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Friday Quick Updates: William Gibson tonight, NC Comicon next weekend, James Maxey’s Bad Wizard countdown sale, and more

Posted: 7 November, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: Friday Quick Updates | Tags: james maxey, motorco, nc comicon, stacey cochran, the raleigh review, william gibson, zelda lockhart | Leave a comment

Friday, November 7, 2014: Ever since seeing Zack Smith report about it for Indy Week’s fall arts preview, I’ve been looking forward to tonight: William Gibson will be at Motorco in Durham! Presented by The Regulator Bookshop, less than 40 tickets remain for this 7:30 reading, talk, and signing so: get your tickets, invite your friends (each ticket is good for two people, after all), and see you there! To whet your appetites, a pair of local interviews are available including Richard Butner’s for Bull Spec (“I get it by osmosis. It’s kind of impossible not to get it by osmosis, although that’s probably just a function of my particular Twitter feed.”) and Brian Howe for Indy Week (“I was given a demo by someone from Oculus Rift a couple of months ago, and I said, ‘Why couldn’t they do this before?'”).

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There are also a pair of a pair of YA sf readings this weekend, with Lauren Kate and Robin LaFevers holding two readings each in the Triangle. Meanwhile, on Saturday and Sunday The Raleigh Review’s Southern Recitations reading and workshop series presents Mining the Mirror: Turning Emotional Landmines into Good Literature with Zelda Lockhart and Angela Belcher Epps. Among the “new-new” events since the October newsletter include:  Read the rest of this entry »


Paul Kincaid’s From the Other Side, October 2014: 12 Doctors, Peter F. Hamilton, Lavie Tidhar, Ann Leckie, and Garry Kilworth

Posted: 7 November, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: From the Other Side | Tags: adam roberts, akira, alien, ancillary sword, ann leckie, brazil, doctor who, garry kilworth, lavie tidhar, paul kincaid, peter f hamilton | Leave a comment

From the Other Side, October 2014

By Paul Kincaid

[Editor's Note: "From the Other Side" is Paul Kincaid's monthly column on books and news from the other side of the Atlantic.]

Sometime around the middle of October there is a date that is very special for the publishing industry. It is the day when more books are published than at any other time, indeed there are some who suggest that more books are published than in the whole of the rest of the year combined. They are, largely, books aimed at the lucrative Christmas market, books intended to be given, not necessarily to be read. Nevertheless, there are usually one or two interesting titles to emerge from the crush.

In this instance, Puffin have come up with Doctor Who: 12 Doctors 12 Stories, an anthology of stories by top authors, available as 12 specially designed mini-books collected in a TARDIS slipcase. There is one story for each of the doctors. For instance, Eoin Colfer writes about the First Doctor (William Hartnell), Philip Reeve takes on the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker), Patrick Ness covers the Fifth Doctor (Peter Davison), Malorie Blackman prefers the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy), and Neil Gaiman creates a creepy new monster for the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith). Most of these have been available as ebooks, but for this collection there’s a brand new story by Holly Black featuring the latest incarnation of the Doctor, Peter Capaldi. I’ve not always been a fan of Doctor Who, but I have to admit, that’s an impressive line-up of authors.

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Still on media sf, Palgrave Macmillan have published nine books on classic sf films to coincide with the British Film Institute’s massive science fiction season that I mentioned a few months ago. The BFI Film Classics are: Akira by Michelle Le Blanc and Colin Odell, Alien by Roger Luckhurst, Brazil by Paul McAuley, Dr Strangelove, Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb by Peter Kramer, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind by Andrew M. Butler, Quatermass and the Pit by Kim Newman, Silent Running by Mark Kermode, Solaris by Mark Bould, and The War of the Worlds by Barry Forshaw. Again, you might quarrel with some of the titles, but you can’t quarrel with that list of authors. Read the rest of this entry »


The Hardest Part: James Maxey on Bad Wizard

Posted: 5 November, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: The Hardest Part | Tags: bad wizard, james maxey | Leave a comment

Hillsborough author James Maxey is the author of superhero novels Nobody Gets the Girl and Burn Baby Burn, two epic fantasy series (Bitterwood and The Dragon Apocalypse), and a short fiction collection There Is No Wheel. Here he writes about his new novel Bad Wizard, the story of Dorothy Gale ten years after she returns from Oz. “Oz” has been fertile ground for authors to poke around in, from Gregory Maguire’s Wicked to John Kessel’s The Baum Plan for Financial Independence and Geoff Ryman’s Was, and Maxey’s zeppelin-flying take brings something a little different to all of them. Maxey will host a launch party for the novel tonight, Wednesday, November 5th at the Orange County Library, at 6:30 pm. To hear more about Maxey and his books, you can also check out a podcast of his interview on Monday on Carolina Book Beat.

UPDATE: Nov. 11, 2014: Bad Wizard is currently featured as a Countdown deal, on sale for $0.99 for the next 12 hours or so, slowly increasing in price until it’s back at its regular $5.99.

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By James Maxey:

Bad Wizard is the story of Dorothy Gale ten years after she returns from Oz. She’s now a reporter for the Kansas Ear, investigating the United States Secretary of War, Oscar Zoroaster Diggs—the man she met in the Emerald City who called himself the Wizard. Diggs returned from Oz with his suit stuffed full of high quality emeralds and instantly became the richest man in Kansas. His fortune and charisma swiftly propelled him to political power, and now, as Teddy Roosevelt’s most trusted adviser, he’s overseeing the construction of a fleet of rigid airships to spread democracy around the world. Of course, Dorothy knows his real motive. But how can she explain to her editor that Diggs is secretly planning to invade an invisible island in the sky ruled by witches? Stopping Diggs is going to take the help of her silver slippers, old friends, and maybe a Winged Monkey as she chases Diggs across the weird and deadly landscape of Oz.

The easy part of writing Bad Wizard was the villain. Read the rest of this entry »


Coming to Town: William Gibson for The Peripheral at Motorco Music Hall, reviewed and interviewed by Richard Butner

Posted: 4 November, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: Coming to Town | Tags: motorco music hall, richard butner, the peripheral, the regulator bookshop, william gibson | Leave a comment

This Friday, William Gibson is coming to town for an event at Motorco Music Hall, presented by The Regulator Bookshop, as Gibson tours internationally for his new book, The Peripheral, his first novel since 2010’s New York Times-bestselling Zero History. Gibson came to Durham on his tour for that book as well (photo, below/left) — it was a fantastic event and we’re expecting no less this time around. Below, Raleigh author Richard Butner reviews The Peripheral and interviews Gibson about the book. I hope you enjoy both. [Note: some information and events that occur later in the book are discussed in this review and interview.]

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Review and interview by Richard Butner:

“The girl sat up in bed and said something in German. Her eyes were soft and unblinking. Automatic pilot. A neural cutout.” –Neuromancer

William Gibson dusts off this science fiction prop, the neural cutout, and deploys it again more centrally in The Peripheral. The novel is Gibson’s return to a far future, one that bears little resemblance to our present. Two futures, actually: in addition to one far downstream, another so close that you can smell it. Read the rest of this entry »


The Hardest Part: Lex Wilson on KLAY

Posted: 31 October, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: The Hardest Part | Tags: jason strutz, klay, lex wilson | Leave a comment

I’m a big fan of both Lex Wilson and Jason Strutz, so I was quite excited to see their new 7-day-only “Quickstarter” Kickstarter campaign for their new one-shot comic, KLAY. It’s foggy in my memory how long I’ve known each; Lex through his Eagle Award winning comics work, and his absolutely hilarious performance of his own “Romeo and Meatbox” story at a Flyleaf Books event, goggling to see him as an extra on ABC’s Revolution, and of course his recent work on the “Islands” radioplay. Strutz was (along with Jeremy Whitley) one of my first Bull Spec interviews, for their Order of Dagonet comics, and he went on to do two print issue covers and other interior illustration for me, and I’ve also enjoyed his fantastic work on David Foland’s Pizzula, before, and this is completely unfair, he moved several states away. Still, he’s been no stranger, and he’ll be back in a couple of weeks for NC Comicon.

Here, they’ve put together a multi-style story of “A superhero sidekick with elastic/morphing powers crosses multiple realities to solve his own murder” where Strutz has had to display both a typical 4-color “superhero” style as well as a darker-toned “noir” as well as peeks into other realities. Lex writes about all — and it’s a lot! — the other “stuff” that it takes to be a comics writer, well beyond the actual script writing itself.

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By Lex Wilson:

The hardest part about writing comics is how little it actually involves writing. And this goes beyond the typical reluctance of an introverted author who’d rather not have to self-promote. Writing the script for Klay took a week or two. Being the writer of  Klay has taken over a year.

Writers of many comic books must become project managers (or at least co-managers) of a team, and regular readers of this blog can likely picture the venn diagram showing the tiny area where the skillsets of great fiction authors and those of great leaders overlap. Read the rest of this entry »


The Hardest Part: Gail Z. Martin on writing multiple series

Posted: 29 October, 2014 | Author: montsamu | Filed under: The Hardest Part | Tags: gail z. martin | 1 Comment

Charlotte author Gail Z. Martin is now really no stranger to Bull Spec’s ongoing guest column series The Hardest Part, as she wrote about launching a new epic fantasy universe with Ice Forged in January 2013, and then a year ago about making the jump to urban fantasy with Deadly Curiosities. Now she’s back in this column as part of her annual #DaysOfTheDead blog tour and I couldn’t be happier to be sending along her thoughts on maintaining muliple series in multiple genres as she picks up a new Steampunk series next year. Head on over to her website to check out the cool interviews, extras, and giveaways happening all week long, which included the cover reveal for War of Shadows, the third book in her Ascendant Kingdoms series which began with Ice Forged.

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The Hardest Part of Writing Multiple Series

By Gail Z. Martin

Epic fantasy, urban fantasy and steampunk. What do they all have in common?

I’m sure the genres share many common traits but here’s the one that matters to me: I’m writing series in each genre, at the same time.

In my Ascendant Kingdoms epic fantasy series, War of Shadows is the new title for 2015, the third book in Blaine McFadden’s rise from disgraced convict to warlord. The series has a post-apocalyptic medieval setting, ranging across the devastated kingdom of Donderath as warring factions fight for control of scarce resources and brittle magic, and follows a sizeable cast of characters. War of Shadows is my ninth epic fantasy, and the large scale and complex world building is something I really enjoy. Read the rest of this entry »


Coming to Town: David Weber and Timothy Zahn for HonorCon

Posted: 29 October, 2014 | Author: angelablackwell | Filed under: Coming to Town | Tags: baen, david weber, honorcon, Timothy Zahn | Leave a comment

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Article and Interviews by The Exploding Spaceship (Angela and Gerald Blackwell)

This weekend (Oct 31-Nov 2) HonorCon is being held at the Hilton North Raleigh/Midtown. This is a science fiction convention celebrating military science fiction literature and Honor Harrington’s birthday. Most of the events feature David Weber’s Honorverse which now has a new participant, Timothy Zahn. A Call to Duty by David Weber and Timothy Zahn was released on October 7 (see review here). This is the first volume in a new series about the early days of the Royal Manticoran Navy.

The convention will include events about all aspects of the Honorverse including some panels led by fan groups as well as the expected Weber panels, events about writing and getting published, and some panels on other science fiction universes like Star Wars, Star Trek and Battlestar Galactica. You can see a full schedule of events here. Online tickets have sold out, so if you don’t have yours already, then you must buy them onsite, where there are weekend passes as well as Saturday- and Sunday-only passes, as well as reduced-price children’s tickets.

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Interview with Timothy Zahn

You have a new book out which is set in the Honorverse. Can you tell us how you went about this collaboration? Did you interact with BuNine as well as David Weber?

David, Thomas Pope, and I first hash out the story, after which I write it all down in a general outline. David and Tom read the outline and we tweak it until we’re all satisfied. I then write the preliminary draft, which is then again filtered through David and Tom (and, via Tom, through BuNine). They send me their comments/suggestions/changes, and I do the rewrite. One final pass by everyone, a final (hopefully final) polish, and we’re done.

What are some of the events you are looking forward to at HonorCon? Read the rest of this entry »


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