Showing posts with label Authors Worth Watching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors Worth Watching. Show all posts

May 22, 2012

Yeti Review: Bitter Seeds - Ian Tregillis


In A Few Words: The best debut of 2010, Bitter Seeds delivers on it's promise of Nazi Supermen vs. British Wizards; representing the start of a dark but brillant new trilogy that is as aggressive in scope as it is captivating in delivery. (2 stars)

Pros:
  • Well-written characters that carry the novel through grim subject matter;
  • Thought-provoking speculation that raises Bitter Seeds above the standard WWII reimagining;
  • The strong integration between alternate history of the war and the events of the book makes the notion of warlocks and psychics feel real; 
  • The implied structure of Milkweed Triptych promises continued originality and innovation

Cons:
  • The conclusion feels a somewhat anticlimatic as the second book is set up;
  • As more of a warning than a con, the tone of the story gets almost too dark at times;
  • Not enough Gretel.

The Review: The saying goes, "War is hell." In few novels is this more true than in Ian Tregillis's debut novel. An alternate history tale set during the darkest days of World War II; Bitter Seeds pits Nazi supermen against British demons in a sprawling battle that leaves everyone involved with deep scars: some physical, some emotional, and most both. Through a quartet of characters intimately involved in this secret war inside a war, Tregillis focuses on these scars and the wounds that cause them in a strikingly dark but equally impressive debut that has earned two stars in my new rating system.

Rather than trying to cover an alternate war in its entirety, Tregillis makes a wise decision and chooses to examine four lives within the war rather than the war itself. From Bitter Seeds’ first pages, it's clear that these four souls are not destined to lead normal lives. On the German side, the orphaned siblings Klaus and Gretel are purchased by Herr Doktor von Westarp for his abhorrent experiments. They and other war orphans are destined to become the Gotterelektrongruppe, a special Nazi outfit of supermen capable of flight, telekinesis, invisibility, and even precognition among other abilities. Klaus himself learns the ability to “ghost”; to pass through walls, bodies, and bullets like they don’t exist. His sister, Gretel, possesses powers of prediction that render her cryptic and, more often than not, incomprehensible. Gretel is the least written about character of the four but still manages to steal scene after scene with her bizarrely captivating antics and disrespect for causality.

Across the channel in the British Isles, a young Raybould Marsh is taken in by a British Intelligence Officer. Little does Marsh know that a career in intelligence will lead him to become involved with forces beyond his imagination. Elsewhere in England, the uncorrupted mind of Will Beauclerk is exposed to eidolons for the first time by his sorcerer grandfather. These entities reside outside the realm of human existence but are willing to interfere, at least for a price. Fast forward fifteen years or so and the world is on the verge of war. Raybould learns of the Nazi supermen during a routine espionage mission to Spain and he is soon tasked with stopping them. As such he reaches out to his college friend, Will, who possess a peculiar set of skills that just may level the playing field. From this brief description, it should be easy to see why the book is advertised as “Mad English warlocks battling twisted Nazi psychics.”

Bitter Seeds delivers on this promise in droves with several outstanding action sequences that just beg for big screen treatment. But underneath the exciting attempts to catch a man that can walk through walls and the orchestrated chaos of an ambush ruined by precognition, Tregillis conceals a wealth of character that helps the story transcend what could have been pure pulp. Now the premise and the execution are strong enough that Bitter Seeds would have been highly enjoyable pulp, but this unexpected depth takes Bitter Seeds from good to great.

Rather than depicting the white vs. black, good vs. evil reimagining of World War II that is all too common where Nazis are involved; Tregillis paints his cast in shades of gray. By focusing on the morality of the characters on both sides of the war and the motivations that can drive normal humans to commit atrocities, the book becomes incredibly gripping, albeit it in an almost perverse way. Another quote applicable to the first volume of the Milkweed Triptych has to be "all is fair in love and war."As the war escalates and the British become more and more desperate to halt the inevitable German invasion, the demonic eidolons demand more and more blood in exchange for their unnatural assistance.

The best science fiction is that which takes relatable ideas and uses speculation to stretch them to idealistic proportions. The idea that is explored here is that of the “Necessary Evil” (also the title of the third book of the Milkweed Triptych); one that frequently occurs in war when considering sacrificing a few for the needs of the many. But under what circumstances does the price become too high to pay? A death? A dozen? What if it's children? It is this grim question that plays heavily on both sides of the trenches and Tregillis sets the seeming unstoppable power of the German supermen against the crimson demands of the eidolons in order to raise the stakes until there is no right answer. Depressing? Yes. Thought-provoking? Without a doubt.

After a less than light hearted first third, this exploration forces the book to become darker and darker the book quickly gets even darker, almost to an excessive level. When a psychic Nazi appears to be the most well adjusted member of the cast, it’s difficult to generate empathy. But even at its darkest, Bitter Seeds never ceases to be compelling. There is a method to the sadness and Tregillis staggers the point at which characters hit rock bottom in a way so not to fully extinguish hope. If the first act sets up the characters as more than human, the second devolves Marsh, Beauclerk, and Klaus into something less than, and the third sees their attempt to pick up the pieces.

At first the conclusion feels somewhat underwhelming, in part due to the staggered nature of each of the character arcs. But as each of the characters concludes their final scene, we get a glimpse of the brilliant structure of the Milkweed Triptych, something that seems blatantly obvious in hindsight. In the last few pages, Tregillis teases the content of June's The Coldest War enough to make it instantly one of my most anticipated books of the year: a suitable accomplishment in its own right. In Bitter Seeds, Tregillis takes a played out setting and made it fresh again, crafting a darkly gripping tale that examines the morality of war through the lens of four superhuman characters who become anything but.

Feb 10, 2012

2013 Promises Blood (and More Bearded Debut Authors)

I'm still pulling together my list of 2012 debuts worth looking out for but I thought I would jump in the TARDIS for a quick look ahead to 2013.

I never get publishing contracts for my birthday...

Sometime in the past few months, Orbit outbid a few other houses for the right to publish PROMISE OF BLOOD, a debut fantasy novel from Brian McClellan (pictured above) as well as the 2nd and 3rd volumes of his intended trilogy. Now that the contracts have all been signed it's possible to share a little bit more about the book.

Here's the back of the baseball card as far as I be able to confirm:

Titles: PROMISE OF BLOOD / Untitled / Untitled
Series Title: Untitled Fantasy Trilogy
Release Window: Spring/Summer 2013
Release Format: Unknown
Elevator Pitch: Magic and Muskets
Burj Khalifa Elevator Pitch: Field Marshal Tamas and his powder mages have
staged a coup against the king of Adro. Their one night of bloody revolution
sparks the first war between the Nine kingdoms in fourteen hundred years as
the old regimes of nobility and Privileged sorcerers strike hard against the
upstart powder mages. Ancient sorcerers emerge from the woodwork as forces
take sides in the conflict and rumors of gods once thought long dead walk
the city streets.
Intended Series Length: 3 Books
Contract length: 3 books

Here's The Publisher's Marketplace announcement, lifted from McClellan's blog.

Brian McClellan's PROMISE OF BLOOD, a debut trilogy set in a world inspired by the revolutionary turmoil of 18th-century Europe complete with guillotines, starving peasants, fanatical royalists and a hero whose survival depends on a small group of honorable mages, including his own estranged son, to Devi Pillai at Orbit , in a good deal, in a three-book deal, for publication in Summer 2013, by Caitlin Blasdell at Liza Dawson Associates (World English).
Field Marshal Tamas has staged a coup against the king of Adro. His powder mages have slaughtered the king's Privileged cabal of sorcerers and the nobility has been rounded up to face the guillotine with their king. Tamas has brought revolution to his country in one bloody night to save his people and right the wrongs caused by the old regime. Yet his actions have far-reaching consequences of which no reasonable man could have conceived, and the king will prove the easiest obstacle to overcome in his quest to free Adro.

Captain Taniel Two-shot is a powder mage of considerable skill. Gunpowder makes him stronger and faster than other men. He can manipulate its properties to shoot out a man's eye at twice the length of a battlefield. It makes him perfect for killing the old Privileged sorcerers with their destructive magic. One of those Privileged has escaped Tamas' cull. The problem is, she's stronger than any sorcerer Taniel has ever seen, and the mercenaries sent to help him track her are of dubious reliability.

When Adamat is summoned to the palace in the middle of the night, the last thing the veteran investigator expects is to arrive during a regime change. His new employer is none other than the man responsible for overthrowing the current government and he has some unfinished business with the king's sorcerers. The dying Privileged cabal has left the Field Marshal with a riddle. It could be nothing, but Tamas does not like loose ends. Adamat knows from long experience that one doesn't ask questions unless one is willing to learn--and believe--the answers. To add to his problems, the Field Marshal isn't the only one interested in the answer to the dying sorcerers' riddle. As enemies emerge from the shadows and the investigation takes a disturbing turn, Adamat must decide where his loyalties lie.

Now I haven't had the opportunity to read any of PROMISE OF BLOOD yet but I did have the opportunity to speak with McClellan about his upcoming work at ConFusion. Based on that conversation and the fact it the rights went to auction, I wouldn't be surprised to see it as one of Orbit's flagship debut titles next year. I'll be sure to keep an eye out and post more when I have it but if you want to follow him directly feel free to bookmark his blog.

Aug 3, 2011

Covering Covers: The Fractal Prince - Hannu Rajaniemi


Cover Artist: Kekai Kotaki


"Jean le Flambeur, posthuman thief, is out of prison, but still not free. To pay his debts to Oortian warrior Mieli and her mysterious patron the pellegrini, he has to break into the mind of a living god. Planning the ultimate heist takes Jean and Mieli from the haunted city of Sirr on broken Earth to the many-layered virtual realms of the mighty Sobornost. But when the stakes of the pellegrini’s game are revealed, Jean has to decide how far he is willing to go to get the job done."
Kekai Kotaki is quickly becoming one of my favorite cover artists. Between The Quantum Thief, The Unremembered, and this gem his work is colorful without being cartoony, evoking a sense of action and adventure without resorting to spaceships or dragons. And anyone who has read the The Quantum Thief knows that's exactly how Rajaniemi operates. He's doesn't slow down, he doesn't explain, and he's not going to apologize.

Rajaniemi's style is difficult to explain. You read it and you like it, but you're not exactly sure what you read or why you like it. At least, not after the first time through. It's complex, peculiar, captivating, and just plain good.

Don't believe me? Have a sample from The Fractal Prince.



Drathdor the zoku elder liked to talk, and it wasn't that hard to get
him to explain what a Box was (without letting on that I had stolen
one from their zoku twenty years ago, of course).

Imagine a box, he said. Now put a cat in it. Along with a death
machine: a bottle of poison, cyanide, say, connected to a mechanism
with a hammer and a single atom of a radioactive element. In the
next hour, the atom either decays or not, either triggering or not
triggering the hammer. So, in the next hour, the cat is either alive
or dead.

Quantum mechanics claims that there is no definite cat in the box,
only a ghost, a superposition of a live cat and a dead cat. That is,
until we open it and look. A measurement will collapse the system into
one state or the other. So goes Schrödinger's thought experiment.

It is completely wrong, of course. A cat is a macroscopic system,
and there is no mysterious intervention by a magical observer
needed to make it live or die: just its interaction with the rest
of the Universe, a phenomenon called decoherence, provides the
collapse into one macrostate. But in the microscopic world --- for
qubits, quantum-mechanical equivalents of ones and zeroes --- the
Schrödinger's cat is real.

The Box contains trillions of ghost cats. The live cat states
encode information. A mind, even, a living, thinking mind. The Box
qubits have been rotated into a limbo state between nothingness and
existence. The mind inside would not notice anything--- a set of
quantum gates can let it continue thinking, feeling, dreaming. If it
stays inside, all is well. But if it tries to get out, any interaction
with the environment will bring the Universe down on it like a ton of
 bricks and collapse it into nothingness. Bad kitty, dead kitty.

"So what do you put in a Box like that?'' I asked Drathdor.

"Something very, very dangerous,'' he said.



Elegantly perplexing, no?

The Fractal Prince, the 2nd entry in The Quantum Thief trilogy, will be published on September 4, 2012 by Tor.

Jul 27, 2010

Authors Worth Watching, Spotlight 4 of 5


After nearly 4 months on the back burner (mostly as a result of life), I'm back with the 4th set of spotlight authors from list of 25 Authors Worth Watching. If you haven't read (or don't remember) the first few installments (Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3) the basic format is as follows: I'll give you a little background on the writer, where you can find early work to sample, and what you should watch for in the next year or two.



Aliette de Bodard As technology makes the world smaller, English-language SF is expanding into oft-ignored cultural realms. Frequently focusing on Asian or Middle Eastern cultures, writers are examining the future and what it could possibly hold for non-Western cultures. While most of the Northern Hemisphere has been featured at one stage or another of this science fiction movement, comparatively few authors have visited the African and South American continents. That's where Aliette de Bodard comes in. Focusing on South and Central America, de Bodard examines the past in her fantasy work and the future and possible alternate presents in her science fiction. The details she weaves into her work are exotic and refreshing and the worlds she creates, be they past or present, beg for further exploration. But de Bodard is not a one-trick pony; her work outside of the unexplored continent is just as strong.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Servant of the Underworld - Obsidian and Blood Trilogy, Book 1 - Angry Robot - January 2010 (UK) / September 2010 (US) - To be followed by Harbinger of the Storm and Untitled Book 3
  • The Jaguar House, in Shadow” - Asimov’s - July 2010
  • Desaparecidos” - Realms of Fantasy - June 2010
Website / Blog / Twitter



Greg Van Eekhout - A regular genre journeyman, Greg Van Eekhout refuses to fit nicely into a singular subgenre or category. He's written Ragnarocking Urban Fantasy in 2009's Norse Code. He's saved the people of Atlantis from serving as carnie folk in the outstanding middle grade novel Kid vs. Squid. He's assured me that I exist only because Santa Claus believes in me. Eekhout tackles the entire Superman mythos in fewer pages than a standard comic book and gives the character a much needed conclusion. If you can't tell from those four brief examples, each of his stories is about something remarkably different. At the same time, they all share the same playful tone and demonstrate a fondness for human mythology. If Van Eekhout continues his current writing trends, the only thing you can expect for sure is quality fiction.
Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Kid Vs. Squid - Middle Grade Fantasy - Bloomsbury Children's Book -  May 11, 2010
  • Last - Middle Grade Science Fiction - A futuristic adventure about the last boy on Earth, a young mammoth, and a broken robot. - Bloomsbury - Spring 2011
  • The Osteomancer’s Son  - Adult Fantasy Novel -  The first of three novels for grownups based on my short story about an alternate version of Los Angeles founded on the magical bones of extinct creatures - Tor - TBD.
Website / Blog / Twitter



John Langan - Horror as a subgenre demands powerful prose and fiction dripping with sensory detail. As such, there are only a few authors who can write horror and manage to make it enjoyable without being campy or off-puttingly gory. John Langan is capable of maintaining that balance and one of the few developing horror writers to make this list. In addition to his focus on tone and character, Langan often imbues his work with a self-referential aspect, often criticizing the literary establishment or simply toying with the concept of story in general. Like so many of the authors on this list, Langan hasn't settled into a particular voice quite yet but he has demonstrated a talent for atmospheric horror well beyond his relatively short writing career.

Early Work:
In the Future:
Website / Blog



Leah Bobet - With the rapid growth of online publications over the past decade, it was only a matter of time before they gained respect as legitimate channels for genre fiction. Likewise, it was only a matter of time before new writers started to see the majority of their early sales go to electronic rather than print outlets. One of these writers is Leah Bobet, a author that should be familiar to anyone who follows Strange Horizons. Bobet likes to play with expectations in her fiction, often taking known quantities and using them to disguise the true purpose behind her work. The stories I sampled ranged from impressive social science fiction to deceptively simple fairy tale fantasy and for some reason or another reminded me of the diverse fiction of Jay Lake. A lot of Bobet's work has debuted online but I won't be surprised when it finds its way into the printed Best Of anthologies before long.
  
Early Work:
In the Future:
  • "Stay" - Chilling Tales: From the Great White North (Mike Kelly ed) - EDGE - March 2011 2011.
  • "A Thousand" in On Spec - Spring 2010.
  • "Mister Oak" - Realms of Fantasy - Feb 2010.
  • Above - An Unconventional Urban Fantasy - Unsold Novel
  • Saturnalia - A Clockwork Gothic - Unsold Novel  
Website / Blog / Twitter



Rachel Swirsky - Having earned Nebula and Hugo nominations for her short fiction this past year, Swirsky is an author poised to graduate from this list of up-and-comers into the ranks of the genre giants. Swirsky's fiction is full of beautiful, evocative prose, capturing often tragic stories with seemingly little effort. Her work reminds me of fellow Author Worth Watching Mary Robinette Kowal. Like Kowal, Swirsky is able to craft heartbreaking stories in a surprisingly small number of pages. The stories I've read suggest Swirsky tends toward the fantasy side of the genre spectrum with a touch of magical realism on the side. Be on the lookout for her, she's going to be taking home one of those trophies sooner or later.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Through the Drowsy Dark - Short Fiction & Poetry Collection - Aqueduct Press - May 2010
    • Features original stories "Through the Drowsy Dark", "The Black Angel's Kiss", and "Defiled Imagination" 
  • "The Lady Who Plucked Red Flowers Beneath the Queen's Window" - Subterranean Magazine - Summer 2010
  • "The Stable Master's Tale" - Fantasy Magazine - July 2010
  • "Again and Again and Again" - Interzone 226 - January/February 2010
Website / Blog / Twitter



5 left. Then the interviews. And the reviews. Can I stop yet? When I did my first interview series last year, I didn't delve into the authors nearly as much as I am this time around. It's taking a lot of work but I think the resulting interviews are going to be worth it.

As always, let me know if there are any other key pieces of info you would be interested in or if I somehow managed to get something incorrect. I hope to have the final piece ready in the next week or two but part four took me several months so please keep bugging me on Twitter.

Mar 3, 2010

Authors Worth Watching, Spotlight 3 of 5


Although I'm quickly running out of way to say, "this author is a good writer and you should read their work", I'm back with the 3rd set of spotlight authors from list of 25 Authors Worth Watching. If you haven't read the first two installments (Part 1 / Part 2) the basic format is as follows: I'll give you a little background on the writer, where you can find early work to sample, and what you should watch for in the next year or two.

This week's group features a pair of genre-aware fantasy writers, a hard SF prodigy, an Australian rising star, and a puppeteer responsible for some of the best short fiction I've ever read.

Update: Some of the information provided for Ari Marmell and Kaaron Warren was slightly incorrect out of date. I've updated accordingly.



Ari Marmell - In my experience, some of the best fantasy authors are the ones who have successfully emerged from early work with role playing games. RPGs are essentially disassembled stories: interesting characters, exotic locales, powerful items, monstrous creatures, and incredible potentialities detailed in the pages of guidebooks and manuals but ultimately left unconnected. When you get an author like Marmell who possesses both the creativity to imagine intricate fantasy worlds beyond the scope of a single novel and the skill to forge those elements into a well-structured, professional narrative, chances are you're going to get a story worth reading. Marmell appears poised to take the genre staples he's worked with for years and turn them inside out. His first two novels, The Conqueror's Shadow and The Warlord's Legacy are set in a fantasy world where a former dark lord must come out of retirement to save the day. His third non-shared universe release, The Goblin Corps, is written from the perspective of minions facing the final days of the evil empire they served. Both worlds sound tremendously genre-aware and I predict I'll be reviewing The Conqueror's Shadow in the near future. 

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • The Conqueror's Shadow -  Epic Fantasy - Spectra - 2/23/2010 - To be followed by The Warlord's Legacy in early 2011
  • The Goblin Corp - Pyr - Mid-to-Late 2011
Website / Blog / Twitter



Hannu Rajaniemi - A mathematician and physicist, Hannu Rajaniemi seems like he was born to be a Hard SF writer. From the stories I've been able to read so far, it appears he's well on his way to fulfilling that destiny. Rajaniemi is the type of writer who can fit into a single sentence the type of idea that others would write entire books about. "His Master's Voice," a story about two post-pet characters, is a great example of this, detailing the miniaturization of humanity for resource conservation in nothing more than a throwaway line. When I was browsing various lists of "anticipated novels" Rajaniemi's debut The Quantum Thief seemed to pop up again and again. Labeled as Neuromancer meets Ocean's Eleven, Rajaniemi sold a three book deal on a total of 24 pages. If that doesn't suggest he's capable of writing something special, you can always take Charles Stross's word for it. Stross ( one of the premiere Hard SF writers today) predicted Hannu would become "the biggest thing to hit hard SF in the next decade." The Quantum Thief makes its UK debut this September and I'll be violating my waiting-for-US-edition policy shortly thereafter.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • The Quantum Thief - Far-future Hard SF - Gollancz (UK only) - 9/16/10
Website / Blog / Twitter



Kaaron Warren - Over the past several years, Kaaron (don't call her Karen) Warren has made a name for herself over in Australian publishing circles. Wherever she is now (it's no longer Fiji), she is well on her way to repeating that accomplishment on a global stage. Her debut novel, Slights, impressed both critics and horror fans alike, at the same time earning a Publisher's Weekly Starred Review and the honor of being selected as Pick of the Week. Although most of her work has at least a tinge of horror, Warren is actually a genre nomad, fluctuating between horror, fantasy, and SF depending on the story. She's also the perfect author for the eclectic reader having written 3 novels to date (and is working on at least 2 more), none of which are written in the same world. In a publishing landscape in which every book seems to be part of a series, Warren propensity for standalones is much appreciated and a sign that she has in mind many different stories to tell.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Walking the Tree- Fantasy - Angry Robot - July 2009 (UK) / June 2010 (US)
  • Mistification - Horror Novel - Angry Robot - June 2010 (UK) / TBD (US)
  • Untitled - 2nd Short Story Collection - Ticonderoga Publications - Before Sept 2010
  • "The Gaze Dogs of Nine Waterfall" - Exotic Gothic 3 (Danel Olson, ed) - Ash-Tree Press - Q1 2010
Website / Blog / Twitter


Mary Robinette Kowal - Mary Robinette Kowal won the 2008 Campbell Award. After reading her debut collection, Scenting the Dark (full review here), it was easy to see why. Several of her stories are ten pages or less, but they pack an emotional punch disproportionate to their word count. Kowal can do in 5 pages what some authors can’t do in 50. I highly, highly recommend Scenting the Dark and Other Stories. One of the most interesting things about Kowal is that she actually works as a puppeteer for her day job. I've seen it suggested that her experience with puppets and stage performance contributes to her exceptional grasp on dialogue and her ability to do more with fewer words. After reading her work, it's hard to disagree. Her debut novel, a historical fantasy entitled Shades of Milk and Honey, comes out from Tor this August and I've already requested an ARC.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Shades of Milk and Honey - Historical Fantasy - Tor - August 3, 2010 - To be followed by Glamour in Glass
  • "The Bride Replete" - Apex Online  -March 2010 (Read Online)
  • "Beyond the Garden to Close" - Apex Online - March 2010 (Read Online)
  • "Horizontal Rain" - Apex Online - March 2010 (Read Online)
  • "Changed Itinerary" - Légendes - March 2010
  • "Ring Road" - Dark Faith Anthology - May 2010
Website / Blog / Twitter



Sam Sykes - Sam Sykes is crazy. While I'm tempted to stop there, it's also worth nothing that he's both fiendishly creative and the author of Tome of the Undergates, one of the "hot" fantasy titles of 2010. From following his twitter feed and reading his blog, it's clear that Sykes has an effortless way with words. His writing has a razor sharp edge and while a blog isn't equivalent to a novel, I'm going to be very interested to see the prose style that emerges from that same mind. I've also seen comparisons to Abercrombie and Lynch, two of my favorite fantasy authors of the last 5 years. Sykes is one of the few authors I haven't sampled yet, and one of the authors I'm most interested to read

In the Future:
  • Tome of the Undergates - Epic Fantasy - Gollancz (UK) / Pyr (US) - April 2010 (UK) / TBD 2010 (US) - To be followed by Unnamed Books 2 and 3 in the trilogy
Website / Blog / Twitter



15 down, 10 to go. Although its hard to find enough time to sample so many authors in a relatively short period and keep up with normal blogging activities, these authors are all putting out material worth reading.
As always, let me know if there are any other key pieces of info you would be interested in or if I somehow managed to get something incorrect. I'll probably have the next piece ready next week unless I suddenly stop working 10 or 12 hour days.

Feb 22, 2010

Authors Worth Watching, Spotlight 2 of 5


I present to you the 2nd group of spotlight authors from the large list of 25 Authors Worth Watching. Like last time, I'll give you a little background on the writer, where you can find early work to sample, and what you should watch for in the next year or two.
I originally planned on doing these on a MWF basis but it is taking a suprising long time to pull these posts together so I'm going to go to a Mon-Thurs schedule for the final 3 posts.

Anyway, on to the writers themselves...



Beth Bernobich - Beth Bernobich is one of the several authors on this list that I hadn't heard of prior to taking nominations. After reading some of her early work, Beth appears poised to become a regular name with fans of historical fantasy or alternate history stories, particularly those who enjoy a romantic subplot or two. That's not to say she's a one trick pony; her SF short "Marsdog" riffs on the timeless nature of a boy and his dog through a very peculiar set of eyes. Bernobich has quite a backlog of stories ranging from SF to fantasy and period pieces to alternate futures, even working some horror and erotica into the mix (I think one story was both). She seems to have settled on a fantasy world for her first mainstream novel. This year marks the release of Passion Play, the first book in the Erythandra Series. James Patrick Kelly blurbed the series as a novel that  "fills the senses with the gritty taste of ashes and the delicious shiver of silk, while the mysterious scent of magic is everywhere present." I'm eager to get more detail on this fantasy world from Beth if she's willing to answer a few of my questions. UPDATE: According to the Mad Hatter (who reviews Ars Memoriae here), Beth has signed a deal with Tor for two additional novels.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • A Handful of Pearls & Other Stories - Short Story Anthology - Lethe Press - Spring 2010
  • Passion Play - Fantasy - Tor - October 2010 To be followed by Queen’s Hunt. Allegiance, and untitled fourth book [The Erythandra Series]
  • Fox and Phoenix - YA Fantasy - Viking - Summer 2011
  • The Time Roads - Collection of stories from her Éireann world - Tor - TBD 
Website / Blog



Ian Tregillis - Ian Tregillis is another one of those authors who doesn't have a lot of dishes on the table yet but the smells from the kitchen are fantastic. Besides a fun short published on the now defunct Trabaco Road website, Tregillis's published work is limited to George R.R. Martin's superhero SF shared Wild Card's universe. That's about to change this spring with the publicaiton of Tregillis's first book in the Milkweed Triptych, Bitter Seeds. The Milkweed Triptych, at least from what I can gather, is an alternate history fantasy set during World War II. If Tregillis's tagline "It's 1939. The Nazis have supermen, the British have demons, and one perfectly ordinary man is caught in the middle." doesn't make you want to check out these books, I'd point you to some high praise from one of his fellow writers "It's pretty much the coolest structure for a trilogy I've ever seen" and "If he doesn't become a Name in the field, it'll be because he decides not to. Seriously, this is his game to lose." Also, check out his website. While not the most functional thing I've ever seen, it's visually impressive and fun to play with. Plus his bio says that he's a mammal...that's a good thing right?

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Bitter Seeds - WWII Alternate History (Nazi Monsters vs British Demons) - Tor - 4/13/10 - To be followed  by The Coldest War (2010) and Necessary Evil (2011)
Website / Blog



Ken Scholes - So far, Ken Scholes appears to be the author my readers are most familiar with. That's probably because the first two volumes of his five volume fantasy series, The Psalms of Isaak, have been garnering rave-reviews accross the blogosphere (not to mention their beautiful covers). Despite authoring this well respected sequence, Scholes has also made a name for himself with a strong body of shorter work. When he's not creating immersive fantasy worlds, Scholes mixes the historical with the fictional. In one of his stories Hitler is a remarkable different man. In another, Edward the Bear must save a fleet of generation ships rapidly approaching disaster. Grasping the familar and twisting it, he creates something both familiar and hauntingly unique. Scholes emotionally evocative writing impresses at any length.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Antiphon (The Psalms of Isaak: Book 3) - High Fantasy - Tor - September 2010 - To be followed by the last two volumes of The Psalms of Isaak, Requiem and Hymn
Website / Blog



Meghan McCarron - Meghan McCarron might not be a household genre name at this point but the overwhelming consensus is that she will be. Alongside Alice Sola Kim and Greg Van Eekout, McCarron's name seemed to come up in every conversation about aspiring new writers. When I read some of her relatively small portfolio of work, it was easy to see why. McCarron possess a gift for prose that flows effortlessly regardless of how surreal the subject matter. McCarron has a grasp of language that would make a grocery list readable and it's easy to assume that she'll only get better as she writes more. Did I mention she's only 27? I don't know what McCarron's future work promises or if/when we will get to see a debut novel, but I do know that what I'll be waiting to read it.

Early Work:
  • "The Magician’s House" - Strange Horizons August 2008 (Read Online)
  • "Tetris Dooms Itself" - Clarkesworld Magazine - August 2008 (Read Online)
  • "The Flying Woman" - Strange Horizons - March 2006 (Read Online)
  • "Close To You" - Strange Horizons - May 2005 (Read Online)
In the Future:
  • "WE HEART VAMPIRES!!!!!!!" - Strange Horizons - Spring 2010 
Website / Blog / Twitter



Theodora Goss - While reading Goss's first collection, In The Forest of Forgetting, I was immediately reminded of Neil Gaiman's Fragile Things or Susanna Clarke's The Ladies of Grace Adieu. Goss write a deceptively simple story, almost fairytale-esque, foregoing intricate plots for more complex characters and emotional moments. Rather than transported to a fully-realized fantasy world like Robert Jordan or George R.R. Martin, I was transported back to my childhood, when a boundless imagination made the world was a more magical place. At the same time, Goss's fairly tales aren't exactly Grimm's. Paradoxically, her stories read as both timeless and modern, demonstrating a clear love for storytelling in today's largely unimaginative society.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Currently Unknown
Website / Blog



That's it for the Group 2 of the 5 Authors Worth Watching. You should really go check out their fiction where you can. I've been impressed by these authors time after time. Typically, I have a hard time reading a lot of short fiction in a short ammount of time because you have to switch voice and prose style so often. These stories are so well-written that you can't help but keep reading.

As always, Let me know if there are any other key pieces of info you would be interested in or if I somehow managed to get something incorrect.

Feb 17, 2010

Authors Worth Watching, Spotlight 1 of 5


As promised, I'm going to write a brief spotlight on each of the writers on the list I compiled of 25 Authors Worth Watching. Each summary will give you a little background on the writer, where you can find early work to sample, and what you should watch for in the next year or two.

I was tempted to try and define them by subgenre but so many authors hop around that it's almost useless to group them, especially so early in their careers.



Blake Charlton - Blake Charlton has a very unique resume to accompany his much-hyped debut novel, Spellwright. While almost every aspiring novelist is a writer, very few are on track to become licensed medical doctors. Despite being diagnosed with dyslexia as a child, Charlton managed to get into Yale, Stanford Med, and sign a 3-book deal with Tor. Unfortunately, his current bibliography is only story long (it's a good one though) but luckily you won't have to wait long for more. Spellwright comes out March 2nd and from the early reviews its extremely intricate and unique magic system has impressed readers. From what I can tell, it's a book about and influenced by the magic of writing and one I'm very interested to delve into.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • Spellwright - Fantasy - Tor - 3/2/10 - To be followed by Spellbound and Disjunction.
Website / Blog / Twitter



Jack Skillingstead - Quite the opposite of Charlton, Skillingstead has dabbled in the short form for the majority of his writing career. Last year, he made the leap to the long form with his first novel, Harbinger after publishing short fiction for nearly a decade. Skillingstead's short fiction is well worth reading: In only a few short pages, Skillingstead manages to explore genre staples such as alien encounters or Lovecraftian horror and create complex characters that resonate with readers. Back at the beginning of his career, he won a fiction contest put on by Stephen King himself. If you ask Skillingstead, he will tell you that he strives for "tight prose delivered at minimum length" something King isn't exactly well known for. Tight prose is a severly undervalued virture in today's more equals better society and something this reviewer loves to read.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • A novel based on or in the same universe as "Life On The Preservation". Tenatively scheduled for 2011.
Website (It will be updated soon...)



Lauren Beukes - Last year, Lauren Beukes's debut Moxyland (full review) suprised me with it's aggresive style and frightfully realistic futuristic setting. Drawing comparisons in my mind to Cory Doctorow or Stross's near-future SF work, Beukes manages to capture the technological and cultural changes of the future in a way few can. And despite the intricate advances she describes, Beukes is able to pair those with compelling, human characters too often lacking in SF writing. Hailing from South Africa, Beukes has a cultural education and worldview that sets her apart from traditional English genre writers. Her 2010 follow-up, Zoo City is one I am eagerly anticipating. Unfortunately, I have had a hard time tracking down her short fiction as most of it was published by South African imprints.

Early Work:
  • Moxyland - Near Future SF - Angry Robot - 4/27/10 (US) / Out Now! (UK)
In the Future:
  • Zoo City - Science Fiction - Angry Robot - 5/25/10 (US) / 4/29/10 (UK)
Website / Blog / Twitter



N.K. Jemisin - Nora Jemisin is most likely the first author I will be interviewing as part of this new series. That is, if she's not exhausted from all the other attention she's been getting from the blogosphere. Her first novel, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, actually came out yesterday and it appears everyone is reading it. And from what I read, not just reading it, loving it too. I have yet to see anything bad about her debut fantasy detailing the power struggle in a fantastical world of powerful gods and the beings that enslaved them. Evocative, imaginative, and enthralling are just a few of the words commonly repeated in early reviews. One of the most common themes in Jemisin's work is power: who has it, who doesn't, and the struggles it creates. Jemisin writes with a distinct voice and a definite purpose, creating multi-layered fiction that is both enjoyable to read and thought-provoking.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms - Fantasy - Orbit - 2/1 - To be followed by The Broken Kingdoms and a third book tentatively titled Kingdom of Gods
Website / Blog / Twitter



Tina Connolly - Based on the early results of the poll I posted to see which of the 25 authors were the most underread, not many people are currently aware of Tina Connolly. Which is a shame because Connolly's fiction is lean and streamlined with a prose style best described as barb-like: it's sharp and pointed but once it's in your head it's stuck there. The few stories I sampled definitely leaned toward the science fiction side of the genre with The BitRunners, my personal favorite reading like a mix of Neuromancer and The Usual Suspects. Connolly has no problem creating immersive SF worlds with unique lexicons and based on the ammount of world building she works into her short fiction, I expect big things if and when she makes the leap to the big show. On the other hand, I'd be happy to "settle" for the same quality short fiction she's already producing.

Early Work:
In the Future:
  • "Silverfin Harbor". The End of an AEon. Forthcoming, 2010.
  • "Zebedee the Giant Man". On Spec. Forthcoming, 2010.
Website / Blog / Twitter





That's it for the 1st set of 5 Authors Worth Watching. I'll give you some time to sample a little of their work and then back on Friday for the next spotlight.

Let me know if there are any other key pieces of info you would be interested in or if I somehow managed to get something incorrect.
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