Black Static 18 Reviewed
Over at Suite101
The website of fiction/non-fiction author Colin Harvey
I’ve been concentrating lately on ticking off the multiple deadlines falling on August 31st.
It’s starting to come together, and to celebrate Winter Song‘s realease into the wild in the US with a series of links and teasers over at Suite101.
More tomorrow, this time on Dark Spires.
I’ve posted a review of the 2010 Arthur C. Clarke Award winner, China Mieville’s The City and The City over at Suite101
After a weekend of ringing round the family and giving them the news about my stepfather, alternating with my wandering around restlessly, things are slowly returning to normal. Thank you to everyone who offered their condolences and support. It helped a lot.
Meanwhile, I’ve posted a review of the latest issue of the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction over at Suite101.
Lastly, I’ll be at the monthly meeting of the Bristol SFF Society tonight at the King William in Bristol, at 8pm onwards. See you there, if you can make it. If not, I’ll be at the monthly BSFA meeting in London on Wednesday, saying hello to Lauren Beukes, author of Moxyland.
We who form the male half of the human race are often criticized for being unable to multi-task. However, we can focus. Boy can we focus, as I have demonstrated this morning. Despite the incessant sound of the house alarm across the road (now 2 hours and counting), I’ve finished this week’s Suite101 review, and have laid out Interzone 229 for your examination.
I think I may now go out, as the noise is starting to seriously hurt my ears, now that I have nothing to focus on.
And tomorrow -or the day after- if I get distracted by something shiny going past….
…sorry, where was I? Yes, tomorrow or the day after, I should have some more book news.
This week’s review at Suite101 is A.E Moorat’s Henry VIII: Wolfman. I didn’t much like it, not being a fan of monster mash-ups, and it’s nowhere near as good as the author’s Queen Victoria: Demon Hunter, which was far better written, and had some novelty that any follow-ups will inevitably lose.
So I was going to let Wolfman go by without a review.
But Hodder have a publicist, who’s even more annoyingly persistent than they usually are (though Tor have got a particularly odious specimen) and she wouldn’t let it go. Having spammed me with not one but TWO unsolicited hard copies* –stretching my poor elastic walls to their limit– she then e-mailed me asking whether I’d had a chance to read it. At which point I muttered “Okaaaaay…..” and took my gloves off.
Actually, I understand publicists are only doing their job, and maybe they regard even a negative review as being ‘any publicity is good publicity.’ Unfortunately, they never seem to publicize good books and anything that finds it’s way to me via a publicist always seems to be a pile of shite.
And I now look forward to receiving a really good book from a publicist that proves me wrong…
* I don’t mind getting review copies if the publicist has had the courtesy to ASK first. I may say no, but more likely than not I may say yes with the caveat that if I don’t like it, I won’t review it.
I’ve posted a new review at Suite101, this time dissecting the latest edition of Albedo One. It’s another good issue.
Meanwhile, I’m off to London later today for the BSFA Meeting, which features an interview with Eric Brown, reviewer for the Guardian, contributor to Pringlezone, and author of Cosmopath and many other fine novels.
Anyone else going?
Since those nice people at Alt.fiction gave us all a copy of The Mammoth Book of Extreme Fantasy, the least I could do was read it. And having enjoyed it a lot, I ought to review it. So I have.
Today’s review is John Travis’ quirky debut novel The Terror and the Tortoiseshell.