Win a copy of the limited edition of Jim Butcher's STORM FRONT


I have a copy of the limited edition of Jim Butcher's first Dresden Files novel, Storm Front, up for grabs, compliments of the nice folks at Subterranean Press. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe and http://www.subterraneanpress.com/.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "STORM." 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!;-)

About those ads. . .

I've been receiving a number of queries since my return from Eastern Europe, so I feel the need to clarify what I believed was clear. For anyone interested in posting an ad on the Hotlist, going through Project Wonderful is one of way of doing it. Yes, it's an auction and your ad might be bumped if a higher bidder comes along. I have no control over that. . .

Of course, there is the possibility to eliminate the middle man and deal directly with me. For example, Subterranean Press rented their spot for a full year. Simply email me at the giveaway address (reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net) to inquire about rates (weekly or monthly) and such. And yes, we can post an ad even if it's in a different format from what is on the Hotlist right now. Though the banners at the top of the homepage have to remain the way they are, we can experiment with ads located elsewhere on the blog.

So whether you are authors, editors, marketing folks, webmasters, etc, all you need is the ad code and a Paypal account, and we're good to go! Just get in touch with me and we'll see if we can make it happen.

The Mirrored Heavens


David J. Williams's The Mirrored Heavens starts with a bang and never ceases to gain velocity as the story speeds toward the finale. This scifi/cyberthriller yarn is a veritable page-turner. Oddly enough, the novel had been laying on my desk since last spring, and I was debating whether or not to give it a shot. It's a good thing I finally did!

In the 22nd century, the Phoenix Space Elevator represents the culmination of the grand alliance between the United States and the Eurasian Coalition. Following the second Cold War, it symbolizes the new era of peace between the two superpowers. And then, the unthinkable occurs. The Space Elevator is blown out of the sky, and an insurgent group known as Autumn Rain claims responsibility for the terrorist attack. In the aftermath, armies mobilize across the face of the world and into space, while strike teams are sent out to take care of this new threat. Soon, the agents dispatched to hunt down Autumn Rain discover that the insurgents are attempting to foment chaos on a scale that could potentially spawn another World War.

The worldbuilding is particularly well-done, and Williams evokes a disturbingly plausible future. One that takes into account not only the political facet of what may take place, but also the repercussions of global warming and various environmental issues. In 2105, the Treaty of Zurich is signed, signaling the end of the Cold War and its globe-spanning conflicts. Referred to as "détente," a new age of international cooperation begins. Instead of relying on info dumps, the author included an appendix containing the timeline of World History at the end of the book.

The pace of the narrative moves at high-octane speed. The Mirrored Heavens is a book that you'll finish in just a few sittings. The novel is split into four parts, but it doesn't feature any chapters. Instead, the narrative jumps from one set of POV to the next in quick succession. As a result, the rhythm is such that The Mirrored Heavens is hard to put down.

On the downside, an action-packed and quick-moving tale like this means that the characterization aspect will inevitably suffer. Williams offers very little in terms of characters' back stories, and they sort of reveal a bit of themselves as the story progresses. Yet even when you reach the end, you know very little about the main protagonists. Having said that, the structure of The Mirrored Heavens is such that to have dwelt more on characterization could have slowed down the story to a point where it might have killed the book. So in the end, it doesn't take too much away from the novel, though a bit more would have been appreciated.

David J. Williams' The Mirrored Heavens is a definite frontrunner for my "Unexpected Surprise of the Year" Award. If Robert Ludlum, Tom Clancy, and William Gibson had ever teamed up to write a book, this is the sort of thing they would have come up with.

To learn more about the author and the novel, visit http://www.autumnrain2110.com/.

The final verdict: 7.5/10

For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe

SF Signal: Mind Meld

The folks at SF Signal invited me to participate in their latest Mind Meld feature:

As a reader, can you enjoy a story that is pushing an opposed viewpoint from one that you hold (religion/politics)? If the author is prone to holding, and writing about, views opposed to yours, can you enjoy their works or do you stop reading them?

Check it out here. JP seems to think that my answer might generate some discussions. . .

HBO exercises its option on A Song of Ice and Fire

From George R. R. Martin's Not a Blog:

I have some exciting news to share.

(But please, guys and gals, don't get TOO excited. This is what it is, and so far that's all it is, so don't make any assumptions).

HBO has just exercised its option, and purchased the television rights to A GAME OF THRONES.

For those of you who don't know Hollywood, an option gives a production company the right to buy a property (a book, a screenplay, whatever) at a certain agreed-upon price for a certain period of time (a year, six months, whatever). When that time runs out, they can let the option lapse, renew the option, or exercise the option and buy the property. The last is what HBO has just done.

What they have NOT done is greenlight the project. A GAME OF THRONES remains in development. They're still budgeting, still looking at locations (Spain and the Czech Republic at present, I hear). No decision has been reached, so any celebration would be premature. In Hollywood it is always best not to assume something is going to happen until it actually happens.

Even so... this is a very encouraging sign, and one that suggests a continued high level of enthusiasm and commitment for A GAME OF THRONES at HBO.

So keep your fingers crossed.
Good news indeed!
Let's just hope that the tv series sees the light in a not-so-distant future. . .:-)

New Poll: A MEMORY OF LIGHT


Well, as expected, there was no unanimous decision as to which SFF artist you guys prefer. Though Michael Komarck (20%) and Michael Whelan (17%) garnered the largest amount of votes, 26% selected the "None of the above" category. Which means that there are a lot of gifted artists out there!:-)

This week's survey has to do with whether or not you believe that Brandon Sanderson can bring Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time to a satisfying end.

Tim Powers contest winner!

Thanks to the folks at Subterranean Press, our winner will get his hands on a matching set of the numbered editions of Tim Powers' Fisher King trilogy, Last Call (Canada, USA, Europe, and http://www.subterraneanpress.com/), Expiration Date (Canada, USA, Europe, and http://www.subterraneanpress.com/), and Earthquake Weather (Canada, USA, Europe, and http://www.subterraneanpress.com/).

The winner is:

- Seth Bell, from Rochester, New York, USA (grey_tinman at sffworld.com)

Thanks to all the participants!

Finished artwork and flap copy blurb for the limited edition of Steven Erikson's GARDENS OF THE MOON


Here's a look at one of the finished art prints that Michael Komarck has produced for the Subterranean Press limited edition of Steven Erikson's fantasy debut, Gardens of the Moon. Looks awesome, eh!?!

Malazan fans will be pleased to know that the artist has turned in everything but the two covers, which should be coming up shortly. So this collector's item should see the light in the near future!:-)

In addition, I revealed last week that I had been selected to write the flap copy of the limited edition. Well, you can now see what Bill decided to go with by visiting this link to the GotM page on the Subpress website. I have to admit that summarizing a novel in which so much is taking place in just 200 to 250 words was a lot more difficult than I thought it would be. . .

Win a signed copy of Peter F. Hamilton's THE TEMPORAL VOID


Thanks to the generosity of the folks at Pan MacMillan, I have an autographed first edition hardback of Peter F. Hamilton's The Temporal Void up for grabs! 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 "TEMPORAL." 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!;-)

NFL SHOWDOWN: GRRM vs Pat (Week 1)


Washington Redskins: 7
vs
New York Giants: 16

Dallas Cowboys: 28
vs
Cleveland Browns: 10

Yes, we're doing it again! And if Romo and company can hold their end of the bargain, a character based on me will die a gruesome death in the next ASOIAF volume!

The rules and the stakes are the same as last year. If GRRM wins (God forbid, not two years in a row), he gets to select a couple of books for me to read and review.

I'm counting on the fact that the Giants can't possibly repeat and win the Super Bowl again. Trouble is, if there is a team that's become adept at screwing up big time, it's my beloved Cowboys. So I guess that the better team probably won't finish on top, at least where this friendly wager is concerned. It will be the one which commits the least amount of mistakes.

I'm not brimming with confidence here. . .:/ But I intend to win this time!!!

Steven Erikson contest winners!


Each of our three winners will receive a complimentary copy of the US edition of Erikson's Toll the Hounds (Canada, USA, Europe), thanks to the folks at Tor Books.

The winners are:

- Ivan Nash, from Calgary,Alberta, Canada

- Ben Music, from Maple Grove, Minnesota, USA

- Ed Curtis, from Huntington West Virginia, USA

Thanks to all the participants!
Don't forget that you can buy this and other SFF art prints at www.toddlockwood.com.

Chronicles of the Black Company


This omnibus is comprised of Glen Cook's first trilogy, The Black Company, Shadow Lingers, and The White Rose. Athough I've known about Cook for years, I had yet to give him a shot. During our first interview, Steven Erikson elaborated on how much Glen Cook had influenced him, and I made a mental note to finally pick up something by the author. That was two years ago. . .

Mentions of Glen Cook and the Black Company resurfaced again last spring when I hosted a giveaway for The Books of the South omnibus (Canada, USA, Europe). At that point, I promised myself to read the first Black Company omnibus when I returned from Eastern Europe.

And boy am I glad I did! I thoroughly enjoyed this first trilogy and I'm eager to read the rest of the serie. I now understand Erikson when he claims that Cook brought the story to a human level by dispensing with the cliché archetypes of the fantasy genre. Though the face of fantasy has changed dramatically over the course of the last decade or so, one must remember that Cook's first three Black Company novels were released in 1984. At the time, David Eddings, Terry Brooks, Raymond E. Feist, and Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman dominated the bestseller lists. Hence, Glen Cook's work must have stood out like a pornstar attending a Southern Baptist Church function. And given the state of the current fantasy market, I feel that these books will be better received now that the genre has accepted and even embraced works that go against the grain.

Malazan fans who have yet to discover Glen Cook should put the author at the top of their list, for he was an undeniable influence on Erikson's writing style in general, and on the Bridgeburners in particular. Imagine novels focusing only on Quick Ben, Kalam, Fiddler, Hedge, Whiskeyjack, Antsy, and the rest of the Brideburners, and you can picture what reading the Black Company books is like. Fun is the first word that comes to mind!

Unlike Erikson, however, Cook's worldbuilding is minimal. Instead, the Black Company novels are character-driven affairs, and it's a delight to follow the adventures of this mercenary band. Cook kicks the Good vs Evil trope in the balls on more than one occasion, and the members of the Black Company must face the moral ambiguity of trying to figure out if they are serving the "right" side of the war time and again.

The author seems to have had a ball playing with the genre's preconceptions (recall that these books came out more than 20 years ago), and you can't help but root for this motley group of misfits. Here's to hoping that more readers will discover and appreciate Croaker, Raven, Darling, Silent, the Captain, the Lieutenant, Elmo, Goblin, One-Eye, and the rest of the gang!

The pace is crisp -- these are rather short novels without a single dull moment. At times I would have liked more information and more depth, but this slight shortcoming is overcome by the characterization.

It all begins when the battle-hardened men of the Black Company are hired by one of the Taken, Soulcatcher, to fight for the Lady against the Rebels in the north. A prophecy proclaims that the White Rose has been reborn to oppose the Lady's reign of terror once more. Soon, Croaker and his companions will realize that they got a lot more than they ever bargained for out of this deal, that this conflict hides an even greater menace, and that choosing which side actually serves the greater good of the world is not as easy as it seems.

Perhaps not as groundbreaking today as they were when they were initially published, the three volumes contained in this omnibus are nonetheless as entertaining as anything you are likely to read this year.

Highly recommended.

The final verdict: 8/10

For more information about this title: Canada, USA, Europe, or you can check out the first volume of the trilogy, The Black Company (Canada, USA, Europe)

Finland and Estonia (July 2008)


I filled another album on Facebook, which I am now sharing with you guys. Within you'll find pics from both Helsinki and Tampere, Finland, as well as a portion of the photos I took in Tallinn, Estonia. The maximum number of pics one can post is limited at 60, so the remaining shots from Tallinn will be included in my next album, which will feature snapshots from Tallinn, Latvia, and Lithuania.


Enjoy!;-)

This week's New York Times Bestsellers (September 2nd)

In hardcover:

Sean Williams' Star Wars: The Force Unleashed debuts at number 1. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Stephenie Meyer's The Host is up one position, ending the week at number 5. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Sherrilyn Kenyon's Archeron is down three spots, finishing its third week on the charts at number 6. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Karen Traviss' Star Wars: The Clone Wars is down eight positions, ending its fourth week on the prestigious list at number 27. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

In paperback:

Patricia Briggs' Cry Wolf is down one spot, finishing its fourth week on the bestseller list at number 9.

Terry Brooks' The Elves of Cintra is down five positions, ending its fourth week on the NYT list at number 21.

Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union is down four spots, finishing the week at number 23. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.

Jocelynn Drake's Nightcrawler is up five positions, ending its fourth week on the charts at number 26.

R. A. Salvatore's The Orc King is down twelve spots, finishing the week at number 34.

Quote of the Day

Short-term plans, long-term problems.

- DAVID LOUIS EDELMAN, MultiReal (Canada, USA, Europe)

Win a copy of Peter F. Hamilton's MISSPENT YOUTH


I have three copies of the US edition of Peter F. Hamilton's Misspent Youth of for grabs, compliments of the folks at Del Rey. 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 "YOUTH." 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!;-)

Orbit contest winner!

The name of our winner has been drawn, and he will get his hands on a 13-book prize pack, courtesy of the folks at Orbit!

This prize pack includes:

- Russell Kirkpatrick's Across the Face of the World, In the Earth Abides the Flame, The Right Hand of God.
- Iain M. Banks' Consider Phlebas and The Player of Games.
- Karen Miller's Empress
- Pamela Freeman's Blood Ties
- Lilith Saintcrow's Working for the Devil, Dead Man Rising, and Night Shift.
- Jennifer Rardin's Once Bitten, Twice Shy, and Another One Bites the Dust, as well as Bitten to Death.

For more info on any of these titles and more, check out http://www.orbitbooks.net/.

The winner is:

- Bryon Shore, from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Thanks to all the participants!

Stephen Hunt Q&A and giveaway

Hi guys,

With their website down, the folks at Voyager asked me if I'd be willing to post a short interview they did with Stephen Hunt in exchange for a giveaway. As you can see, since both of Hunt's novels are on my "books to read" piles, I accepted their offer.

So check out the Q&A with Hunt, and perhaps you'll be intrigued enough to register for the contest. Up for grabs are five sets of both The Court of the Air (Canada, USA, Europe) and The Kingdom Beyond the Waves (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 "WAVES." 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!;-)
---------------------------

- The Kingdom Beyond the Waves has elements of Jules Verne, Arthur Conan Doyle and Rider Haggard intermingled with the Jackelian world of The Court of the Air. Have you always been a fan of classic adventure stories?

I have, although for me the definition of the true classics would have to be widened to include much of space opera, science fiction and fantasy pulp and the 1970s new wave as much as the slightly more stuffy 1930s Homesian and Lost World genre. Michael Moorcock, more than Rider Haggard, perhaps.

- Is there anything that grips your imagination now that you think you might like to go on an adventure and discover for yourself?

I think my fantasy novels are about as close as I would like to get to any of the dangerous situations I regularly toss my characters into. Trying to find lost cities while avoiding dinosaurs and cannibal steammen I am quite happy to leave to those with serious firearm training and their own torpedo-carrying u-boat.

In real life I’m a bumbling absent-minded professor-like klutz, so I would probably only feature in my literary adventures as a comic fill-in who always puts everyone else in danger by accidently stumbling into a seventy-foot tarantula nest. I’m also a homebody, far happier with my feet up in front of the fire grate reading a copy of the Sunday newspapers, than exploring dangerous distant realms. I don’t even do camping anymore! My idea of the perils of the quest these days is a dodgy two-star hotel.

Perhaps I could make a good, traditionally minded hobbit, who refuses to go out beyond my garden, unless there’s the promise of a hearty roast lunch at the neighbours mound opposite?

- Who would you assemble from the canon of great explorers of the past whether living or fictional in your pursuit for your lost antiquities?

Well, they’d have to be good – or lucky – to keep me alive, so I could only choose from the very best. I would need Robur and Captain Nemo on technical support and gadget provision, Professor Challenger heading the expedition, and for muscle, I’d need Tarzan, Flash Gordon, Tom Strong, Michael Kane of Old Mars, Jerry Cornelius, and Oswald Bastable (the latter is from Moorcock’s Nomad of the Time Streams). I would also pack the expedition with lots of evil henchmen and a traitorous academic, to ensure they got added to the lunch menu by those giant spiders before I did.

- Have you ever been tempted to bring your mixture of technologies and worldsinging fantastical arts into a more futuristic world?

Well, there’s certainly a space opera or two lurking within me. I love reading Iain Banks culture books and Alastair Reynolds’ works, and I definitely think I could create some novels in the ‘grand sweeping cosmic-strings as dreadnought ordinance’-style.

I don’t think I’d like to press the fast-forward button on the Jackelian world to get there, though. Novels like The Kingdom Beyond the Waves are too rooted in a Napoleonic/Victorian-level culture. It’d be like trying to re-imagine Middle Earth in the 27th century. You’d end up with mutant offspring like Warhammer 40K.

Part of the fun of writing an entirely new series is coming up with a new world to keep your brain cells fresh, though, so I wouldn’t imagine it would be too much of a problem to push out into that territory.

- In The Court of the Air, we’re left at the end of the novel with Middlesteel in the throes of revolution, what was the thinking between the two stories that made you decide to take up a separate story with Amelia Harsh?

I wanted each novel to be a stand-alone, discrete work in its own right. The Court of the Air is one tale, The Kingdom Beyond the Waves is another, albeit set in the same world with some of the same characters. Writing them that way helped assuage my worries that I might be tempted to meander into an identikit fantasy series where you have to have read book twenty in the series for book two to make any kind of sense at all.

You just end up straying into soap opera territory when you do that, and writing with many of the exact same literary tricks the soap scriptwriters use to keep their audience vaguely engaged on the tediously long journey. ‘Aha, you thought I died in book seven, but actually, I married an elf and she used her Ring of Resurrection to bring me back to life in book seventeen, then I divorced her and married your mother… so yes, I am now your father (and you may kiss my ring).’

- What were some of the moments about creating the world of The Kingdom Beyond the Waves that brought you the most satisfaction (without giving too much away!)?

The floating city of Camlantis was a lot of fun, as was the journey into the dark ruin-strewn jungles of Liongeli. Much of the world’s backdrop had already been established in The Court of the Air, though, so I could just get stuck straight into the story, which was rather nice on a great many levels.

- After the first novel, what was the fan mail like and what was one of the best items?

The fan mail seems to be largely electronic these days, either via e-mail, or as profile comments on social networking services like Hivemind and Facebook. It’s usually tended to be of a fairly general nature along the lines of ‘wow, I really loved the book, when’s the next one coming out?’

It’s always nice when you get other budding authors asking you questions about the whats and wherefores of the authoring business – and that happens a lot. You kind of feel like Obi Wan lecturing Luke on lightsabre etiquette (although a little less worthy: the force is not always so strong within me).

- What was the hardest moment writing The Kingdom Beyond the Waves, how was that compared to the last novel?

To be honest, there really wasn’t one. Whenever I hit a roadblock, I just turn my imagination loose on it and blast it away. Perhaps I should be suffering for my art more, so I could feel lot a ‘proper’ author. I could take a small flat in Paris, wear black roll-necks, get off of my gourd on the green fairy, climb up my own a-hole and talk a lot more about how the tenuous perception of reality should act as the bridge between the writer and reader.

If anything, The Kingdom Beyond the Waves was an easier novel to write, because the concept and the world and the society had already been proved in The Court of the Air. The core of the second novel for me was a fairly interesting philosophical question, though… how much money and power do you need to change the world for the better? And what’s ‘better’ anyway? It’s always easy to write an exciting page-turner when you have a deeper central theme to wrap everything around.

- Your next novel, The Rise of the Iron Moon will be coming out in twelve months, can you give us any details, or is it still firmly under wraps?

The Rise of the Iron Moon details the invasion of the Kingdom of Jackals from the north by a force that everyone believes are merely a horde of particularly successful polar barbarians. They soon learn, to their everlasting regret, that the invaders aren’t large hairy axe-wielding raiders, however.

It features the return of the complete gang from The Court of the Air, including Molly, Oliver, Commodore Black and Coppertracks, and yes, it was a joy to write this one too!

Coming attractions


Here's what I have in the pipeline for September:

Book Reviews

I'm almost done with Glen Cook's Chronicles of the Black Company (Canada, USA, Europe), an omnibus of the first three Black Company novels, and I'm really enjoying it. As I said a while back, Malazan fans should give this one a shot!

After that, it will probably be David J. Williams' The Mirrored Heavens (Canada, USA, Europe), and Brent Weeks' The Way of Shadows (Canada, USA, Europe), which is supposed to be in the same style as Lynch's The Lies of Locke Lamora. Not far behind will be Jack Vance's Tales of the Dying Earth (Canada, USA, Europe) to terminate my obligation to GRRM. Rejoice football fans, for there will be another NFL Showdown between me and George! Now if only Romo and the Boys don't fuck it up this season. . .
Both Alison Goodman's The Two Pearls of Wisdom (Europe) and Scott Westerfeld's The Risen Empire (Canada, USA, Europe) could be on the horizon as well.

Interviews

The only interview request I have in the pipeline at the moment is with Gene Wolfe. Don't know if it will become a reality yet.

Giveaways

This month will sort of be the Peter F. Hamilton month on the Hotlist. For starters, I will soon have a signed first edition hardback of The Temporal Void (Canada, USA, Europe) for you to win. In addition, I will have a contest for the new North American edition of The Reality Dysfunction (Canada, USA, Europe). It hasn't been confirmed just yet, but I'm also gunning for a giveaway for the US edition of Misspent Youth (Canada, USA, Europe).

Robin Hobb fans will be glad to discover that I will have 5 copies of the French graphic adaptation of the Farseer, L'Assassin Royal, at the end of the month.

Collectors stay tuned, for in collaboration with Subterranean Press I will have the mother of all giveaways for you guys! Bill made an offer that I couldn't possibly refuse. Speaking of Subpress, I will also have a contest for the limited edition of Jim Butcher's Storm Front (http://www.subterraneanpress.com/).

Possible giveaways include Gene Wolfe's An Evil Guest (Canada, USA, Europe) and Scott Westerfeld's The Killing of Worlds (Canada, USA, Europe), as well as a few others. More on them if they are within the realm of possibilities.

Finally, since Voyager's website is down, I've agreed to post a short Q&A with Stephen Hunt on the Hotlist, which will coincide with a giveaway for both The Court of the Air and The Kingdom Beyond the Waves.

As always, things might change. But that's the way love goes!;-)

Anyone knows what's going on with malazanempire.com???

The website dedicated to Steven Erikson's The Malazan Book of the Fallen has been down for a few days now, and it looks like it's a hosting problem. Anyone knows what's going on?

In other news, guess who's going to pen the flap copy of the Subterranean Press limited edition of Erikson's Gardens of the Moon!?! Yep, Yours Truly!

So if the gorgeous art by Michael Komarck wasn't enough, now you'll have a 200-250-word story blurb from me to look forward to! If that doesn't make you want to fork out over a 100$ for that collector's item, what will!?!:p

For more info, check out http://www.subterraneanpress.com/.