Showing posts with label Juliet E. McKenna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juliet E. McKenna. Show all posts

Juliet E. McKenna talks conventions, book launches and Darkening Skies...

Darkening Skies, the second book in the Hadrumal Crisis series, launched this week at the Phoenix Convention in Dublin. We asked author Juliet E. McKenna to talk about the weekend, Irish roots, and different types of magic...


"So why did we hold a launch party for Darkening Skies in Ireland? Well, the book was going to be published on the 28th February (US)/1st March (UK) and I was going to be at the 9th Phoenix Convention, Dublin (known to its friends as P-Con) from the 2nd -4th March. So that immediately offered me the chance to celebrate the new book among friends, fans and book lovers.


Then in a wonderful coincidence of timing, it turned out that CE Murphy (Catie to her friends) also had a book published on 1st March, namely ‘Raven Calls’, the seventh of her excellent urban fantasy series, The Walker Papers.
So we decided on a joint launch party at the Irish Writers Centre, a glorious Georgian building on Parnell Square and P-Con’s new home. Do we qualify as Irish Writers? Well, my grandfather left Ireland in the 1920s, heading for the UK, and Catie’s grandfather left around the same time, heading for the US. Catie’s family returned to Ireland in 2005 and now live in Dublin. My father lived in County Laois till last year. Good enough.

It was a great start to the convention weekend. We shared a few glasses of wine and Catie and I shared a few thoughts about our books. For a start, although this is my fourteenth book and her eighteenth, yes, we agreed, every publication day is still really exciting. We talked a bit about writing in extended series, how it’s great to see characters and ideas develop – and how you casually write half a line in one of the early books that comes back to bite you on the ass years later. We both have experience of that.

We swapped notes on our different approaches to magic. Joanne Walker is a shaman living in modern-day Seattle; her magic is fluid and mysterious, both enabled and limited by Joanne’s own imagination. So Catie’s drawing on Native American and Irish myth (her heroine is of Cherokee and Irish descent), which opens up a tremendous amount of possibility for finding similar elements in both cultures (there are more than you'd think!) and massaging them into story arcs. The magic in her stories is less elemental than fundamental: shamanic practitioners believe everything has a life force and a purpose, and so much of what Joanne does is activating and working with that force and its natural purpose.

I’m writing in an entirely secondary world with magic based on the four classic elements of air, earth, fire and water and wizards who take an almost scientific approach to their studies. So I’m drawing on our own world’s history of science as well as modern sources like experimental archaeology to find plausible justifications for the spell effects I’m devising. If an earth wizard needs to find out how old something is, he can use his innate affinity with for example Carbon 14. Except of course, that would be on a good long list of words I cannot use without wrecking the fantasy atmosphere of my secondary world, along with ‘diatom’ and ‘isotope’ and so many others. We agreed the challenges of writing can prove quite unexpected.

It was a great evening, especially because I could share my admiration and enjoyment of Catie’s books, and she’s a fan of my writing – we both read outside our particular sub-genre for relaxation and enjoyment. Since one of the most toe-curling things about a book launch is being expected to praise your own work, it was so much nicer to be enthusing about a good friend and fellow writer’s work instead!"

Darkening Skies is available to buy in both physical and Kindle editions in the UK and North America.

Juliet’s website at www.julietemckenna.com has been revised, updated and relaunched, now with a wealth of additional material on the world of her books.

Fantasycon Photos

Two editors, one PR guy and lots of Solaris authors walk into a convention...

Just a quick post to share with you some of the photos that we took of the Big Solaris Book Event, and to say thank you to all the fans and readers who came to the signing and who told us how much they're enjoying our books.

A big thank you also to the British Fantasy Society, for organising such a fabulous convention, and to all the hardworking volunteers who made it happen.

Gary McMahon, Nicholas Royle, Richard Ford, James Lovegrove, Juliet E. McKenna and Conard Williams at the signing.

The view from the hotel.

Juliet chats with a fan.



Juliet E. McKenna Speaks Out in SFX

Juliet E. McKenna has written a fascinating article over at the SFX Magazine website, entitled 'Everyone Can Promote Equality in Genre Writing'.


Juliet talks about some of the barriers facing women writing science fiction, fantasy and horror novels, and the sometimes subconscious biases that people carry. She says that a survey conducted by Strange Horizons magazine revealed that even though slightly more SFF and horror books were being written by men (55% vs. 45%), across a wide range of genre publications the proportion of books being reviewed was 70% by men vs 30% by women...

Head over there and read the article, and get involved the the debate going on in the comments! It's interesting stufff...

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Online Reviews:


Graeme's Fantasy Book Review reviews Redlaw
, gives it nine and a quarter out of ten, and hopes that this could be the start of a series...

SciFiChick.com reviews Sympathy for the Devil. Dark, suspenseful, with plenty of surprising twists, the story was completely engaging and hard to put down. And the characters are complex and gritty. Gustainis never fails to entertain.

The Fantasy Book Review has reviewed Juliet E. McKenna's Dangerous Waters. reviewer, mark, says he not only now understands Juliet's place within 'the pantheon' of British fantasy authors, but is planning the read her earlier novels. As a reader we are stretched as taut as a bowstring... our frustration building until, at the last, the world McKenna has corralled us into explodes in a maelstrom of violence that is merely the tinder spark for what must come in the next books...

Pornokitsch reviews Nicholas Royle's Regicide, (insists on being read through to the final page, with every paragraph serving as another turn in the maze....) as does Gavin C. Pugh of GavReads.co.uk (It’s not often that books affect me after reading them but this one lingers, especially when you start asking how unhinged Carl actually is and when you first started to notice...). Gavin is also running a Regicide giveaway, ending 2nd September, so get over there and enter if you want to bag yourself a copy....

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Guest post: Juliet E. McKenna discusses Urban fantasy


Juliet E. Mckenna is the author of several bestselling fantasy series, including The Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution, and her new series, The Hadrumal Crisis, which begins with Dangerous Waters, released in bookstores this month. Download a free Hadrumal Crisis short story by Juliet, or find out more about her work at her official website, on Amazon, and on Twitter.



Writing Epic Fantasy, Reading Urban Fantasy


People can be surprised when they ask what good books I’ve read lately and I offer urban fantasy titles. I write epic fantasy; the affairs of kings and wizards, full of conflict, politics and power, and their human impact. I write those books because I love all that high historically-influenced drama. So why don’t I read all the splendid writers published nowadays?

Well, I do read high epic fantasy but only when I’m on holiday. While I’m actually working on a book myself, I cannot set aside the analytical writer’s mindset unless I’m reading to write a review in which case that mindset is ideal. But to switch off and immerse myself in an epic secondary world? These days I have to be right away from my own work.

Urban fantasy though, is sufficiently different from my own writing. It also offers so much of the enjoyment and thrill I have always got from crime fiction.

So I’ve been celebrating the publication of my own new book by reading Sympathy for the Devil, by Justin Gustainis. The third of his ‘Morris and Chastain Investigations’, this sees white witch Libby Chastain and supernatural investigator Quincey Morris caught up in the US presidential race. There are always concerns about candidates being in thrall to special interest groups; unions, big business, extremists on right and left. How much more worried would you be at the thought of the White House really going to Hell in a hand basket?

As with his two previous stories, Black Magic Woman and Evil Ways, Gustainis takes an apparently straight-forward idea and really tests that premise, his characters and the readers with a thrilling plot that never ducks the hard choices. Morris and Chastain are convincingly complex characters who know the folly of hoping for easy answers. Their different perspectives, their secret parallel world, their allies and their enemies, are all made ominously plausible thanks to Gustainis’ astute eye for logic and telling detail along with timely pop culture references and a canny sense of humour offering lighter touches to enhance the darkness.

Imagine my delight when I discovered he’s also got a new book coming from Angry Robot. Hard Spell flips the coin completely; a first person narrative by Stan Markowski, a Scranton, Pennsylvania cop in a world where supernatural creatures are openly acknowledged. See a crime involving one? Dial 666. Here the quest for power is far more local and personal, though just as potentially disastrous for the human race, while the cost to individuals amid the inexorable demands of the bigger picture makes this a story about real people, just the wickedly funny riffs on TV cop shows and mystery fiction raise a smile.

Over on the west coast of America, I’m enjoying Patricia Briggs’ ‘Mercy Thompson’ series, from Moon Called to the latest, River Marked. These are fast-paced, exciting thrillers with a personal focus on Mercy, who’s a coyote shape-changer, and her relationship with Adam, alpha werewolf of the local pack. But don’t make the mistake of thinking these are sappy paranormal fang-banger romances. Mercy is a car mechanic and that’s very far from a token gesture to female empowerment. Along with the thrills and chills, these books explore the nature of power and its use and abuse within all the relationships which we become entangled in, through choice, accident, family and love, platonic and sexual.

Those same subtexts add similar depth and substance to Kelley Armstrong’s ‘Otherworld’ series, which I’ve been enjoying since the first book, Bitten. I’m really looking forward to the next instalment, Spell Bound where young witch Savannah Levine discovers that the only thing worse than having occult powers is not having them. I have no idea what Armstrong is going to do with that twist but I can’t wait to find out, and to see which other characters from her series help Savannah out. A particular strength of this series is the wide-ranging cast of different women and men whose stories explore so much of this world and the pressures on us all in the here and now; cash and careers, life-work balance, familial expectation, through these adventures in parallel realms.

Where these series mark the boundary between thrillers and urban fantasy, Charlie Houston’s Joe Pitt casebooks stray into real horror territory, this time in Manhattan. A reader needs a robust frame of mind to see the story through from Already Dead to My Dead Body. These stories are uncompromisingly bloody though not entirely unremittingly grim. That’s what saves them from crossing the line from exploration of violence and cruelty to mere exploitation. Once again, the nature of power is studied and most of all, what happens to people when they believe there can be no consequences, or just as deadening, no hope, whatever they might do. In this context, such harsh urban fantasy has at least as much to say, if not more, than the slasher/serial killer sub-genre of crime fiction these days.

I don’t only read US based urban fantasy. Mike Carey’s Felix Castor novels, from The Devil You Know onwards offer a bleakly believable vision of London slowly coming to terms with the emergence of ghosts and other things that go bump in the night. Felix has the power to exorcise ghosts and if he gets the chance, worse. Though it turns out that demons are none too keen on being sent back whence they came and have no conscience when it comes to using and abusing humans tricked by their promises and/or trapped by their own folly. Add those who would exploit Felix’s powers for their own purposes, whatever the cost to him, and the police who are just trying to manage the body count, and these are some very mean streets for a man to walk down.

Even more distinctively British, Ben Macallan’s debut novel Desdaemona opens in a small town bus station where Jordan finds Sarah, another runaway teenager who’s about to be eaten by werewolves. She has no idea what to do but he does, because what he’s running away from is far, far more deadly. This is what Jordan does; he keeps on running and while he’s doing that, he saves other lost and vulnerable people when and where he can. For a whole lot of reasons, he’s far older than his seventeen years. So what is he to do when Desdaemona finds him in an end-of-season seaside cafe and asks for his help finding her lost sister? Because only Jordan understands the perilous world which these girls were seduced by and just how relentless the pursuit will be now that the powerful and the personal have found themselves at odds. That’s all very well but the danger is that Jordan’s own enemies will pick up his scent if they’re on the same trail.

Urban fantasy can only convince with the ‘urban’ when the real-world setting is a three-dimensional, fully sensory environment. It will never convince with the fantasy if all it delivers is variations on cliché monsters. Macallan delivers. The story takes us to London but it’s events in Henley on Thames that truly anchor the dread in the Thames Valley. There are werewolves and such but it’s evil drawn from English myth that chills all the more thoroughly as half-glimpsed folklore is woven into the modern world of back alleys and refuges for runaways and outcasts. Above all else, the people must convince. They must be more than ‘characters’; living, breathing, loving, fearful. Even when they might not even be people at all, we must care about their fate. You will.

The use and abuse of power, in life and love and everything in between. Lies and self-deception. The cost of sacrifice and of ambition, for the individual and for those around them. The lingering effects of dramatic events on those swept along, innocent and guilty alike. The full gamut of human experience is explored in urban fantasy.

Just as it is in epic fantasy. Just as it is in the books I write. After a dozen books in the Einarinn timeline, I’ve found the rights and wrongs of using wizardly power have come to the fore in the Hadrumal Crisis trilogy. Can the Archmage evade the hard choices? What happens if he does? What will the mainland rulers do if he refuses to help them? What will the consequences be? What are the costs to a wizard of pursuing magic above all else? What is the ultimate price of devotion for a loving wife and a loyal guardsman?

In the final analysis, all fiction that’s worth reading explores the human condition. Only the details differ. Thankfully urban fantasy differs just enough from the epic to give me such great books to read while I’m working on my own stories.

~Juliet E. McKenna

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You can still download a free short story by Juliet Mckenna, The Wizard's Coming, in ebook or pdf form when you click on the banner below:-


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News Round-Up!

The brilliantly-named Innsmouth Free Press (famed for their accurate reporting of Mythos-related horrors that the regular press will cover up!) have interviewed our very own editor-in-Chief, Jonathan Oliver, for their website.

Fantasy penmistress Juliet E. McKenna has shared some wise words with the readers of feminist pop culture blog Bad Reputation, in a piece entitled The Representation of Women in Fantasy: What’s the Problem?

Juliet's also received a brilliant review for the debut novel in her new fantasy series, Dangerous Waters, from the BFS (British Fantasy Society). They say: 'A classic fantasy narrative that gallops along and leaves us wanting more ... recommended for fans and newcomers alike.'

LinkYou can still vote two of our longlisted titles, The Concrete Grove and Regicide, for The Guardian's Not the Booker Prize award.

Nicholas Royle's Regicide has received what we believe is it's very first review, at Graeme's Fantasy Books. Only the start of the acclaim for this much-anticipated novel... Regicide is out on 30th August in the US and Canada, and the 1st of September in the UK.

And finally, just a quick note to say that many of our upcoming titles for 2012 have now been added to the Titles section of our website. There's lots to look forward to!

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Press Release: Welcome to a New Kind of Fantasy World


Book One of the Hadrumal Crisis:
Dangerous Waters
by Juliet E. McKenna

OUT THIS MONTH

£7.99 (UK)
ISBN 978-1-907519-97-0
$7.99/$9.99 (US & CAN) ISBN 978-1-907519-96-3

Also available as an eBook

In a world where magic is banned, what protection is there for the innocent against murderous roving corsairs? And who will be the first to unveil the secret of a widow’s mysterious guardian?

The first book in a stunning new fantasy series, with Dangerous Waters renowned author Juliet E. McKenna promises a thrilling re-invention of fantasy with a unique series far removed from the clichés of the genre.

The Caladhrian Coast is a rich new world filled with pirates and politics, rogue wizards and adventure. This is the perfect point to join a new fantasy series from an increasingly dominant voice in the genre.

The prequel for the series, The Wizard’s Coming, is available as a free eBook in ePub, Amazon Kindle and PDF formats, and introduces some of the characters and events leading up to this stunning new fantasy series from a major voice in fantasy writing.

Juliet’s Chronicles of the Lescarii Trilogy eBooks are also all discounted on Amazon Kindle – down to £3.98 in the UK and $4.99 in the US.

“A tapestry of conflict and complications that you can’t bring yourself to put down.”
– SF Site on Irons in the Fire

About the Author
Juliet E. McKenna is the renowned author of The Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution, The Tales of Einarinn series and The Aldabreshin Compass sequence. Dangerous Waters marks the start of a major new fantasy trilogy.

www.julietemckenna.com
www.twitter.com/JulietEMcKenna

Twitter Competition: Juliet E. McKenna

To celebrate the arrival of a crate full of her new fantasy novel, Dangerous Waters, on her doorstep, Juliet E. McKenna has organised a Twitter giveaway this week, ending on Thursday! Head over to her account to enter.


Don't forget that you can still download a free short story by Juliet Mckenna, The Wizard's Coming, in ebook or pdf form when you click on the banner below:-


And if you're in Oxford this week, Juliet will be in conversation with two other Solaris authors, Ian Whates and Ben Macallan, at a signing at Waterstones this Thursday.

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Oxford signing this Thursday: Waterstones

Come along on Thursday to meet Juliet E. McKenna, Ian Whates and Ben Macallan (a.k.a. Chaz Brenchley), as well as our editor-in-chief, Jonathan Oliver!

Waterstones, Oxford is located at William Baker House, Broad Street, Oxford OX1 3AF.

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Free Ebook! The Wizard's Coming...


‘Captain!’ Hosh’s shriek startled everyone. Up on the cliff edge, he was hopping from foot to foot, pointing out towards the distant horizon. ‘The wizard! The wizard’s coming!’

...and what's more, he's free.

That's right! Those of you who are especially loyal readers and have been picking up your lovely Solaris treats since right back in the beginning will know that the profoundly talented and many-hatted Juliet E. McKenna, author of the upcoming The Hadrumal Crisis trilogy, wrote a story, "The Wizard's Coming," for our anthology The Solaris Book of New Fantasy, way back in 2007.

What you may not have known is that the story actually serves as a kind of "prequel" for The Hadrumal Crisis, introducing some of the characters and revealing some of the events leading up to the first book, Dangerous Waters, which is hitting the shelves in August!

(It also, for really dedicated fans, ties in to her previous trilogy, The Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution...)

And, of course, it's a great story in its own right.

What's more, we're just plain ol' giving it away, right now! So you can have a read, and whet your appetite for when this baby hits the shelves in a few weeks. We got it in .epub, .mobi and even in good old-fashioned .pdf for those who don't get into the ebook thing so much.


Outstanding.

Cheers,

David

Solaris Triple Bill in Waterstones, Oxford - July 28th



New ebooks!

We've got three brand new ebooks released on Amazon Kindle this week!

There's Banners in the Wind, the final instalment in Juliet E. McKenna's fantasy trilogy The Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution, which she scheduled for release as an ebook for the very first time in March-April-May of this year.

There are also two novels which have only very very recently been released in print: Ian Whate's sci-fi adventure The Noise Revealed (the sequel to last year's The Noise Within), and Eric Brown's much-praised masterpiece The Kings of Eternity.

Monday linkspost:-

Juliet E. McKenna, author of the Chronicles of the Lescarii trilogy and the upcoming Dangerous Waters, has been interviewed about editing, at the Writer, Revealed website.

Horror artist Will Jacques has posted a triplicate of Solaris-related interviews at his blog, The Ghastly Door, with Juliet E. McKenna, Gary MacMahon (author of the upcoming The Concrete Grove) and Vincent Chong, creator of many eerie book covers (including The Concrete Grove and Shine).

Our congratulations go to Abaddon Books author Scott Andrews who has had his apocalyptic novel, School's Out, optioned for a movie by Multistory Films!

Chaz Brenchley's new urban fantasy noir, Desdaemona, has received a sterling review from Jared Shurin.

The BookThing review blog has posted two reviews in quick succession, of the first and second novels in Gail Z. Martin's Chronicles of the Necromancer series. We hope you enjoy the rest of the series!

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Juliet McKenna interviewed by Rowena Cory Daniells, plus Blood in the Water ebooks!

Juliet McKenna, author of our upcoming fantasy novel Dangerous Waters, and the Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution, has been interviewed by our very own Rowena Cory Daniells, the author of the King Rolen's Kin trilogy! There's also a great competition going, so click the link and head on over.

Juliet McKenna interviewed by Rowena Cory Daniells!

That's two for one on Solaris fantasy authors! The two writers talk about how to maintain a consistent fantasy setting over several books and trilogies, they talk about the idea that fantasy writing and reading is a 'boys' club', and Juliet McKenna reveals where she'd go if she could take a time machine to anywhen and anywhere in the world...

Juliet's Blood in the Water, the second book in the Lescari Revolution trilogy, is now available as an ebook! Solaris are releasing each book in the trilogy on ebook, one per month from March to May this year. Which might dull the agony of the wait for Dangerous Waters a little, we hope...

on Amazon.com
on Amazon.co.uk




Irons in the Fire is also available at the iBooks store, and Blood in the Water should be up there too, shortly.


The cover of Dangerous Waters, book one of The Hadrumal Crisis, due to be released this August.

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Juliet E. McKenna ebooks: Irons in the Fire


Just a quick announcement to say that the first of our Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution spring ebook releases is now online. You can buy the first book in this stunning fantasy trilogy, Irons in the Fire, now, at amazon.com or amazon.co.uk.

There. Hasn't that brightened up your Monday morning?

The country of Lescar was carved out of the collapse of the Old Tormalin Empire. Every generation has seen the land laid waste by rival dukes fighting for the High King’s empty crown.
Tathrin’s parents apprenticed him in the distant city of Vanam to escape the recurrent skirmishes. He meets Aremil, another Lescari albeit from another dukedom, whose parents have their own reasons for sending him so far away. These two young men cannot forget their homeland. Can they persuade other exiles with Lescari blood that something must be done to relieve their kinfolk’s misery? If they can persuade Branca, the down-to-earth scholar, to share the ancient lore which she has studied, then this mismatched band of commoners, merchants and nobles can begin plotting a revolution.
Meanwhile, back in Lescar, Failla, a duke’s beautiful mistress, is risking her own life to help those already secretly working to frustrate their feudal lords’ selfish ambitions. Will Litasse, Duchess of Triolle, and Hamare, the duke’s spymaster, uncover this conspiracy before the exiles can join forces with these hidden rebels? Hamare’s ruthless right-hand man Karn already has his suspicions.


Full of rich characters and high adventure, this novel marks the beginning of a thrilling new fantasy series.

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PSA: Picocon

Juliet Mckenna is a Guest of Honour at tomorrow's Picocon in London!

Picocon is Imperial College's one-day Science Fiction and Fantasy convention, organised by the their Science Fiction and Fantasy Society to be an affordable and convenient one-day convention for students and fans alike. Go check them out!

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Interview: Juliet McKenna

Issue #4 of science fiction and fantasy magazine Salon Futura features this interview with Solaris author Juliet McKenna. Cheryl Morgan conducts the interview.




You can find out about Juliet's all-new fantasy trilogy for Solaris Books, The Hadrumal Crisis, on our website. Here's the cover for the first instalment, Dangerous Waters, coming out in August next year.

Cover (TBC) by Clint Langley

The Archmage rules the island of wizards and has banned the use of magecraft in warfare, but there are corsairs raiding the Caladhrian Coast, enslaving villagers and devastating trade. Barons and merchants beg for magical aid, but all help has been refused so far.

Lady Zurenne’s husband has been murdered by the corsairs, and a man she doesn’t even know stands watch over her and her daughters. Corrain, former captain and now slave to the corsairs, knows that Zurenne’s guardian is a rogue wizard.

If Corrain can only escape, he’ll see justice done. Unless the Archmage’s magewoman, Jilseth, catches the renegade first...

Dangerous Waters is the start of a stunning new fantasy trilogy by highly-respected fantasy writer, Juliet E. McKenna.

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Festivals in May

Hi all,

Just a quickie to let you know about some festivals coming up.

The Write Fantastic
8th May, Oxford

As you've already heard, Juliet McKenna, author of the Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution (here's the first book, Irons in the Fire, with David Palumbo's dramatic "Man in front of a flag" cover) and Ian Whates, author of The Noise Within (here's Dominic Harman's fine "Exploding spaceship" cover) are helping stage The Write Fantastic's fifth anniversary event on the 8th May at the Jacqueline du Pre building in St. Hilda's College, Oxford University. There are going to be four pretty interesting-sounding panels, a book release, and an opportunity to pick up signed copies of both Irons and Noise.

(And a certain pair of charming, slyly witty, strangely alluring editors will be in attendance to boot. Look out for Jenni and me!)

The Lincoln Book Festival
12th - 16th May, Lincoln

Ian's also going to be at the Lincoln Book Festival the following weekend. This is a fairly big festival, which has played host to Benjamin Zephaniah, Melvyn Bragg and Iain Banks in the past, and Ian will be appearing on a panel along with horror novelist Adam Nevill and fantasy author Stephen Deas. Looks like a good weekend, and Lincoln's a beautiful place to visit, so you can make a holiday of it!



Cheers,

David

Second Podcast is up now!

Hi all,

The second Abaddon & Solaris Books Pocast is now up! Point your iTunes to this link, or search "Abaddon" (or "Solaris") in the "Search Store" box at the top-right corner of iTunes, to check it out. Or if you're a good boy/girl and subscribed to our feed last time, just run iTunes and it should find and upload the new episode automatically.

The editors and staff at Abaddon Books and Solaris Books continue to deliver the "very best, most hard-hitting and innovative"* of podcasting entertainment in this second, thrilling instalment.

The Abaddon & Solaris Books Podcast #2: Juliet McKenna and the SFX Weekender (okay, it's a functional title; it does what it says on the tin) is introduced by junior editor Jenni Hill, who's trying to overcome her fear of the microphone, so everybody be really nice about her. Jon Oliver interviews Juliet McKenna, author of Solaris's The Chronicles of the Lescari Revolution books, sharing thoughts on coming up with fantasy names, writing and the future of fantasy fiction, and Juliet gives us a reading from the second Lescari book, Blood in the Water. Finally, Jon and David talk about the SFX Weekender, and we hear David's interviews with daleks, authors, and a couple of special guests.

Seriously, you can't get this stuff anywhere else. Barack Obama's considering starting a war with the UK, just so he can justify sending the CIA in to kidnap us. That's how cool we are.

Please listen to it, and once again, we'd love feedback. We got some great feedback last time, and have tried to make completely different mistakes this time.

Cheers,

David


*my mum again.

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Gemmell Award: Vote Now!

Hi all,

As I may have mentioned, Mark Chadbourn's The Lord of Silence (cover by John Picacio), Emily Gee's The Laurentine Spy (cover by Larry Rostant), Ed Greenwood's Archwizard (cover by Jon Sullivan), Gail Z. Martin's Dark Haven (cover by Michael Kormarck), James Maxey's Dragonseed (cover by Michael Kormarck) and Juliet E. McKenna's Irons in the Fire (cover by David Palumbo) have all been longlisted for the David Gemmell Award, in both the Legend (for best heroic fantasy) and Ravenheart (for best cover art) categories.


Current voting is for the short-list, to be published in April, and ends on March 31st; there will be another round of voting, the details for which will be given when the shortlist comes out.

The Gemmell Award is relatively new - this will be the second award - but already well supported and quite widely recognised, and winning either category will be a great coup for the author or cover artist (and for us). So be sure and jump on the website, sign up and get your votes in!

Cheers,

David