Archive for November, 2009
Love in the U.S. of A.
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Well, lookie here! Just a day after we announce our ambitions to take over the Western World (see yesterdays post) we get sent links from all over Canada and the US, exclaiming just how happy people are!
Here are a few of the best:
Canadian Cream is a new book blog set up by Kell Harker, with the sole intention of reviewing Angry Robot’s books, which is totally freakin’ cool (to use the parlance of today’s youth).
Kell has started with one of our launch titles – Slights – and seems to have quite liked it, based on the following:
The writing is so powerful that I often felt as if I was an intruder in the mind of serial killer Stephanie (Stevie). That’s what made it so freaking terrifying. Usually I’m not scared when reading books in the horror genre, but Slights was able to tap into my fear of aloneness, and gave me nightmares… Slights is truly frightening, and therefore highly recommended.
Read the full review at Canadian Cream.
Next up, those fine reporters of all things genre over at io9.
We’re pretty excited for the Angry Robot release schedule, not least because it’s bringing some authors to our shores who deserve more love.
All our authors deserve love. Some already have it, others are starting to get it, and others still might even pay for it, but who are we to judge?
Anyway, finally (for now), over at Poisoned Rationality, we’re told that:
They’re [sic] current fleet of authors are some interesting folk that take the gamut from noir historical scifi to chinese inspired fantasy and everything you can possibly think of in between.
Yeah, that’s a pretty good summary, especially that “everything you can think of in between”, though we might be tempted to add “and a whole bunch more you couldn’t possibly dream of.”
Hell – we’re so mean at Angry Robot we even hang our prepositions!
Our 2010 Schedule – Including the US and Canada
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For the last few months 57% of the world’s population* has been eagerly awaiting the news – when will Angry Robot launch in the US and Canada?
Well, now we can exclusively reveal to you and everyone else who has an internet connection that our first books will be out in North America in May 2010.
With 6 books a month to begin with, it’s an exciting schedule! Below you will find a list of the first 27 Angry Robot books to be released in the US and Canada, along with the first 8 months schedule for the UK and Australia.
Keep an eye on our “Books” page for updates as they happen.
| 2010 | UK / AUSTRALIA | US / REST OF WORLD |
|---|---|---|
| Jan | "Servant of the Underworld" by Aliette de Bodard "The Bookman" by Lavie Tidhar | |
| Feb | "The World House" by Guy Adams "Edge" by Thomas Blackthorne "Walking The Tree" by Kaaron Warren | |
| Mar | "Dead Streets" by Tim Waggoner "City of Dreams and Nightmare" by Ian Whates "King Maker" by Maurice Broaddus | |
| Apr | "The Dark Heavens Trilogy" by Kylie Chan: "White Tiger", "Red Phoenix", "Blue Dragon" ( UK ONLY ) "Amortals" by Matt Forbeck (UK & Aus) | |
| May | "Zoo City" by Lauren Beukes "Damage Time" by Colin Harvey "Soul Stealers" by Andy Remic | "Moxyland" by Lauren Beukes "Slights" by Kaaron Warren "Triumff: Her Majesty's Hero" by Dan Abnett "White Tiger" by Kylie Chan "Winter Song" by Colin Harvey "Kells Legend" by Andy Remic |
| Jun | "Mistification" by Kaaron Warren "The Crown of the Blood" by Gav Thorpe "Vegas Knights" by Matt Forbeck | "Amortals" by Matt Forbeck "Damage Time" by Colin Harvey "Sixty-One Nails" by Mike Shevdon "Red Phoenix" by Kylie Chan "Zoo City" by Lauren Beukes "Soul Stealers" by Andy Remic |
| Jul | "The Road to Bedlam" by Mike Shevdon "Death's Disciples" by J Robert King "Pretty Little Dead Things" by Gary McMahon | "Blue Dragon" by Kylie Chan "Nekropolis" by Tim Waggoner "Vegas Knights" by Matt Forbeck "The Crown of the Blood" by Gav Thorpe "Walking the Tree" by Kaaron Warren "Book of Secrets" by Chris Roberson |
| Aug | "Restoration" by Guy Adams "Point" by Thomas Blackthorne | "City of Dreams and Nightmare" by Ian Whates "Death's Disciples" by J Robert King "Edge" by Thomas Blackthorne "Embedded" by Dan Abnett "The Road to Bedlam" by Mike Shevdon |
| Sep | to be announced | "Dead Streets" by Tim Waggoner "King Maker" by Maurice Broaddus "Point" by Thomas Blackthorne "Servant of the Underworld" by Aliette de Bodard |
| Oct | ditto | exciting stuff to come |
| Nov | same here | more exciting stuff |
| Dec | no titles in UK/Aus this month | here, too - you lucky, lucky people! |
SF Signal interviews Kaaron Warren
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Angry Robot’s own Lavie Tidhar (author of The Bookman, his incredible steampunk novel published by Angry Robot in January (UK/Aus) and October (US/Canada)) is the editor of The Apex Book of World SF. SF Signal is running a series of interviews with some of the contributors – it promises to be a great series of interviews!
Today is the turn of Kaaron Warren, author of Slights.
Q: What’s the appeal of speculative fiction for you?
Anything is possible in Speculative Fiction. Anything. I guess in Hard SF you need to ensure that your science makes sense but beyond that, whatever you imagine you can make work in your story. I love that. I love writing about enormous trees, and awful hells, and teenagers in suspended animation, and laughing cults and haunted apartment blocks.
Kylie signs with Angry Robot
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Oh, come now – surely you didn’t think… It’s Kylie Chan, people! Dear me…
According to As If magazine, Kylie’s Dark Heavens trilogy is “packed with Chinese mythology, kick-ass action and sexual tension”.
Already a major success Down Under through HarperCollins’ Voyager imprint (book one is currently on its ninth printing!), the trilogy has proven a hit with fans and critics alike. Published worldwide by Angry Robot from April 2010, the trilogy is a must-have for all fans of urban fantasy, and there’s not a misunderstood vampire in sight, thank god!
The Dark Heavens Trilogy
Handsome young Hong Kong businessman John Chen employs Emma, a naïve young nanny, to care for his daughter. When she falls in love with her employer, however, Emma discovers he is not quite what he seems – he is being hunted by a whole horde ancient demons, dragons and gods, and they all want him dead. Emma will soon discover it is she who has the power to save them all…
About Kylie
Kylie Chan married a Hong Kong national in a traditional Chinese wedding ceremony and lived in Hong Kong for many years. She now lives in Queensland with her two children. White Tiger was her first novel, and she is already well under way writing her second trilogy. And if there’s a better name for an Australian writer of Chinese-themed urban fantasy we want to know about it!
Book 1: White Tiger April 2010 (UK) May 2010 (US/Canada)
Book 2: Red Phoenix April 2010 (UK) June 2010 (US/Canada)
Book 3: Blue Dragon April 2010 (UK) July 2010 (US/Canada)
And finally, here are the original Australian editions …
An Interview with Aliette de Bodard
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Over at SF Signal (one of the best online resources for all things SF), they’ve just interviewed Aliette de Bodard.
You’ll know Aliette’s name from the countless number of short stories she has had published the world over in pretty much every magazine or book of note. She also missed out on winning the Campbell Award at the Hugos this year by just three votes, having been nominated on the basis of her short story work.
Her first novel – Servant of the Underworld – is available from Angry Robot this coming January in the UK and Australia, and everywhere else from the spring.
I’m a novel writer at heart: my love of novels is what started me writing, and I’m always more comfortable with novels than with short stories. With short stories, I’m always struggling with length: my strengths, at least as I see them, are worldbuilding and characters, two things which really play out better when you have more space.
Experts’ Books of the Year – 2 Angry Robot Titles Listed
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At World Fantasy Con last week, Annalee Newitz (from the incomparable io9.com) moderated a panel about the most notable books of 2009. Kaaron Warren‘s much-acclaimed Slights was chosen as one of bookseller Justin Ackroyd’s top titles, an Jo Fletcher from Gollancz named Andy Remic‘s epic Kell’s Legend.
The year ain’t over yet, and we expect to see a few more inclusions on Best-Of lists for more of our titles.
Meanwhile, over at SFsite.com, Bonnie Norman has reviewed Lauren Beukes’ debut novel Moxyland.
In real life, there are no happy endings, the story just continues on, along with the winners and losers. Moxyland is no different… There always seems to be this promise that with more technology, more advancements, more of everything, life will suddenly become a utopia where everyone is equal, has enough to eat, and a little extra money for the newest tech in the stores. Lauren Beukes is here to tell you that you shouldn’t hold your breath.
SF Site also recently reviewed Nekropolis by Tim Waggoner.
Matt himself is still very human, despite his death handicap, and the way he’s slowly shaken out of his funk by the desperate search for the missing artifact is captivating… [It has] good description style and a well thought out plot.
We think so, too.
NaNoWriMo
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No, its not the name of a character from yet another insipid children’s TV show. It stands for National Novel-Writing Month. Although it’s international, rather than national, and the target output is barely a novel, but look – I’ve only just started this post and you’ve got me criticising, already. Yes, it’s your fault.
NaNoWriMo is an annual activity, wherein deluded fools prospective writers the world over, attempt to write a novel in a single month. According to the rules, you can research and plot your novel beforehand, but you cant write a single word of it until November 1st, and you must finish it (with a minimum of 50,000 words) by November 30th.
That’s 1,667 words per day, fact-fans.
Last year, over 120,000 people entered, and more than 20,000 of these crossed the finish line. That’s 20,000 people who might not have otherwise written a novel. In one month. Pretty good going!
So what does this tell us? First of all, it tells us that it is possible to write a novel in a month (in fact, after day 2, someone I know that’s entering is already up to 20,000 words, which is a bit frightening, to tell the truth); more importantly, it tells us that it only takes a bit of motivation (in this case, the NaNoWriMo goal itself) to keep up a steady wordcount every day.
So, what do the “winners” get for successfully completing NaNoWriMo? They get the satisfaction of having completed it – oh, and an original novel sitting in their “My Documents” folder on their desktop. A pretty fantastic prize by any stretch of the imagination!
NaNoWriMo is a great idea – it shows wannabe writers that it is possible to write that novel, that it is possible to find time every day to write, that they can be writers if they want to be (note: I never said good writers – that comes with craft and art, not just tenacity).
But NaNoWriMo is just the start – you can’t be a writer one month a year, but you can use the month to give yourself that kick up the backside you always promised yourself, and to start writing that novel!
And if you don’t manage to finish? If you only manage 500 words a day instead of 1,667? Doesn’t matter. If you manage 500 words a day every day (to put that into perspective, 500 words is less than you will have read in this blog post), then after 3 months you’ve written over 45,000 words. After six months you’ve finished a 90,000 word epic, and by this time next year you’ve not only finished your 90,000 word genre-shattering opus, you’ve also written the sequel. That’s 2 novels in a year, for just 500 words a day!
Of course there are the revisions, the copy edits, the proofreading, etc, but just think – if you’d started this time last year, you’d already be shopping your first novel/s around literary agencies.
And NaNoWriMo? A fantastic way to kickstart your motivation, and it’s not too late to begin. Head on over to the official website and get motivated!
Books more popular than games on the iPhone?
Posted by: | CommentsEarlier on this year I predicted that 2009 would be the Year of the eBook. Indeed, it seems the tipping point is within shouting distance. We have seen a flurry of activity this year, with many new models of eReader hitting the market. Amazon, too, have made their groundbreaking Kindle available overseas for the first time (with a few too many teething problems for many, though these issues are likely to be ironed out soon).
We’ve seen new hardware from the likes of Elonex, InterRead (the funky-looking Cool-Er eReader), Sony and Barnes & Noble (the Nook), as well as non-dedicated tablet-style devices from a whole host of manufacturers. Prices are coming down, too, as demand increases.
When Stanza – a software-based eReader – launched on the iPhone and iPod Touch, it opened up a whole new level of availability for eBooks, and many other mobile phones have the ability to display eBooks. eBooks are now within reach of tens of millions of customers, as eReaders come down in price, and as existing owners start exploring the eReading capabilities of their smartphones.
In fact, eBooks have become so popular over recent months that the number of eBook applications (and other book-related apps) launching on the iPhone (and equivalents) has overtaken the number of games on the same platforms*. Of course, the fact that the books are launching on these platforms doesn’t mean that the sales are higher than sales of games, but the fact that so many new books are becoming available in this format to so many potential new purchasers bodes extremely well for the format itself. Time will tell how popular these new apps are – after all, if they don’t sell, it’s unlikely the publishers will continue to launch the apps.
Amazon, too, have stated that for those titles they stock as both Kindle and paper-based versions, the Kindle version accounts for 48% of the titles’ sales. That’s a significant figure!
We won’t be ditching paper for quite some time, yet (if ever), but it’s interesting to watch how quickly we’re catching up with the future…




































































