Talking With Tom: A Conversation Between Tom Doherty and L.E. Modesitt Jr.

Tor.com just posted what’s certainly my biggest assignment for them to date: a long conversation between Tor Books founder Tom Doherty and science fiction and fantasy author L.E. Modesitt Jr. I’m not going to re-post the entire thing here, but if you’re curious (as, I think, almost anyone who’s interested in the SF&F publishing field and/or L.E. Modesitt Jr. would be), you can find it here!

(Also, in case you missed it, I was fortunate enough to conduct a long interview with L.E. Modesitt Jr. earlier this year.)

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The Emperor’s Soul by Brandon Sanderson

At the start of Brandon Sanderson’s latest novella The Emperor’s Soul, Emperor Ashravan has just barely survived an assassination attempt. He’s alive thanks to his healers’ skills, but his mind has been wiped completely. The ruling Arbiters have managed to keep the fact that their Emperor has become a vegetable secret, thanks to the hundred day solitary mourning period he is expected to maintain for the death of his wife, the Empress, who died in the same attack. However, once that period runs out, it will become clear that the Emperor is no longer able to rule, and the power in the Empire will inevitably change hands….

It’s therefore an incredibly happy coincidence that the Empire has recently captured Shai, a master Forger with the magical ability to re-create and change objects and even people. Even though Forging is considered an abomination by the Empire, the Arbiters are left with little choice and set a bold plan in motion: they will force their prisoner to attempt the impossible and Forge a new soul for the Emperor, before the rest of the world finds out what happened…

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Giveaway winner! (Iain M. Banks giveaway)

Banks_CultureBoxSet-HCThe winner of last week’s giveaway (for a copy of the brand new Iain M. Banks boxed set containing his first three Culture novels) is…

Keith P. of Holdingford, MN

Congratulations, Keith – your copy of the Culture box set is on its way, courtesy of the kind people at Orbit!

And for those of you who didn’t win this time, make sure to keep following what’s happening here at FBR, because I plan to have regular giveaways.

As a matter of fact, there’s another one running right now, and you can still enter it…

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A Red Sun Also Rises by Mark Hodder – includes giveaway!

There are many possible reasons I pick books to read and review. I always like giving debuts a try. Conversely, I have a long list of favorite authors I’ll read almost anything by. A plot summary that promises some depth and/or innovation usually works. Sometimes a good cover illustration will even pull me in. But my favorite reason of all to pick an unfamiliar book from the stack is a plot summary that’s so, well, so plain weird that I couldn’t possibly turn it down.

A perfect example of this is Mark Hodder’s newest novel A Red Sun Also Rises, which, in addition to the grin-inducing Hemingway-by-way-of-Chtulhu title, also features a synopsis that adds a whole new level of weird with every new paragraph.

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Lookin’ Good: Quintessence by David Walton

QuintessenceI mentioned a few weeks ago that I sometimes can be motivated to try an unfamiliar author or novel if the plot summary is sufficiently weird. (And as a matter of fact, I did try that novel out. What’s more: I really enjoyed it. The review appeared on Tor.com last week and will be posted here tomorrow!)

Today, I have another example of the strange little things that can grab my attention when trying to decide what to review. I’m not sure whether I should call this a tag line or just a bunch of, well, keywords maybe? Anyway, this is the string of text running along the top of the press release for David Walton’s Quintessence:

* Sea Monsters * Alchemy * Betrayal * Human Dissection * Religious Controversy * Magic * Torture *

Well alrighty then. I mean, really, how could you turn down a novel that promises all of that?

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Meanwhile at the Discussion Group: December 2012

The name of this website was inspired by the Beyond Reality discussion group, which has been around for almost two decades in various forms and which I’ve been managing for more than half of that time. The group is currently housed at GoodReads (a site I waste an incredible amount of time on) and has over 1,300 members. Because this site’s name took its inspiration from the group, I try to post monthly updates about the group here, including our Books of the Month, our series discussions, and any other special events like giveaways or author visits. (At least: I used to do this, but somehow forgot to put the actual posts together for the past six months.)

Please consider this an invitation to join us, if you’re interested in SF&F book discussion. And if book discussions aren’t your thing, maybe you’ll find some additional book recommendations in this monthly feature!

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Jagannath by Karin Tidbeck

Where do they keep coming from? Over the last handful of weeks I’ve read Near + Far by Cat Rambo (review), At the Mouth of the River of Bees by Kij Johnson (review) and Errantry: Strange Stories by Elizabeth Hand (review)—three new collections of short stories, all from small presses, all by female authors, and all superb. And then, just when I think it can’t get any better, along comes Karin Tidbeck’s debut collection Jagannath, which may just be the best one of the bunch. If you take into account that this is Tidbeck’s debut collection in English and that it was translated from Swedish to English by the author herself, it’s hard not to be awed by the sheer level of talent on display here.

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Giveaway! Enter to win a boxed set of the first three Iain M. Banks Culture novels

It’s hard to believe that it’s been 25 years since Consider Phlebas, the very first Culture novel by Iain M. Banks, was published. Since that faithful day in 1987, Banks has released ten Culture books, making this a double anniversary: 10 books and 25 years! I consider this the best science fiction series currently running, with at least one or two of its installments on my personal all-time-favorite SF list. (I reviewed The Hydrogen Sonata, which is the latest addition to the series, here.)

To help celebrate a quarter century of brilliant SF, Orbit has generously offered a copy of the beautiful new box set including the first three novels in the Culture series (Consider Phlebas, The Player of Games and Use of Weapons) to give away to one lucky reader in the US or Canada. Orbit also has a fascinating interview with the author on its site.

To enter, simply send an email with subject line “CULTURE” to fbrgiveaway AT gmail DOT com with your full name and mailing address. One entry per person, please: multiple entries will result in immediate disqualification, but please feel free to tell your friends! Please note again that this giveaway is limited to the US and Canada.

The giveaway will end on Tuesday, December 4th at 11:59 PM, and I’ll announce the winners the following day. Void where prohibited by law, rules are subject to change, harmful when swallowed, batteries not included.

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Want to give something back for Thanksgiving?

Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday, which may sound funny coming from someone who only officially became an American a handful of years ago, but there it is. I love that it’s a holiday that doesn’t require cards, or giving gifts, or all the other phony traditions that have become more about meeting manufactured expectations than about the true meaning of the holiday. I love that it’s just a good excuse to get together, have a good meal, and appreciate life and family and friendship. (I also love that it’s the last moment of sanity before the most commercial of holidays takes off, and thanks to the Black Friday nonsense, that moment is sadly getting shorter and shorter, but I’ll save that rant for another time.)

Anyway.  I also love that, for many of us, Thanksgiving is a time to reflect on everything that makes us lucky, and maybe, just maybe, give something to those who don’t have as much.

For those of you looking to do some good this Thanksgiving, here are a few options to consider:

1. Triumph Over Tragedy. I’ve written before about this anthology, being put together to benefit the people affected by Hurricane Sandy. It’s a good cause, selflessly put together by some good folks, and if you have $7 to spare you can help get it off the ground.

2. Worldbuilders. Patrick Rothfuss is an awesome guy. He writes great fantasy novels. He has a fantastic, self-deprecating sense of humor that makes his blog a true pleasure to read. Having a young son myself, I simply melt every time he writes about Oot. And every year he selflessly devotes a ton of time and money to Worldbuilders. What’s even more cool – by donating you can win some truly amazing prizes.

3. Small Business Saturday! Just got an email from my favorite bookstore in the whole wide world, Mysterious Galaxy right here in San Diego, with details about a new initiative from American Express called Shop Small. I’ll let you read the fine print for yourself, but in essence you can register for this program, go spend $25 or more at a local participating indie store, and then get a $25 credit on your statement. So if you fancy $25 of free books, register for this thing and go shopping at your local independent book store this weekend.

4. National Buy a Book Day. Now to be clear, this event actually happens in September, and I try to participate in it every year, but since I just got a message from one of the foundation’s people looking for donations to this very worthwhile cause, I thought I’d drop it in this list too. Help keep bookstores alive!

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Errantry: Strange Stories by Elizabeth Hand

There’s a lovely scene in “Errantry,” the title story of Elizabeth Hand’s newest collection of short fiction, in which a character finds a print of a painting she loved as a child and describes what she used to imagine about the world it depicts: “A sense of immanence and urgency, of simple things […] charged with an expectant, slightly sinister meaning I couldn’t grasp but still felt, even as a kid.”

It’s probably not a coincidence that the same painting graces the cover of the book, because that quote is a perfect way to encapsulate the atmosphere of many of the “Strange Stories” in Errantry. The magic in Elizabeth Hand’s short fiction can usually be found at its edges, just slightly out of reach. It’s there for a moment, but it’s hard to see without squinting. If you blink, it might be gone—but you’d never lose the sense that it’s still there, pushing in on reality from the outside.

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