out:


Pretty cool, huh?

The full story's here.