Tag Archive: michael swanwick

New on Kindle: Black Friday!

And now for a long reel of new science fiction and fantasy (and related) on the Kindle, because it just isn’t the day after Thanksgiving without consumer consumption.

Also, I’ve started covering offerings from Webscriptions, which includes books from Baen, Nightshade Books, and Subterranean Press.

Paul of Dune by Brian Herbert And Kevin J. Anderson

Buy: Kindle Store

Don’t you want another volume in the Dune series? Of course you do. The story covers the MuadDib jihad between Frank Herbert’s Dune and Dune Messiah (e.g., Paul Takes Over the World).

You can also watch a video interview with the authors.

Fools’ Experiments by Edward M. Lerner

Buy: Kindle Store

In a near future world, artificial intelligence developed for controlling prosthetic limbs and otherwise controlling human/machine interactions, evolves consciousness. This is almost always a bad thing.

Lerner also has another book available on the Kindle, Fleet of Worlds, a prequel to Larry Niven’s classic Ringworld.

The Gods Return by David Drake

Buy: Kindle Store or Webscriptions

The third volume of the Crown of the Isles series, which began with The Fortress of Glass.

The Lord-Protector’s Daughter by L. E. Modesitt

Buy: Kindle Store

The latest volume of the fantasy series The Corean Chronicles, which is almost entirely on the Kindle as of this writing. The previous books in order:

Halo: The Cole Protocol by Tobias S. Buckell

Buy: Kindle Store

Covering the first days of the Human-Covenent War in the world of your very favorite first-person-shooter science fiction space opera video game, from the viewpoint of one Lieutenant Jacob Keyes.

Please give Mr. Buckell your good wishes, as he is at this time in the hospital with a pulmonary embolism, second in the Surprising Secrets of Tobias S. Buckell’s Heart series.

Also by Tobias S. Buckell: Crystal Rain and Sly Mongoose.

Princeps’ Fury by Jim Butcher

Buy: Kindle Store

This is an early surprise: the fifth book in Jim Butcher’s Codex Alera series, has come out on the Kindle and in press.

Other books in this series:

The Crown by Deborah Chester

Buy: Kindle Store

A continuation of The Ruby Throne series, featuring the story of Lea, sister to Emperor Caelan Light Bringer. The first half of this story is available on the Kindle: The Pearls.

Deryni Checkmate by Katherine Kurtz

Buy: Kindle Store

The second book in the first cycle of the Deryni series, which includes Deryni Rising (previous) and High Deryni (next).

The Last Battle by Chris Bunch

Buy: Kindle Store

The third book in the Dragonmaster trilogy, the second being Knighthood of the Dragon.

Seraphs by Faith Hunter

Buy: Kindle Store

Second in the Rogue Mage series, now completing the Kindle set of Bloodring (book 1) and Host (book 3).

Elric: The Sleeping Sorceress by Michael Moorcock

Buy: Kindle Store

It’s Elric. It’s Michael Moorcock. It’s a new edition of a classic tale of the Eternal Champion. With extras.

Other Elric books available on the Kindle:

The Engine’s Child by Holly Phillips

Buy: Kindle Store

According to Meredith Schwartz in Library Journal: “Her lush prose and dark fantasy cityscape will appeal to fans of China Mieville’s Perdido Street Station and Sarah Monette’s Melusine, but her manipulative, scarred, sexual, unapologetic antiheroine recalls Elizabeth Bear or Melissa Scott.”

Phillips has also been compared to Jeff VanderMeer. All this tends to spell WIN for me. How about you?

On the Prowl: Tales of an Urban Werewolf by Karen Macinerney

Buy: Kindle Store

It’s a werewolf romance—and the protagonist here is the werewolf. Her perfect life begins to fall apart when she suspects her boyfriend of philandering1, a Texas millionaire client begins to exude a strange hold over her, and the Houston wolf pack shows up on her doorstep demanding union dues.

Starfist: Force Recon: Recoil by David Sherman And Dan Cragg

Buy: Kindle Store

Military colonial science fiction, the most recent book in the second cycle of the successful Starfist series, preceded by Backshot and Pointblank.

The very first two Starfist books are available as one bundle:
First to Fight/School of Fire.

Many more Starfist books are available on the Kindle.

Night Shadow by Cherry Adair

Buy: Kindle Store

The conclusion to Adair’s paranormal romance trilogy, which started with Night Fall and continued with Night Secrets.

Succubus Takes Manhattan by Nina Harper

Buy: Kindle Store

Sex in the City. With demons—in particular, a succubus who works for Satan and is searching for true love to free her. The sequel to Succubus in the City.

Queen of Oblivion by Giles Carwyn And Todd Fahnestock

Buy: Kindle Store

The conclusion to the fantasy Heartstone trilogy, wherein the Heir of Autumn must stop a ruthless enchantress from destroying the world. The trilogy started with Heir of Autumn and continued with Mistress of Winter.

Warriors: Power of Three #5: Long Shadows by Erin Hunter

Buy: Kindle Store

The latest in the third mini-series of the highly successful Young Adult fantasy books that follow the adventures of four clans of wild cats.

The entire series has been released on Kindle, with six books per mini-series. The first mini-series begins with Into the Wild; the second, The New Prophecy, begins with Midnight; the third, Power of Three, started with Sight.

A brand new series in the same vein, but this time covering three bears, has started with Seekers.

The Bride and the Beast by Teresa Medeiros

Buy: Kindle Store

A humorous, light romantic fantasy that recasts the tale of Beauty and the Beast with an imperfect heroine (irreverent and overweight) and a dragon (wounded and gentlemanly).

She has another book below….

A Kiss to Remember by Teresa Medeiros

Buy: Kindle Store

A humorous, light romantic comedy that recasts the tale of Sleeping Beauty in a more complex mold, with a man as the sleeping beauty (but not how you think), a woman who wishes vengeance upon him, and a woman who loves him. And the last two are the same woman.

I think this technically isn’t fantasy, because there appears to be no magic or fantastic beasts involved. But I included it anyways, because it seems fun and it’s a reprint of an otherwise unavailable book.

Strength and Honor by R.M. Meluch

Buy: Kindle Store

Military science fiction, and the sequel to The Sagittarius Command.

Star Trek: Destiny: Lost Souls by David Mack

Buy: Kindle Store

Soldiers of Armageddon who lay waste to worlds in their passage, unstoppable save for actions unthinkable to Starfleet captains. Or are they so unthinkable? See Captains Picard, Riker, and Dax struggle with their choices.

Lexi by L.S. Matthews

Buy: Kindle Store

Through a fair amount of Googling, I’ve determined that Lexi is YA fantasy-but-it-might-not-be-fantasy-kind-of-fantasy. A girl wakes up in the woods, remembering nothing before that, with a silver key. She finds shelter, and rediscovers a life she never knew bit by bit.

Fish Out of Water by Maryjanice Davidson

Buy: Kindle Store

Third in a series featuring a cranky mermaid named Fred, a hidden civilization of mer-people, a mer-prince, and her marine biologist friend Thomas.

The second book, Swimming Without a Net, is also available for the Kindle.

Magic Tree House #30: Haunted Castle on Hallow’s Eve by Mary Pope Osborne And Sal Murdocca

Buy: Kindle Store

The first of the 42 Magic Treehouse books to make it onto the Kindle, and part of the “Merlin’s Missions” second cycle.

Perfect Circle by Carlos J. Cortes

Buy: Kindle Store

A geologist is hired by a corrupt company to discover secrets beneath a rain forest, which turn out to be a miracle that might save the planet from the ecological crisis it’s currently headed down the maw of. But the company is corrupt, you know.

The Oracle’s Queen by Lynn Flewelling

Buy: Kindle Store

The third book in the Tamír Triad, where the main character is a woman who’s been hidden with a man’s body in the person of Prince Tobin for years. The second book, Hidden Warrior, is also available on the Kindle.

Lord of the Shadows by Jennifer Fallon

Buy: Kindle Store

The third book in the The Second Sons Trilogy. The first two books, The Lion of Senet and Eye of the Labyrinth, are both available in the Kindle store.

Faerie Tale by Raymond Feist

Buy: Kindle Store

A malevolent spirit in the forest brings supernatural mayhem and horror to the home of a family on the edge of its woods.

Feist is more famous for his fantasy, in particular the Riftwar Cycle. The earliest available in the series on the Kindle is the first half of a duology, Prince of the Blood.

Every trilogy after this duology is complete on the Kindle, however, starting with The Serpentwar Saga:

After the War: Two Tales of Noreela by Tim Lebbon

Buy: Webscriptions or Amazon Hardcover

From Subterranean Press; two novellas set in the world of Noreela:

  • Vale of Blood Roses
  • The Bajuman

Cryptic by Jack McDevitt

Buy: Webscriptions

The best short stories of Jack McDevitt, who writes the popular far-future Alex Benedict detective series.

Laughin’ Boy by Bradley Denton

Buy: Webscriptions or Amazon Hardcover

Here are sample chapters. I can’t describe it well enough to do it justice.

Screaming Science Fiction: Horrors from Out of Space by Brian Lumley

Buy: Webscriptions or Amazon Hardcover

Science fiction horror stories and novella (think Weird Science or Weird Fantasy magazines) by Brian Lumley.

Sample chapters includes the first story, “Snarker’s Son”.

The Best of Michael Swanwick by Michael Swanwick

Buy: Webscriptions or Amazon Hardcover

His award-winning short stories, covering the last quarter-century from “The Feast of Saint Janis” all the way to “The Dog Said Bow-Wow” and “From Babel’s Fall’n Glory…”.

Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded by John Scalzi

Buy: Webscriptions or Kindle Store

The best columns of John Scalzi’s Whatever blog from the last ten years, starting with a wonderful and short treatise on hate mail. Hilarious and sharp, there’s a reason Whatever pulls hundreds of thousands of hits every week.

His famous earlier book, collecting the writing-orientated posts of Whatever, is also available via Webscriptions: You’re Not Fooling Anyone When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop. I actually reviewed it back in 2007, and favorably so.

Scalzi is also famous for the Old Man’s War series.

  1. Note to philandering boyfriends: your significant other being a werewolf tends to give such games away. []

A Date with the F&SF Oct/Nov All-Star Issue, Part 4: Only Wrappers Left


Photography: shok

On a somewhat unrelated note: cerulean nougat exists!

Here are my impressions of the final stories, a brief comment on Lucius Shepard, and concluding thoughts.

Private Eye by Terry Bisson

“Spare one of those?”

“Of course.” I shook a Camel out of my pack, which was sitting on the bar as a reminder of better days. She was wearing a raincoat—Burberry; we notice such things—over jeans. It matches her hair, almost; it wasn’t buttoned, only belted at the waist. She was three stools away, but I caught a glimpse of a narrow black strap on a narrow pale shoulder when she leaned down the bar to take the cigarette from my fingers.

We notice such things. Especially in a quiet bar on Eighth Avenue, on a rainy Thursday autumn-in-New York afternoon.

As the commentary says, this is a sexy tale—and a very well-told one. I like how the atmosphere settles in like fog, subtly and not a word wasted. The science fiction is like the atmosphere; it settles in gracefully. For a story so lurid, the handling of its plot and ideas is gentle and teasing. Especially the teasing.

A dark, risque liquor chocolate.

I’ll be seeking out more Terry Bisson. Unca Mike certainly likes him, but it’s on the strength of this story that I’m downloading Bears Discover Fire and Other Stories onto my Kindle right now.

December 22, 2012 by Sophie M. White

Cute poem. I’m not good with poetry so I’ll leave it at that.

Whoever by Carol Emshwiller

I forgot who I was. I suppose it’s just as well. This doorway, where I lie, is dirty. If this doorway is my doorway and if I’m dressed as I usually dress, then I can’t have been a very respectable person. First thing I’ll do, I’ll go get something else to wear and then I’ll find a good place to live. Something more like the new me. If this is a new me.

I wonder what I look like. My hands seem strong. My fingernails are clean. I’m not too fat. Am I the same sex I used to be?

I’m fond of narrators with disassociation in one form or another, and this is a well-done and approachable narrator. Her exploration is mysterious and suspended, with a cheerfully humorous attitude. The climax feels more than a little out of place, however; this is a story that needs decent room to grow, and I think more space was needed. However, this is a disassociated narrator, so there’s technically nothing wrong with the way things went.

I’d love a bigger story of this, but it’s not her fault that I’m not satiated. Well, it kind of is. But not. Dang it.

One of those little chocolate almond clusters I love, and of which there are too few of in this world.

Here’s an interview with Emshwiller on Bookslut.

Evidence of Love in a Case of Abandonment:
One Daughter’s Personal Account
by M. Rickert

It took a long time to deduce that many of the missing women could not be accounted for. Executions were a matter of public record then and it was still fairly easy to keep track of them. They were on every night at seven o’clock, filmed from the various execution centers. It was policy back then to name the criminal as the cameras lingered over her face. Yet women went missing who never appeared on execution. Rumors started. Right around then some of the policies changed. The criminals were no longer named, and execution centers sprung up all over the country so it was no longer possible to account for the missing. The rumors persisted though, and generally took one of two courses: Agents were using the criminals for their own nefarious purposes, or women were sneaking away and assembling an army.

When my mother didn’t come home, my father kept saying she must have had a meeting he’d forgotten about, after all, she volunteered for Homeland Security’s Mothers in Schools program, as well as did work for the church, and the library. That’s my mom. She always had to keep busy. When my father started calling hospitals, his freckles all popped out against his white skin the way they get when he’s upset, and I realized he was hoping she’d had an accident, I knew. The next morning, when I found him sitting in the rocker, staring out the picture window, their wedding album in his lap, I really knew.

This is a very strong story. And by strong, I mean strong like oaks. I think about the Taliban, but of course this context is quite Western. The world-building is flawless. The way the story and the narrator unfold is entirely unexpected, and things are complicated. It’s all masterful.

At the same time, though—and this is speaking as someone who usually accepts many things headlong—it wasn’t believable. Oh, I believe there’s enough hatred and venom in the world to accomplish such things; but you’d run out of women too quickly. On the other hand, this might be a relatively recent cultural twitch.

If this story is a message, it isn’t going to reach the people who need to hear it. Just speaking as someone who used to live in a small town like that. But a message probably isn’t the reason for this story; it’s an exquisitely accomplished macabre exploration.

Dark orange chocolate. I don’t really like orange in my chocolate, and consider it just this side of nougat, but it is a dark chocolate, for all that. Very dark.

C.C. Finlay interviews M. Rickert for Ideomancer.

Planetesimal Dawn by Tim Sullivan

It was the most dangerous place on the asteroid.

“Why don’t we just go back?” Wolverton asked.

“Because we can’t,” Nozaki said. “The sun’s coming up.”

“Yeah, but we’ve got insulated suits.”

“Not enough.”

This wasn’t the best day to be base camp security chief, Nozaki thought. They stood next to the rover, watching the searing dawn advance across the curved horizon. The rover had died on them, and Nozaki had worked on it as long as she could. The dawn was too close. They had to get moving.

Let me just say: this is what’s wrong with me. I claim to like science fiction, but this is exactly the kind of story I hate.

It’s a bit inexplicable, actually. I liked Heinlein when he wrote stories like this. I like Scalzi when he writes stories like this. I liked Zelazny when he wrote stories like this. I liked Delany’s (weird weird weird) takes on stories like this. They all add something more than just the adventure, even if it’s just characters that I like, or strangely succinct world-building that just, for whatever reason, works. Or the feeling I’m smoking something, but it’s a good something….

But I didn’t like Gene Wolfe’s Memorae, and not only am I usually in love with Gene Wolfe, but he did add more to the story in his usual Wolfe-ian way. Nevertheless, I hated it.

Let’s just say that for me, Planetesimal Dawn is a big white bar of nougat, and that’s likely because I’m an idiot. When I read a story from someone who won the Nobel Prize in Literature (and also Physics), and all I can think of is how all the notes sound wrong, the problem is obviously with me as a reader, not the writer.

Yes, after reading this novelette I wanted to pitch the entire magazine across the room and burn it (I did not actually do so, though, because of Days of Wonder and “Private Eye”).

I’m amazed, actually, that I still feel the same way, at the same strength, a week after I read this. This is not really like me.

Nougat is truly beyond my understanding, I think.

Also, I’m not able to track down more Tim Sullivan links. At least, links that I’m sure point to him; there’s a surprising number of Tim(othy) Sullivans in the world, both alive and dead.

But look! There’s another chocolate in the box, under the wrappers. There always is, you know.

The Scarecrow’s Boy by Michael Swanwick

The little by came stumbling through the field at sunset. His face was streaked with tears, and he’d lost a shoe. In his misery, he didn’t notice the scarecrow until he was almost upon it. Then he stopped dead, stunned into silence by its pale round face and the great, ragged hat that shadowed it.

The scarecrow grinned down at him. “Hullo, young fella,” it said.

The little boy screamed.

Instantly, the scarecrow doffed his hat and squatted down on one knee, so as to seem less threatening. “Shush, shush,” he said. “There’s no reason to be afraid of me—I’m just an obsolete housebot that was stuck out here to keep birds away from the crops.” He knocked the side of his head with his metal knuckles. It made a tinny thunk noise. “See? You’ve got bots just like me back home, don’t you?”

What can I say? This is a very Swanwick story. I have always associated his name with his storytelling style, of strange half- and three-quarter- and sixth-and-eight-twists, going swanwick-swack! through your expectations in a delicious manner. This is almost as good as “Tideline” (and for a friend of mine, to him this would be better; no accounting for taste).

A final drizzled mint chocolate.

And now… there are only wrappers.

• • • •

And now, a comment on Lucius Shepard. I recall seeing folks dislike his review of Iron Man for being too scathing. To which I say (having read Lucius Shepard’s LJ): dude. It’s just Lucius Shepard being Lucius Shepard. I miss having a Mr. Cranky Movie Reviewer around. I may not always agree with him, but he’s good reading.

As for the rest of the departmental stuff, the reviews and musings and what not, I like them. I always have. Even if I don’t agree, I like them. They were never an issue with me.

• • • •

Some short concluding thoughts. Well, two, really.

The first is that F&SF is a nice venue for reading writers who are new to you. But then, so are many other venues online and elsewhere. Which brings up the next point….

Which is that F&SF is probably not for me. I loved three of the stories. In a more easy mood, I like six of the stories. If I stretch myself, I’d say that I liked seven. That’s out of 12 stories by an all-star crowd.

This is technically a good ratio.

But what is technically a good ratio does not always mean that it felt like a good ratio.

Maybe the flames will die down after a few weeks and I’ll scoop the next issue onto my Kindle from Fictionwise.

Or maybe not. Right now I’m busy marking up my copy of Acacia on the Kindle so I can understand the plot threads better. Me, knife, drawer, not sharpest.

2008 Hugo Awards Countdown: The Sites and Blogs Behind the Fiction – Short Stories

solaris-book-new-sf.jpg

One thing I miss on the Hugo nominee lists are links to the websites and, in many cases, blogs of the writers responsible for these works. As a blogger I admit I’m prejudiced in that direction.

So I’ve decided to start compiling all that information together, along with summaries and quotes where applicable so that anyone late to the party can pick and choose from the smorgasbord of fantasy and science fiction reading goodness.

I also think this is a useful look at the websites and blogs of great writers—useful for those of us who hope to use our blog to enhance and promote our writing.

Click here to read more »