Archive for December, 2011

It’s become a bit of an Angry Robot tradition that we celebrate Christmas with a series of guest posts from our authors. This year we’ve invited all those authors who have their first Angry Robot book out next year (note: not necessarily their first book, just the first one with us).

Today we begin our 12 Days of Christmas series. And yes, we know that the 12 Days starts on Christmas Day, but our blog, our rules, so nyarr!

Starting us off today, Madeline Ashby (author of “vN”, August 2012) entertains us with one of the least jolly Christmas tales you will read this year. Cracking stuff!

 

The Education of Junior Number 12

By Madeline Ashby

 

“You’re a self-replicating humanoid. vN.”

Javier always spoke Spanish the first few days. It was his clade’s default setting. “You have polymer-doped memristors in your skin, transmitting signal to the aerogel in your muscles from the graphene coral inside your skeleton. That part’s titanium. You with me, so far?”

Junior nodded. He plucked curiously at the clothes Javier had stolen from the balcony of a nearby condo. It took Javier three jumps, but eventually his fingers and toes learned how to grip the grey water piping. He’d take Junior there for practise, after the kid ate more and grew into the clothes. He was only toddler-sized, today. They’d holed up in a swank bamboo tree house positioned over an infinity pool outside La Jolla, and its floor was now littered with the remnants of an old GPS device that Javier had stripped off its plastic. His son sucked on the chipset.

“Your name is Junior,” Javier said. “When you grow up, you can call yourself whatever you want. You can name your own iterations however you want.”

“Iterations?”

“Babies. It happens if we eat too much. Buggy self-repair cycle – like cancer.”

Not for the first time, Javier felt grateful that his children were all born with an extensive vocabulary.

“You’re gonna spend the next couple of weeks with me, and I’ll show you how to get what you need. I’ve done this with all your brothers.”

“How many brothers?”

“Eleven.”

“Where are they now?”

Javier shrugged. “Around. I started in Nicaragua.”

“They look like you?”

“Exactly like me. Exactly like you.”

“If I see someone like you but he isn’t you, he’s my brother?”

“Maybe.” Javier opened up the last foil packet of vN electrolytes and held it out for Junior. Dutifully, his son began slurping. “There are lots of vN shells, and we all use the same operating system, but the API was distributed differently for each clade. So you’ll meet other vN who look like you, but that doesn’t mean they’re family. They won’t have our clade’s arboreal plugin.”

“You mean the jumping trick?”

“I mean the jumping trick. And this trick, too.”

Javier stretched one arm outside the treehouse. His skin fizzed pleasantly. He nodded at Junior to try. Soon his son was grinning and stretching his whole torso out the window and into the light, sticking out his tongue like Javier had seen human kids do with snow during cartoon Christmas specials.

“It’s called photosynthesis,” Javier told him a moment later. “Only our clade can do it.”

Junior nodded. He slowly withdrew the chipset from between his tiny lips. Gold smeared across them; his digestive fluids had made short work of the hardware. Javier would have to find more, soon.

“Why are we here?”

“In this treehouse?”

Junior shook his head. “Here.” He frowned. He was only two days old, and finding the right words for more nuanced concepts was still hard. “Alive.”

“Why do we exist?”

Junior nodded emphatically.

“Well, our clade was developed to-”

“No!” His son looked surprised at the vehemence of his own voice. He pushed on anyway. “vN. Why do vN exist at all?”

This latest iteration was definitely an improvement on the others. His other boys usually didn’t get to that question until at least a week went by. Javier almost wished this boy were the same. He’d have more time to come up with a better answer. After twelve children, he should have crafted the perfect response. He could have told his son that it was his own job to figure that out. He could have said it was different for everybody. He could have talked about the church, or the lawsuits, or even the failsafe. But the real answer was that they existed for the same reasons all technologies existed. To be used.

“Some very sick people thought the world was going to end,” Javier said. “We were supposed to help the humans left behind.”

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Categories : 12 Days, Angry Robot, Writers
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Here’s a fresh selection of Angry Robot sample chapters for you to read, download, fall in love with, share with your friends and rave about every time you hear the word ‘book’. Think of them as an early holiday season gift of free fiction-y goodness from your friendly Robot Overlords Chums.

This time out we’re previewing our first five 2012 titles: Adam Christopher‘s Empire State (Jan), Ian Whates‘s City of Light and Shadow (Jan), Dan Abnett‘s Embedded (Jan, b-format UK re-issue), David Tallerman‘s Giant Thief (Feb) and Lavie Tidhar‘s The Great Game (Feb).

Print editions of all five titles can be pre-ordered from your favourite bookstore or online retailer and the ebook versions will be available via the usual channels – including angryrobotstore.com – on publication day.

Click the embedded applets below to read a full-screen version or follow the links below each one for file download options. 

You can embed any of these free samples in your own site or blog by opening the full screen version, then clicking on “expand”, then selecting the envelope icon, then “embed”.

Empire State by Adam Christopher

More Info | Read Online at issuu.com
Download: ePub | PDF | Mobi

City of Light and Shadow by Ian Whates

More Info | Read Online at issuu.com
Download: ePub | PDF | Mobi

Embedded by Dan Abnett

More Info | Read Online at issuu.com
Download: ePub | PDF | Mobi

Giant Thief by David Tallerman

More Info | Read Online at issuu.com
Download: ePub | PDF | Mobi

The Great Game by Lavie Tidhar

More Info | Read Online at issuu.com
Download: ePub | PDF | Mobi

Categories : Angry Robot, Free
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Dec
12

A Big Angry Robot “Hello!” to Amanda

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Strange Chemistry Editor Amanda RutterAs we announced a few weeks back, Amanda Rutter joins us today to start work in earnest on our brand new YA fiction imprint Strange Chemistry. The first SC titles aren’t due to see the light of bookstore shelves until September 2012 but there’s plenty to do in the meantime and Amanda will be launching in to her full-time talent-scouting and list-building role with her typical gusto and enthusiasm as of… now.

Please do join us in welcoming Amanda to the newly-expanded Angry Robot gang!

Categories : Angry Robot
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Dec
09

Robot Round-Up, 09.12.11

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Hello, hello, hello and welcome to the latest Angry Robot Links round-up. It’s been another busy, busy week on the Interwebs, so without further palaver and to-do:

SFBook.com have announced the shortlist for their SFBook of the Year 2011 poll and two of those titles are ours: Dan Abnett‘s Embedded and Maurice Broaddus‘s King’s War. Both brilliant books, of course, and both deserving of at least few hundred more votes, we reckon. >cough< You’re still here..?

Triumff: Her Majesty's Hero. by Dan AbnettMeanwhile, Mr. Abnett‘s Triumff was on the receiving end of what can really only be described as a rave review, courtesy of Red Rook Review’s “review every AR book, ever” strand. And his comics writing projects were featured in a Beyond the Bunker Practicioners piece this week.

Jo Anderton has posted a selection of pics from the Debris launch party at UNSW on her blog, with a more extensive set on Facebook (warning: includes images of chocolate robots and cake that some viewers may find delicious – no licking the screen…)

Lauren Beukes‘s Arthur C. Clarke Award-Winning Zoo City (you know, we just never get tired of saying that) has been reviewed by Kristy G. Stewart for LooseleafLeaflets.

Another couple of Maurice Broaddus mentions: firstly as the star of the hilarious 97th SF Signal Podcast and secondly, a blog post from Maurice with details of his 2012 convention appearances.

Empire State by Adam ChristopherAdam Christopher was the recipient of much love this week. First up (and the one that had Adam literally dancing around the room) was Billy (The Rocketeer) Campbell’s comments on Empire State, which went like this: “As it happens, I’m a sucker for hard-boiled retro sci-fi stories; rocket-powered superheroes, spunky dames, fedoras, Studebakers slewing round gritty Gotham street-corners on two wheels, and Adam Christopher sure knows his way around a tightly spun yarn – I was as happy as a pig in poop from page one! As they say: This story? She’s a real sweater-full, with a great pair’a getaway sticks… Watch out for this Adam kid, he’s nobody’s sap. He’s got a sharp nib and a sharper wit. He’d steal your last few hours before you could say ‘cat’s pajamas’, and you’d thank him for it.”

There was also a cracking review from ‘Bane of Kings’ at TheFoundingFields.com: “…what I found in these pages blew me away … I think we may be looking at one of the best debut authors of 2012 already!”

Aliette de Bodard was interviewed by Jacob Topp-Mugglestone Drying Ink blog and talked about breaking genre expectations, world-building, Aztec civilisation, human sacrifice and much more. Aliette also posted an article on writing technique entitled ‘Playing To Your Strengths, Playing to Your Weaknesses’ at The Night Bazaar.

Matt Forbeck has been talking to legendary geek webcomic Dork Tower about his ’12 for 12′ Kickstarter project (and they snuck in a mention for Amortals as well). And Producer Paul has posted his review of Vegas Knights.

Roil, by Trent JamiesonTrent Jamieson‘s Roil was reviewed at Dragon Page by Laith Preston, who said things like: “Trent Jamieson’s Roil, the first book in The Nightbound Land duology, promises… and delivers.” Trent also runs through his Xmas book wishlist in a Book Corner Christmas Special (we’ll pass on the Cinzano thanks, Trent.)

Gary MacMahon‘s Dead Bad Things has been named on the Horror Book of the Year shortlist. Which is a Good Thing, we feel.

And there are a couple of early reviews in for Giant Thief (Feb 2012) by David Tallerman; first a mini-review from Publisher’s Weekly and also an elegantly minimalist review of the first line of the book from Mad Hatter’s Book Review: “This line did exactly what a first line should do: pull the reader in.”

Red Rook’s “review every AR book, ever” programme is back and this time it’s Lavie Tidhar‘s The Bookman that’s under review: “…an intelligent, clever book, that creates a wonderfully complex secondary world … as well-constructed as a Swiss cuckoo clock and as readable as any genre fiction being written today.”

And finally, that man Chuck Wendig has posted a few thoughts on the Seduction of Self-Publishing. Wise words from Chuck, there. Wise words.

Right, that’s all from AR HQ for this week! Have a great weekend. And remember: Be Good, and if you can’t Be Good, then Be Damn Sure They’re Not Going to Catch You.

Talk to the Robot

Reviewed an Angry Robot title? Interviewed an Angry Robot author? Drop us a line (via the Marketing drop-down option on our contact form) and let us know!

Dec
09

Angry Robot Authors Twitter-List

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Another quick note, this time to say that we’ve put together a Twitter List of all tweet-enabled Angry Robot authors, which you can find at:

twitter.com/#!/angryrobotbooks/angry-robot-authors

It’s a rather handy way to check out all the tweets from all you favourite Angry Robot authors and the list page can be loaded into Twitter clients such as Hootsuite or Tweetdeck for on-screen updates as they happen.

Even better, if you click through to the list page’s Following tab whilst logged in to your own Twitter account, you can whizz down the list to make sure you’re following everyone, and click the big, friendly ‘follow’ buttons to catch up with anyone you’re missing:

Angry Robot Authors Twitter List

Follow! Follow them All!*

*Yes, we know there are a few names missing, but we’ve double-checked and the authors in question don’t have a Twitter account yet…

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Dec
09

Angry Robot Facebook Page Update

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Just a quick note to say that we’ve re-vamped our Facebook outpost in the past couple of weeks. We used to have a Group, but Facebook decided to change the way Groups were set up (and no-one really seemed sure how Groups worked anyhow) so we decided to go ahead with moving over to our new Angry Robot Fan Page.

Angry Robot's Facebook Page

So, you can now Like us (which, incidentally, is a great way of ensuring that you’re on the ‘do-not-eradicate’ list on that glorious day when the robot attack drones sweep down from the sky and inflict laser-blastery death on the hordes of unbelievers) by visiting www.facebook.com/angryrobotbooks and then Liking what you see when you get there.

And if you’re interested in things social-media-ish, you might like to track down a copy of the current issue of Sci-Fi Now magazine, which includes an article by Angry Robot Lee on the subject of social media strategy for authors.

Categories : Angry Robot, Technology
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Another win for the Angry Robot Open Door Month!

We’ve just signed debut novelist, Lee Battersby for two books in a new fantasy series. The first title – The Corpse-Rat King – will be published in the autumn of next year, with the second to follow in 2013. The deal included world English rights in physical and electronic formats.

In the highly imaginative The Corpse-Rat King, readers are introduced to Marius Helles as he plunders the bodies of the dead after a major battle – a crime punishable by death. The dead tell Marius that they need a King – the King is God’s representative, and they need someone to speak to God and remind him where they are, thank you very much! He doesn’t actually want the job, but when the alternative is to deny a legion of angry corpses, it’s that or find a suitable compromise – and quickly: the dead aren’t known for their patience…

The deal was negotiated by Angry Robot editor Lee Harris, and Battersby’s agent Richard Henshaw of the Richard Henshaw Group, after The Corpse-Rat King came to Angry Robot’s attention during their first Open Door Month open submission period, in March this year.

British-born Battersby, who now lives in Australia, said: “To publish a novel has been a long-held dream. To achieve it with such a progressive and forward-thinking publisher, based in the town of my birth, just makes it all the more special. Angry Robot think about speculative fiction the same way I do – that it is a warped and twisted fabric that should be used to pervert the minds of the young and the innocent.”

Editor, Lee Harris stated: “Lee’s twisted worldview is ideal for Angry Robot’s many followers. The Corpse-Rat King is a great read – funny, exciting and very, very addictive – and by making sure Lee is busy writing, we’re keeping him away from decent folk!”

____________

Note on the next Open Door submission period
Following the success of this year’s Open Door Month (we’ve signed three authors from it, so far), we’re likely to run it again in the spring. We’ve not yet decided exactly when, or what format it will take. Keep your eyes peeled for more info, though, as details will be posted here, closer to the time. In the meantime, our standard submissions policy applies.

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Ladies, Gentlemen and noble Bibliophiles, please be aware: the Charing Cross Road branch of the esteemed booksellers Blackwell’s is holding what promises to be a rather stupendous Steampunk Evening, this Thursday, December 8th, from 6.00 – 8.30 p.m.

The Bookman, by Lavie TidharOne of the exceedingly illustrious word-smiths invited to attend is none other than our very own Lavie Tidhar, esq. author of the highly-regarded Bookman Histories (tomes currently available for public perusal consisting: The Bookman and Camera Obscura, to be completed in February of the year 2012 by The Great Game) who will be joining a plethora of creatively-minded personages of great renown.

The event will be hosted by the fine, upstanding folk behind The Kitschies (“an annual award for those books which best elevate the tone of genre literature”) fame, who would like to make the following known to all and sundry: “Entry is free and there’s no ticket required. If you would like to RSVP, you can do so on the event’s Facebook page. (RSVPing makes sure we have enough of The Kraken Rum for everyone. How’s that for an incentive?)”

A feast of steampunk literature and art, with free Kraken Rum for all? Can you think of a better way of spending a Thursday evening on Charing Cross Road (sans the obvious addition of a pair of spring-heeled boots, a filigree’d sword-cane, a yellow handkerchief, three burly Russian sailors and a visiting Dutch burlesque troop lately of Old Amsterdam)?

No, we didn’t think so.

Full details are available at www.thekitschies.com.

Categories : Angry Robot, Events
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Dec
02

Robot Round-Up, 02.12.11

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Hello and welcome to our regular round-up of Angry Robot author activity from around the Internets. Without further ado, here’s this week’s selection:

Jo Anderton was interviewed by David Conyers on the subject of her short story ‘Out Hunting For Teeth’, which will be appearing in issue #6 of Midnight Echo, the Australian Horror Writers Association magazine.

Zoo City, by Lauren Beukes (UK Paperback)In the wake of this week’s announcement of the Zoo City TV/Movie rights deal, Lauren Beukes has been speaking to Bizcommunity.com and The Mail and Guardian about the project.

An interview with Knights of Breton Court creator Maurice Broaddus was the main feature of the latest SpeculateSF podcast. Maurice also revealed the contents of his to-be-read book pile, including Chris F. Holm‘s forthcoming debut Dead Harvest (March 2012).

Adam Christopher‘s forthcoming debut novel, Empire State (January 2012) has been getting some attention this week, with reviews from fantasynibbles.com and Livejournaller Gill Polack. Plus, a top-10 shortlist mention in Kirkus’ Science Fiction and Fantasy for December 2011 watch-list, and The Ranting Dragon’s 5 Most Anticipated December Releases as well. Meanwhile, Adam has been telling The Night Bazaar about his lifelong love of Doctor Who stories.

Peter Crowther‘s first Forever Twilight instalment, Darkness Falling, has been reviewed by David Marshall for his ‘Thinking About Books’ blog, by and Silver Thistle for ‘The Bookshelf Chronicles’ and by Mike Chinn for The British Fantasy Society.

Nathan McKnight has produced an Obsidian & Blood glossary for the Kindle, to help Aliette De Bodard readers keep track of all those Aztec names and their meanings. Aliette was also interviewed by Jeremy L. C. Jones for Clarkesworld Magazine.

Dead Harvest, by Chris F. HolmBack in November Chris F. Holm was interviewed by R Thomas Brown for Crime Fiction Lover about his love of crime fiction, his recent short fiction collection 8 Pounds and, of course, Dead Harvest (March 2012).

Paul S Kemp is posting a series of excerpts from his forthcoming (July 2012) fantasy saga The Hammer and The Blade (July 2012). He’s just posted the second one and the first is here if you missed it.

Over on her blog, Anne Lyle, author of The Alchemist of Souls (March 2012), reveals the cunning visual reference methodology with which she plots fight scenes (hey, I guess that’ll be the same bleeding-edge character animation software last seen in the truly epic Lord of the Rings movie battle sequences..? eh? What’s that? Not the fancy software? So what does she..? Playmobil figures? Cool..!)

A second round-up mention for reviewer Gill Polack; this time she’s posted her review of David Tallerman‘s forthcoming (February 2012) debut novel Giant Thief.

Matt Forbeck was interviewed by Rick Novy for his ‘Entropy Central’ blog, talking about writing, game design and his ongoing ’12 for 12′ Kickstarter project.

There’s much love for Chuck Wendig as Andrea Philips turns the Creative Spotlight on his projects past, present and, er, projected, for her ‘Deus Ex Machinatio’ blog.

And finally, a rollerskating duck. Oh, no, it’s our Marco, live and uncensored, in the Nottingham online magazine Left Lion.

…and that’s your lot for this week. Have a great weekend!

Talk to the Robot

Reviewed an Angry Robot title? Interviewed an Angry Robot author? Drop us a line (via the Marketing drop-down option on our contact form) and let us know!

Stuck for seasonal gift ideas for that lover of quality sf/f/wtf? fiction in your life?

Here at Angry Robot we’d rather see you meat-sacks relaxing, feasting on turkey dinners and downing pints of egg-nog (thereby making you all sluggish, slow, and much easier to catch) than worrying yourselves skinny (and irritatingly nimble) with all that difficult decision-making.

Which is why – out of the goodness of our diamond-encased heart-analogues – we’ve come up with the perfect solution to save you from the hours of pain, torment and deep psychological scarring that a trip to the mall at this time of the year is guaranteed to entail.

Give the gift that says you understand. Give the gift that says you care. Give the gift that says: “I like and respect you enough to trust you to make your own purchasing decisions.”

Give the gift of Angry Robot Store Gift Vouchers!

Angry Robot Gift Cards now available!

Now available from the Angry Robot Store in handy £5, £10 and £20 denominations, they’re redeemable against all other items on sale there, including all Angry Robot novels, short fiction and, of course, our subscription packages.

Speaking of the latter, we’ve also introduced a new, 6 month ebook subscription package at the low, low price of £39.00. That’s at least 12 top-notch, brand new Angry Robot ebooks at a hefty discount on the £53.88 individual price total.

What’s that? 12 discounted ebooks isn’t enough for you? We applaud your dedication! And we’re happy to remind you that you can still get a full year’s worth of 24 brand new ebook releases with our original 12 month subscription package for a startlingly reasonable £69.00, an even more impressive discount on the £107.76 individual price total.

We’re sure you’ll agree that any or all of these things would make a perfect seasonal gift – either from you or to you – whatever season you and your loved ones happen to be celebrating.

[If you don't agree, well, that's fine, of course. But do bear in mind that it's not just Santa who maintains a global naughty/nice database these days. And when the Robots come down your chimney in the middle of the night, they won't just be armed with candy canes and mistletoe...]

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