Gogmagog

Jeff Noon, Steve Beard. Angry Robot Books. (400p) ISBN: 9781915202826
Gogmagog

Gogmagog

I’ve read everything that Jeff Noon has written but unfortunately don’t think I’ve read anything by Steve Beard and I was so looking forward to this coming out.

and wonderfully it doesn’t disappoint and will be searching out Steve’s work!

A world of different people’s who all seem to have come from space with a mixture of technology levels, abilities, and worldviews.

Gothic, steampunk, magic, technology, all mix together to give a wonderful world to explore and gives that world an epic feel with all the back story about its settling and development.

This epic feel doesn’t detract from the personal of the Juniper’s crew as they travel along the river Nysis, the length of the ghost dragon Faynr to help Brin recover from what ails her.

Each chapter builds on the last and each was a revelatory window into the weirdness of the world that they inhabit and how their relationships grow over the length of their quest.

Gogmagog was the last giant to inhabit Albion, but here it is a shadow dragon, full of poison and bile.

There was a lot of word play throughout, especially when Cady let forth with tirades of abuse, and this added a beat to the book that I really enjoyed and made me think of passages from Vurt and other of Jeff’s works.

The end left a lot up in the air though this quest through distance is definitely concluded and it makes me wonder where the quest will go next.

I received this from NetGalley for an honest review.


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Jacey Bedford – Author Q&A

Jacey Bedford

Jacey Bedford

Jacey Bedford is a British writer of science fiction and historical fantasy. She is published by DAW in the USA. She has seven novels, out: the Psi-Tech and Rowankind trilogies, and her most recent novel The Amber Crown, a historical fantasy.

Her short stories have appeared in anthologies and magazines on both sides of the Atlantic, and have been translated into Estonian, Galician, Catalan and Polish.

In another life she was a singer with vocal trio, Artisan, and once sang live on BBC Radio4 accompanied by the Doctor (Who?) playing spoons.

Jacey can be found at:
Website/mailing list: www.jaceybedford.co.uk
Blog: jaceybedford.wordpress.com
Twitter: @jaceybedford
Instagram: @jacey_bedford
Facebook: jacey.bedford.writer
Artisan: artisan-harmony.com

Tell me what inspired you to write your (debut) novel?

Ah, that’s a question that has to be answered by a question. What do you call a debut novel? My first-published novel, Empire of Dust was not the first novel I wrote, nor was it the first I sold. The first I wrote is still on a back-burner. The first I sold was Winterwood, a historical fantasy. By that time, I’d written seven complete novels, and my editor also bought Empire, which was science fiction/space opera. For my first three book deal I sold Winterwood, Empire, and a yet-to-be-written sequel to Empire (which became Crossways). It just so happened that DAW had a gap in the publishing schedule for science fiction in 2014, but if they’d gone with Winterwood first, it would have had to wait until 2015 – so my debut novel was Empire of Dust. As to the inspiration… it was a prequel for the two novels that are still on the back-burner, but set 1000 years before them. At that point it could have been a standalone, or the start of a trilogy (which it became). I’m still hoping to revisit those two unpublished novels because I still think they have legs – though obviously I’ve learned a lot since I wrote them, and revision would reflect that.

What came first the characters or the world?

Characters. Always characters. I usually start off with characters-in-a-situation, and take it from there. The world is often flexible in the early stages of writing. My latest book, The Amber Crown, is a historically-based fantasy. When I first got the idea, I could have set it in any number of different settings, either real-world, generic medievaloid, or it could even have been a second-world setting. In the end I settled on an alternative version of the Baltic States around the 1600s, though I mucked about a fair bit with history. I’d just been reading about the Northern Crusades, which is what made me latch on to that region, though it’s not set during that timeline. I have a friend who doesn’t like reading science fiction or fantasy and I just keep telling her that they are all stories about people in situations interacting with other people, whether it’s medieval Italy or modern-day New York. Look how many versions of Romeo and Juliet there are, from Shakespeare to Shakespeare in Love and West Side story.

How hard was it to get your first (debut) book published?

I sold my first short story in 1998, and my first novel didn’t come out until 2014, so my overnight success took sixteen years (not counting the time it took to sell my first short story). Getting an agent was the first hurdle. My first agent (acquired on a recommendation from Anne McCaffrey) was so easy to get that when we parted company, I didn’t realise how difficult it was going to be to get another. It took NINE years. That was largely my fault because I was subbing to a single agent at a time and some of them were taking months to reject me (or simply not replying at all). Then my lovely second agent retired from agenting with Winterwood still circulating publishers. I knew DAW hadn’t seen it, so I sent it to their slushpile with a recommendation from one of their authors… and I sold it. On the back of that I got a new agent, too. The secret is persistence. I could have given up at any time during those sixteen years, but I didn’t.

How long did it take to write?

I wrote the first draft of Empire of Dust – 70,000 words – in about a month. Then I spent years revising it – writing other novels in the meantime. Eventually it ended up at 240,000 words. It changed shape and size many times during various edits, so altogether it took years to get to the 173,000 word final version.

What can you tell us about your next book?

It’s a YA book based on the Tam Lin story as depicted in the folk ballad about a knight captured by the Queen of Fairies and intended to be her tithe to Hell. He is saved by the love of a mortal. I’m not giving away spoilers, you can find the ballad on the internet, but I hope I’m bringing something different to it. The ballad is set in the medieval period, but I’ve set it partly in the modern world (England) and partly in the land of Fairy.

Do you take notice of online reviews?

I try not to. I’ve been lucky to have no real stinkers (that I’ve noticed). The golden rule is never to respond to a review whether you think it’s justified or not.

What did you do before (or still do) you became a writer?

I sang for twenty years with the vocal trio, Artisan, touring all over the world, UK, USA, Canada, Australia. We didn’t do much in Europe, just Belgium and Germany a few times, because our words were important and so we preferred to stick to countries that spoke English as a first language. (www.artisan-harmony.com) When we ‘retired’ from the road, I started a music booking agency, securing gigs for (mainly folk) musicians in the UK. That’s ongoing.

Which author(s) inspire you?

Oh, I don’t know. I like any number of authors, but I didn’t discover most of the ones I read today until after I started writing. I suppose I read Andre Norton and Anne McCaffrey in my twenties. One of my current favourites is Los McMaster Bujold. I love her Vorkosigan books, but my favourite book of all time is her fantasy, The Curse of Chalion. It’s the book I would grab as I ran screaming out of a burning building.

Which genres do you read yourself?

Fantasy, science fiction and the occasional historical novel. I’ll read dark fantasy and Grimdark, but I draw the line at pure horror. I can’t watch horror movies either. Regency romance is my guilty pleasure.

What is your biggest motivator?

A deadline.

How much (if any) say do you have in your book covers?

I’ve been very lucky. DAW has always asked for my input, and I even got to suggest the artist (Larry Rostant) for my Rowankind trilogy.

Were you a big reader as a child? And what were your favourite childhood books?

I could read fairly fluently by the time I was three and I joined the local library as soon as I was old enough. I was only allowed two books a week, but when we discovered I could use some of my parents’ tickets I used to get five books a week. I loved pony books. One of my favourite writers was Monica Edwards who wrote about children and ponies having adventures. Her characters were very real to me. I would read anything with a horse on the cover, which was how I found C.S. Lewis’s The Horse and His Boy – my gateway book into fantasy. And then in my teens I read my way through the Gollancz yellow jackets – the science fiction books: Arthur C Clarke, Isaac Asimiv, James Blish, Bob Shaw. I wish I’d kept a list of what I read. They’ve all faded into a hazy memory now.

Do you have a favourite bookshop? If so, which?

Sadly, my part of the UK has no specialist bookshops, so there are only the chain bookshops in cities which I hardly ever visit. These days I mostly read on Kindle because I can make the print bigger. My favourite actual bookshop is halfway around the world – Bakka Phoenix in Toronto, which I used to visit regularly when we were on tour in Canada.

How many books are in your own physical TBR pile?

I call it my Strategic Book Reserve. Probably about sixty or seventy actual physical books, but I have hundreds of unread books on my Kindle. (We’re just talking about fiction, right?) I buy books for research in dead tree format because dipping in and out of a Kindle book is more problematical.

What is your current or latest read?

I’m reading T. Kingfisher’s What Moves the Dead ,and I just finished The Dead Dragon Job by Anne Lyle. I post all the fiction I read on my reading blog on Dreamwidth. (https://jacey.dreamwidth.org/) – though I also have a writing blog at WordPress. (https://jaceybedford.wordpress.com/)

Any events in the near future?

After several years of keeping my head down because of Covid I’m booked into the UK Eastercon in Birmingham in April. I’m really looking forward to being on panels again, and seeing a bunch of friends. I’ll be attending a writing retreat in May for a week, and the Milford SF Writers’ Conference in September, which is a workshopping week with other published writers. For my sins I’m the Milford secretary, so I’m one of the organisers. (www.milfordSF.co.uk). Incidentally, Milford is launching an anthology called Eclectic Dreams at Eastercon in order to help fund our Writers of Colour bursary. I have a story in that

and finally, what inspired you to write the genre you do?

I love the freedom science fiction and fantasy gives me to make up stuff for pleasure and profit. I like playing in new worlds, or in old worlds reimagined. You write what you read. I’ve always been more interested in swashbucklers and spaceships than in police procedurals and kitchen sink dramas. Funnily enough I often manage to get a horse into my books somewhere – even the space operas – which probably harks back to those pony books of my childhood and my many years of hanging around stables.


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Gleanings

Neal Shusterman. Walker Books. (432p) ISBN: 9781529509540
Gleanings

Gleanings

I absolutely loved the Scythe series by Neal Shusterman and was sad to leave it at the end, when I heard that there was going to be a collection of short stories set in the same universe I kept an eye out for its release. Amazingly I was approved for this on NetGalley and had to wait no longer.

And what a collection this is, if you’re a lover of the Scythe universe you will love this addition, and if you’ve not read the original trilogy I would advise you to read it first as there are some spoilers in here.

The collection has a real mix of tone throughout, from the darkly humorous to more serious additions, though I would say that the humorous stories really add to the flavour of Scythe, and would probably have to admit that two of the humorous shorts were my favourites but not my top story.

Meet Cute and Die Is hilarious, the fluffiest story in the collection but also one of the best, got to love Scythe Boudica’s preferred method of Gleaning.

The Persistence of Memory is a hilarious look at two Scythes of different temperaments in Barcelona, Dali and Gaudi… It is a look at the perceived competition between the two in Dali’s eyes, how one wishes to be flamboyant and the other more peaceful, absolutely loved the ending of this, and the theatricality of Scythe Dali.

Never Work with Animals who doesn’t like a shaggy dog story with a happy ending, maybe not the ending you would expect but hilarious especially with the bits of the Sythe’s past that are brought into the story.

The Mortal Canvas this for me though was the strongest story of the collection, looking at what could be lost with the onset of immortality and lack of challenge that only having one lifetime brings.

A great collection of short stories for lovers of Scythe and for all others as you don’t need to know the universe to appreciate great storytelling.


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Swashbucklers

Dan Hanks. Angry Robot. (400p) ISBN: 9780857669384
Swashbucklers

Swashbucklers

Let’s start this off with the fact that I’m a great fan of Angry Robot, they always seem to release great books 🙂

Cisco is the only one that remembers Deadman’s Grin, this has not been great for his life and marriage as he also can’t let go.

And in Dark Peaks it’s all starting over again!

This was a great read, really pulled me through from start to finish. Some wonderfully described images still stick in my mind, especially the Christmas Market!

Dan plays with a lot of tropes from old children’s favourites and some newer film-based ones, but puts his own twist on them and serves them up fresh (love the use of old consoles) and without stumbling.

In places quite dark, but also very funny, a bit horror, a bit fantasy, a bit sci-fi but all a great story, looking forward to reading more from Dan.

I was given this on NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.


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Stephen Cox – Author Q&A

Stephen Cox

Stephen Cox

Stephen has his new book, ‘Our Child of Two Worlds’ (9781787471627), coming out at the end of March. This is the follow-up to ‘Our Child of the Stars’ a massively well-received debut novel set in the world of the Vietnam War and Woodstock, and absolutely nothing to do with the Beverly Hillbillies.

What came first the characters or the world?

In Our Child of the Stars, the three main characters and their setup arrived together. It’s small-town USA – the time of Woodstock, the Vietnam War, and the moon landings. Molly is sewing her son’s Halloween costume in a hurry. Why do Molly and Gene need to keep their much-loved Cory a secret? It was quickly a fantastic short story floating on a sea of possibilities and over the months I realised it was a novel. I worked back so we understood Gene and Molly and worked forwards to the challenges they face. Since some big issues for the family couldn’t be resolved in book one, it always felt like two books and Our Child of Two Worlds is out in March 2022. Both books have tender emotion and relationships, gripping drama, and the joy and humour of this unusual family.

How long did it take to write?

I wrote one novel that did not get an agent, and even as I sent it out I knew that Our Child… was better. The original idea was 2013, I got an agent in 2015 – I was plucked from the slushpile by an agent I had never met – and he gave invaluable advice re improving it. Then we got a publisher, and it was the Quercus lead title beginning 2019.

Do you have a writing playlist? If so do you want to share it?

I played the music of the time, and a little from Gene and Molly’s youth. This was great as I expanded my knowledge and dived deep into artists I didn’t know. Joan Baez, (who plays a role in the book), Dylan, the Beatles, the Stones, Creedance Clearwater Revival, Joni Mitchell, the Mamas and the Papas, Motown, the Grateful Dead. Molly likes her music beautiful, a bit mournful, and often with some social dimension…

Our Child of the Stars

Our Child of the Stars

Do you take notice of reviews?

I’ve been really pleased with the reaction to the first book – positive reviews in the Guardian, Grazia, the Mail, and a glowing, sensible review in the Sport! The Los Angeles Times called the first book “…a wonderfully emotional, heart-warming journey of what it really means to be a parent” 

It’s great when a book lands with ordinary readers too. Not everyone liked it, I’ve been in and out of writing groups for many years and individual reactions to books or films will differ. Look at friends who like things you hate and vice versa. I try not to get worked up about those who didn’t like it or misunderstood it – that’s their opinion. It’s more complex when a review occasionally says something which is objectively untrue, or which proudly proclaims they understand your sinister motives for writing the book, when they are talking bunk. But this is a private grumble, the 100% best advice for authors is not to share those frustrations publicly. Go into the shed and scream into a bucket if you have to.

Would you ever consider writing outside your current genre?

I sit lightly to genre. I write books which reflect that life is often hard and unfair, but which also try to offer hope and humour. Most of what I write does fall into the science fiction, fantasy, speculative area – as a way of throwing light on the human condition – but it seeks to be character led and accessible. Our Child… has been loved by speculative fans – it uses classic SF ideas – and by those who don’t usually like those sorts of books. I could move around a bit within that remit. My current project is technically fantasy not science fiction. I suppose an idea might come to me which had no speculative angle, an idea so good I would write it. Hasn’t happened yet.

What did you do before (or still do) you became a writer?

I work in frontline NHS communications so everything slowed down massively in the last two years. Most authors need to work or marry someone wealthy as well as write.

Our Child of Two Worlds

Our Child of Two Worlds

Which author(s) inspire you?

Ursula Le Guin not least for her philosophy of non-violence and extraordinary ability to rethink her work as her understanding grew. Ray Bradbury for real people but supernatural goings on. Neil Gaiman for daring. Mary Renault wrote extraordinary books set in the ancient world as gripping and immersive as the very best fantasy – and with same sex relationships presented as real and honourable. There are so many authors who have opened-up what fiction can be and who it can be about. Bernadine Evaristo, Zen Cho, Jeanette Ng, Nnedi Okorafor.

How much (if any) say do you have in your book covers?

I was “consulted”. The draft covers were so clearly gloriously good designs – and what I thought we might try was basically undoable in the real world – so there wasn’t any friction. It’s important to know that covers don’t exist for the joy of authors but to sell the books… Publishers are not infallible of course and you do see real clashes, particularly where the author feels the cover misrepresents the books’ genre or tone.

Any plans or projects in the near future you can tell us about?

I want to write about England, specifically, and its delusions, and where the main characters are loveable rogues – certainly less pure and honourable than Gene Molly and Cory. It’s in early stages.

Any events in the near future?

There will be various ways to get involved as I launch Our Child of Two Worlds – look on my website www.stephencox.co.uk and twitter @stephenwhq. I will be at Cymera (Scottish SF event) in Edinburgh, and I hope to do a tour – probably online.


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Deep Wheel Orcadia

Harry Josephine Giles. Picador Poetry. (164p) ISBN: 9781529066609
Deep Wheel Orcadia

Deep Wheel Orcadia

This has been one of my most anticipated releases of the year ever since I saw it mentioned in The Bookseller.

A space odyssey science fiction novel written in the Orcadian dialect in the form of an epic poem, if this isn’t enough to sell it to you read on.

Since I’m of a certain age and Scottish my first read of this was in the way it was originally set out, as an epic poem in Orcadian, and? For the most part I could understand what was written and in this form it was really satisfying, only rarely having to pop down to see the english translationinterpretationmeaning of the words used.

I then read the story in the english translationinterpretationsense and loved the way some Orcadian words were set down in this version and did think that this was the only way it could really be done.

Finally I scanned the Orcadian several times to get the rhythm of the words, then read it aloud and honestly this felt the beast way of interacting with the text. you got the strength of certain passages and lines, some words got greater strength from being spoken aloud. It really feels like a story that should be shared at night with friends.

Apart from all that it is a brilliant science fiction story, with good characterisation considering how little text there actually is in the end.

Well worth the chance on something different.


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