The Motion Picture Event
Guys and Girls, do have I have news for you!!!
Over at this post, Peter V Brett breaks the news of a future The Painted Man / The Warded Man movie.
I shit you not.
All I can say is AWESOME!!!!!!!
Congrats to Peat and to the extremely lucky director!
I came a bit late to this news (2 days, in fact) but hell, what AWESOME news it is!
Be EPIC!
Review & Giveaway: Patient Zero by Jonathan Maberry
That’s right, guys and girls!
Not only am I reviewing Patient Zero for you, but I’ve also got one copy of the book for one lucky person!
More on that at the end of the review, though; let’s get into the review!
Patient Zero follows Joe Ledger, a hard, no-nonsense cop in Boston who is facing a hearing because of the his fatal shooting of a suspect – Joe isn’t worried, though. The hearing is merely for show since his actions were legal in every way, but the motions need to be gone through to satisfy those that need satisfying. Joe, however, is waylaid by two burly ear-piece-wearing men in suits, who take him to see a ‘Mr. Church’, and it’s from that moment on that Joe’s life spirals out of true… You see, Joe once again comes up against the same guy, a Middle Eastern terrorist, that he shot and killed earlier… But he’s dead, isn’t he? Well, dead he may be, but he’s also hungry, his skin is a bit on the grey side, and he snarls a lot… And now Joe has to contend with the fact that suicide bombers are going out of style and a new kind of bio-terrorism is being born…
Welcome to 21st Century zombies – and trust me on this one, you haven’t ever seen zombies like these before!
I’m not going any deeper into the plot – What I’ve told you is (as far as I remember) the first four or five pages of the book, and if that already sounds cool, then preare yourself – Jonathan Maberry is going to knock your socks off with what else happens in the book!
Not only are the action sequences incredible, fast-paced, hard-hitting and violent (think the Punisher crossed with Christian Bale’s moves in Equilibrium and spiced with the tech-angle of Mission Impossible), they are also personal; we are in the thick of it, seeing and experiencing everything through Joe Ledger’s eyes and other senses. Jonathan uses all the senses, mind you, which is one of the aspects that makes a novel incredible – you can practically smell the gunsmoke, feels the line in the air that a passing bullet has created, feel the deep, twisted revulsion when a two-legged once-human thing comes sprinting at you, taste the blood in your mouth and the bile, too, hear the percussion of charges being set off to open doors, the sloshing of sewer-pipe water… Jonathan totally immerses you, the reader, into the story, and here is a warning: if you’re a smoker (like me), have a few boxes handy, because you will finish them all! If you’re a coffee-drinker (like me), keep that kettle boiling! And if you have a job (like me, and almost everyone who reads this blog), then get ready to have some very late evenings!
Another awesome angle of this story is the science; Jonathan does what (in my opinion) only Michael Crichton has been doing, and doing well – he uses science that we know about (even though our brightest minds don’t completely understand that science), science that is real today, to shine a light on how, perhaps, becoming a zombie would be possible. The ideas Jonathan brings forth are pretty damn cool, educating us as well as intruiging us, and he has the characters themselves explain the science. This is one of those rare (like I said, Michael Crichton) books that is highly entertaining, educational, and an absolute thrill to enjoy.
Oh, and beware of the sting, the twist, at the end – not one but two “Holy SHIT!” moments are waiting for you to enjoy them!
I reccomend this book highly – not only for those zombie-lovers out there (and no, I didn’t mean that in a sick way, c’mon!) but for those who like intense action, characters that come alive and don’t mind getting down to business, and science-lovers who’s minds are ticking over with ideas – just don’t actually go and create a zombie, okay? I like my life.

9/10!
For more info on Jonathan Maberry, check out his blog here! Also, Jonathan announced earlier this month that he is taking over as the new writer for the great Marvel comic, Black Panther!
Check out and buy it here!
And here’s some more good news, guys and girls: Joe Ledger will be returning!
Book 2 is on it’s way, and Book 3 is at Jonathan’s editor!
More info as it’s released!
Patient Zero is available to order from Exclusive Books in South Africa (and Amazon everywhere else!), and should be available on the shelves! (A birdie told me that Exclusive’s newest branch in the Kolonnade center in Pretoria has two copies available…)
Now to the giveaway!
I have one (that’s right, only ONE) copy to give away to a lucky reader! (Thanks to Elmarie Stoddart and Donna Moore from Jonathan Ball)
It’s the trade paperback edition (still wayyy to early for this book to be available in paperback), and has the same cover in the pic above.
You all know the rules, but here they are again:
1) Only South Africans to enter, please – shipping costs (and I’m paying these costs, not the publishers) are damn expensive from SA to anywhere outside SA, so only South Africans in South Africa may enter.
2) If you work for a publisher, stay away – you know why.
3) All you have to do to enter is comment on this post – the form will ask for your email address, so you don’t have to leave that in your comment, and don’t leave your address or any other important info (there are sneaky Skynet programs stealing that info to build Terminators), just your name and a comment.
That’s it!
I will run this giveaway from today (30 May) until the 13th on June – that gives you and everyone else 2 weeks to enter!
Good luck to the entrants, and
Be EPIC!
P.S. My very next post will be my review of Mark Charon Newton’s excellent debut, Nights of Villjamur!
Review: Worst Nightmares by Shane Briant
I’m putting the review in a non-SFF category because it isn’t SFF at all – just a bloody good thriller!
Let’s get the intro out of the way so I can get to telling you why you should buy this book as soon as you see it and read it as soon as possible!
Worst Nightmares follows Dermot Nolan, a Booker-prize winning author and darling of the literary scene, who needs to come up with another wonderful novel before, his agent drops him, his publisher demands the advance that they paid him back, and he loses all credibility in literary circles. Throw into the mix a wife (and editor) who is ready to have kids and a best friend who is doing better, financially and in almost every other aspect, than his best-selling friend, and you’ve already got a brew of plotlines that would suit any novel. But when a crazy homeless guy shoves an envelope into Dermot’s mailbox and he discovers a macabre diary in it, that’s when things start getting really interesting – because Dermot takes the diary, detailing horrific murders by someone called the Dream Healer, and begins thinking that he could just adapt the diary and publish it as his own book….
You see, the Dream Healer finds out what your worst nightmare is, tracks you down, and visits that worst nightmare upon you – but surely it can’t actually have happened? Surely all the murders in the diary are made up! After all, what does a crazy homeless guy know about writing a book? Dermot begins investigating some of the ‘murders’ and as he discovers that the diary is not just a diary, he realizes he may just have written himself into his own worst nightmare.
It took me a few chapters to warm up to this book, I’ll admit that. Why? Well, I just couldn’t shake the ‘Saw” vibe (and I am a big fan of the Saw story, as well as the traps, of course), and as I read, I guess I was hoping so much that the book wouldn’t be just another ‘Saw’ that I didn’t enjoy the first 2 ore so chapters as much as I could have. But trust me on this one: there comes a point, early in the book, that an event takes place that really makes you sit up and take notice! By then you’ll be hooked, just as I was, and this speaks to one of Shane’s greatest strengths as a storyteller – the ability to lull you into thinking exactly what he wants you to think before snapping a surprise out at you! Shane’s talent at creating thrills and ramping up the levels of those thrills is something to behold – you may just find yourself staying up wayyy past your bedtime!
Shane also creates believable characters, people in their own right who we can sympathize with, cheer on, swear at – he could have just created flat 2-dimensional characters because, lets face it, the concept of the book is interesting enough that it probably could have worked. But Shane doesn’t write that way – his characters live and breathe, react to situations as we probably would, and above all, make it easy for us to empathize with them. You really do experience the events through them, not just watch, suspended in the air, listening to what they say and watching what they do. So don’t even worry about the characters not being real enough!
One thing I also have to add – I guessed (I took a wild guess, mind you, not basing it on anything) the identity of the Dream Healer. I worried at that stage whether or not I even wanted to finish the book, whether it was even interesting anymore – but I’m so glad I did finish reading it!
Trust me, when you reach the final quarter of the book, when all hell starts breaking loose and you can’t put the book down, Shane’s got one more surprise coming that’ll knock your socks off!
…and maybe, just maybe, you’ll have a nightmare. Just don’t tell anyone about it. Okay?

8/10
To read another review with some more info about Shane, check out this link!
And to order your copy, go here!
Be EPIC!
Season of the Witch Giveaway Winner!
Hey guys and girls, I’m really sorry to have kept you in suspense like I did, but work, private life and problems with the internet got in the way!
I am, however, here now to let you all know that the random number generator I use has chosen a winner for Natasha Mostert’s Season of the Witch, and the lucky person will be getting a copy through the post soon!
Now, without any further a-do, the winner is….!
(drumrolllll…!)
Mark Thompson! Congratulations, Mark!
Your book will be on its way shortly – or in other words, as soon as I take it to the post office and send it on it’s way, so check your email and send me address!
I’ll be announcing the new giveaway next week some time, and trust me, it’s going to be a doozie! Got some awesome books to give away!
Be EPIC!
Review – Terminator Salvation Novelization by Alan Dean Foster
Before Sarah Conner’s life was turned upside down by a creature of implacable will and deadly determination, before even the birth of her son and the knowledge that he had to live so that the world could live, a man named Marcus Wright was executed by the State of Texas, and a man named John Conner fought to keep the remnants of humanity alive.
Confusing?
Don’t’ worry – every time I try and wrap my head around the time-travelling aspects of the Terminator mythos I also start thinking, “What the hell?!”
But that’s only because the story of humanity’s fight against Skynet is so entertaining that I don’t give myself time to think about anything deeper than what I’m watching or reading.
After reading Alan Dean Foster’s novelization of the soon-to-be-released Terminator Salvation, I find myself becoming a fan, once again, of the Terminators (only because they’re so damn cool, of course), of John Conner, and even of Sarah Conner: I will be watching all the movies again and going through the first two seasons of Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles before buying my tickets to watch Salvation.
You see, Alan writes damn good books. Whether he’s writing his own novels (and by that I mean non-franchise) or novelizations, Alan knows what makes a good book work, and gives that to us in spades!
Case in point: if the first chapter of the book doesn’t hook you, nothing will. As I said to Alan himself, that first chapter (wherein we meet Marcus) could very well be a story on it’s own – Alan takes us right into Marcus’ head while also giving us a brutal view of what it’s like to sit in a cell and wait to die for the crimes you’ve committed. Another character is also introduced that will make a surprising appearance later, but none of that, don’t want to spoil you!
One of Alan’s greatest strengths as a storyteller, too, is his ability to make the characters live and breathe in their worlds. Whether that character is a Resistance fighter with the ground troops, a field-doctor battling to save the wounded and dying, a pilot tasked with giving air support to whichever mission needs air support, or kids trying to stay alive in the shattered remnants of cities, Alan brings them all a measure of life and living that helps you sink even deeper into the story.
The action sequences are incredible, too! Even though you’re holding a paperback in your hands, it feels like you’re watching the events unfold on a wide, wide screen with an incredible sound system; sure, Alan probably worked from a script for this novelization, but hell, you try translating the very-cut-down scenes of a screenplay into the action-scenes that populate this novelization! It’s nowhere as easy as it seems – believe me, I’m engaged with a screenplay project myself – but Alan makes it seem effortless!
Is this a Terminator story? Definitely! (And no, not because it’s titled Terminator Salvation) Alan really sinks us into the world of the Resistance and what they’re fighting to preserve. Not only are the descriptions of Skynet-tech very cool, with plenty of T-600s and H-Ks, but Alan also uses events and what characters say to refer back to the previous movies – the characters that have made the Terminator movies so cool are all there, some in spirit, and Alan has written the book in such a way that you’ll find yourself flashing back to scenes from the previous movies without realizing it, deepening your submersion in the story.
The next thing I s’pose I should tackle is: Why read this book when I can watch the movie? Well, I’m going to be standing in line for my tickets – but only in June! Terminator Salvation only reaches our theatres then- and I’m still going to enjoy the hell out of the movie! You see, I’m pretty sure that’ll I’ll understand the characters better, that their motivations will make more sense, that all the little details we miss when watching a huge action movie like this are missed because Christian Bale or a T-600 are on the screen. You’ll enjoy the movie more because of this book, and then you may just find yourself tracking down other novelizations that Alan has done (and will still do) so that you can read them and then re-watch the movies.
It’s almost like having special features available to you that open the world of the story even wider!
So, I’m pretty sure that you’ll love this book, and then enjoy the hell out of the movie, too!
Last words: Marcus Wright is awesome, and John Conner is not going to disappoint!
8/10
To check out more of Alan’s work, follow this link to his site, and to order your copy of the book, follow this link.
And don’t forget, the prequel to the movie is also available and is written by Star Wars EU-Creator (in my opinion) Timothy Zahn!
Check out Titan Books for more Terminator goodness!
Be EPIC!

An Interview with Brandon Sanderson
Thanks to Brandon for taking time out of one of the most important projects in Epic Fantasy’s publishing history to answer a few of my questions!
I hope you enjoy the interview as much as I did!

Thanks for agreeing to this interview, Brandon, and welcome to the South African SFF scene! First off, will you please tell us a bit about yourself? Where you grew up, what started you reading, and why you started writing?
I grew up in Lincoln, Nebraska. I was a big reader as a child, then fell away for a while. In third and fourth grade, my favorite series was the Three Investigators books, a mystery series. As I grew older, the books that other people gave me to read were realistic fiction–books that bored me out of my skull, so my reading habits dribbled off. By junior high I wasn’t reading anything new, until I had a wonderful English teacher who told me I couldn’t keep doing book reports on novels that were four grades below my reading level. Instead, she gave me her copy of Dragonsbane by Barbara Hambly. I had no idea books like that existed–it engaged my imagination like no other book ever had. At that point I started reading every fantasy book I could get my hands on, including Eye of the World when it came out in paperback. I was hooked, and there was no going back. I even started writing some myself–on my website in the library section there’s a short story I wrote in high school for a writing contest at a local SF convention. It’s really not very good, but it took first place in the student division, and at the awards ceremony was one of the first times I can remember thinking, “Wow, maybe I can do this.”
My mother, however, thought I should study something more concrete and said I could keep writing on the side. I started college as a biochemistry major, but when I took two years off to serve a mission for my church I realized I didn’t miss chemistry at all and just wanted to write. On my off days I worked on what eventually became my first novel, and when I got back to school I changed my major to English and determined to become a professional author.
You have amassed a well-loved body of work, attaching your name to epic fantasy even before being approached to finish A Memory of Light; will you please tell us about your work, and why a reader who has never read your work should buy and read a copy of Elantris, the Mistborn series or Warbreaker?
I love epic fantasy, but I’m of the generation who grew up reading Robert Jordan and Tad Williams and are now trying to say, what else can we do with the genre? I want to write books that feel like the great epic fantasies of the past that you’ve read, but don’t use the same, familiar stories. In Mistborn, for example, the idea was to turn the standard fantasy story on its head–what if the prophesied hero failed and the Dark Lord took over and has ruled the known world for the last thousand years? My books are also known for their spectacular, interesting magic systems that are very rule based and almost a science unto themselves. But of course none of that matters without characters whose motivations you can understand and who you can care about as a reader. In Elantris I have three very different main viewpoint characters, and readers are fairly evenly divided on who’s their favorite–in writing as in anything else, it’s impossible to please everyone all the time, but I’m happy that my books have shown so many different people a character they can relate to and root for.
Between writing Mistborn 2 and Mistborn 3, I wanted to try something new, and my series of humorous middle-grade novels beginning with Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians was the result. I love epic fantasy, and don’t intend to ever stop writing it. However, sometimes we all need a diversion toward something more lighthearted. If you want to get a taste of what my writing is like, because Alcatraz is so different from my other books I recommend that unless you’re between the ages of ten and thirteen you start with the first Mistborn book–or Elantris or Warbreaker. Mistborn is a good entry point for people who like trilogies and series (and the writing is better in Mistborn than in Elantris; I can see how much I have improved over the years). The other two are good entry points for people who prefer standalones–and Warbreaker is available for free on my website (as well as coming out in hardcover in North America from Tor next month), so it may be the most convenient starting point of all.
You’ve been using the Internet as an excellent tool for marketing your work and getting readers a behind-the-scenes seat on being an author; what led to you taking that path?
There are some authors out there who are really good at sitting down and blogging about themselves or whatever’s on their mind and building a following of likeminded people, but I actually find that a bit of a struggle. Perhaps writing fiction kind of sucks away all of the “writing juices” from me, leaving me unmotivated to write anything promotional. Or perhaps it’s because I’m really a recluse at heart. I want people to read my fiction, but I don’t necessarily care if they know about the man behind the screen. He’s not important–only the story matters. So while I do manage to do some of the normal blogging things–talking about my life and the creative process–I also see my website and blog as an opportunity to give back to the fans. In the publishing world, a lot of time passes between one book’s release and the next’s, and I hope that giving my readers something to read regularly while they’re waiting is a good way to keep my books in their mind. If someone who reads a book by me puts my name into a search engine, I want something interesting to show up–I think of a lot of my website content in terms of the bonus content you get on a special edition DVD. The biggest example of this is the chapter-by-chapter annotations I post regularly–think of them as the director’s commentary track that you can listen to while you watch a movie, usually on the second or third watching of a movie you like. You can read a chapter or section of the book, then read my companion discussion of that particular section. The annotations alone add a lot of text to the reading experience–the annotations for Mistborn 3: The Hero of Ages that I’ll start posting soon total 40,000 words, which is long enough to be called a novel in its own right (though my novels themselves are quite a bit longer than that). Also like on a DVD, you can find deleted scenes and alternate endings on my website–earlier drafts that I had to discard but which the readers might find interesting. And I do like to let people know the status of the projects I’m currently working on, with handy progress bars in one corner of the page.
You also run the Writing Excuses podcast with Howard Tayler and Dan Wells; did the idea start with you, or was it the brainchild of a get-together? And why do you think it has become so popular?
A couple years ago, I realized that there’s a whole lot of writing talent hanging around my area. I also realized that my brother is getting a degree that focuses heavily on web marketing, and that he had just taken a podcasting class. These two ideas started battling to the death in the arena of my mind, until they merged into the weekly podcast known as Writing Excuses. Dan Wells and I have been friends since college, and before we were published we went to conventions together to hit up editors. (His first published book, horror novel I Am Not a Serial Killer, recently came out in the UK.) Howard I met more recently, but I’d long been a fan of his Schlock Mercenary webcomic (schlockmercenary.com). I felt that our combination of writing styles and backgrounds would make an interesting mix for the podcast, and Dan and Howard were enthusiastic. As for why the podcast has become popular, I think our slogan has a lot to do with it–“Fifteen minutes long, because you’re in a hurry, and we’re not that smart.” Our goal is to be quick, informative, and conversational–and, if possible, occasionally amusing. That has clearly struck a chord with our listeners.

Moving on to the Wheel of Time, I’m sure you can remember exactly where and when you were when you first laid eyes on The Eye of the World; what, in your opinion, makes the Wheel of Time series so popular?
I do remember exactly where and when I first laid eyes on The Eye of the World. It was right after the paperback came out, and I was at the local comic store where I bought all my fantasy books. While browsing the new paperback shelf, I saw this huge fantasy novel there. I can almost feel that moment, standing and holding the book in my hands, listening to someone play an antiquated upright of Cadash in the background. I think the cover of Eye is the best Darryl Sweet has ever done–one of the best in fantasy. I loved the cover. The feel of the troop marching along, Lan and Moiraine proud and face forward. . . . The cover screamed epic. I bought the book and loved it. I still think Eye is one of the greatest fantasy books ever written. It signifies an era, the culmination of the epic quest genre which had been brewing since Tolkien initiated it in the ’60s. The Wheel of Time dominated my reading during the ’90s, influencing heavily my first few attempts at my own fantasy novels. I think it did that to pretty much all of us; even many of the most literarily snobbish of fantasy readers were youths when I was, and read Eye of the World when I did. Robert Jordan showed us what it was to have vision and scope in a fantasy series–he did a wonderful job giving his readers a sense of immensity to his story, while at the same time focusing on the specific lives of his characters. He did an excellent job of creating a large set of empathetic characters and keeping them straight in the reader’s mind. He’s a model writer for walking the line between familiarity (the “farmboy saves the world from an evil overlord” story) and originality (his use of magic, his political worldbuilding). The descriptiveness of his writing is great. And the prologue to Eye of the World is hands-down one of the most interesting introductions to any series. All those factors have won readers over and cemented the Wheel of Time as one of the most popular fantasy series of all time. Nobody in the adult fantasy market today has left more of an impact on more people’s lives than Robert Jordan.
It must have been surreal when you found out you were going to finish a series you loved and work from the notes of an author you (and many others, myself included) admire so much; does it still feel as if you’re dreaming, sometimes? Is there still that little voice telling you you’re going to wake up soon?
I still feel a little stunned at times. It’s odd. It’s been a year and a half, but from time to time I still stop and think, “Wait, how in the world did this happen? Out of all of the people who could have been chosen, did this really happen to me?” I kind of feel like Sam, carrying Frodo the last few paces up the mountain. I’m finishing the Master’s work for him, since he is unable to. I’m just glad I could be here to help for the last stretch when I was needed.
How has finishing (and it’s not completely done yet, guys and girls) A Memory of Light changed your life? Are you still the same Brandon Sanderson you were before A Memory of Light?
It’s far from completely done! The first part of the three, The Gathering Storm, is turned in and in production, and I’m only about halfway through the second part’s rough draft. There’s a lot of writing left to go. But working on the Wheel of Time has forced me to grow immensely as a writer. Back when I sold Elantris to Tor, they were interested in following that with the book I was working on at the time, called The Way of Kings. But I felt my career and writing skills weren’t yet in the right place to pull off the ten-volume epic fantasy series that I wanted that book to lead into, so I wrote the Mistborn trilogy instead. Now, after working on the Wheel of Time for over a year, I finally feel ready to dive in and do a revision of Way of Kings. If I can effectively use all I’ve learned, I might be able to make the book become what I want it to be.
How has it been working so closely with Harriet? Granted, you are in different States, but you know what I mean.
Harriet is a world class editor–she really is great at what she does. I’ve had several opportunities to meet with her in person–she, and Mr. Jordan’s staff, are awesome. His two assistants, Maria and Alan, are continuity experts and went through my completed manuscript pages fact checking and giving feedback on general issues as well. I had worried that having three editors on this project would make it more difficult to work on, but so far it’s simply been a big help. There is so much going on in this book and this world that having the extra sets of eyes is very helpful.
I’ve really enjoyed the process. At the beginning, after I read all the notes and explained to the team my feelings on the various outlines for the different characters, Harriet pretty much let me call the shots when it came to the actual drafting of the novel. As an editor, she works best when I provide material to her, then she works her magic to turn it from good to excellent. When I turned manuscript pages in, and she came back to me with line edits–where she goes through and tweaks the language of the book–it quickly became obvious what a pro she is and how much she loves this series. It’s truly an honor to work with her.

Not only are you finishing A Memory of Light, you’re also writing your own work; how on earth to you balance and juggle everything? I s’pose it helps to be a full-time writer.
andWhat is your day like while working on A Memory of Light? Do you work according to a schedule? Are there enough hours in the day?
Let me combine the answers for these two questions. You may not be surprised to hear that I have many more ideas for books than I have time to work on them. There are several first drafts or partial drafts of novels that I’ve written that need serious revision before they ever see the light of day, but I have to prioritize according to the urgency of the project and the deadlines I’m working under. Part two of A Memory of Light (the working title is Shifting Winds, but this will ultimately change) will be getting the largest share of my attention during the next year. I also have to finish the fourth Alcatraz book in the next few months–Scholastic will probably start breathing down my neck around July or August, but my goal is to write it when I have a rough draft done for Shifting Winds. I often work on two books at once–writing new material for one book and editing another. Writing and editing take different types of attention, and I can usually only write new material for four to six hours a day, but I can revise all day long–maybe this is the difference between mental heavy lifting and mental long-distance running. I recently hired an assistant to handle a lot of the non-writing tasks associated with being self-employed; this should free up another couple hours each day during which I can work on revising Way of Kings as I mentioned above. I generally put in an eight-hour workday, then call it quits if other things are happening. From 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. is family time, and then if nothing pressing is going on I head back to work after dinner and after my son is in bed. It works for me–most of the time, the fifty or sixty hours a week I spend writing are quite fun. As my wife says, writing is my job and my hobby. I’d generally rather be working on one of my books than sitting in front of the television.
With Red Eagle Entertainment doing the live-action movie and the various games of the Wheel of Time, why do you think many fans have had such a strong reaction against this? I know I’d like to shout, “If Harriet’s okay with it, leave it alone!”
Maybe they’ll get made. Maybe they won’t turn out so well, like some other recent fantasy book adaptations. Or maybe we’ll get lucky, and they’ll get a director who understands the books and can bring out the same feel of the novels while still adapting them in a way that suits the film medium. The thing is, you never know which of those you’re going to get until you try. Now that I’ve met with representatives of Red Eagle, I’m much more comfortable with them working on the project. They really impressed me with their sincere desire to do the series justice.
We know you can’t say anything specific or even in general about what takes place in A Memory of Light, but you have to be able to answer this one, at least – does Bela save the day?
I’m afraid Bela’s future exploits are still under wraps, but I have already revealed that it was Bela (with the assistance of Narg) who killed Asmodean.
Finally, Michael A. Stackpole once commented on whether or not the world of the Wheel of Time should be expanded by having other writers writing the stories of, let’s say, Artur Hawkwing’s rise to power or how the Seanchan tamed Seanchan, and so letting Robert Jordan’s world expand and grow – good idea or bad idea?
I think the concept of anyone else working on the Wheel of Time was very painful for Robert Jordan. But in the last months before his death, he became determined–even insistent–that the series be completed after he passed away–and that means the part of the story that he had outlined to appear in the final book, now split into three due to length. He also previously had ideas for two more prequels and the outrigger novels set after the series’ end, but those were not a priority in his last few months. At this point we’re not sure Robert Jordan would have wanted those books to be written in his absence, and no one involved in finishing the series now feels the same urgency about them. I know that a lot of fans want to see those books eventually, but I ask that you please respect Harriet’s ability to decide their fate. If Harriet feels that he would not have wanted them done or that there aren’t enough notes or materials to complete the books in a way that would have made him proud, then the books should not be written. As for other books in the Wheel of Time universe that Robert Jordan did not have any plans to write or to arrange to be written, that’s not something I contemplate. When an author creates a world so rich that readers want an unending supply of books set in that world, that’s just a testament to the author’s skill as a storyteller–it doesn’t mean that having people write an unending supply of books in that world is a good idea. Stories have beginnings, middles, and endings for a reason, and ignoring that is detrimental to the integrity of the story. Robert Jordan had a vision for the Wheel of Time, and it’s important to be faithful to that vision. We’d rather leave his legacy as it stands than have bad books attached to his name.
Thanks, Brandon, for finding the time to answer these questions!
We wish you nothing but the best, all the time you need to write, and more spots on the New York Times Bestseller list!
Thank you! It’s been my pleasure.
Check out Brandon’s site for wayyy more info and behind-the-scenes stuff!

To order Brandon’s Mistborn novels, check out this link!

To order Elantris, click this link!

To pre-order Warbreaker, click this link!
Also, check out Writing Excuses here, Dan Wells’ website here, and Howard Tayler’s website here!
Be EPIC!
New Covers: Black Ships by Jo Graham & The Desert Spear by Peter V Brett (German Edition)
Hey everyone, saw this at Orbit and decided to re-post it here, seeing as how I’ve read and reviewed Black Ships and Hand of Isis as well as interviewed JO.

What do you think?
Also, Peat posted this on his blog on the 9th – what is assumed to be the German Edition of The Desert Spear!
Pretty cool, but Larry Rostant’s covers are still incredible!

Be Fantastic!
Review – The Magicians Apprentice – Trudi Canavan
Reviewed by David!
Hey guys and girls, this week I have a big treat for all the Trudi Canavan fans out there.
I was lucky enough to get my hands on a copy of her new book The Magician’s Apprentice and do a review of it.

Now you must understand I am a huge fan of Trudi’s work, have been ever since I read Priestess of the White, in fact, after I read that I went out and bought all her other books.

Those of you who are not so familiar with her stuff, what’s wrong with you?! but seriously, before this she brought out the Age of Five Trilogy and this book is set as a prequel/introduction to the her first Trilogy, The Magician’s Guild.

Now as for this book, my abstract goes something like this:
Kyralia is still a young nation, memories of their enslavement by the Sachakans still fresh in the minds of every citizen. An uncomfortable truce exists between the two nations, one that will be tested as Kyralia is invaded by a group of outcast Sackakans.
In the meantime a young girl with dreams of becoming a healer discovers her own latent magical abilities and must make a decision that will change the rest of here life, possibly leading to a discovery that could change the whole world.
Will the Sachakan invasion finally unite the Magicians of Kyralia or will their narrow minded ways prove the end of their freedom. The war will bring a great price to all involved, loss of loved ones, madness to the kind, and an act of such enormity that its results will be seen for hundreds of years to come. Behind all of this a small group will discover a secret so old its existence had been forgotten.
Ok let’s start with the storyline.
As I’ve said this is a prequel to the Magicians Guild series and is set several hundred years before it. Many things you get to know in the series are better discussed and even discovered in this prequel. It’s always interesting to see where things came form and the roles they play in the world created by the author.
On of the things I loved the most about this book is that it does not have the normal “one hero one story” storyline, instead Trudi creates a world with multiple characters leading a nation into a war that will decide the future for generations to come.
She creates a whole variety of characters to populate the story and help it forward from a young healer/magician apprentice, high magicians, slaves and a woman who must learn her place in Sachakan society and give up her freedom.
The storyline progresses very well through the novel with people, perceptions, tactics, and basically just about everything to do with the story changes just enough to set a steady pace for you to follow. Many discoveries are made along the way, along with decisions that will change Kyralian society forever, leading to the Kyralia we discovered in The Magicians Guild.
Something else Trudi did in this book that I found rather interesting, although I could not figure out the meaning behind this till later on is a secondary storyline that lies in the background of the main story. It has nothing to do with the main storyline of The Magicians Apprentice but it is still very well integrated into the main story. This is the story of Stara, the daughter of an Elynese mother and Sachakan father. She travels back to Sachaka hoping to join her father in the trading business, but instead discovers that Sachakan woman do not have nearly as much freedom as she had experienced in Elyne. Instead she starts a new life, meeting a group of extraordinary women and in the end, making an amazing discovery.
Now then let’s take look at the characters. Trudi creates a whole range of characters as I have said, exposing you to a whole nation, with their leaders and heroes. No single character is singled out as the main character or hero, like Auraya or Sonea form her previous books. Instead you follow the adventure alongside the Kyralia army, the apprentices, Stara, the Sachakan forces and even following Hanara, a Sachakan source slave. Even with such a wide variety of characters Trudi still gives enough attention to each one to allow them to develop fully, from characters discovering secrets about themselves, finding love, and going mad.
This is definitely a must-read for any Trudi Canavan fan and if you are just discovering her novels this will make for a good introduction into the Magicians world. Another reason why fans should read this one? Well lets see, you remember the great wastelands from The Magicians Guild? Well, at the start of this novel its still lush fields and forests, but by the end its turns into the desert Trudi showed us in the trilogy. Also keeping to her own style she has a variety of plants and animals with their own unique names, adding to the sense of a fantastical world created outside our own.
All in all, this was a read I definitely enjoyed. I love Trudi Canavan’s novels and the worlds she creates and this one is another amazing journey to add to her previous books. The story is well written, showing the extents to which a nation will go to in order to safeguard its freedom, and keeping the political matters involved in ruling and overthrowing two cultures realistic, something authors don’t always keep in mind.
And lastly Trudi sets herself up for several possible storylines she could work on, especially the story of Stara and the Traitors, or would you say it’s just a coincidence that she has started on her next book which will follow a few years after the events of The Magicians Guild and aptly calling it The Traitor Spy.
Now there is not much more to say about this book without giving to much away.
9/10
To get more info about Trudi and her work, follow this link to her website (she’s also got a blog running there, now); click here to purchase from Amazon UK.
Angry Robot News!

This news from Lee Harris @ Angry Robot Books!
Hey guys and girls, the great folks over at Angry Robot have chosen their first-ever winner of the Website of the Month!
And the winner is…. (drumroll…)
SF Signal!
Congrats to the excellent people over at SFSignal – I couldn’t agree more that they definitely run a tight ship there, keeping us up to date with everything to do with SFF!
Congratulations, SFSignal
What have they won? Well, keep an eye on their site for the next two or so weeks – hopefully they’ll post the good news there, too, and fill us in on the prizes!
Once again, congrats!
Also, Angry Robot has signed a new author!
We’re over the moon to welcome British science fiction writer COLIN HARVEY to our happy but metallic band. The Bristol-based author has signed up with us for two novels, the first of which – WINTER SONG – will be appearing as soon as October this year, with the second to follow in May 2010.
Colin has for some years been an active contributor British small presses and blogs, and he is a regular reviewer for Strange Horizons, but these novels will mark his debut with a major publisher. His writing manages to combine solid action with a deeper, more reflective style that, when combined, delivers fabulous modern science fiction. The deal was done with his US-based agent, Jenny Rappaport, with the invaluable assistance of the Two Johns at Zeno Literary Agency in London.
Book one, WINTER SONG, sees bio-engineered starship pilot Karl Allman crashing his craft onto a snowy planet inhabited by Viking-like tribes, the remnants of earlier colonisation efforts. As the natives help him find a way back to the stars, he comes to realise that they are far from primitive. That will be followed by DAMAGE TIME, a near-future thriller from a world where America is on its last legs (topical, us?) and being parcelled off between the Chinese and the Muslims. A policeman who specialises in reading the last memories of murder victims comes under suspicion himself…
Colin blogs at Suite 101 and can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.


As always, check out Angry Robot at this link – there’s plenty more news there!
Be Fantastic!
John Jarrold’s Corner: US Deal for Mark C Newton!
This is awesome, AWESOME news!

PRESS RELEASE –TWO-BOOK US RIGHTS DEAL FOR NEW BRITISH FANTASY WRITER
Margaret Halton, Rights Director at Pan Macmillan, has sold US rights in two fantasy novels by UK novelist Mark Charan Newton to Chris Schluep for a good five-figure sum in US dollars.
World rights in the novels, which open with Mark’s mainstream debut NIGHTS OF VILLJAMUR (to be published in hardback in the UK in June 2009), were acquired by Peter Lavery at Tor UK from John Jarrold in 2008.
Chris Schluep said: ‘I am so excited to be publishing NIGHTS OF VILLJAMUR, which is an absolutely wonderful book, and I’m very much looking forward to launching the U.S. career of an important and talented new writer in the field. I’m convinced that Mark has a bright future ahead of him; he’s one of those writers that you come across only on occasion . . .’
‘Chris acted quickly and with great enthusiasm. Mark and I are delighted, and looking forward to working with him and his colleagues at Del Rey, who I know well,’ said John Jarrold.
I’m busy reading Nights at the moment (and believe me, it’s getting more time between the novels I’m juggling) and this is well-deserved! Watch out, US – Mark Newton is going to take on the big guns!
This info courtesy of John Jarrold (thank you, as always!).
Check out John’s site here, and Mark’s site here!
Be Fantastic!

