Archive for February, 2010
Actions have repercussions, good guys don’t always win and there are no easy answers
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As we move ever-closer to the launch of our first titles in the US and Canada, it’s gratifying to see those same titles – launched three-quarters of a year ago in the UK and Australia – are still garnering great reviews.
SF Crowsnest have just reviewed Moxyland:
…a chilling, effectively written novel.
Actions have repercussions, good guys don’t always win and there are no easy answers. This uncertainty builds real tension as the novel progresses towards its climax, as the various strands of reality weave around each other and the relentless minimalism of Beukes’ style evokes an oppressive atmosphere to match that hanging over the city. A tension leading to an utterly terrifying scene in which the police deploy biological weapons as a crowd-control measure.
The uncomfortable question ‘Moxyland’ raises is whether it’s truly terrorist to oppose a system which no longer recognises the rights of its individual citizens. There is a line between terrorist and freedom fighter, that much is clear but when does it get drawn and who gets to do the drawing?
Then go buy Moxyland (currently on special offer (£3.99) at Play.com) – you’ll thank yourself.
New Cover Art – The Crown of the Blood
Posted by: | CommentsWe’re justifiably proud of the range of covers we produce at Angry Robot, and often like to shout about them from the rooftops. Sometimes, though, we just like to sit back and let the artwork speak for itself. Just look at that detail.
Ladies and gentlemen, the cover to Gav Thorpe‘s The Crown of the Blood (published in the UK and Australia May 27, US and Canada in July):
Click the image for a larger version*.
Cover art by: Paul Young of Artist Partners of London
*some versions of Internet Explorer may have trouble with the larger size, so maybe best to download it for offline viewing.
FREE Nekropolis short story
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I’m a big fan of the short story – anyone who knows me will tell you that. Well, they’ll tell you if you ask them – it’s not the sort of thing that would necessarily be voluntarily offered. Have you seen Lee? He likes short stories, you know. Won’t happen.
But I digress…
The sequel to Tim Waggoner’s wonderful Nekropolis is published in the UK and Australia from next week. Dead Streets gives you everything you loved about the first book, and more! And as a special treat for all you lovely people living out there in internet-land, we have a free short story set in Nekropolis. If you’ve not read the first book yet, all you need to know to get started is that Matt Richter (our hero) is a zombie and former cop, and his paramour, Devona, is half-vampire.
I flicked the flashlight’s switch and played its beam around to get my bearings. It was just as Devona had said: a foyer with stone walls and ceiling and a marble tiled floor. Nice enough, in a cold, Spartan way, but nothing to e-mail home about. There were sconces on the walls where greenfire torches had undoubtedly once burned to light the place, but the mystic flames had died away decades ago, and without an Arcane torchlighter to rekindle them, it looked like we were stuck with my flashlight.
As we started slowly down the foyer, I said, “So, are you going to tell me why this place is supposed to be haunted?”
Now head on over to Next Read to enjoy the full story.
The kind of book that changes you on the inside
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Now that’s what I call a good review! At Dave Brendon’s Fantasy and SciFi Weblog, the focus is on J Robert King’s masterful tale of the supernatural, Angel of Death.
I found Angel of Death to be an utterly masterful novel – one of those novels that truly only comes along very, very rarely. And it’s still echoing through my head – I replay scenes, hear the dialogue, see the imagery, feel the emotions… I haven’t read anything quite like this before; it stunned me completely, and I truly hope that this book finds its way into the hands of many, many people.
Gillian Polack has been getting to grips with King Maker (out next week):
Books can be puzzling. My current book ought to be. I tried to explain it to someone the other day.
“King Arthur in Indianapolis,” I said.
She said “Why would King Arthur be in Indianapolis?”
I blame Angry Robot. Again.
Oooh – sounds ominous…
KingMaker isn’t yet another retelling of the Arthurian stories. There are drugs and gangs and people who are almost too scared to breathe. If there’s a small world that needs saving, it’s the world of this novel: too many lives are in danger and too many people are willing to give up. What’s awesome is there is no guarantee that King is going to become the Arthur we know. His enemies understand where he comes from and what he can do before he does. They may just defeat the whole notion of a livable world before King can cause it to happen.
Ah… she liked it! -)
Meanwhile, Rose Fox (from Publishers Weekly’s Genreville) talking about Slights said:
there is no question in my mind that the best horror of 2009 was published by ChiZine Publications in Canada and HarperCollins’s new Angry Robot imprint in the U.K
Aliette de Bodard continues to attract praise for her Servant of the Underworld. This time, over at fantasyliterature.com:
Servant of the Underworld is a highly original debut novel. Thanks to a solid mystery plot and Aliette de Bodard’s extensive research into pre-Conquest Meso-America, this novel should strike a chord with more than just fantasy readers.
Dead Bad Things – The Anatomy of Horror
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This summer we publish Gary McMahon‘s dark and disturbing horror novel, Pretty Little Dead Things. We love this book – it’s everything we want in a horror, so we’re really looking forward to reading the follow-up, Dead Bad Things when it’s written.
Gary has decided to keep a journal to document the progress of the book, and it promises to be a fascinating read. The first part is online now at his blog.
Regrets
Posted by: | CommentsStolen from With thanks to Mark Charan Newton and Dan Abnett on Twitter for pointing this out.

Head over to Moronail.net for some more great inspirational posters!
(Warning: some of them are NSFW)
Reviews, interviews and some “interesting” views…
Posted by: | CommentsA few catch-ups to, er… catch up on – some brilliant interviews and superb reviews.
First up, we’re going old-school. Moxyland as reviewed by a native of South Africa (where it’s set):
I’d built up this book for myself for a while… Expectations were high, and they were met. It’s a hugely challenging and fun adventure through places both familiar and strange, encapsulated in a rich, coherent world. Highly recommended.
Falcata Times reviews J Robert King’s supernatural serial killer horror, Angel of Death:
Its quirky, its different and its definitely a novel to make you think… Not something to rush and will remain in the readers subconscious long after the final page.
Helium reviews Guy Adams’ The World House:
But in the meantime we have The World House, which is a wonderful read – and a book that deserves to be in the best-seller lists – by a writer who will at least keep me reading his new fiction.
A few interviews:
Dan Abnett interviewed by SciFi Now:
The premise [of Embedded] sounds really interesting, could you expand on your inspirations behind it?
It was one of those things that just sort of came along. Obviously through 40k, I am associated with what’s commonly known as, or officially known as Combat Science-Fiction. Military SF. Which I’d probably been writing for four or five years before I realised that it was a subgenre – I had no idea. In fact at 40k, in Black Library and stuff we always referred to it not as Combat SF, we referred to it as ‘shooty-death-kill-in-space’, which is a much better name for it. Anyway, if I’ve got a reputation based on anything at all, it’s probably that, because the bulk of my novels are those. The Gaunt’s Ghosts stuff particularly falls into that category. So one thing that Angry Robot said was ‘If you’re so damned good at that, can you put out something that plays on those strengths but has that universe stamp of being your own product’. So what I didn’t want to do was take the tried and tested Gaunt’s Ghosts formula, change his name to Gant, and they can be Gant’s Phantoms. You know, just transferring them across and crossing out 40k.
Kaaron Warren interviewed by DragonKat:
I get creeped out very easily. Just this morning on the bus, a man was picking at his fingernails and I wanted to hit him with my book.
I also tap into my subconscious very well. I think we all have nightmares under the surface. I can see what lies between, and I have these odd glimpses of dark truth.
Sometimes I feel the weight of the world on my shoulders, as many do. It’s all too hard. There are too many problems, too much suffering. I think my writing is the result of all that. It’s like the negativity translates itself into story. Like that man on the bus, the fingernail picking one; things are not going to end well for him in my next story. Not well at all.
and Kylie Chan interviewed by Kathryn Linge:
After book three of the ‘Dark Heavens’ series, ‘Blue Dragon’, I received a constant stream of emails asking me when the next one would be out. I did a tour of the southern states just before Christmas to coincide with the release of ‘Earth to Hell’, and it was exciting to see queues of people at book shops waiting to have their copies signed. ‘Earth to Hell’ hit the top of a few best seller lists, and now I’m receiving the emails again – asking when the next one, ‘Hell to Heaven’, will be released.
And finally, some people who really seem to like our Mr Tidhar. Not quite sure what to make of this one… :-/
Have a great week!
SciFi Now Magazine
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This month’s issue of SciFi Now magazine (issue 38) has just hit the shops in the UK.
SciFi Now have an excellent monthly section called Library. As you would expect, it’s devoted to the written word. One regular mini-feature within Library is The Inside Scoop, where authors talk about their writing process. This month it’s the turn of Kaaron Warren. It’s a short piece, but makes for very interesting reading. You can pick up SciFi Now from most good newsagents for the unusual price of £4.40 (I’ve never seen a magazine at £4.40, have you?)
The current issue has lots of other cool stuff, and I’ll be taking my copy with me into the bath, later. And no, I’m not Twitpiccing it! Jeez – what are you like?!
Like nailing soup to a table…
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The extremely lovely Guy Adams (author of The World House) has been interviewed by Hagelrat at the Un:Bound blog, and it makes for fascinating reading:
I think some of the book if lifted and offered out of context – I’m thinking about the scenes in the bathroom on the good ship Intrepid – actually reads like a kid’s book. But then I go and spoil it elsewhere with all the cannibalism and paintings rutting in their canvases.
It’s a great interview, so go read.
The equally-lovely Maurice Broaddus received a parcel yesterday – see what it is, and his reaction, here.
And Andy Remic’s Kell’s Legend (which is nominated for the David Gemmell Legend Award) has had a great review over at the Gemmel Award website, so go read the review, then go vote for the book!
Truly brilliant… it should come with a government health warning to fasten your seat belt as the pace is ferocious and leaves you breathless.
Personally I did not want this to end as it is such a fantastic read. Roll on book 2, grab this now and hang on for dear life as you ride the Kell rollercoaster!
I will be voting for this as it is truly the first Gemmell like read I’ve come across for pure grit and action.
Oh, and Stomping on Yeti lists their top 25 new (or newish) authors worth watching in 2010. Angry Robot authors account for 4 of these! Pretty good going for such a new imprint!
Enjoy your Wednesday.
A Mini Monday Morning Missive
Posted by: | CommentsA few more excellent reviews have surfaced over the last few days:
At Only the Best Sci-Fi/Fantasy, Lavie Tidhar’s debut, The Bookman is reviewed. They describe it as:
steampunk in 3D! Highly recommended
Guy Adams’ weird and wonderful modern fantasy The World House gets more praise over at Graeme’s Fantasy Book Review:
It’s not often that I find myself tearing through a book, desperate to find out how it all ends but at the same time trying to hold back and drag out such an enjoyable reading experience for as long as possible. It’s even less often that I find myself doing this with a book that can be so unrelentingly dark and sinister. This was my experience of the ‘World House’; a book that reeled me in and had me hooked before I even realised that I’d taken the bait. I didn’t mind in the slightest.
This is the kind of book that ‘Best of Lists’ were made for. Nine and Three Quarters out of Ten
Oh, yeah!
Thomas Blackthorne’s near future ultra-violent SF thriller Edge, meanwhile, has been causing a bit of a stir over at Science Fiction and Fantasy.co.uk:
The characters themselves are wonderfully fleshed out and their interaction is quite mesmerising.
… an intelligent, slick and brilliantly executed novel with a quite unexpected but superbly scripted ending.


































































