Excerpt from Steven Erikson's BAUCHELAIN AND KORBAL BROACH


It took some effort, but Steven Erikson's publicist at Tor Books managed to sort out the rights issue so we could post this extract from Bauchelain and Korbal Broach (USA, Europe) This omnibus will be released on September 15th in the US and the book will contain three novellas:

- Blood Follows (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Lees of Laughter's End (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Healthy Dead (Canada, USA, Europe)

The excerpt is from Blood Follows. . .

Enjoy!
---------------------

The Bells pealed across the lamentable city of Moll, clamoring along the crooked, narrow alleys, buffeting the dawn-risers hurriedly laying out their wares in the market rounds. The bells pealed, tumbling over the grimy cobblestones, down to the wharfs and out over the bay’s choppy, gray waves. Shrill iron, the bells pealed with the voice of hysteria.

The terrible, endless sound echoed deep inside the slate-covered barrows that humped the streets, tilted the houses and cramped the alleyways in every quarter of Moll. Barrows older than the Lamentable City itself, each long ago riven through and tunnelled in fruitless search for plunder, each now remaining like a pock, the scarring of some ancient plague. The bells reached through to the scattered, broken bones bedded down in hollowed-out logs, amidst rotted furs and stone tools and weapons, bone and shell beads and jewellery, the huddled forms of hunting dogs, the occasional horse with its head removed and placed at its master’s feet, the skull with the spike-hole gaping between the left eye and ear. Echoing among the dead, bestirring the shades in their centuries-long slumber.

A few of these dread shades rose in answer to that call, and in the darkness moments before dawn they’d lifted themselves clear of the slate and earth and potsherds, scenting the presence of ...someone, something. They’d then returned to their dark abodes-and for those who saw them, for those who knew something of shades, their departure seemed more like flight.

In Temple Round, as the sun edged higher over the hills inland, the saving wells, fountains and bowl-stones overflowed with coin: silver and gold glinting among the beds of copper. Already crowds gathered outside the high-walled sanctuaries of Burn-relieved and safe under the steamy morning light-there to appease the passing over of sudden death, and to thank the Sleeping Goddess, who slept still. And many a manservant was seen exiting the side-postern of Hood’s Temple, for the rich were ever wont to bribe away the Lord of Death, so that they might awaken to yet another day, gentled of spirit in their soft beds.

It was the monks of the Queen of Dreams for whom the night just past was cause for mourning, with clanging dirge of iron, civilisation’s scarred, midnight face. For that face had a name, and it was Murder. And so the bells rang on, a shroud of fell sound descending upon the port of Moll, a sound cold and harsh that none could escape ....

...while in an alley behind a small estate on Low Merchant Way, a diviner of the Deck of Dragons noisily emptied his breakfast of pomegranites, bread, prunes and watered wine, surrounded by a ring of dogs patiently awaiting theirs.

* * *

The door slammed behind Emancipor Reese, rattling the flimsy drop-latch a moment before sagging back down on its worn leather hinges. He stared at the narrow, musty hallway in front of him. The niche set waist-high on the wall to his right was lit with a lone tallow candle, revealing water-stains and cracked plaster and the tiny stone altar of Sister Soliel, heaped with wilted flower-heads. On the back wall at the far end, six paces from where he stood, where the passage opened on both sides, hung a black-iron broadsword-cross-hilted and bronze-pommeled, most likely rusted into its verdigrised scabbard. Emancipor’s lined, sun-scoured face fell, becoming heavy around his eyes as he gazed on the weapon of his youth. He felt every one of his six, maybe seven decades.

His wife had gone silent in the kitchen, halfway through heating the wet sand, the morning’s porridge pot and the plates on the wood counter at her side still awaiting cleansing; and he could see her in his mind, motionless and massive and breathing her short, shallow, increasingly nervous breaths.

"Is that you, ’Mancy?"

He hesitated. He could do it, right now-back outside, out into the streets-he knew how to sound depths, he knew knots-all kinds of knots. He could stand a pitching deck. He could leave this damned wart of a city, leave her and the squalling, simpering brats they’d begetted. He could . . . escape. Emancipor sighed. "Yes, dear."

Her voice pitched higher. "Why aren’t you at work?"

He drew a deep breath. "I am now. . . " he paused, then finished with loud, distinct articulation: "unemployed."

"What did you say?"

"Unemployed."

"Fired? You’ve been fired? You incompetent, stupid-"

"The bells!" he screamed. "The bells! Can’t you hear the bells?"

Silence in the kitchen, then: "The Sisters have mercy! You idiot! Why aren’t you finding work? Get a new job-if you think you can laze around here, seeing our children tossed from their schooling-"

Emancipor sighed. Dear Subly, ever so practical. "I’m on my way, dear."

"Just come back with a job. A good job. The future of our children-"

He slammed the door behind him, and stared out on the street. The bells kept ringing. The air was growing hot, smelling of raw sewage, rotting shellfish, and human and animal sweat. Subly had come close to selling her soul for the tired old house behind him. For the neighbourhood, rather. As far as he could tell, it stank no different from all the other neighbourhoods they’d lived in. Saving perhaps that there was a greater variety among the vegetables rotting in the gutters. ‘Positioning, ’Mancy. It’s all in positioning.’

Across the way Sturge Weaver waddled about the front of his shop, unlocking and folding back the shutters, casting nosy, knowing glances his way over the humped barrow mound that bulged the street between their houses. The lingering fart heard it all. Don’t matter. Subly’ll be finished with the pot and plates in record time, now. Then she’ll be out, gums flapping and her eyes wide as she fished shallow waters for sympathy, and whatnot.

It was true enough that he’d need a new job before the day’s end, or all the respect he’d earned over the last six months would disappear faster than a candle-flame in a hurricane; and that grim label-‘Mancy the Luckless’-would return, the ghost of old in step with his shadow, and neighbours like Sturge Weaver making warding signs whenever their paths crossed.

A new job. It was all that mattered, now. Never mind that some madman stalked the city every night since the season’s turning, never mind that horribly mutilated bodies were turning up every morning-citizens of Lamentable Moll, their eyes blank (when there were eyes) and their faces twisted in a rictus of terror-and their bodies-all those missing parts-Emancipor shivered. Never mind that Master Baltro wouldn’t need a coachman ever again, except for the grave-digger’s bent, white-faced crew and that one last journey to the pit of his ancestors, closing forever the line of his blood.

Emancipor shook himself. If not for the grisly in-between, he almost envied the merchant’s final trip. At least it’d bring silence-not Subly, of course, but the bells. The damned, endless, shrill, nagging bells ....

* * *

Go find the monk on the end of that rope and wring his neck."

The corporal blinked at his sergeant, shifted uneasily under the death-detail’s attire of blue-stained bronze ringed hauberk, lobster-tailed bowl helm, and the heavy leather-padded shoulder-guards. Damn, the lad’s bloody well swimming in all that armour. Not quite succeeding at impressing the onlookers-the short sword at his belt’s still wax-sealed in the scabbard, for Hood’s sake. Guld turned away. "Now, son."

He listened to the lad’s footsteps recede behind him, and glumly watched his detachment enforcing the cordon around the body and the old barrow pit it laid in, keeping at a distance the gawkers and stray dogs, kicking at pigeons and seagulls and otherwise letting what was left of the dead man lie in peace under the fragment of roof-thatch some merciful passerby had thrown over it.

He saw the diviner stumble ash-faced from the other alley. The king’s court magus wasn’t a man of the streets, but the cloth at the knees of his white pantaloons now showed intimate familiarity with the grimy, greasy cobblestones.

Guld had little respect for coddled mages. Too remote from human affairs, bookish and naive and slow to grow up. Ophan was nearing sixty, but he had the face of a toddler. Alchemy at work, of course. In vanity’s name, no less.

"Stul Ophan," Guld called, catching the man’s watery eyes. "You finished your reading, then?" An insensitive question, but they were the kind Guld most liked to ask.

The rotund magus approached. "I did," he said thickly, licking his bluish lips.

A cold art, divining the Deck in the wake of murder. "And?"

"Not a demon, not a Sekull, not a Jhorligg. A man."

Sergeant Guld scowled, adjusting his helmet where the woollen inside trim had rubbed raw his forehead. "We know that. The last street diviner told us that. For this the King grants you a tower in his keep?"

Stul Ophan’s face darkened. "Was the King’s command that brought me here," he snapped. "I’m a court mage. My divinations are of a more . . . " he faltered momentarily, "of a more bureaucratic nature. This raw and bloody murder business isn’t my specialty, is it?"

Guld’s scowl deepened. "You divine by the Deck to tally numbers? That’s a new one on me, Magus."

"Don’t be a fool. What I meant was, my sorceries are in an administrative theme. Affairs of the realm, and such." Stul Ophan looked about, his round shoulders hunching and a shudder taking him as his gaze found the covered body. "This . . . this is foulest sorcery, the workings of a madman-"

"Wait," Guld interjected. "The killer’s a sorceror?"

Stul nodded, his lips twitching. "Powerful in the necromantic arts, skilled in cloaking his trail. Even the rats saw nothing-nothing that stayed in their brains, anyway-"

The rats. Reading their minds has become an art in Moll, with loot hungry warlocks training the damn things and sending them under the streets, into the old barrows, down among the bones of a people so far dead as to be nameless in the city’s memory. The thought soothed him somewhat. There was truth in the world after all, when mages and rats saw so closely eye to eye. And thank Hood for the rat-hunters, the fearless bastards will spit at a warlock’s feet if that spit was the last water on earth.

"The pigeons?" he asked innocently.

"Sleep at night," Stul said, throwing Guld a disgusted look. "I only go so far. Rats, fine. Pigeons . . . ." He shook his head, cleared his throat and looked for a spitoon. Finding none-naturally-he turned and spat on the cobbles. "Anyway, the killer’s found a taste for nobility-"

Guld snorted. "That’s a long stretch, Magus. A distant cousin of a distant cousin. A middling cloth merchant with no heirs-"

"Close enough. The King wants results." Stul Ophan observed the sergeant with an expression trying for contempt. "Your reputation’s at stake, Guld."

"Reputation?" Guld’s laugh was bitter. He turned away, dismissing the mage for the moment. Reputation? My head’s on the pinch-block, and the grey man’s stacking his stones. The noble families are scared. They’re gnawing the King’s wrinkled feet in between the sycophantic kissing. Eleven nights, eleven victims. No witnesses. The whole city’s terrified-things could get out of hand. I need to find the bastard-I need him writhing on the spikes at Palace Gate .... A sorceror, that’s new-I’ve got my clue, finally. He looked down at the merchant’s covered body. These dead don’t talk. That should’ve told me something. And the street diviners, so strangely terse and nervous. A mage, powerful enough to scare the average practitioner into silence. And worse yet, a necromancer-someone who knows how to silence souls, or send them off to Hood before the steam leaves the blood.

Stul Ophan cleared his throat a second time. "Well," he said, "I’ll see you tomorrow morning, then."

Guld winced, then shook himself. "He’ll make a mistake-you’re certain the killer’s a man?"

"Reasonably."

Guld’s eyes fixed on the mage, making Stul Ophan take a step back. "Reasonably? What does that mean?"

"Well, uh, it has the feel of a man, though there’s something odd about it. I simply assumed he made some effort to disguise that-some simple cantrips and the like-"

"Poorly done? Does that fit with a mage who can silence souls and wipe clean the brains of rats?"

Stul Ophan frowned. "Well, uh, no, that doesn’t make much sense-"

"Think some more on it, Magus," Guld ordered, and though only a sergeant of the City Watch, the command was answered with a swift nod.

Then the magus asked, "What do I tell the King?"

Guld hitched his thumbs into his sword-belt. It’d been years since he’d last drawn the weapon, but he’d dearly welcome the chance to do so now. He studied the crowd, the tide of faces pushing the ring of guards into an ever tighter circle. Could be any one of them. That wheezing beggar with the hanging mouth. Those two rat-hunters. That old woman with all the dolls at her belt-some kind of witch, seen her before, at every scene of these murders, and now she’s eager to start on the next doll, the eleventh-questioned her six mornings back. Then again, she’s got enough hair on her chin to be mistaken for a man. Or maybe that dark-faced stranger-armour under his fine cloak, well-made weapon at his belt-a foreigner for certain, since nobody around here uses single-edged scimitars. So, could be any one of them, come to study his handiwork by day’s light, come to gloat over the city’s most experienced guardsman in these sort of crimes. "Tell His Majesty that I now have a list of suspects."

Stul Ophan made a sound in his throat that might have been disbelief.

Guld continued drily, "And inform King Seljure that I found his court mage passably helpful, although I have many more questions for him, for which I anticipate the mage’s fullest devotion of energies in answering my inquiries."

"Of course," Stul Ophan rasped. "At your behest, Sergeant, by the King’s command." He wheeled and walked off to his awaiting carriage.

The sergeant sighed. A list of suspects. How many mages in Lamentable Moll? A hundred? Two hundred? How many real Talents among them? How many coming and going from the trader ships? Is the killer a foreigner, or has someone local turned bad? There are delvings in high sorcery that can twist even the calmest mind. Or has a shade broken free, climbed out nasty and miserable from some battered barrow-any recent deep construction lately? Better check with the Flatteners. Shades? Not their style, though-

The bells clanged wildly, then fell silent. Guld frowned, then recalled his order to the young corporal. Oh damn, did that lad take me literally?

Love is in the air!

It's been quite a while since I've read such a passionate and entertaining Dune rant!:P

With The Winds of Dune (Canada, USA, Europe) now on the shelves, Adam "Wert" Whitehead goes all out and doesn't pull any punches while discussing Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.

Here's an excerpt:

The new Dune books were revealed to be what, in fairness, a lot of less-invested SF commentators had been saying for years: a cynical cash-grab designed to exploit a respected intellectual property and turn it into a franchise. Because the authors knew that this would go down like a lead balloon with the fans, the importance of these 'notes' and 'outlines' had been inflated many times until they became some kind of oracular vision, Frank Herbert guiding their writing hands from beyond the grave. The truth of the matter is that if these notes didn't even tell them who the bad guys were, the notes could not have been very comprehensive at all. Oh sure, I think they exist - the stuff with loads of past Dune characters being resurrected as gholas (so they can re-examine their lives and the impact of their decisions five thousand years on) does actually sound like a Frank Herbert idea - but I think we're possibly talking about some very rough, "What if?" brainstorming ideas, certainly nothing to hang a dozen more novels on.

[...]

The worst part of all of this is that when I went to reread the original Dune itself a couple of years back, I found myself completely unable to get into it. The sound of Frank Herbert spinning in his grave made it impossible to concentrate on the text.

Can you feel the love!?!

Read the full piece here.
P. S. Wert, GRRM told me that he really enjoys your blog and your reviews.:-)

My Worldcon: Anticipation report, part 1


First of all, let me begin with a mea culpa: I'm a complete dumbass, no question about it. Though I brought my camera every day, I only have nine photos to show for it. Lame, I know. . . The upside is that a few members of the Brotherhood Without Banner took hundreds of pics between them, so there will be links to some of those at some point. At least I hope so!

Another mea culpa: I'm terribly sorry not to have been able to find enough time to meet up and have a drink (at the very least) with several industry people. The convention is a bit of a whirlwind if you are an author or editor or a blogger like me, with lunches and dinners and meetings filling up your agenda. Two I would have loved to spend some time with were Pyr editor Lou Anders and artist John Picacio. Funny thing about this is that I bumped into both of them on my way to the BwB party on Saturday. So at least I was able to introduce myself and shake their hands.

Sadly, to my consternation the recession appears to have hit Worldcon: Anticipation pretty hard. Which means that MANY of the editors and authors I couldn't wait to meet in person never made it to Montréal. Chief among those Joe Abercrombie, R. Scott Bakker, Steven Erikson, Ian Cameron Esslemont, Scott Lynch, David Louis Edelman, Richard Morgan, Brian Ruckley, Hal Duncan, Ian McDonald, and a whole lot more.

Okay, so Worldcon officially began on Thursday, August 6th, but fans and pros alike started to show up on Monday. Volunteers were invited to help set up the whole gig. I met up with those members of GRRM's Brotherhood Without Banners (BwB) who had made it to town on Wednesday night at a downtown pizza place called Il Focolaio. It was kind of fun to have the chance to put a face to a screen name, especially since I've been hanging out on Westeros for a couple of years now. There I met Mormont, Kat, Mandy, Peadar, Pebble, and a few others. Sorry, I totally suck with names. With dinner done, we stopped at an Irish Pub for a drink before heading out to the Reno party at the Delta Centre-Ville. It was the only party that night, so as you can imagine it was packed.

Peadar had told me earlier that the difference between Worldcon and smaller, regional cons was the average age of the participants. Crap, that Reno party felt like a senior hippie meeting. I mean, I'm now 35 years of age. Supposedly no longer a spry young chap, regardless of the fact that I work out four times a week and bike about 120km a week if the weather is good. Biology says I'm fourteen years past my sexual prime, and that five years from now I should have a doctor stick something up my ass every year or so to make sure I don't have cancer. Still, glancing about me, if not for the BwB crew, I was definitely a junior. For women wishing to fool around with older men, Worldcon is doubtless for you! And if you are looking for a Jedi or a Klingon, even better!:P

We hung out there for a while, but the heat was suffocating, and at some point we made it down to the hotel's bar, where we met up with a number of other BwB members who had taken the train from New York City. My cellphone rang, and I was forced to make an exit circa 11:00pm.

On Thursday, I was to have a late lunch with none other than George R. R. Martin. I was eager to meet him in person. We had spoken on the phone and corresponded via email in the past, but this would be our first face-to-face meeting. I met him at the Intercontinental Hotel, and GRRM was basically everything you thought he would be. Low-key, affable, jovial -- it's impossible to be intimidated by his friendly character.

To set the record straight, this was not an interview. So those expecting a Q&A will be disappointed. I used Worldcon: Anticipation as an opportunity to socialize with authors and editors and fans, which is probably why I ended up enjoying it as much as I did. Hence, a lot of what was discussed falls under the "off the record" umbrella.

First thing GRRM said to me was that I didn't look like a Dallas Cowboys fan. When I asked whether or not it was a compliment, he laughed and said yes. Interestingly enough, most people who met me mentioned that I didn't look at all like what they expected. . . I may not have the profile of the usual SFF fan, but that doesn't mean I can't enjoy the genre as much as I do!

As you can expect, George and I did talk about football. The Cowboys, the Giants, the Jets, Plaxico, T. O., the Eagles likely being the team to beat in the NFC East, etc. It was a great way to break the ice. On our way to the Newtown (Jacques Villeneuve's restaurant in downtown MTL), I mentioned that the fan in me felt that it wasn't right for me to be sitting in a cab with a #1 NYT bestselling author like him. GRRM just laughed (he laughs a lot) and replied that I was a VIP fan with all the work I do with the Hotlist.

As is always the case whenever I meet a writer or an editor, the talk then centered on Pat's Fantasy Hotlist. The blog has become a big success, and they are always curious about how it started off, and how it ultimately became what it is today. So we talked about the traffic of our respective sandboxes in the World Wide Web, trolls and how to deal with them, content, etc.

Then George seemed very happy to answer basically every question that popped inside my head. I got a few sideways glances, followed by a "We are still off the record, right?" Anyone who thinks that George -- or any other SFF author, for that matter -- confides secrets to me is crazy. So no, I don't know any more than you do about Jon, Arya, and the rest. But we did discuss the HBO TV series for quite some time, and yes for the time being I might be aware of a few details that will soon be announced. GRRM revealed that Jaime and Cersei are extremely difficult to cast. As twins, they must look alike. But every time they found a good Jaime, they couldn't find a good Cersei to go with him, and vice versa. But with the recent announcement that Jaime has been cast, I wonder if that means that they have given up on getting two actors that are nearly identical. The same thing goes for every Stark sibling. It's very hard to find good child actors, and Rob, Arya, Bran, and Sansa have important roles to play if the series is picked up.

We also talked about the various ASOIAF products, such as the video game, the miniatures, etc. I asked all sorts of questions about his approach to editing and the difference between editing mosaic novels like the Wild Cards books and anthologies such as Warriors and Songs of the Dying Earth.

I basically had George to myself for the better part of two hours, so we discussed a panoply of topics. Some would be of great interest to you guys, like his thoughts on Terry Goodkind (strictly off the record!), while other subjects, such as how he enjoyed Tallinn, Estonia (which I loved), would bore you to death. Some of that stuff was covered during the Q&A following his reading yesterday. I'm thinking about questions such as why the Bran chapters continue to be so difficult to write. We also talked about the forthcoming anthology I'm editing for Subpress.

One thing I'm not sure was ever covered in an interview and which made an impression on me was when I asked him which scene had been the most difficult to write thus far. With no hesitation, he replied the Red Wedding. George said that a number of scenes had been more difficult to write than others, but the Red Wedding scene was probably the worse. He was lost in thought for a moment or two, and then told me that his fans always say he loves to kill off main characters. While the plot demands it, he explained, killing them is never as easy as fans think.

All in all, it was a terrific lunch. The food was good, though I couldn't care less about what I ate (even though the Newtown is a pretty trendy and expensive place). In the end, it was a fantasy fan's greatest dream. I had one of the most popular SFF authors on the planet sitting next to me and chatting about whatever we wanted to talk about.

I'll tell you more about GRRM when I post something about the BwB party and his reading on Monday. But I'll never forget how easy-going and fun it was to be there shooting the breeze with George R. R. Martin, sipping on my beer while he was drinking iced tea. And on the way back, sitting in the cab as the driver had to get us through heavy traffic, the fan in me no longer felt that something wasn't right. Indeed, the fan in me wants to kick this author's ass when the Dallas Cowboys and the New York Giants duke it out again this fall for our annual wager!;-)

When he first introduced me to Parris, George mentioned that I never learn and I like to suffer. We'll just have to see about that, won't we!?!

More to come, so stay tuned. . .:-)

Summary for the new Bran chapter that was read by GRRM yesterday at Worldcon

Like all George R. R. Martin fans, most of you can't wait to get their hands on A Dance with Dragons (Canada, USA, Europe). And every little nugget of information is likely to get you excited! If you fall into this category, I reckon you'll be delighted to learn that a detailed summary of the new Bran chapter has just been posted on Westeros.

I was meaning to post the entire summary here, but then decided against doing just that. There are always a few dumbasses who don't want to read stuff for fear of spoilers, but who can't help themselves and go through the text, and then cry foul because it contained spoilers.

So follow this link for a full summary of GRRM's reading.

Enjoy!

Quote of the Day

The Chain of Dogs had fallen at the foot of Aren. Pormqual's ten thousand danced on trees. Leoman's rebel army was destroyed at Y'Ghatan. It was clear -- it could not be clearer -- that for all there was to learn, no one ever bothered. Each new fool and tyrant to rise up from the mob simply set about repeating the whole fiasco, convinced that they were different, better, smarter. Until the earth drinks deep again.

- Warleader Gall of the Khundryl Burned Tears, in Steven Erikson's Dust of Dreams (Canada, USA, Europe)

Win a copy of Steven Erikson's BAUCHELAIN AND KORBAL BROACH


Thanks to the folks at Tor Books, I have five copies of Steven Erikson's Bauchelain and Korbal Broach for you to win! For more info about this title: USA, Europe. This omnibus contains three novellas:

- Blood Follows (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Lees of Laughter's End (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Healthy Dead (Canada, USA, Europe)

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "KORBAL." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

2009 Hugo Award Winners


The ceremony took place last night at Worldcon: Anticipation in Montréal. Here are this year's winners:

Best Novel: Neil Gaiman, The Graveyard Book

Best Novella: Nancy Kress, "The Erdmann Nexus"

Best Novelette: Elizabeth Bear, "Shoggoths in Bloom"

Best Short Story: Ted Chiang, "Exhalation"

Best Professional Artist: Donato Giancola

Best Graphic Story: Kaja and Phil Foglio, Girl Genius

Best Editor, Long Form: David Hartwell

Best Editor, Short Form: Ellen Datlow

Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form: Wall-E

Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form: Joss Whedon, "Dr. Horrible's Singalong Blog"

Best Related Book: John Scalzi, Your Hate Mail will be Graded

Best Semiprozine: Ann VanderMeer and Stephen Seagal, Weird Tales

Campbell Award for Best New Writer: David Anthony Durham

And as tradition dictates, let the bitching begin!:P

Worldcon Report


I know what you're thinking! But no, I'm not posing with Rupert from Survivor. This is bestselling fantasy author Patrick Rothfuss at the annual Daw Books dinner. A fun guy, to be sure!

Okay, I am acutely aware that many of you are eagerly awaiting my report on the 2009 Worldcon: Anticipation which is winding down in Montréal. But please bear with me, all right? I got a little more than 3 hours of sleep last night because of the Brotherhood Without Banners party at the Delta Centre-Ville (the BwB did an awesome job), and I had to work all day today although this unit could barely function.

So hang in there, for a report is on its way. . .:-)

2009 World Fantasy Award Nominees


2009 World Fantasy Award

The judges are Jenny Blackford, Peter Heck, Ellen Klages, Chris Roberson, and Delia Sherman.

Novel

The House of the Stag, Kage Baker (Tor)
The Shadow Year, Jeffrey Ford (Morrow)
The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman (HarperCollins; Bloomsbury)
Pandemonium, Daryl Gregory (Del Rey)
Tender Morsels, Margo Lanagan (Allen & Unwin; Knopf)

Novella

"Uncle Chaim and Aunt Rifke and the Angel", Peter S. Beagle (Strange Roads)
"If Angels Fight", Richard Bowes (F&SF 2/08)
"The Overseer", Albert Cowdrey (F&SF 3/08)
"Odd and the Frost Giants", Neil Gaiman (Bloomsbury; HarperCollins)
"Good Boy", Nisi Shawl (Filter House)

Short Story

"Caverns of Mystery", Kage Baker (Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy)
"26 Monkeys, Also the Abyss", Kij Johnson (Asimov's 7/08)
"Pride and Prometheus", John Kessel (F&SF 1/08)
"Our Man in the Sudan", Sarah Pinborough (The Second Humdrumming Book of Horror Stories)
"A Buyer's Guide to Maps of Antarctica", Catherynne M. Valente (Clarkesworld 5/08)

Anthology

The Living Dead, John Joseph Adams, ed. (Night Shade Books)
The Del Rey Book of Science Fiction and Fantasy, Ellen Datlow, ed. (Del Rey)
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror 2008: Twenty-First Annual Collection, Ellen Datlow, Kelly Link, & Gavin J. Grant, eds. (St. Martin's)
Paper Cities: An Anthology of Urban Fantasy, Ekaterina Sedia, ed. (Senses Five Press)Steampunk, Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, eds. (Tachyon Publications)

Collection

Strange Roads, Peter S. Beagle (DreamHaven Books)
The Drowned Life, Jeffrey Ford (HarperPerennial)
Pretty Monsters, Kelly Link (Viking)
Filter House, Nisi Shawl (Aqueduct Press)
Tales from Outer Suburbia, Shaun Tan (Allen & Unwin; Scholastic '09)

Artist

Kinuko Y. Craft
Janet Chui
Stephan Martinière
John Picacio
Shaun Tan

As with the Hugos and any other genre awards, it will come as no surprise that not everyone agrees with the nominees selected. That's the way love goes. . .:-)

In case you didn't know, the World Fantasy Convention will take place in San Jose, California, USA this year.

Musical Interlude



Can't believe that it's already been 6 years! This tune features what could well be Dr. Dre's best beat ever, and that's saying something! Okay, so the lyrics are nothing to write home about, but it's 50 Cent after all!;-)

Sing along:

Go Shorty
It's your birthday
We're gonna party like it's your birthday
We're gonna sip Bacardi like it's your birthday
And you know we don't give a fuck it's not your birthday

To those who have complained about my ecclectic musical tastes in the past, once again this should demonstrate that I'm all over the place!

New GRRM interview in the Montreal Gazette

GRRM was meeting the reporter right after we had lunch together on Thursday afternoon.

You can read and hear the full interview here.

I should bump into George again tonight at the annual Brotherhood without Banners Worldcon party!:-)

Joel Shepherd contest winners!

Thanks to the generosity of the folks at Pyr, our winners will each receive a full set of Joel Shepherd's Cassandra Kresnov series. The prize packs include:

- Crossover (Canada, USA, Europe)
- Breakaway (Canada, USA, Europe)
- Killswitch (Canada, USA, Europe)

The winners are:

- Tim Crothers, from Rockford, Michigan, USA

- Raina Workman, from Wooster, Ohio, USA

Thanks to all the participants!

Win a copy of Glen Cook's THE RETURN OF THE BLACK COMPANY


I have five copies of Glen Cook's latest Black Company omnibus, The Return of the Black Company, compliments of the folks at Tor Books. This omnibus is comprised of Bleak Seasons and She is the Darkness. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "BLACK." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

New website for Jeff Somers' THE ETERNAL PRISON


To help promote the forthcoming The Eternal Prison, author Jeff Somers just launched a new website.

It's centered around an old-school text-adventure (think "ZORK") which is set in the Avery Cates universe. For more information about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

If you haven't already, be sure to check out Somers action-packed prequels to The Eternal Prison, The Electric Church ( Canada, USA, Europe) and The Digital Plague (Canada, USA, Europe).

Win a copy of CLOCKWORK PHOENIX 2, edited by Mike Allen


Thanks to the folks at Norilana Books, I have two copies of Clockwork Phoenix 2 up for grabs. The anthology contains 15 short stories from SFF authors such as Tanith Lee and Catherynne M. Valente. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "PHOENIX." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

Richard Morgan film news

Some film news regarding Richard Morgan's Altered Carbon (Canada, USA, Europe) from ScifiNow:

James McTeigue, the director of films such as V For Vendetta and Ninja Assassin, has said that he is still actively pursuing an adaptation of Altered Carbon, the Philip K Dick Award winning novel by Richard Morgan.

“I still hope to make [Altered Carbon] with Joel [Silver, producer],” said McTeigue to /Film’s Peter Sciretta. “There is a really good script that I’ve developed for a while, and I’d love to do that when the time is right, and hopefully that time will be shortly. We’ve started actively talking about that again.” Altered Carbon has been a project long in gestation, with the rights bought almost as soon as the novel was published in 2002. It has assumedly been in development hell up until this point, but the news that McTeigue is still considering the project is encouraging, even if there is no specific time frame.

Altered Carbon follows the story of Takeshi Kovacs, a former special forces operative who is released from prison to help solve the murder of a prominent figure on Earth. In the future, a person’s consciousness can be transmitted and downloaded into a different body, meaning that the murder of wealthy individuals is practically pointless, as they’ll simply restore themselves from consciousness backups into clone bodies. Kovacs works the case in a typical hard-boiled detective manner, and uncovers far-reaching consequences in the process.

Steven Erikson contest winners!

Only a few more days to go till you can all get your hands on this latest Malazan installment!

Yet thanks to the kind folks at Transworld, our winners might get the chance to sink their teeth into it before the rest of you! Each will receive a complimentary copy of Steven Erikson's Dust of Dreams. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

The winners are:

- Robert Uden, from Eggbuckland, Plymouth, England (Illuyankas on malazanempire.com)

- Martin Savage, from St-Hubert, Québec, Canada

- Sean Crummy, from Swords, Co. Dublin, Ireland (Wry on malazanempire.com)

- Chad Harland, from Hamilton, New Zealand

- Dane Wells, from Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia. (Mappo's Travelling Sack on malazanempire.com)

Thanks to all the participants!;-)

GRRM's A GAME OF THRONES TV Series News

This from Winter is Coming:

It's now official, actress Jennifer Ehle will play the role of Catelyn Stark. I know there has been some bitching about this casting, but Ehle looks exactly how I've always perceive Catelyn. So I think it's a pretty good match.

Rumor has it that George R. R. Martin could have more news pertaining to the pilot later this week at Worldcon: Anticipation. . .

Win an autographed copy of Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson's THE WINDS OF DUNE


The novel goes on sale tomorrow, and I have two signed copies of Herbert and Anderson's The Winds of Dune, as well as Dune B&W string backpacks, for you to win! For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

With their usual skill, Brian Herbert and Kevin Anderson have taken ideas left behind by Frank Herbert and filled them with living characters and a true sense of wonder. WherePaul of Dune picked up the saga directly after the events of Dune, The Winds of Dune begins after the events of Dune Messiah.

Paul has walked off into the sand, blind, and is presumed dead. Jessica and Gurney are on Caladan; Alia is trying to hold the Imperial government together with Duncan; Mohiam dead at the hands of Stilgar; Irulan imprisoned. Paul’s former friend, Bronso of Ix, now seems to be leading opposition to the House of Atreides. Herbert and Anderson’s newest book in this landmark series will concentrate on these characters as well the growing battle between Jessica, and her daughter, Alia.

For an extract and an audio excerpt, follow this link.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "WINDS." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

Ad Lib Column: Mike Shevdon


When urban fantasy author Mike Shevdon contacted me to inquire about the possibility to write an Ad Lib column on the sub-genre, I told him that I would only agree to run his piece if it added something to the debate. The column indeed looks at urban fantasy from a different angle, so there you have it!:-)

Mike Shevdon's forthcoming urban fantasy novel, Sixty-One Nails, will be published by Angry Robot in November 2009. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

There is a secret war raging beneath the streets of London. A dark magic will be unleashed by the Untained...Unless a new hero can be found. Neverwhere's faster, smarter brother has arrived. The immense SIXTY-ONE NAILS follows Niall Petersen, from a suspected heart attack on the London Underground, into the hidden world of the Feyre, an uncanny place of legend that lurks just beyond the surface of everyday life. The Untainted, the darkest of the Seven Courts, have made their play for power, and unless Niall can recreate the ritual of the Sixty-One Nails, their dark dominion will enslave all of the Feyre, and all of humankind too.

Open or Closed

As a writer of Urban Fantasy, I very much enjoyed Lillith Saintcrow's Angry Chicks in Leather article and the follow-up from Carrie Vaughn, Deconstructing Urban Fantasy. They provide an insight into why these particular forms are so strong within Fantasy at the moment and what it is we find compelling in them. In its quest to discover whether the kick-ass girls represented some flaw in cultural values, though, I think it perhaps missed the question of why it is that Urban Fantasy is hot right now.

First, we have to decide what we mean by Urban Fantasy and yes, we do have to include the kick-ass chicks with crossbows and pants you could could barely bend down in, but we also have to accept that they are a sub-genre of a sub-genre. Urban Fantasy has more to offer than Hamilton's Anita Blake and her Buffy-inspired chums. And yes, I know that Anita preceded Buffy, but Joss Whedon brought the genre to an audience far wider than it ever had before because it was on television, not in books. It used to be said that TV was killing reading but, in a twist of irony worthy of Whedon's creation, if you want more Buffy you have to read it. There's only re-runs on TV.

So if Urban Fantasy is not just kick-ass girls (or boys) in leather pants, then what is it?

The Fantasy part of is easy. The strangeness in the world is explained through the supernatural in the same way that if this were SF, it would be explained by science. Why is Anita Blake feared by the vamps? Because she's a necromancer. Doesn't Tanya Huff's Vicki Nelson fight against the demons because they're not of this world? Magic and the supernatural are at the core of Fantasy as they have been since Narnia and LOTR.

That leaves us with 'Urban'. It's a strange word to use in this context. We were just talking about the supernatural and discussing vampires and demons and then we're into cities and towns. It's not accidental. In Urban Fantasy the place is as important as the protagonist. You could walk around Harry Dresden's Chicago, tour Anita Blake's St Louis or discover the haunts of Felix Castor's London for yourself. Buffy's Sunnydale could be any one of hundreds of small American towns. At the heart of the genre, Fantasy is about imaging a world that is stranger and more magical than our own. It is about escape from the mundane and routine into a world populated by monsters and filled with danger and excitement. The world could be Narnia or Middle Earth, but that would be another world. You can go there for a while, but you're a tourist. You have to come back.

Urban Fantasy is where the real world, the one in which you clean your teeth, go to work, eat lunch and argue with your friends, meets the other world, the one with monsters and supernatural powers. What makes Urban Fantasy special is that the world we escape into is our own. It leaves us with the sense that normality is a thin veneer and if we could peel it back we would see another world beneath.

This is why Urban Fantasy is hot. We can imagine that if only we had eyes to see it, we would realise that our city, our town, is a magical place, easily as exciting and wonderful as Joe Abercrombie's Adua or Juliet E McKenna's Lescar, and we don't have to leave it when we close the pages. We live there.

But if we set stories in the real world, then what happens when magic starts happening and people notice? What do the police do when corpses turn up with twin puncture marks on the neck and no blood? Won't the public start to notice the howls of werewolves at the full moon? And if demons really are walking the earth, why isn't it in the newspapers?

Of course, the beauty of Fantasy is that reality is yours to change. If you want a St. Louis with notorious vampire clubs so that Anita Blake can strut her stuff, then create one. If you need a Chicago with magical crime for Harry Dresden to solve then tweak reality until it's there. If you can't find a small town for your vampire-slayer, then create Sunnydale.

This is what is known as 'open' Urban Fantasy, where you are asked to accept that the world you thought you knew is just a little different. It shares a border with alternative reality fiction and it can be be an excellent vehicle for story-telling, take any of the examples above and many more besides. Indeed, the beauty of Sunnydale was that no-one who lived there believed in the vampires or monsters, even though they'd seen them. It took an apocalypse (the first of several) to convince them. The persistence of normality was a myth to which everyone subscribed, despite the evidence arrayed before them.

This expansion of the suspension of disbelief, from the reader, who must suspend disbelief for the purposes of enjoying the story, to the characters, who must now suspend disbelief to maintain the plot, is a problem that gets worse over time. The more supernatural events that occur in the open world, the more unlikely the character's disbelief becomes and the more tenuous the reader's hold on the world may be. As a result, the fictional world tends to drift further and further away from reality and we find ourselves drawn into an alternate universe where the disbelief can be maintained. Some of these universes are intricately constructed to mirror our own. Mike Carey's London where Felix Castor prowls the streets investigating ghosts and were-creatures is one of my personal favourites, partly because he maintains the link with the real world so beautifully.

The alternative is to have the supernatural element of the story occur away from public knowledge in a closed world. Examples of this might be Tanya Huff's Blood series where Toronto quietly has its own vampire or Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere in which the protagonist becomes effectively invisible to the normal people around him. This vein has deep roots, going back through contemporary Fantasy like Alan Garner's Weirdstone of Brisingamen and Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising, both stories set in the real world but with magical events. Further back than that there are the folk tales; the old man met at the cross-roads who offers to buy your horse for a handful of shiny gold, the beautiful woman with whom you can spend but a single night, the feast under the hill that lasts a year and a day. These stories often have a strong sense of place associated with them. If you ever stand on Alderley Edge and listen to the eerie quiet that persists, you will get a real sense of why Alan Garner set The Wierdstone and the Moon of Gomrath there. Then you can walk along the scarp and have a pint in The Wizard, the inn which stood there long before the books were written and hear the local story which inspired the books. These are the foundations upon which Urban Fantasy rests.

Setting Urban Fantasy in a closed world presents a different challenge to an open one. Disbelief in the supernatural is accepted - spiritualism lost much of its credibility in the 19th century and only in Iceland is there a widely held belief in the existence of elves. Instead, the writer must constantly ask themselves, "What would the consequences be if this really happened?". In Sergei Lukyanenko's Watch series the Night and Day Watches fight out their battles in a twilight space that cannot be seen by mortal eyes, constantly concerned that the battle remain hidden. This adds an additional tension into the story and provides a limit to what the magicians can do. It is the same problem in Men in Black where the existence of aliens is held back from the public to allow people to continue in their normal lives. Maybe that makes MIB an example of Urban SF.

So, if there really are faeries, why aren't they ruling the world and shaking the foundations of human civilisation as in Mark Chadbourn's World's End? If vampires exist, why aren't humans hunted as in I Am Legend? An important aspect of closed Urban Fantasy is that the world as we know it persists and therefore there must be limits. This can be as a result of tension within the hidden world, which in Lukyanenko's Watch series translates into neither the Dark or the Light being able to gain the upper hand, or because of some inherent weakness, such as a vampire's aversion to sunlight or a werewolf's reaction to silver. Whatever it may be, that constraint is important, since it maintains the consistency of the imagined world with the real one.

Is a closed world better than an open world? You may as well ask whether one genre is better than another - it depends entirely on how well it's done. For my own writing, I chose to write in a closed world. I enjoyed the challenge of creating a world hidden in plain sight, but I also wanted to leave my readers with the sense that they could walk around a corner one day and see something inexplicable, and perhaps they might not simply blink and dismiss it as a trick of the light. At that point they might start to wonder whether their town, their city, was a truly magical place in which to live.

Steven Erikson news

This from the PS Publishing website:

Also just in is a first draft of the first hundred typed pages of Steven Erikson’s brand new Bauchelain and Korbal Broach novella, Crack’d Pot Trail. Believe me when I tell you that this one is absolutely awesome. Again, we’ll have ordering details posted up on the site as soon as possible.

Sounds good to me!;-)


Tad Williams news

This from Tad Williams on Facebook:

Jell-o brain, Night Two. Just got back from New Jersey and a story conferencing day. All good work, but it's now three a.m. and my brain...well, you know. Wibble-wobble-wibble. However, one piece of news for the Tad readers. Shadowrise is definitely going to have to be two volumes, but only a few months apart.

Crap. . . Here's to hoping that splitting books into multiple volumes won't become a trend. . .

New Poll: What to read next??? Again!!!

Here are the results from our last survey:

- King's Dragon by Kate Elliott (Canada, USA, Europe): 17%
- Rules of Ascension by David B. Coe (Canada, USA, Europe): 13%
- The Briar King by Greg Keyes (Canada, USA, Europe): 35%
- Elric: The Stealer of Souls by Michael Moorcock (Canada, USA, Europe): 23%
- Rite: Short Work by Tad Williams (Canada, USA, Europe): 9%

So I guess that Keyes will be moving up in the batting order. . .

Okay, so this is probably the last such poll for some time, but I wanted to see how the vote would go this time around. Here are the nominees:



- Dreamsongs, Volume 2 by George R. R. Martin (Canada, USA, Europe)

Dubbed “the American Tolkien” by Time magazine, #1 New York Times bestselling author George R.R. Martin is a giant in the field of fantasy literature and one of the most exciting storytellers of our time. Now he delivers a rare treat for readers: a compendium of his shorter works, all collected into two stunning volumes, that offer fascinating insight into his journey from young writer to award-winning master.

Whether writing about werewolves, wizards, or outer space, George R.R. Martin is renowned for his versatility and expansive talent, highlighted in this dazzling collection. Included here, in Volume II, are acclaimed stories such as the World Fantasy Award-winner “The Skin Trade,” as well as the first novella in the Ice and Fire universe, “The Hedge Knight,” plus two never-before-published screenplays. Featuring extensive author commentary, Dreamsongs, Volume II; is an invaluable chronicle of a writer at the height of his creativity—and an unforgettable reading experience for fans old and new.



- The Twilight Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko (Canada, USA, Europe)

Three years have passed since the events of The Day Watch. His wife and daughter spending the summer on a dacha not far from Moscow where Anton is working when his boss Gesser reveals he has received an anonymous note. An Other has exposed the truth about their kind to a human, and now intends to convert that human into an Other.

The note has been sent to Zebulon and to the Inquisition's offices in Berne - a place whose address only the highest level of mages and sorcerers know. Now cooperating, the Night Watch and the Day Watch, along with an Investigator from the Inquisition, seek to unmask the culprit. Anton will represent the Night Watch, while the Day Watch is sending High Vampire Kostya Saushkin, once Anton's teenage neighbour.

Installed in the apartment complex to which the letter writer has been traced, Anton begins to investigate the residents one by one. Reviewing the dossiers of the building's inhabitants, Anton comes across a familiar - albeit much younger - face. Could Gesser be trying initiate his son as an Other?



- Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami (Canada, USA, Europe)

Kafka on the Shore is powered by two remarkable characters: a teenage boy, Kafka Tamura, who runs away from home either to escape a gruesome oedipal prophecy or to search for his long-missing mother and sister; and an aging simpleton called Nakata, who never recovered from a wartime affliction and now is drawn toward Kafka for reasons that, like the most basic activities of daily life, he cannot fathom.

As their paths converge, and the reasons for that convergence become clear, Haruki Murakami enfolds readers in a world where cats talk, fish fall from the sky, and spirits slip out of their bodies to make love or commit murder. Kafka on the Shore displays one of the world’s great storytellers at the peak of his powers.



- Smoke and Mirrors by Neil Gaiman (Canada, USA, Europe)

In the deft hands of Neil Gaiman, magic is no mere illusion ... and anything is possible. In this, Gaiman's first book of short stories, his imagination and supreme artistry transform a mundane world into a place of terrible wonders -- a place where an old woman can purchase the Holy Grail at a thrift store, where assassins advertise their services in the Yellow Pages under "Pest Control," and where a frightened young boy must barter for his life with a mean-spirited troll living beneath a bridge by the railroad tracks. Explore a new reality -- obscured by smoke and darkness, yet brilliantly tangible -- in this extraordinary collection of short works by a master prestidigitator. It will dazzle your senses, touch your heart, and haunt your dreams.


- A Cruel Wind by Glen Cook (Canada, USA, Europe)

Before there was Black Company, there was the Dread Empire.

An omnibus collection the first three Dread Empire novels: A Shadow of All Night's Falling, October's Baby and All Darkness Met.

Steven Erikson contest winner!

This lucky guy will receive an Advance Reading Copy of Steven Erikson's Bauchelain and Korbal Broach (USA, Europe), which contains the author's three Malazan novellas:

- Blood Follows (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Lees of Laughter's End (Canada, USA, Europe)
- The Healthy Dead (Canada, USA, Europe)

The winner is:

- Bruce Sterling, from Tacoma, Washington, USA

Thanks to all the participants!;-)

NFL Showdown: GRRM vs Pat


Okay, so George gave me my second assignment for losing that football wager. The next book I must read and review will be Bill Willingham's Peter & Max: A Fables Novel. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

Set in the imaginative realm of the award-winning comic book series FABLES, PETER and MAX is a stand-alone prose novel – the first ever published starring FABLES characters!

Long ago, in the deepest dark of The Black Forest, two brothers – Peter Piper and his older brother Max - encountered ominous forces that changed them both irreparably. Thus begins an epic tale of sibling rivalry, magic, music and revenge that spans medieval times to the present day, when their deadly conflict surfaces in the placid calm of modern day Fabletown.

PETER and MAX: A FABLES NOVEL features the deft prose of award-winning comic book writer Bill Willingham and lush ink spot illustrations from FABLES artist Steve Leialoha. The novel also reveals secrets of some of the regular FABLES series cast members including Bigby Wolf, Frau Totenkinder and Bo Peep. Included as well is an 8-page bonus sequential comic story by Willingham and Leialoha that serves as a bridge to the FABLES graphic novel collections.

You can download a preview here.

You can expect my review to go up at some point next month. . .

This week's New York Times Bestsellers (July 28th)

In hardcover:

Charlaine Harris' Dead and Gone is up four positions, ending its eleventh week on the charts at number 12.

Stephenie Meyer's The Host is down one spot, finishing the week at number 18.

Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Angel's Game is down nine positions, ending its fifth week on the bestseller list at number 22. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

David Weber's By Heresies Distressed is down fourteen spots, finishing its second week on the NYT list at number 25. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

In paperback:

Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith's Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is down one position, ending its 16th week on the prestigious list at number 8.

Carlos Ruiz Zafón's The Shadow of the Wind maintains its position at number 15. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Charlaine Harris' eight Sookie Stackhouse novels are on the paperback bestseller list, ranking from number 4 to number 21.

Win a copy of Adrian Tchaikovsky's BLOOD OF THE MANTIS


I'm giving away my review copy of Adrian Tchaikovsky's Blood of the Mantis to one lucky winner! For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Here's the blurb:

Driven by the ghosts of the Darakyon, Achaeos has tracked the stolen Shadow Box to the marsh-town of Jerez, but he has only days before the magical box is lost to him forever. Meanwhile, the forces of the Empire are mustering over winter for their great offensive, gathering their soldiers and perfecting their new weapons. Stenwold and his followers have only a short time to gather what allies they can before the Wasp armies march again, conquering everything in their path. If they cannot throw back the Wasps this spring then the imperial black-and-gold flag will fly over every city in the Lowlands before the year's end. In Jerez begins a fierce struggle over the Shadow Box, as lake creatures, secret police and renegade magicians compete to take possession. If it falls into the hands of the Wasp Emperor, however, then no amount of fighting will suffice to save the world from his relentless ambition.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "MANTIS." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!