← Older posts
Newer posts →

Release Week: Brandon Sanderson's The Rithmatist; Antti Tuomainen's The Healer; Neil Gaiman's Smoke and Mirrors; World War Z; The Strange Adventures of Rangergirl; Fiction River; and John Scalzi's The Human Division

Posted on 2013-05-15 at 17:15 by Sam

May 8-14, 2013: It’s a very, very crowded middle release week in May, with a long list of new audiobooks including new books in translation, a new YA novel from Brandon Sanderson, Neil Gaiman voicing one of his earlier collections, and finally an “unabridged” (scare quotes explained later…) US recording for World War Z. And more. How long is the list? Very long. I grudgingly winnowed things down to six seven picks, but others (a non-fiction Scatter, Adapt, and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction By Annalee Newitz, and Tor-published fiction with “fantastical elements” Mending the Moon By Susan Palwick, in particular) are certainly worth checking out as well, along with a pair of “Book 3” in a series, Raymond Feist’s Magician’s End: Book Three of the Chaoswar Saga and Jenna Black’s Rogue Descendant: Nikki Glass, Book 3.

PICKS OF THE WEEK:

The Rithmatist by Brandon Sanderson, narrated By Michael Kramer for Macmillan Audio, out concurrent with the hardcover/ebook release from Tor Teen. While Sanderson is a multiple-times bestselling adult author (Mistborn, The Way of Kings, and the concluding volumes of Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time), and with his “Alcatraz” series he has written several books for young readers, this is his “debut novel for the young adult audience.” Early reviews have described an interesting magical fighting system in which writing and drawing with chalk is indeed mightier than the sword. Here’s the setup: “More than anything, Joel wants to be a Rithmatist. Chosen by the Master in a mysterious inception ceremony, Rithmatists have the power to infuse life into two-dimensional figures known as Chalklings. Rithmatists are humanity’s only defense against the Wild Chalklings - merciless creatures that leave mangled corpses in their wake. Having nearly overrun the territory of Nebrask, the Wild Chalklings now threaten all of the American Isles.” First of a new series.

The Rithmatist | [Brandon Sanderson] The Healer | [Antti Tuomainen, Lola Rogers (translator)]

The Healer By Antti Tuomainen, translated by Lola Rogers, and narrated By Simon Shepherd for Random House Audio, out concurrent with Henry Holt’s US release of the English translation of this 2010 novel from Finnish author Tuomainen, winner of the Scandinavian Glass Key crime-fiction prize and the Clue Award for Best Finnish Crime Novel. It’s on the shorter side for an adult fiction at under 6 hours, and a physical CD release is set for early June from AudioGO. Here, in his third novel, Tuomainen sets his sights on a post-climate-catastrophe Helsinki: “It’s two days before Christmas, and Helsinki is battling ruthless climate catastrophe: subway tunnels are flooded and abandoned vehicles are burning in the streets. People are fleeing to the far north where conditions are still tolerable. Social order is crumbling and private security firms have undermined the police force. Tapani Lehtinen, a struggling poet, is among the few still willing to live in the city. When Tapani’s wife, Johanna, a journalist, goes missing, he embarks on a frantic hunt for her.”

Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fictions and Illusions by Neil Gaiman, read by Gaiman for Harper Audio, brings one of Gaiman’s earlier collections (1998) to audio. While Gaiman’s 2006 collection Fragile Things contains a long list of awarded and nominated stories (“A Study in Emerald”, “How to Talk to Girls at Parties”), Smoke and Mirrors collects Gaiman’s major short fiction and poetry up to that point in his career, and was itself nominated for the Bram Stoker Award. The publication of American Gods was still two years away, though Gaiman was already well-known for Sandman, Neverwhere, and Good Omens. It’s a picture-window look into Gaiman’s fiction where: “In the deft hands of Neil Gaiman, magic is no mere illusion… and anything is possible. In Smoke and Mirrors, Gaiman’s imagination and supreme artistry transform a mundane world into a place of terrible wonders.”

Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fictions and Illusions | [Neil Gaiman] World War Z: The Complete Edition (Movie Tie-in Edition): An Oral History of the Zombie War | [Max Brooks]

And now it's time to explain the "scare quotes" about getting an "unabridged" World War Z, as the already Guilded Earlobe A+ reviewed World War Z: The Complete Edition (Movie Tie-in Edition): An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks is finally here, narrated by the author along with an all-star cast including Alan Alda, John Turturro, Rob Reiner, Mark Hamill, Alfred Molina, Simon Pegg, Henry Rollins, and Martin Scorsese, and still more including Nathan Fillion, Nicki Clynes, and Kal Penn, for Random House Audio. Another title, World War Z: The Lost Files: A Companion to the Abridged Edition is also out, intended to supplement the previously released abridged edition from 2006, World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War. So, what gives with the scare quotes? Well, this is an unabridged recording -- of the "Movie Tie-in Edition". Which itself first cuts some text from the original 2006 edition. So while we don't yet in the US have an "unabridged original edition", this one's so very, very close.

Nearly lastly, two “indie” picks, starting with The Strange Adventures of Rangergirl By Tim Pratt, narrated By Marguerite E. Croft. Pratt is no stranger to indie releases, having funded multiple books through Kickstarter and previously publishing the Dave Thompson-narrated Briarpatch via ACX. Here, “Rangergirl” is his 2005 debut novel, now available in audio: “Acclaimed short-story author Tim Pratt delivers an exciting heroine with a hidden talent - and a secret duty. Witty and suspenseful, here is a contemporary love song to the West that was won and the myths that shape us. As night manager of Santa Cruz’s quirkiest coffeehouse, Marzi McCarty makes a mean espresso, but her first love is making comics. Her claim to fame: The Strange Adventures of Rangergirl, a cowpunk neo-western yarn. Striding through an urban frontier peopled by Marzi’s wild imagination, Rangergirl doles out her own brand of justice. But lately Marzi’s imagination seems to be altering her reality. She’s seeing the world through Rangergirl’s eyes - literally - complete with her deadly nemesis, the Outlaw.”

The Strange Adventures of Rangergirl | [Tim Pratt]  Unnatural Worlds: Fiction River: An Original Anthology Magazine, Volume 1 | [Richard Bowes, Leah Cutter, David Farland, Esther M. Friesner, Kellen Knolan, Devon Monk, Irette Y. Patterson, Annie Reed, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Dean Wesley Smith]

Speaking of Kickstarter and experienced indie publishers, Unnatural Worlds: Fiction River: An Original Anthology Magazine, Volume 1 includes stories by Richard Bowes, Leah Cutter, David Farland, Esther M. Friesner, Kellen Knolan, Devon Monk, Irette Y. Patterson, Annie Reed, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, and Dean Wesley Smith, and is narrated By Matthew Buchman, Jerimy Colbert, Jane Kennedy, Irette Y. Patterson, Kristine Katherine Rusch, Dean Wesley Smith, Stephanie Writt. I’m not completely sold on the narration of each story, but this is quite an ambitious indie release and one of note. The new original anthology series edited by Rusch and Smith was funded by a Kickstarter project, and plans a new volume every other month, though I’m not sure yet whether future volumes will be produced in audiobook format as well. Here, it’s the first volume: “From a funeral procession in Asia, to an ancestral estate deep in the heart of a vaguely Victorian forest, to a carriage accident in the vast universe of The Runelords, Unnatural Worlds takes listeners on a journey to the far side of the imagination. Funny, heartbreaking, frightening, but most importantly, memorable, the original stories in this anthology go places few writers dare reach. Unnatural Worlds marks the perfect start to the brand-new Fiction River anthology series.”

Lastly, it’s almost hard to wrap my head around it really being the “release week” for The Human Division by John Scalzi, since we hosted the Listen-a-Long for the serialized releases of the weekly back-to-back-to-back-to…back bestselling episodes.

The Human Division | [John Scalzi] The B-Team: The Human Division, Episode 1 | [John Scalzi]

But! Here it is, all in one volume, narrated of course by William Dufris for Audible Frontiers — and there’s also a physical CD audiobook from fellow Amazon.com imprint Brilliance Audio — collecting all the episdoes from The B-Team: The Human Division, Episode 1 to Earth Below, Sky Above: The Human Division, Episode 13. I’m not yet 100% sure whether or not the full audiobook includes, as does the also-now-just-released Tor hardcover/ebook, the short story “After the Coup” (first published and still available at Tor.com) and a new short story “Hafte Sorvalh Eats a Churro and Speaks to the Youth of Today”, which (per the author) will be available standalone at some later point, and is a character piece not necessary to the plot in any case.

ALSO OUT THIS WEEK:

Magician's End: Book Three of the Chaoswar Saga | [Raymond E. Feist] Scatter, Adapt, and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction | [Annalee Newitz]

TANTOR: Rogue Descendant: Nikki Glass, Book 3 By Jenna Black, narrated By Sophie Eastlake; Shadows of Falling Night: Shadowspawn, Book 3 By S. M. Stirling, narrated By Todd McLaren; Kiss of Steel: London Steampunk, Book 1 By Bec McMaster, narrated By Alison Larkin

HARPER AUDIO: Magician’s End: Book Three of the Chaoswar Saga By Raymond E. Feist, narrated By John Meagher

RANDOM HOUSE AUDIO: (Non-Fiction) Scatter, Adapt, and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction By Annalee Newitz, narrated By Kimberly Farr; (Fiction) Inferno: A Novel By Dan Brown, narrated By Paul Michael (Series: Robert Langdon, Book 4)

LISTENING LIBRARY: (Teen) The Beautiful and the Cursed By Page Morgan

CROSSROAD PRESS: The Monarchs By Stephen Mark Rainey, narrated By Chet Williamson; Long Horn, Big Shaggy By Steve Vernon, narrated By Larry Oliver

CARINA PRESS: The Stolen Luck By Shawna Reppert, narrated By Charles Carr

CANDLEWICK on BRILLIANCE AUDIO: The Cydonian Pyramid: The Klaatu Diskos, Book 2 By Pete Hautman, narrated By Peter Berkrot

BRILLIANCE AUDIO: The Book of Seven Hands: A Foreworld SideQuest By Barth Anderson, narrated By Nick Podehl

AUDIBLE INC: Everdead By Rio Youers, narrated By Seth Michael Donsky; Mending the Moon By Susan Palwick, narrated By Emily C. Michaels and Alfred Gingold; along with several short novels and other works of the late Roberto Bolaño

AUDIBLE FRONTIERS: The Warlock’s Curse By M. K. Hobson, narrated By Pat Young; The Redemption of Althalus By David Eddings and Leigh Eddings, narrated By Dennis Holland; Element-X By B. V. Larson; and the usual longlist of additional backlist titles

INDIE: I Punch the General By I. Flowers, narrated By Joshua Mackey; and The Cold Beneath By Tonia Brown

SEEN BUT NOT HEARD:

DG-How-to-Play
  • Zombie Versus Fairy Featuring Albinos (How to End Human Suffering) by James Marshall (ChiZine, May, 2013)
  • Path of Needles by Alison Littlewood (Quercus UK, May 9) — no US release info yet; Littlewood’s previous novel, Cold Season, out early 2012 in the UK, doesn’t arrive in the US until September
  • Dangerous Games: How to Play by Matt Forbeck (May 12, 2013) -- "Dangerous Games: How to Play is the first in a trilogy of thrillers set at Gen Con, the largest tabletop gaming convention in America. In the book, aspiring young game designer Liam Parker leaves the Diana Jones Award party with gaming legend Ken Hite and stumbles across the body of world-famous game designer Allen Varney (who volunteered for the role!). Shocked at the tragedy and hired by Gen Con as its liaison with the Indianapolis police, Liam makes it his mission to figure out who killed Allen and why. His investigations drag him deep into the world of tabletop games and thrust him into the center of a mystery he must solve fast — or become the latest victim in this dangerous game."
  • Never (Lightbringer) by K. D. Mcentire (Pyr, May 14, 2013)
  • The Tyrant’s Law (The Dagger and the Coin) by Daniel Abraham (Orbit, May 14, 2013) -- Update: should eventually be forthcoming from Recorded Books, which has published both The Dragon's Path: Dagger and Coin, Book 1 and The King's Blood: The Dagger and the Coin, Book 2
  • Solip by Ken Baumann (Tyrant Books, May 14, 2013) -- "Every sentence of Solip is a brazen little puzzle of heavy mystery, which when welded together as an object form the most compact and mask-faced take on the encyclopedic novel I can think of. In the ballroom with Sukenick and Lispector, it’s one that continues to unfold, query, conflate, revealing slick black floors where you thought walls were." —Blake Butler
  • Anthology: Nebula Awards Showcase 2013 edited by Catherine Asaro (Pyr, May 14)
  • The Wall by Marlen Haushofer (Cleis Press, May 14, 2013) -- a new edition of this novel originally published in German in 1962; an audio edition is forthcoming on June 1 from Blackstone Audio: "“I can allow myself to write the truth; all the people for whom I have lied throughout my life are dead…” writes the heroine of Marlen Haushofer’s The Wall, a quite ordinary, unnamed middle-aged woman who awakens to find she is the last living human being." -- Update: now available from Blackstone Audio.
  • Fiction: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Knopf, May 14) -- "From the award-winning author of Half of a Yellow Sun, a dazzling new novel: a story of love and race centered around a young man and woman from Nigeria who face difficult choices and challenges in the countries they come to call home."
COMING SOON:

The Shambling Guide to New York City | [Mur Lafferty] Bullettime | [Nick Mamatas]

  • TEST OF FIRE  by Ben Bova, read by Dean Sluyter for Blackstone Audio -- Available 15 May 13
  • Wraiths of the Broken Land by S. Craig Zahler (Raw Dog Screaming Press, May 15 2013) — “A brutal and unflinching tale that takes many of its cues from both cinema and pulp horror, Wraiths of the Broken Land is like no Western you’ve ever seen or read. Desperate to reclaim two kidnapped sisters who were forced into prostitution, the Plugfords storm across the badlands and blast their way through Hell. This gritty, character-driven piece will have you by the throat from the very first page and drag you across sharp rocks for its unrelenting duration. Prepare yourself for a savage Western experience that combines elements of Horror, Noir and Asian ultra-violence.”
  • Jane (The Warriors of Love) by P. F. Jeffery (May 15, 2013) -- new edition from Chomu Press; the title was previously (2010) self-published on Lulu
  • The Stranger's Shadow: The Labyrinths of Echo: Book Four by Frei, Max (Overlook Hardcover, May 15, 2013)
  • Collection: Conservation of Shadows by Yoon Ha Lee (Prime Books, May 21, 2013)
  • Teen: THE PLANET THIEVES by Dan Krokos (Blackstone Audio, 21 May)
  • The Garden of Stones (Echoes of Empire) by Mark Barnes (47North and Brilliance Audio, May 21, 2013)
  • Vaporware by Richard Dansky (JournalStone, May 24) — “Video game projects get shut down all the time, but when the one Ryan Colter and his team have poured their hearts into gets cut, something different happens: the game refuses to go away. Now Blue Lightning is alive, and it wants something from Ryan – something only he can give it.”
  • The Shambling Guide to New York City by Mur Lafferty (Orbit, May 28) — coming to Hachette Audio read by Lafferty and currently being podcast — check out The AudioBookaneers Listen-a-Long!
  • RED HORSE by Alex Adams (Blackstone Audio, 28 May) — sequel to White Horse
  • The Eighth Court by Mike Shevdon (Angry Robot: 28 May)
  • The Blue Blazes by Chuck Wendig (Angry Robot: 28 May)
  • Antiagon Fire (Imager Portfolio) by L. E. Modesitt (Tor, May 28, 2013) — coming to audio from Tantor Audio, read by William Dufris
  • Anthology: Fearsome Journeys: The New Solaris Book of Fantasy edited by Jonathan Strahan (Solaris, May 28) — includes new stories from Saladin Ahmed, Kate Elliot, Elizabeth Bear, Scott Lynch, Ellen Kushner, Jeffrey Ford, KJ Parker, and more
  • After Earth By Peter David, Narrated By To Be Announced for Random House Audio — Length: 10 hrs — Scheduled Release Date: 05-28-13 — novelization of the forthcoming Will Smith film
  • Bullettime By Nick Mamatas, Narrated By Brandon Massey for Audible Inc. -- Scheduled Release Date: 05-29-13
  • Fiction: WE ARE ALL COMPLETELY BESIDE OURSELVES by Karen Joy Fowler (Blackstone Audio, 31 May)
  • Unfettered edited by Shawn Speakman (Grim Oak Press, May 2013) –a charity anthology with stories from Terry Brooks, Patrick Rothfuss, Tad Williams, Brandon Sanderson, R.A. Salvatore, Naomi Novik, Peter V. Brett, Lev Grossman, Daniel Abraham, Michael J. Sullivan, David Anthony Durham, Robert V.S. Redick, Kevin Hearne, Mark Lawrence, …
  • Anthology: The Grimscribe's Puppets edited by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. (Miskatonic River Press, May 2013) -- "all new tales that pay homage to Ligotti and celebrate his eerie and essential nightmares" with stories from Michael Cisco, Nicole Cushing, Jeffrey Thomas, Gemma Files, John Langan, and more
JUNE and LATER:

The Shining Girls North American Lake Monsters: Stories

  • THE WALL (1962) by Marlen Haushofer, read by Kathe Mazur (Blackstone Audio, June 1) -- “I can allow myself to write the truth; all the people for whom I have lied throughout my life are dead…” writes the heroine of Marlen Haushofer’s The Wall, a quite ordinary, unnamed middle-aged woman who awakens to find she is the last living human being.
  • Heart of Iron: London Steampunk, Book 2 By Bec McMaster, narrated By Alison Larkin for Tantor Audio -- Scheduled Release Date: 06-03-13
  • The Shining Girls by (Mulholland Books and Hachette Audio, 6/04/2013) — “A time-traveling serial killer is impossible to trace–until one of his victims survives. In Depression-era Chicago, Harper Curtis finds a key to a house that opens on to other times. But it comes at a cost. He has to kill the shining girls: bright young women, burning with potential.”
  • The Beautiful Land by Alan Averill (Ace, Jun 4, 2013) — “An exciting debut novel, in the tradition of The Passage. The Beautiful Land is part science fiction, part horror–and, at its core, a love story, between a brilliant young computer genius and the fragile women he has loved since high school. Now, he must bend time and space to save her life, as the world around them descends into apocalyptic madness.”
  • Abaddon’s Gate (The Expanse) by James S.A. Corey (Orbit, Jun 4, 2013)
  • In Thunder Forged: Iron Kingdoms Chronicles (The Fall of Llael Book One) by Ari Marmell (Jun 4, 2013)
  • Gameboard of the Gods (Age of X) by Richelle Mead (Penguin Audio, Jun 4, 2013)
  • Fiction: The Blood of Heaven by Kent Wascom (Grove Atlantic, Jun 4, 2013) — “an epic novel about the American frontier in the early days of the nineteenth century”
  • Siege and Storm (Grisha Trilogy (Shadow and Bone)) by Leigh Bardugo (Henry Holt, Jun 4, 2013)
  • The Firebird By Susanna Kearsley, Narrated By Lucy Rayner for Brilliance Audio — Scheduled Release Date: 06-04-13
  • After the End: Recent Apocalypses by Paolo Bacigalupi, Cory Doctorow, Margo Lanagan and Nnedi Okorafor (Jun 5, 2013)
  • Love Minus Eighty by Will McIntosh (Orbit, June 11) — “In the future, love is complicated and death is not necessarily the end. Love Minus Eighty follows several interconnected people in a disquieting vision of romantic life in the century to come.”
  • Shattered Pillars (The Eternal Sky, Book 2) by Elizabeth Bear (Recorded Books, 14 June 2013) — Out in ebook and hardcover earlier this year from Tor: “A winner of multiple Hugo Awards and a Locus Award, Elizabeth Bear crafts mesmerizing tales of science fiction and fantasy. The second novel in her Eternal Sky trilogy, Shattered Pillars continues the epic saga of politics, war, and magic that began with Range of Ghosts. Temur the exiled heir and Sarmarkar the Tsarepheth wizard must gather all their strength to fight the dark forces determined to conquer every great empire along the Celedon Road.”
  • THE WINDS OF ALTAIR by Ben Bova, read by Stefan Rudnicki for Blackstone Audio (Available 15 June 13)
  • ATTICA by Garry Kilworth, read by Simon Vance for Blackstone Audio (Available 15 June 13)
  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane: A Novel by Neil Gaiman (William Morrow and Harper Audio, Jun 18, 2013)
  • Lexicon by Max Barry, read by Heather Corrigan and Zach Appelman for Dreamscape Media (concurrent with hardcover/ebook release from Penguin, June 18) — “An up-all-night thriller for freaks and geeks who want to see their wizards all grown up in the real world and armed to the teeth in a bloody story.” – Kirkus Reviews; as well as blurbs from both Lev (“About as close you can get to the perfect cerebral thriller: searingly smart, ridiculously funny, and fast as hell. Lexicon reads like Elmore Leonard high out of his mind on Snow Crash.”) and Austin Grossman (“I don’t know how you could craft a better weekend read than this novel of international intrigue and weaponized Chomskian linguistics. It’s the perfect mix of philosophical play and shotgun-inflected chase scenes. Like someone let Grant Morrison loose on the Bourne identity franchise.”)
  • Sea Change by S.M. Wheeler (Tor, Jun 18) — “Wheeler’s stunning debut is a sophisticated fantasy whose lush descriptions, lurical dialogue, and engaging structure are reminiscent of the very best fairy tales… This profoundly beautifuly evolution of fairy tale elements will have readers eagerly awaiting Wheeler’s next book.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review
  • Requiem by Ken Scholes (Tor, Jun 18) — “the latest in The Psalms of Isaak series”
  • Before the Fall by Francis Knight (Orbit, Jun 18) — book two in a trilogy to be published in its entirety in 2013, starting with (already out) Fade to Black
  • The Long War by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter (Harper, Jun 18, 2013) — sequel to The Long Earth
  • Wisp of a Thing by Alex Bledsoe (Tor, Jun 18) — coming to audio read by Stefan Rudnicki, this is book 2 after 2011′s The Hum and the Shiver
  • The Shuddering by Ania Ahlborn (47North and Brilliance Audio, Jun 18, 2013)
  • The Quarry by Iain M. Banks (Little, Brown and Co., June 20, 2013)
  • The Adjacent by Christopher Priest (Orion UK, Jun 20, 2013) — no US release news
  • Divinity and the Python by Bonnie Randall (Panverse, June 21)
  • Cold Steel (The Spiritwalker Trilogy) by Kate Elliott (Orbit, Jun 25, 2013)
  • Blade Reforged (A Fallen Blade Novel) by Kelly McCullough (Ace, Jun 25, 2013)
  • The Goliath Stone by Larry Niven and Matthew Joseph Harrington (Tor Books, Jun 25) — “Twenty-five years ago, the Briareus mission took nanomachinery out to divert an Earth-crossing asteroid and bring it back to be mined, only to drop out of contact as soon as it reached its target. The project was shut down and the technology was forcibly suppressed. Now, a much, much larger asteroid is on a collision course with Earth—and the Briareus nanites may be responsible.”
  • The World of the End by Ofir Touché Gafla (Tor, Jun 25) — “As an epilogist, Ben Mendelssohn appreciates an unexpected ending. But when that denouement is the untimely demise of his beloved wife, Ben is incapable of coping. Marian was more than his life partner; she was the fiber that held together all that he is. And Ben is willing to do anything, even enter the unknown beyond, if it means a chance to be with her again. One bullet to the brain later, Ben is in the Other World, where he discovers a vast and curiously secular existence utterly unlike anything he could have imagined: a realm of sprawling cities where the deceased of every age live an eternal second life, and where forests of family trees are tended by mysterious humans who never lived in the previous world. But Ben cannot find Marian. Desperate for a reunion, he enlists an unconventional afterlife investigator to track her down, little knowing that his search is entangled in events that continue to unfold in the world of the living. It is a search that confronts Ben with one heart-rending shock after another; with the best and worst of human nature; with the resilience and fragility of love; and with truths that will haunt him through eternity.”
  • Anthology: Aliens: Recent Encounters by Alex Macfarlane (Prime, Jun 25, 2013)
  • THE INTEGRAL TREES by Larry Niven, read by Tom Weiner for Blackstone Audio (Available 1 July 13)
  • Channel Zilch by Doug Sharp (Panverse, July 2013) — “Mick Oolfson trashed his astronaut career by stunt-flying a shuttle during re-entry. He’s miserable as a groundling, so when testosterone-surfing geek goddess Heloise Chin offers him an astronaut gig on Channel Zilch, a pirate orbiting reality show, Mick jumps at the chance to return to space, though it means denting his Boy Scout scruples by stealing space shuttle Enterprise from the Smithsonian. CHANNEL ZILCH is a near-future hard science fiction caper with heart and purpose, the first book of The Geek Rapture Project. Book 2, HEL’S BET, will be published by Panverse later in 2013.”
  • Thieves’ Quarry by D.B. Jackson (Tor, July 2) — sequel to Thieftaker
  • Neptune’s Brood by Charles Stross (Ace, Jul 2, 2013) — “The year is AD 7000. The human species is extinct—for the fourth time—due to its fragile nature. Krina Alizond-114 is metahuman, descended from the robots that once served humanity. She’s on a journey to the water-world of Shin-Tethys to find her sister Ana. But her trip is interrupted when pirates capture her ship. Their leader, the enigmatic Count Rudi, suspects that there’s more to Krina’s search than meets the eye.”
  • A Discourse in Steel by Paul S. Kemp (Angry Robot: 2 Jul 2013)
  • Woken Gods by Gwenda Bond (Jul 2, 2013)
  • The Thousand Names: Book One of The Shadow Campaigns by Django Wexler (Roc Hardcover, Jul 2, 2013) — “Enter an epic fantasy world that echoes with the thunder of muskets and the clang of steel—but where the real battle is against a subtle and sinister magic.”
  • Playing Tyler by T L Costa (Strange Chemistry, Jul 2, 2013)
  • Anthology: Wastelands II: More Stories of the Apocalypse by John Joseph Adams (Night Shade Books, Jul 2, 2013)
  • The Curiosity: A Novel by Stephen Kiernan (William Morrow, Jul 9, 2013)
  • North American Lake Monsters: Stories by Nathan Ballingrud (Small Beer Press, July 16)
  • Beacons edited by Gregory Norminton (Oneworld Publications, Jul 16, 2013) — “Beacons throws down the gauntlet, challenging best-selling and award-winning authors to imagine where we, and out planet, might be headed and, in imagining, help us transform the way we look at our world and change things for the better. From Joanne Harris’ powerful vision of a near future where ‘outside’ has become a thing of history to Nick Hayes’ beautifully illustrated tale of the bond between man and nature, Beacons sees the coming together of dystopian satire, speculative and historical fiction, metaphorical flights of fancy, quiet tragedy, and farcical comedy in stories that are as various as our possible futures. Provocative, encouraging, and deeply moving, Beacons represents the best of short story writing — and collectively illuminates the immediacy of the ecological problems at hand. All author royalties will go to the Stop Climate Chaos Coalition, one of the largest groups of people dedicated to action on climate change and limiting its impact on the world’s poorest people.”
  • This Is How You Die: Stories of the Inscrutable, Infallible, Inescapable Machine of Death by Matthew Bennardo, David Malki ! and Ryan North (Grand Central, Jul 16, 2013)
  • Anthology: Carniepunk (Pocket Books, July 30)
  • Three (Duskwalker Cycle #1) by Jay Posey (Angry Robot, July 31, 2013) — cover reveal and excerpt up at io9
  • Anthology: Impossible Monsters edited by Kasey Lansdale (Subterranean Press, July 2013) — “The Lansdale name is legendary in the horror field. Now acclaimed musician and actress Kasey Lansdale follows in her father’s footsteps, making her editing debut with this anthology of monstrously innovative stories. The twelve creatures that stalk the pages of Impossible Monsters spring from the twisted imaginations of a dozen of today’s most noted authors.” This anthology includes Neil Gaiman’s “Click-Clack the Rattlebag” among other tales.
  • Hollow World by Michael J. Sullivan (Kickstarter, July 2013) — “Ellis Rogers is an ordinary guy who has always done the right things and played by the rules. But like many, his life didn’t turn out as he had planned. Facing a terminal disease, he’s willing to gamble that a cure could exist in the future, and although it is insanely dangerous to try, he really has nothing to lose. There are many books that explore what life might be like many years from now, and they cover the spectrum from the idealized world of the original Star Trek, with its progressive stance on equality and civil rights, to Huxley’s dystopian Brave New World. For years I’ve been fascinated by the observation that perception can make people see the same thing in very different ways. So I created a future, which if I’ve done my job properly, will be seen by some as a utopia and by others as exactly the opposite.”
  • Darwen Arkwright and the School of Shadows (Darwen Arkwright #3) by AJ Hartley (Razorbill, August 1)
  • The Crown Tower (The Riyria Chronicles #1) by Michael J. Sullivan (Orbit, August 3)
  • The Emergence of the Digital Humanities by Steven E. Jones (Routledge, Aug 3, 2013)
  • Wrath-bearing Tree (A Tournament of Shadows Book Two) by James Enge (Pyr, Aug 6, 2013)
  • Emperor of Thorns (The Broken Empire) by Mark Lawrence (Ace, Aug 6, 2013)
  • The Companions: The Sundering, Book I by R. A. Salvatore (Aug 6, 2013)
  • Kindred and Wings (A Shifted World Novel) by Philippa Ballantine (Pyr, Aug 6, 2013)
  • The Third Kingdom by Terry Goodkind (Tor, Aug 6) — direct sequel to The Omen Machine
  • Blood of Tyrants by Naomi Novik (Del Rey, Aug 13, 2013)
  • The People in the Trees by Hanya Yanagihara (Doubleday, Dreamscape Media, August 13) — “In 1950, a young doctor, Norton Perina, signs on with the anthropologist Paul Tallent for an expedition to the remote island of Ivu’ivu in search of a rumored lost tribe. They succeed, finding not only that tribe but also a group of forest dwellers they dub “The Dreamers,” who turn out to be fantastically long-lived but progressively more senile. Perina suspects the source of their longevity is a hard-to-find turtle; unable to resist the possibility of eternal life, he kills one and smuggles some meat back to the States. He proves his thesis, earning worldwide fame, but he soon discovers that its miraculous property comes at a terrible price. As things quickly spiral out of his control, his own demons take hold, with devastating consequences.”
  • Collection: Celestial Inventories by Steve Rasnic Tem (ChiZine, Aug 15)
  • Fiction: Lookaway, Lookaway: A Novel By Wilton Barnhardt, Narrated By Scott Shepherd for Macmillan Audio (concurrent with print/ebook release from St. Martin’s) — Scheduled Release Date: 08-20-13
  • The Time of Contempt (The Witcher) by Andrzej Sapkowski (Orbit, Aug 27, 2013)
  • Billy Moon: A transcendent Novel Reimagining the Life of Christopher Robin Milne by Douglas Lain (Tor, Aug 27, 2013)
  • The Swords of Good Men by Snorri Kristjansson (Jo Fletcher Books, August 2013) — a “Viking fantasy novel” by a new Icelandic author
  • Super Stories of Heroes and Villains edited by Claude Lalumiere (Tachyon, August 2013) — Christopher Golden and Mike Mignola, Jonathan Lethem, Cory Doctorow, Kelly Link’s “Origin Story”, Carol Emshwiller, Gene Wolfe, GRRM, …
  • The Daylight War: The Demon Cycle, Book 3 by Peter V. Brett (GraphicAudio, August 2013)
SEPTEMBER and LATER:
  • Anthology: Glitter and Mayhem edited by John Klima, Lynne M. Thomas, and Michael Damian Thomas (Apex Books, Sep 1) -- "Welcome to Glitter & Mayhem, the most glamorous party in the multiverse. Step behind the velvet rope of these fabulous Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror tales of roller rinks, nightclubs, glam aliens, party monsters, drugs, sex, glitter, and debauchery."
  • Shaman: A novel of the Ice Age by Kim Stanley Robinson (Orbit, 3 Sep 2013) — UK release date, US date not confirmed for this historical fiction “novel set in the ice age, about the people who made the paintings in the Chauvet-Pont-d’Arc Cave in southern France, about 32,000 years ago”
  • Constellations: A Play by Nick Payne (Faber and Faber Plays, Sep 3, 2013) — already available in Kindle and in the UK — via an interesting review on Tor.com
  • Monsters of the Earth (Books of the Elements #3) by David Drake (Tor, September 2013)
  • The Thicket by Joe R. Lansdale (Mulholland Books, September 10) — ‘In the throes of being civilized, East Texas is still a wild, feral place. Oil wells spurt liquid money from the ground. But as Jack’s about to find out, blood and redemption rule supreme. In The Thicket, award-winning novelist Joe R. Lansdale lets loose like never before, in a rip-roaring adventure equal parts True Gritand Stand by Me–the perfect introduction to an acclaimed writer whose work has been called “as funny and frightening as anything that could have been dreamed up by the Brothers Grimm–or Mark Twain” (New York Times Book Review).’
  • Anthology: Once Upon a Time: New Fairy Tales edited by Paula Guran (Prime Books, September 11)
  • Fiddlehead by Cherie Priest (Tor, Autumn 2013)
  • American Elsewhere by Robert Jackson Bennett (Recorded Books, Sep 13) — published earlier this year in print/ebook, and perhaps to show up in digital audio a bit earlier (Sep 1)
  • The Rose and the Thorn by Michael J. Sullivan (Orbit, Sep 17) — Riyria Chronicles #2
  • The Falconer by Elizabeth May (Gollanz UK, Sep 19) — I don’t see a US release until 2014 for this much-balyhooed debut fantasy
  • Doctor Sleep by Stephen King (Scribner and Simon & Schuster Audio, September 24) — King returns to The Shining
  • Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, Sep 24, 2013)
  • The Incrementalists by Steven Brust and Skyler White (Tor, Sep 24)
  • Dead Run, The by Adam Mansbach (HarperCollins, Sep 24, 2013)
  • Love is the Law by Nick Mamatas (Dark Horse, September 24, 2013)
  • Hero by Alethea Kontis (Harcourt Children’s Books, October 1)
  • Pandemic by Scott Sigler (Crown, Oct 1, 2013)
  • Ghosts Know by Ramsey Campbell (Tor, Oct 1)
  • The Republic of Thieves (Gentleman Bastard, #3) by Scott Lynch (Spectra, October 8)
  • A Dance of Cloaks by David Dalglish (Orbit, Oct 8) — originally self-published, now being re-published by Orbit
  • Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction by Jeff VanderMeer and Jeremy Zerfoss (Abrams Image, Oct 15, 2013) — an audiobook for this doesn’t make sense and so there isn’t one and won’t be one, but definitely a project I’m looking forward to
  • Copperhead by Tina Connolly (Tor, October 15, 2013) — follow-on to Ironskin cover revealed
  • Fiendish Schemes by K. W. Jeter (Tor, October 15) — “The long-awaited stand-alone sequel to the seminal novel Infernal Devices by one of the founding fathers of steampunk”
  • The Abominable: A Novel by Dan Simmons (Little, Brown and Company, Oct 22, 2013)
  • Two Serpents Rise by Max Gladstone (Tor Books, October 29) — book one is in audio from Blackstone
  • The n-Body Problem by Tony Burgess (ChiZine, October 2013) — “Tony Burgess returns to the realm of the zombie”
  • The Violent Century by Lavie Tidhar (Hodder UK, October 2013) — just announced — “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy meets Watchmen in Tidhar’s The Violent Century, the thoughtful and intensely atmospheric novel about the mystery, and the love story, that determined the course of history itself. The Violent Century is the sweeping drama of a time we know too well; a century of fear and war and hatred and death.  In a world where everyday heroes may become übermenschen, men and women with extraordinary powers, what does it mean to be a hero? To be a human? Would the last hundred years have been that much better if Superman were real? Would they even have been all that different?”
  • Collection: Kabu Kabu by Nnedi Okorafor (Prime, October 2013)
  • Parasite by Mira Grant (Orbit, November 1) — I know nothing about his other than the quite interesting cover…
  • Twenty-First Century Science Fiction by David G. Hartwell and Patrick Nielsen Hayden (Tor, Nov 5, 2013)
  • Fortune’s Pawn by Rachel Bach (Orbit, Nov 5)
  • Words of Radiance by Brandon Sanderson (Tor, November 12) — book 2 in The Stormlight Archive after The Way of Kings
  • Apparition by Trish J. MacGregor (Tor, Nov 12)
  • Watcher of the Dark by Joseph Nassise (Tor, November 19)
  • Bloodstone by Gillian Philip (Tor, Nov 19)
  • Arcanum by Simon Morden (Orbit, Nov 19) — “A historical fantasy novel of medieval Europe in which the magic that has run the world for centuries is disappearing– and now the gifts of the gods must be replaced with the ingenuity of humanity.”
  • The Land Across by Gene Wolfe (Tor, Nov 26)
  • Last to Rise by Francis Knight (Orbit, Nov 26) — concluding volume in a new trilogy which started with Knight’s debut Fade to Black in early 2013
  • Collection: Bleeding Shadows by Joe R. Lansdale (Subterranean, November 2013)
  • Anthology: Dangerous Women edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois (Tor, Dec 3) — table of contents includes Joe Abercrombie, Lev Grossman, and Pat Cadigan, among others
  • Maze by J.M. McDermott (Apex, January 2014)
  • Leaving the Sea: Stories by Ben Marcus (Knopf, January 2014)
  • The Crimson Campaign (The Powder Mage Trilogy, Book 2) by Brian McClellan (Orbit, February 2014)
  • The Magician’s Land by Lev Grossman (Viking, Early 2014) — book three after The Magicians and The Magician King
  • Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer (Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 2014) — the first of three “Southern Reach” novels being published in 2014 — “For thirty years, Area X has remained mysterious, remote, and concealed by the government as an environmental disaster zone even though it is to all appearances pristine wilderness. For thirty years, too, the secret agency known as the Southern Reach has monitored Area X and sent in expeditions to try to discover the truth. Some expeditions have suffered terrible consequences. Others have reported nothing out of the ordinary. Now, as Area X seems to be changing and perhaps expanding, the next expedition will attempt to succeed where all others have failed. What is happening in Area X? What is the true nature of the invisible border that surrounds it?”
  • City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett (Crown/Broadway and Recorded Books, April 1, 2014) — “a second-world story of spies, subterfuge, and statesmanship set in a nation of dead gods.”
  • Lagoon by Nnedi Okorafor (Hodder & Stoughton, April 2014) — “The Nigerian megacity of Lagos is invaded by aliens, and it nearly consumes itself because of it.”
  • The Moon King by Neil Williamson (Newcon, April 2014) — Debut novel: “The story of The Moon King grew out of its setting, the sea-locked city of Glassholm, which is a thinly veneered version of Glasgow, Scotland where I live. Glasgow is a city of mood swings, brilliant with sun and warm sandstone one minute and dour with overcast and rain soaked tarmac the next. Summer days are long and filled with light. The winter months pass mostly in darkness. Living here, your spirit is tied to the city’s mood. As soon as I hooked that almost bipolar sense to the idea of natural cycles, the story blossomed. In Glassholm, the moon never sets and everything, from entropy to the moods of the populace, is affected by its phasing from Full to Dark and back to Full again. I wanted to know what would life be like there, what quirks nature might throw into the mix. And what would happen if it was discovered that the cyclic euphorias and depressions were not natural after all.”
  • Immolation (Children, #1) by Ben Peek (Tor UK, Spring 2014) is “set fifteen thousand years after the War of the Gods. The bodies of the gods now lie across the world, slowly dying as men and women awake with strange powers that are derived from their bodies. Ayae, a young cartographer’s apprentice, is attacked and discovers she cannot be harmed by fire. Her new power makes her a target for an army that is marching on her home. With the help of the immortal Zaifyr, she is taught the awful history of ‘cursed’ men and women, coming to grips with her new powers and the enemies they make. The saboteur Bueralan infiltrates the army that is approaching her home to learn its terrible secret. Split between the three points of view, Immolation‘s narrative reaches its conclusion during an epic siege, where Ayae, Zaifyr and Bueralan are forced not just into conflict with those invading, but with those inside the city who wish to do them harm.”
Fiction: Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Knopf, May 14) -- "From the award-winning author of Half of a Yellow Sun, a dazzling new novel: a story of love and race centered around a young man and woman from Nigeria who face difficult choices and challenges in the countries they come to call home."
Posted in Release Week | Tagged brandon sanderson, john scalzi, neil gaiman, world war z

Review: The King's Blood

Posted on 2013-05-14 at 19:46 by Dave

The King's Blood

The King’s Blood, Book 2 in The Dagger and the Coin by Daniel Abraham, Narrated by Pete Bradbury Length 15 hours, 42 minutes

The priests have spiders in their blood.

They worship a goddess that has spend centuries in hiding, “a spider” who blesses them with the power to divine whether or not someone is lying, as well as the ability to speak truth. When you hear them, you believe - despite the circumstances, or whether you have evidence to the contrary, you believe. And so what the priests say comes to pass. They are prophets, and they’re creating self-fulfilling prophecies. Probably.

”Probably” is what’s important. Because what the priests are speaking isn’t actually the truth. It’s a belief made of sincerity, certainty, and absolute conviction. Even if it’s wrong.

If you haven’t checked out Daniel Abraham’s The Dagger and the Coin series, you need to do that ASAP, starting with The Dragon’s Path. It’s epic fantasy, and it does what it says on the tin - it’s full of all the stuff we love about epic fantasy - an incredible cast of characters, magic (albeit a very subtle magic), fantastical creatures, adventure, romance, and most surprisingly - banking. And yet, it grapples with big ideas like forced belief and fundamentalism.

If you’re looking for B&B (Battles & Badasses), there’s some of that but the books are generally more subtle, and instead focus on what’s really special about this series: the characters. Whether it’s ex-soldiers Marcus and Yardem waxing philosophical and theological while collecting a debt (like shades of Jules and Vincent from Pulp Fiction) or banking ingenue Cithrin meeting up with her old friends from an acting troupe, the characters feel like friends you haven’t seen in years, but when you reunite with them, it’s like no times gone by.

Not all of them are heroic - some are monstrous, whether in actions or philosophy, but Abraham doesn’t let us forget they’re humans too, and gets us to empathize with them far easier than we should. Dawson Kalliam’s class-warfare attitudes are despicable, yet the genuine affection he showers on his wife and children is endearing. Geder Palliako was bullied before his unpredictable rise to power, and so when he uses his newly gained positions to keep people from lying ot his face and taking advantage of him, we understand, despite his awful and barbaric actions.

The Dagger and the Coin is one of the best kept secrets in epic fantasy. Unfortunately, the audiobooks aren’t released until about 9 months or so after the print and eBooks come out (which seems to happen as often as not for Recorded Books)…or maybe that’s a good thing? Like The Dragon’s Path, I ended up reading this book, and then listening to it once the audio came out, right in time for The Tyrant’s Law (3 of this 5 book series). There are two reasons for this: 1) Daniel Abraham’s series is just that good (I expect to revisit these books and characters many, many more times, and 2) Pete Bradbury’s narration gives an added gravity to the story that’s phenomenal. Daniel Abraham was born to write SF/F, and Pete Bradbury was born to narrate it.

Let the countdown to The Tyrant’s Law audiobook commence!

Posted in reviews

Featured author and narrator: Mary Robinette Kowal

Posted on 2013-05-14 at 17:36 by Sam

AudioBookaneers Features Presents: Mary Robinette Kowal, author, narrator, and puppeteer

kowal-shadow-puppets

By Samuel Montgomery-Blinn

Hugo Award winning author Mary Robinette Kowal visited Raleigh’s Quail Ridge Books on Friday, on her book tour for Without a Summer, the third book in her The Glamourist Histories series which began with 2010’s Shades of Milk and Honey. Billed as, more or less, “the fantasy novel which Jane Austen might have written” the series is a Regency period historical fiction with plenty of manners, costume changes, polite conversations, sisters competing for the affections of suitors, and — this is also fantasy, after all — the “womanly art” of Glamour, which in its high society form is a sort of drawing room magic of delightful illusions and fancy.

All three novels in the series are also narrated by Kowal, an experienced voice actor with credits on Seanan McGuire’s October Daye series and Sherryl Woods’ Sweet Magolia series prior to voicing her own novels. Since, she has also narrated Rosa Montero’s Tears in Rain, Neve Maslakovic’s The Far Time Incident, and Oksana Zabuzhko’s The Museum of Abandoned Secrets, among other projects.

Shades of Milk and Honey was produced by Macmillan Audio, and both book 2, 2012’s Glamour in Glass, and the new book are out from Audible Frontiers. All three are in hardcover, paperback, and ebook from Tor Books.


Kowal began the program with a short presentation of an historical shadow puppet play, 1784’s “The Broken Bridge”. A trained puppeteer with work on the children’s TV series LazyTown as well as many stage play productions and performances, Kowal’s delightful shadow puppet antics and “Tra-la-la”s brought plenty of smiles; more followed as Kowal explained the construction of her curtain and puppets, out of white shower curtain and Trader Joe’s boxes, respectively.

Attendees were treated to a reading that was wonderful in at least two respects. The first being that after polling the audience for their wishes, she read from the first chapter of the forthcoming 4th book in the series, 2014’s Valor and Vanity, which takes place after Napoleon’s defeat to Duke Wellington, and is set near Venice as Jane and Vincent sail for Murano and a meeting with Lord Byron. The second is that, as both an experienced voice actor and narrator and of course as the narrator of her own books, is that it was pretty much a “live audiobook” experience, complete with a wide range of familiar character voices both gruff and matronly which, again, brought plenty of smiles and a few laughs as well.

Jane and Vincent only begin to experiment a bit with creating magical folds at sea — creating and maintaining folds in the ether even while walking is an enormous undertaking — before… well, there has to be some benefit for actually attending the reading, so I’ll leave it at that. Kowal concluded the reading with some additional details about Lord Byron — who has some time which is “unaccounted” for in the historical record — and another historical figure, Doctor John William Polidori, a friend of Byron’s and the author of The Vampyre, a “progenitor of the romantic vampire genre of fantasy fiction” (Wikipedia). And one last thing — Doctor Polidori is “a” Doctor, and, apparently known to most of the people in the room and many of my friends who have read Kowal’s books who were not in the room, Kowal has inserted a Doctor Who reference into each of the novels so far. Kowal read one more short excerpt from further into the novel, featuring a character wearing a fez. Which, apparently, was a Doctor Who reference, though as someone who doesn’t watch the show, fairly well lost on me.

In the Q&A session after the reading, I asked Kowal about The Transfigured Lady, a novel she posted chapter by chapter in draft form on a password-protected blog, in order to get reader feedback from the very beginning. Now that novel is Passing Fair, set in early 20th century Nashville, Tennessee, and while it does not (yet!) have a publisher, it’s still very much a live project, complete with 99 pins of research on Pinterest.

Another question from the audience concerned the Science of Glamour, which Kowal explained as “manipulation of waveforms”. In the deep past of her world, humans and fae did not go apart but rather interbred, and so everyone can do magic, some to lesser or greater extents. Further, the farther outside the visible spectrum the harder it is, the more energy is required, the harder the toll on the glamourist. This was expanded upon in an answer to a later question, about analogues between the historical Luddite uprising and the Coldmongers of Kowal’s new novel, Without a Summer. Kowal explained that coldmongery — the transfer of heat energy — was among the most physically demanding, debilitating, and dangerous.

Another question led to some details on two of Kowal’s methods for preventing anachronisms in word and language use. The first is by using a special thesaurus which lists synonyms in order of their year of appearance in English. The second is by using a “Jane Austen Spellcheck Dictionary” which includes the text of all of Austen’s works. But! Even this is not quite enough, because some words, though both in historic use and even in use by Austen, such as “electric” would “feel” too much like anachronisms to be used. And just the words are not enough, either, as Kowal illustrated with the idiom “to have a measured reaction”. This, she explained, was not the way these words were used, due to a different relationship between language and “self” in this time period, requiring the author to “unpack” the meaning into other phrasing.


After the reading, and a costume change of her own out of her Regency dress and a drive over to the recently-opened Raleigh Brewing Company, I got to talk to Kowal about her other recent work. This led me to find out that somehow I’d been living under a rock, because as much as I’d enjoyed METAtropolis and METAtropolis: Cascadia I somehow did not know that a third, again audiobook-first all-original novella anthology was coming, edited by Jay Lake and Ken Scholes, and including stories from (among others) Kowal, Karl Schroeder, and Elizabeth Bear. Kowal said that her story is in a new storyline, not a follow-on to “Water to Wine”, and, after correcting my faulty memory as to which TV cast narrated which previous anthology (Battlestar Galactica narrated METAtropolis and Star Trek: The Next Generation narrated METAtropolis: Cascadia, for the record) named Firefly as perhaps a dream cast to narrate the new anthology, METAtropolis: Green Space.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged mary robinette kowal

Review: Double Feature

Posted on 2013-05-13 at 19:50 by Dave

Double Feature by Owen King, read by Holter Graham Length: 16 hours, 11 minutes

Review by Dave Thompson:

When I was in college, I made a student film. I went to a Christian university, and so I decided to write and direct a movie about vampires. This was just as Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV show came out, before it became "a thing." So, I spent a semester of my life and education attempting to make a horror movie - one that to this day has never actually been edited together and completed. One of the tapes was lost (probably the one with some of the best footage on it - where we tromped through a sewer). And while that does completely suck (ha!) most of the time I'm generally okay with that, because I think it probably would not have turned out to be a very good movie for a number of reasons. Most of the time. I was trying to make a movie that I really didn't have the right budget for, and I'm sure any multiverse version of me would be a decent cinematic director. (I will say  - I think we put together a pretty kickass preview, though!) Also, I made some choices back then that I regret. But what if - what if I'm wrong? And the movie was bad, but so bad it was awesome? And still haunted me?

Owen King's Double Feature is a modern-day coming of age story - one win which the characters only figure out how to redeem the errors of their youth as adults. It's the funniest thing I've listened to in a long time, and while it might attempt answering some of life's harder questions a little too pat at times, I still found it genuinely moving.

Read more...
Posted in reviews, Uncategorized | Tagged double feature, holter graham, owen king

The Shambling Guide to New York City Listen-a-Long: Chapter 1

Posted on 2013-05-09 at 19:04 by Sam

Welcome to the first installment of The Shambling Guide to New York City Listen-a-Long, covering Chapter 1 of Mur Lafferty’s The Shambling Guide to New York City. There’s a bit more to this installment than will be usual, as we get to also talk about Lafferty’s introduction to the podcast, and, well, a bit about my listening history where it comes to her other podcasts. First a warning, that I’ll repeat each episode, that the discussion here is oh-so-spoilerific, so if that’s a concern, pop over and take the 15 minutes to listen to the podcast episode first. On to…

[caption id="" align=“alignnone” width=“200”]Cover art by Jamie McKelvie Cover art by Jamie McKelvie[/caption]

The Shambling Guide to New York City: Chapter One by Mur Lafferty Runtime: 15 minutes

I find it hard to count how many hours of Mur Lafferty’s voice I’ve heard over the past few years now. I met Mur in late 2009, and soon after started checking out her I Should Be Writing podcast (where I learned that “It’s OK to suck” — a better mantra for me probably doesn’t exist) and then her Afterlife series, starting with Heaven, then (and still) available as a free Podiobook. I’ve listened to her host dozens and dozens of Escape Pod episodes, and narrate quite a long list as well. (Inlcuding “You’re Almost Here” by Melinda Thielbar, in which Mur drops the F-bomb with some verve and panache; for several mostly selfish reasons one of my favorite episodes.)

Still, even after all those episodes, all those intros and outtros and narrations, there’s still something very exciting that happens between my ears when I press “play” on Chapter One of Mur’s latest podcast, for her forthcoming novel The Shambling Guide to New York City. While the other projects were well-ongoing before I knew what a podcast even was, for this one, I’d get to be listening along right from the first episodes.

The intro here for episode one is pretty short, though we find out that the idea for this book has been rolling around since 2005. We hear just a bit about selling the book to Orbit (and somehow selling Hachette Audio on the idea of the free podcast as well) and get the plans for the podcast: one chapter a week, for free, for 29 weeks, then remaining up for one month afterwards. Of course, the novel and full audiobook will go on sale on May 28, so those of us who can’t wait to find out what happens next in any given week will have a pretty easy time of scratching that particular itch.

Then it’s right into the “real” audiobook, complete with “Hachette Audio presents…” and intro music. Having gotten to sit in on one studio session, to hear the care and attention to detail from Mur’s editor and recording engineer, I knew I was in for a high-quality recording, and, no surprise, here we are. “Chapter One.”

We meet former travel guide writer Zoë Norris, browsing through a strange New York City bookstore that isn’t in the guidebook. Well, Zoë’s guidebook at least. After passing by a few even stranger titles, such as “How to Make Love, Marry, Devour, and Inherit in Eight Weeks”, Zoë picks up a book on hounds from hell from the Pets section. With a sticky leather binding. That makes its way onto Zoë’s sweater. Of course.

Upon trying to actually buy the strange book in this strange bookstore, though, Zoë runs into some difficulties, as the clerk responds to Zoë’s inquiry about the book’s price with an unsmiling: “We cater to a specific clientele.” As a man who was posting a flyer turns to regard the rising confrontation, we get a peek into Zoë’s paranoid inner voice as she struggles to remind herself that: Not everyone is out to get you.

The man begins to diffuse the situation, but Zoë’s interest in the book is thrown by the wayside when bigger quarry is spotted. The man had just posted a flyer for a travel guide writing job on the bulletin board, and, as we find out immediately, “She needed a job.”

Of course, she gets the job, the book ends, everyone’s happy.

No, of course not. Instead, she gets pretty much the same treatment from the man about the job posting as the clerk was giving her about the hound book. Through the resulting exchange, we find out a bit of Zoë’s backstory: a former head researcher and writer for Misconceptions Publishing (“the second biggest travel book publisher in the USA”) laid off after finding herself as the “other woman” to her boss, Godfrey’s, wife.

Still, Zoë presses on. Who is this pudgy guy in a T-shirt and jeans to tell her that she wasn’t “what they’re looking for”? Just Phillip Rand, the owner, president, and CEO of the company, Underground Publishing, of course.

And yet, still, Zoë pushes on, listing her qualifications, lining up her qualifications and experience as the perfect fit. Shot down yet again, she asks, “Isn’t this illegal?” Though Rand assures her that she’s not being discriminated against based on gender or race — though going by the clues given by the cover art and chapter so far, we might suspect the “human” race, mightn’t we? — and that, as they say, is that.

Finding no help in the self-help section (“Get the Salary You Deserve! Negotiating Hell Notes in a Time of Economic Downturn”) she heads for a long bath, via a “tall caloric caffeine bomb” stop on the way. Finally, chapter one closes with an “Excerpt from The Shambling Guide to New York City”, in which we find out a bit more about the bookstore in which this has all just happened.

And, the chapter finished, the podcast episode ends with a brief outtro, in which we learn about Orbit’s wallpaper images for the book, and an official necklace at Surlyramics.


Well, I’m biased, but I’m also very pleased. We’re starting to get to know Zoë — needs a job, smart, knows she’s got what it takes to write, juuuuust a bit paranoid, maybe a bit slow on the “every book in here seems non-a-joke directed towards mythical beings” uptake, but hey, it’s New York City, every subculture has its hole-in-the-wall bookstore, right?

So! Chapter Two is already up, which is a more meaty 24 minutes. See you next week! Will Zoë find her caffeine bomb? Will she end up dressed as a sandwich, or will better employment opportunities come her way? Tune in, and see you next week for the listen-a-long discussion!

Posted in The Shambling Guide to NYC Listen-a-Long

Release Week: The Kings and Queens of Roam, Odds Against Tomorrow, Tales of Majipoor, and The Crystal Shard

Posted on 2013-05-08 at 19:46 by Sam

MAY 1-7, 2013: May is here, and the first release week brings quite a haul, so let's get right to it:

PICKS OF THE WEEK:

The Kings and Queens of Roam: A Novel by Daniel Wallace, read by Angela Brazil for AudioGO. Out concurrent with the print/ebook release from Touchstone, it's the first new novel since 2007 for Wallace, the author of Big Fish. Here it's a story blending tall tales, folklore, and magical realism in, well, "Wallace"-ian fashion; is the magic "real"? Does it matter if it is? "Helen and Rachel McCallister, who live in a town called Roam, are as different as sisters can be: Helen older, bitter, and conniving; Rachel beautiful, naïve - and blind. When their parents die an untimely death, Rachel has to rely on Helen for everything, but Helen embraces her role in all the wrong ways, convincing Rachel that the world is a dark and dangerous place she couldn’t possibly survive on her own... or so Helen believes, until Rachel makes a surprising choice that turns both their worlds upside down. In this new novel, Southern literary master Daniel Wallace returns to the tradition of tall tales and folklore made memorable in his bestselling Big Fish. The Kings and Queens of Roam is a wildly inventive, beautifully written, and big-hearted tale of family and the ties that bind."

The Kings and Queens of Roam | [Daniel Wallace] Odds Against Tomorrow | [Nathaniel Rich]

Odds Against Tomorrow By Nathaniel Rich, Narrated By Kirby Heyborne for Tantor Audio. Released a month ago in print/ebook (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, April 2) to quite a bit of coverage. "New York City, the near future: Mitchell Zukor, a gifted young mathematician, is hired by a mysterious new financial consulting firm, FutureWorld. The business operates out of an empty office in the Empire State Building; Mitchell is employee number two. He is asked to calculate worst-case scenarios in the most intricate detail, and his schemes are sold to corporations to indemnify them against any future disasters. This is the cutting edge of corporate irresponsibility, and business is booming. As Mitchell immerses himself in the mathematics of catastrophe - ecological collapse, war games, natural disasters - he becomes obsessed by a culture's fears."

Tales of Majipoor by Robert Silverberg, read by Stefan Rudnicki for Blackstone Audio. "Hailed as 'one of the most fully realized worlds of modern science fiction,'(Booklist) Majipoor is a planet unlike any other, with countless untold stories. Now, available for the first time in one volume, science fiction grand master Robert Silverberg presents seven tales that chronicle thousands of years of Majipoor’s history, from the arrival of the settlers of Old Earth, to the expansion of vast cities, to the extraordinary life of Lord Valentine. Within these stories lie the secrets of Majipoor, a wondrous world of incredible imagination."

Tales of Majipoor | [Robert Silverberg] The Crystal Shard: Legend of Drizzt: Icewind Dale Trilogy, Book 1 | [R. A. Salvatore]

The Crystal Shard: Legend of Drizzt: Icewind Dale Trilogy, Book 1 By R. A. Salvatore, Narrated By Victor Bevine for Audible Frontiers. While several hundred other audiobooks have been added to the Audible Frontiers stash of Dungeons and Dragons titles, including plenty of others in the long-running story of dark elf Drizzt Do'Urden, this is the book which started it all. Not chronologically in terms of Drizzt's story, but this is the book that introduced Drizzt -- and much of the Forgotten Realms setting, not to mention Salvatore himself -- to the reading world. "Drizzt Do'Urden has settled in the windswept towns of Icewind Dale. There, he encounters a young barbarian named Wulfgar, captured in a raid and made the ward of a grizzled dwarf name Bruenor. With Drizzt's help, Wulfgar will grow from a feral child to a man with the heart of a dwarf, the instincts of a savage, and the soul of a hero. But it will take even more than that to defeat the demonic power of Crenshininbon, the fabled Crystal Shard." Streams of Silver and The Halfling's Gem are scheduled for two and four weeks later, respectively.

ALSO OUT THIS WEEK:

Read more...
Posted in Release Week | Tagged daniel wallace, stefan rudnicki

Received: April 2013

Posted on 2013-05-03 at 19:42 by Sam

I took it pretty easy on the review copy front in April, to the tune of three titles:

  1. No Return by Zachary Jernigan, read by John FitzGibbon for Audible Frontiers.
No Return | [Zachary Jernigan]

This is one I finished listening to a couple of week ago now, so here’s a snippet of my review, A stunning and original debut fantasy: “In a crowded year of strong debut fantasy novels, “No Return” is a very strong contender. Beginning with an assured voice, a prologue of a pitiless landscape of an hallucinogenic salt lake, expanding out to a world whose currency is the powdered skin of an Elder race, populated by (among others) rival enclaves of warrior monks engaging in ritualized battles to defend and proselytize their competing faiths. There is a god with city-killing orbital kinetic ordinance at his whim; there are deeply weird and sexualized alchemistic magics; there are sentient constructs of magical metal spheres; there are dragons and ghosts.”

  1. River of Stars by Guy Gavriel Kay, read by Simon Vance for Penguin Audio.
River of Stars | [Guy Gavriel Kay]

I haven’t gotten to this one yet, but it’s due up this weekend, where a road trip to and from DC should allow plenty of uninterrupted listening.

  1. YOU by Austin Grossman, read by Will Collyer for Hachette Audio.
You | [Austin Grossman]

I did listen to and very much enjoy this one; as a “software engineer by day” who has worked for quite a long time in a big software project release environment, and as a gamer, this one really was quite fantastic. I don’t have a full review put together, but I did have a quip: “With apologies to Jonathan Coulton, this is what it feels like to write software for a living.” The Guilded Earlobe does have a full review up.

Posted in received

May is for Mur: The Shambling Guide to New York City Listen-A-Long begins tomorrow!

Posted on 2013-05-01 at 19:59 by Sam

I hope you enjoyed Dave’s The Human Division Listen-a-Long the past couple of months, because we have another one planned for May and June, getting started tomorrow as part of a month-long feature here on The Audiobookaneers, focusing on author, podcaster, and narrator, Mur Lafferty.

Due out in print, ebook, and audiobook on May 28 from Orbit and Hachette Audio, Lafferty’s new series The Shambling Guides gets started with The Shambling Guide to New York City. Great reviews have been rolling in along with other accolades, the latest being the book’s inclusion on io9’s list of Summer Beach Reads That You Won’t Want to Miss, which provides this nifty summary: “Campbell Award-nominated writer Lafferty’s new novel is about a hapless travel writer who doesn’t realize she’s been hired by a publishing house run by monsters. Now she has to write a travel guide to New York City for the undead — and stop a collision that’s brewing between the world of humans and the world of all the other creatures who haunt the city.”

[caption id="" align=“alignnone” width=“307”]Book front cover for The Shambling Guide to New York City by Mur Lafferty, cover illustration by Jamie McKelvie (Orbit Books, May 2013) The Shambling Guide to New York City by Mur Lafferty, cover illustration by Jamie McKelvie (Orbit Books, May 2013)[/caption]

Hachette Audio booked Lafferty to narrate the book, and later this month we’ll feature pictures “in studio” from one of the recording sessions, along with an interview about narrating, podcasting, writing, and I can’t quite remember what else right now. (That’s why I took notes, people!)

But first up, starting tomorrow, Lafferty will be podcasting the first chapter of the audiobook, free! So tune in, and we’ll make it a regular Monday thing to discuss, Listen-A-Long style, the chapters as they come. This time I’ll be your host, and I hope you’ll join me!

Posted in The Shambling Guide to NYC Listen-a-Long | Tagged mur lafferty, the shambling guides

Release Week: Joe Hill's NOS4A2, Wesley Chu's The Lives of Tao, Allen Steele's Apollo's Outcasts, and Ballard's The Drought

Posted on 2013-05-01 at 14:54 by Sam

APRIL 24-30, 2013: April goes out with a howl and a bang, with more than a quartet of excellent titles, ranging from concurrent new horror and humorous sf releases, to one of last year's most "missing in audio" young adult sf titles, to one of sf's classic stories of climate change. Next week is another huge crop of high-interest titles as publishers start ramping up for summer reading and listening, so you'd better get started!

PICKS OF THE WEEK:

From the author of the novels Heart-Shaped Box and Horns and the comic book series Locke & Key comes NOS4A2: A Novel By Joe Hill, Narrated By Kate Mulgrew for Harper Audio. Narrator Mulgrew is best known as Captain Janeway of Star Trek: Voyager but also turned in a fine narration in the METAtropolis audio anthology series as well as a story in the Ray Bradbury tribute anthology Shadow Show but this is her first full-length solo narration. Here: "Victoria McQueen has an uncanny knack for finding things: a misplaced bracelet, a missing photograph, answers to unanswerable questions. When she rides her bicycle over the rickety old covered bridge in the woods near her house, she always emerges in the places she needs to be. Vic doesn't tell anyone about her unusual ability, because she knows no one will believe her. She has trouble understanding it herself. Charles Talent Manx has a gift of his own. He likes to take children for rides in his 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith with the vanity plate NOS4A2. In the Wraith, he and his innocent guests can slip out of the everyday world and onto hidden roads that lead to an astonishing playground of amusements he calls Christmasland. Mile by mile, the journey across the highway of Charlie's twisted imagination transforms his precious passengers, leaving them as terrifying and unstoppable as their benefactor. And then comes the day when Vic goes looking for trouble...and finds her way, inevitably, to Charlie. That was a lifetime ago. Now, the only kid ever to escape Charlie's unmitigated evil is all grown up and desperate to forget. But Charlie Manx hasn't stopped thinking about the exceptional Victoria McQueen. On the road again, he won't slow down until he's taken his revenge. He's after something very special - something Vic can never replace. As a life-and-death battle of wills builds her magic pitted against his - Vic McQueen prepares to destroy Charlie once and for all... or die trying...."

NOS4A2: A Novel | [Joe Hill] The Lives of Tao | [Wesley Chu]

The Lives of Tao by Wesley Chu, narrated By Mikael Naramore for Angry Robot on Brilliance Audio, out concurrent with the print and ebook edition from Angry Robot. "When out-of-shape IT technician Roen wakes up and starts hearing voices in his head, he naturally assumes he’s losing it. He isn’t. As of last night, he has a passenger in his brain - an ancient alien life-form called Tao, whose race crash-landed on Earth before the first fish crawled out of the oceans. Over the millennia his people have trained human heroes to be great leaders, to advance our species at a rate far beyond what it would have achieved on its own. Split into two opposing factions - the peace-loving, but under-represented Prophus, and the savage, powerful Genjix - the aliens have been in a state of civil war for centuries. Both sides are searching for a way off-planet… and the Genjix will sacrifice the entire human race, if that’s what it takes. So now Roen must train to be a hero worthy of his unwanted companion. Like that’s going to end up well.…" And! The book also comes with probably my favorite blurb so far this year: "Wesley Chu is my hero.… He has to be the coolest science fiction writer in the world." (Lavie Tidhar, World Fantasy Award-winning author of Osama). And! Whew. There's more. Author Chu has an essay up on the Big Idea behind the novel.

Apollo’s Outcasts By Allen Steele, Narrated By Ramon DeOcampo for Audible Frontiers was published in print/ebook last year by Pyr Teen, a story in the vein of Heinlein’s Space Cadet, updated by Steele, the author of the Coyote series of sf novels. Here: "Jamey Barlowe has been crippled since childhood, the result of being born on the Moon. He lives his life in a wheelchair, only truly free when he is in the water. But then Jamey’s father sends him, along with five other kids, back to the Moon to escape a political coup d’etat that has occurred overnight in the United States. Moreover, one of the other five refugees is more than she appears. Their destination is the mining colony, Apollo. Jamey will have to learn a whole new way to live, one that entails walking for the first time in his life."

Apollo's Outcasts | [Allen Steele] The Drought | [J. G. Ballard]

The Drought (1965) By J. G. Ballard, Narrated By Julian Elfer for Audible Inc. It's a shorter title at under 6 hours, and hopefully, maybe, this also means Audible is at work on audio for Ballard's The Drowned World. Here it isn't an excess of water, but rather its lack, which drives the story from one of sf's most prescient authors. "The world is threatened by dramatic climate change in this highly acclaimed and influential novel. Water. Man's most precious commodity is a luxury of the past. Radioactive waste from years of industrial dumping has caused the sea to form a protective skin strong enough to devastate the Earth it once sustained. And while the remorseless sun beats down on the dying land, civilisation itself begins to crack. Violence erupts and insanity reigns as the remnants of mankind struggle for survival in a worldwide desert of despair."

ALSO OUT THIS WEEK:

Read more...
Posted in Release Week | Tagged allen steele, joe hill, wesley chu

Release Week: Helene Wecker's The Golem and the Jinni, Neil Gaiman's The Silver Dream, Sarah Prineas' Summerkin, and David Niall Wilson's Nevermore

Posted on 2013-04-24 at 15:56 by Sam

APRIL 17-23, 2013: Though it's not a tremendously crowded release week, there are great picks in adult, teen, and kids audiobooks, ranging from the latest in a long line of strong debut fantasy novels in 2013 (Helene Wecker's The Golem and the Jinni) to a sequel to Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves' InterWorld, and more. (In "meta coverage" notes, this week seems to belong to Harper Audio, whereas last week I noted strong weeks for Hachette Audio and Audible Frontiers.) Without further preamble:

PICKS OF THE WEEK:

The Golem and the Jinni: A Novel By Helene Wecker, Narrated By George Guidall for Harper Audio, concurrent with print/ebook release from Harper. “Harper is really getting behind this debut in the vein of The Night Circus and The Discovery of Witches. The novel combines historical fiction with a magical fable about two supernatural creatures in turn-of-the-20th-century New York City.” (via PW). Here: "Helene Wecker's dazzling debut novel tells the story of two supernatural creatures who appear mysteriously in 1899 New York. Chava is a golem, a creature made of clay, brought to life by a strange man who dabbles in dark Kabbalistic magic. When her master dies at sea on the voyage from Poland, she is unmoored and adrift as the ship arrives in New York Harbor. Ahmad is a jinni, a being of fire, born in the ancient Syrian Desert. Trapped in an old copper flask by a Bedouin wizard centuries ago, he is released accidentally by a tinsmith in a Lower Manhattan shop."

The Golem and the Jinni: A Novel | [Helene Wecker] The Silver Dream: An InterWorld Novel, Book 2 | [Neil Gaiman]

In the young adult category: The Silver Dream: An InterWorld Novel, Book 2 By Neil Gaiman, Michael Reaves, and Mallory Reaves, Narrated By Christopher Evan Welch for Harper Audio, concurrent with the print/ebook release from HarperTeen, with Welch returning as narrator after 2007's book 1, InterWorld. Here: "New York Times best-selling authors Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves deliver a thrilling sequel to the science fiction novel InterWorld, full of riveting interdimensional battles and alternate realities. After mastering the ability to walk between dimensions, Joey Harker and his fellow InterWorld freedom fighters are now on a mission to maintain peace between the rival powers of magic and science who seek to control all worlds. When a stranger named Acacia somehow follows Joey back to InterWorld's base, things get complicated. No one knows who she is or where she's from - or how she knows so much about InterWorld. Dangerous times lie ahead for Joey and the mission. There's a traitor hidden among them, and if Joey has any hope of saving InterWorld, the multiverse, and the mission, he's going to have to rely on his wits - and, just possibly, on the mysterious Acacia Jones. With a story conceived by Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves and written by Michael and Mallory Reaves, this mind-bending follow-up to the exciting science fiction novel InterWorld is a compelling fantasy adventure through time and space, in which the future depends on a young man who is more powerful than he realizes."

In the young reader category: Summerkin: Winterling, Book 2 By Sarah Prineas, Narrated By Erin Moon for Harper Audio, continuing Prineas' Winterling series after last year's Winterling. Here: "In the Summerlands, time moves slowly, roots grow deeply, and change is not welcomed. But change is needed. After defeating the wicked Mor and freeing her kin from deadly oaths made to this false ruler, Fer is now the rightful Lady of the land. Yet her people don't know what to make of their new Lady's strange ways, and neither do the High Ones, the rulers of the magical realm, for Fer is an outsider - half human. To prove herself worthy of the Summerlands crown, Fer is summoned to compete in an epic contest where her strengths and skills will be tested and her loyalties challenged. Can she trust Rook, the puck she calls friend? Can she trust herself? If Fer fails, she will lose her land and the Way will be closed to her forever."

Summerkin: Winterling, Book 2 | [Sarah Prineas] Nevermore: A Novel of Love, Loss, & Edgar Allan Poe | [David Niall Wilson]

Lastly, a book published a bit earlier this year but one I've been looking forward to in audio: Nevermore: A Novel of Love, Loss, & Edgar Allan Poe By David Niall Wilson, Narrated By Gigi Shane for Crossroad Press. On the shorter end (a bit over 6 hours) it's also a change of pace from my usual more sf/fantasy picks, with Wilson an award-winning horror author. "On the banks of Lake Drummond, on the edge of the Great Dismal Swamp, there is a tree in the shape of a woman.One dark, moonlit night, two artists met at the Lake Drummond Hotel, built directly on the borderline of North Carolina and Virginia. One was a young woman with the ability to see spirits trapped in trees and stone, anchored to the earth beyond their years. Her gift was to draw them, and then to set them free. The other was a dark man, haunted by dreams and visions that brought him stories of sadness and pain, trapped in a life between the powers he sensed all around him and a mundane existence attended by failure. They were Eleanore MacReady, Lenore, to her friends, and a young poet named Edgar Allan Poe, who traveled with a crow that was his secret, and almost constant companion, a bird named Grimm for the talented brothers of fairy-tale fame.Their meeting drew them together in vision, and legend, and pitted their strange powers and quick minds against the depths of the Dismal Swamp itself, ancient legends, and time. Once, upon a shoreline dreary, there was a tree. This is her story."

ALSO OUT THIS WEEK:

Read more...
Posted in Release Week

← Older posts
Newer posts →