More Books I have read this year for your Christmas list…

Here are three that I read, which are the all the first book in series or trilogies. Each was a fabulous read and each had me aching for the next in the series. Each had me thinking about it afterwards – not the sort of sugar fix where the effect doesn’t last. These books stay with you…

Spirit Gate by Kate Elliott
Shadowbridge by Gregory Frost
Feast of Souls by Celia Friedman (C.S.Friedman)

More about them individually in a minute.

These days I am much pickier than I used to be, and there aren’t that many books that I can lose myself inside, especially when it comes to fantasy. Instead, I often find myself thinking about the way the book was constructed instead, asking myself why they did something that way or thinking of how I would have done it.

These three were definitely books where all thought of the writing process went out of my head as I was reading. All I could think about was the story and what was going to happen next.

Spirit Gate is the first in a saga (Crossroads), so don’t expect a quick end to this one. And don’t wait for the last book either, before you begin. The journey is the thing with this one, not the destination. The second book, Shadow Gate, is already out, and is on the top of my TBR pile. I was so anxious to get it that I ended up with an Orbit trade paperback, so it doesn’t match the US mass paperback I have of Spirit Gate. But who cares? The story’s the thing!

This series is set in a complex world with numerous cultures, always a difficult thing to bring off successfully, let alone brilliantly, as here. The intricacies of the plot – the cultures, the stories, the characters – entwine and separate and come back together – leaving me in awe. I was involved every inch of the way, I guess because I was so rooting for the main protagonists, both male and female. Hey, who couldn’t like a hero who rides an eagle?

Who is this book not for? I guess you wouldn’t like it if you want that quick sugar fix. It is for readers who love a long involvement with people and a world that will stay with you.

Shadowbridge: great story. And an intriguing mystery too. Draws you in and keeps you turning the pages. Fascinating world – more bridge than land, a strange construction where peopel live and surreal things keep happening. The main character is a shadow puppeteer, which in itself is intriguing.

And every now and then you learn a tiny bit more about the mysteries of the world and the characters and whatever it is that threatens them. Trouble is, every bit you learn seems to ask another question… Definitely one of those reads where the sense of mystery pervades everything and the reader learns the answers along with the equally puzzled main protagonist as the story progresses.

This is only a duology, so you don’t have to wait long for all the answers. The second book, Lord Tophet, is already out in the USA.

Feast of Souls: I have read Friedman’s sf and fantasy books and loved them all. This is the first in The Magister trilogy, and the second book is out in February, so not long to wait. She’s a masterful writer who asks difficult questions and fashions an un-put-downable story around those questions. In this case: what would you risk for power and a very long healthy life – as long as you wanted to live, in fact? More to the point: what would you be prepared to pay, or have another pay? How much, in fact, do you care about someone you’ve never heard of?

The second book, Wings of Wrath, is out in February. Great stuff.

Untitled Post

Book Two of Random Rain

Another 1%.

Due Date: March 1st 2009 … for a polished version
Publication date: March 2010

Pix: Banksia flowers, south coast Western Australia

Reading Amazon Reviews

Yes, I read the reviews of my books on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk. It has never occurred to me not to. I also run a Google notification for internet reviews and the same from BlogPulse, which tells me when my books get mentioned on a blog.

So, if you write a review out there on a public site, there’s a pretty good chance that I will get to hear of it, and read it. I regard this as feedback from readers, and I love readers. Especially readers who buy my books and readers who care enough to write a review.

Of course, it does mean I have to take the good with the bad.

If the review is a “good” review (i.e. one which explains what the reviewer thought was good/bad, and why; what sort of readers might like/dislike the book, and why), then I learn something. That’s great feedback, and I love it. It’s a learning curve for me as a writer. The only thing I have to be wary of is taking one person’s opinion as a universal opinion.

Occasionally writers get reviews that just trash the book without being coherent, which is not helpful. You know the kind: “Waste of paper and trees. Don’t buy this stupid crap and if someone gives it to you, throw it in the rubbish bin without reading. Or better still recycle into toilet paper.”

The key to reading reviews is simply to remember each is only one reader’s view and if a single gushing review doth not a genius author make, a single trashing diatribe doth not a crappy book (or author) make either. You have to keep your perspective.

I was surprised to see (over on an E-forum I belong to) how many authors simply prefer not to read any reviews, particularly Amazon ones, because if they do, they obsess too much about the opinions.

Not me. I want to know what people think. My real complaint is that I don’t get enough Amazon reviews to be able to generalize. I think the most reviews I’ve ever had for a single edition was the US edition of The Aware – 13 reviews. I am madly envious of writers who get 30 plus, let along the mega stars who get 100’s for a single book.

Yep, if I was so lucky, I’d read every one…

More light-hearted reads…with a dash of the serious

You are buying books for Christmas, right?
For the kids, the aunts, the partner, the friends, the cat?

So now I am going to talk about one of my favourite book-writing people.

K.E. Mills, aka Karen Miller. She’s a Sydneysider, but I have decided to forgive her that solecism.
She dedicated a book to me, the daft woman, so I will forgive her anything. She is one of the most versatile writers under the sun – dodging between media tie-ins for Stargate and Star Wars, to standard fantasy (Kingmaker, Kingbreaker duology), to gruesome no-holds-barred swords and sorcery (try Empress of Mijak, called Empress in the UK, the first book of the Godspeaker trilogy), to humour with a streak of the deadly serious about it.

Karen’s greatest strength is characterisation, particularly dialogue and speech rhythms. You can hear her characters speak as you read the page.

Her semi-comedic stuff is a series, Rogue Agent, not a trilogy, so each book has a beginning, middle and end, but the characters pop up again in the next book, which is just as well because you won’t want to say goodbye to them. The snappy, witty dialogue and repartee forms the basis of the comedy, funny because it reflects the characters – from the articulate bird Reg, to the bumbling, well-intentioned Gerald Dunwoodie, to his friends – and some pretty nasty enemies. Reg is as memorable as, say, Nanny Ogg or Granny Weatherwax.

The first book is called The Accidental Sorcerer; the second is Witches Inc. The world reminds me a little of that of Wodehouse’s Jeeves and Bertie Wooster, with Reg being a sort of acerbic avian Jeeves … no medieval fantasy this!

I love these books. Need cheering up, but like excitement too? Then try the Rogue Agent series.

The Accidental Sorcerer

The Accidental Sorcerer

Rogue Agent – Book 1

(UK Release)

PUBLISHER: Orbit
FORMAT: Paperback
RELEASED: 01-Jan-2009 (which means it will be available before Christmas)
ISBN-10: 0316035424
ISBN-13: 9780316035422

Some light-hearted fantasy Christmas reading

Tis the season to be jolly, right?

Books make great presents, they aren’t too expensive, they smell good when new, they are easily transportable, they can be thrown at the cat without doing too much damage to either cat or book, they rarely get stolen by burglars, they can be talked about and lent, they can be burned in the fireplace when you get cold, or used as doorstops, or sold to secondhand bookstores; they can be read in bed or on trains or at Bangkok airport in the middle of a protest, all without being plugged-in and recharged…and they can cheer you up.

So here today and tomorrow are a couple of recommendations for those who want more light-hearted reading.

First up: space opera idiotic fun.
The Hal Spacejock series by Simon Haynes (he’s lives in my home town so I had a soft spot for Simon even before I met him!).
First book is called simply Hal Spacejock, but you don’t have to read these books in order to enjoy them. You can find out more about the four books already out here.

This is not a series for people who take their space opera seriously. It is just plain wacky – the adventures of an accident-prone, not very bright pilot who can’t actually pilot a ship:

In the flight deck, Hal Spacejock was studying the main viewscreen from his customary stance in the pilot’s chair — hands clasped behind his head, boots up on the flight console and a cup of coffee at his side.

I mean, why bother to learn how to pilot a ship when you have an onboard chess-playing, smart-ass computer who can do it for you, not to mention a robot sidekick called, um … Clunk?

Hal’s webpage says:
“If you enjoy books by Douglas Adams, Terry Pratchett, Tom Holt and Jasper Fforde, or TV shows like the Young Ones, Firefly, Blackadder, Lovejoy, Auf Wiedersehen Pet, Red Dwarf and Doctor Who, then the Hal Spacejock series is for you.”

They are written as books for adults, but I would say they are also great books to give to reluctant teenage boy readers to get them hooked on books, and there aren’t too many authors you can say that about.

There’s plenty of snappy dialogue, but I think visual humour is also one of Simon’s strengths as a writer. His books would make great zany films, or even cartoons. As Hal plunges from one disaster to the next, most scenes unfold as visual comedy as much as verbal, which is harder to achieve than it sounds.

Tomorrow: K.E.Mills – humour with an undercurrent of the serious.

What to buy for Christmas…

I could tell you about the latest idiocy re Malaysia and censorship. Or I could tell you what I think of a certain President who ignored and sidelined the very people paid by his government to investigate the truth about the lack – or presence – of WMD in Iraq (one of them a personal friend of ours, so I know what I am talking about) and who now has the gall to lie, “Nobody told me!”

Instead, in the next few days, I’m going to tell you what to buy for Christmas. Books of course.

For those who like long, complex stories I recommend the following:

I’ve only read the first 3 books, but I have no doubt that the next two will be just as good. For a start, David is an expert with characterization. A series like this has a great many people roaming through Dukedoms, realms and an Empire, and we follow a number of them, yet each is memorable and distinct. There was no glossary of characters, yet I rarely had to refer back to see who someone was. That’s classy writing.

It’s a series for those who like politics and machinations, villainy on a large scale, different levels and fascinating kinds of magic, and heroes who have to make choices that are far from easy. There were times when I thought he nailed the true problems of racial politics and relationships and prejudices with uncanny accuracy. And because very early on he killed off a couple of likeable characters, I am none to sure who is going to make it to the end alive and well, so the tension is there too. The remaining two books are high on my TBR pile.

Tide Lords tetralogy by Jennifer Fallon.
(Ok, so maybe it’s not all out in US and UK yet. Never mind, you can get it from Australia…)

The Immortal Prince; Gods of Amyrantha; Palace of Impossible Dreams; The Chaos Crystal.

This one is for anyone who likes strong plots with lots of twists, and plenty of strong characters vying for preeminence with diabolical deviousness. Complex politics, interesting use of magic, the kind of world that you think you have a handle on until Jenny peels back another layer and you realise you didn’t have it worked out after all. Not until Book 3 do you realise just who is calling the shots, and has been all along, and you don’t understand why until well into book 4. And not until the end of Book 4 do you realise fully just what has been going on…

I guess what I liked best was the way that you keep on thinking you understand, only to find out later that you were mistaken. It’s easy enough to keep a reader thoroughly confused, but that’s not what Jenny does. She does something much harder for a writer, she continually changes your perception.
Don’t, whatever you do, read the last pages first. You’ll regret it if you do.
I loved the ending. Brilliant.

Nine months more

…until Book 1 of Random Rain is published. Sounds like a baby’s gestation. Would you believe, discussion is still ongoing what to call it? Things get a bit complicated too, when there is more than one parent publisher involved in different countries.

Today, though, I felt as if another milestone was reached. There was some discussion about the cover and I know who is the artist for one of the publishers involved, and the name has blown my mind… wow.

I am officially getting excited – but birth publication day is still so far off! How can I keep my cool that long? I feel like a kid finding out on Boxing Day that Christmas only comes once a year.

Or a woman realising she’s got to be pregnant for nine whole months…