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Wednesday, June 18th, 2008 by Bella Pagan
When Pamela Freeman was in the UK recently, we had a fascinating conversation about technology in fantasy (I felt quite awed at her knowledge!). And Pamela promised to write down some of her thoughts on the subject for our blog. So, in honour of Blood Ties (UK/US), her debut fantasy out this month, here it is:
Do you ever get the feeling that most epic fantasy is set in the same time? Olden times – vaguely pre-industrial, vaguely medieval, vaguely Dark Ages … often a bit of each. One example I read recently – a society which had tailored jackets but no socks!
So often, fantasy authors stick technologies from widely different times together as though every culture prior to the invention of the steam engine was the same. The point of history is that things change – and this includes technology.
Technology! I hear you exclaim. They didn’t have technology then!
But they did. It didn’t use electricity, but it was technology nonetheless.
(more…)
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Category: All posts, Contents, Guest Blogs, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Tuesday, June 17th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
This week’s official stats are in and we’re delighted to announce that Blood Noir [UK], the latest instalment in Laurell K. Hamilton’s legendary Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series, has just spent its third week at the top of the UK Hardback SF/Fantasy best-seller charts, according to figures produced by Nielsen Bookdata.
Hearty congratulations to Laurell on topping the UK SF&F charts yet again and proving that, when it comes to urban fantasy, Anita Blake - the original kick-ass heroine - is still number one!
For more information on Blood Noir, visit the catalogue page of the Little, Brown website. For more on Laurell K Hamilton, visit her official homepage at www.laurellkhamilton.org.
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Category: All posts, News, Orbit UK
Monday, June 16th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
The dice-of-randomness have spoken again and we’ve drawn weekly winner #2 in our Brian Ruckley Facebook competition. This week’s lucky winner is - Jan Ove B from Norway - who will be receiving a signed, personalised copy of Brian’s brand new novel, Bloodheir [UK/US] in the near future.
There are now just two more chances to win during June, folks. To be in with a shout, you’ll need to sign up as a Fan of Brian’s Winterbirth Facebook Page in time for the remaining draws at lunchtime on June 20 and 27.
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Category: All posts, Contests, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Friday, June 13th, 2008 by The Orbit Team
Here’s another quick round-up of links of interest featuring Orbit authors that we’ve spotted (or have been pointed in the direction of) online this week:
- Fantasy Book Critic interviews Jacqueline Carey (we’ll be publishing our first book from her this August).
- Russell Kirkpatrick dispels a glamour-myth or two in a blog piece entitled ‘What’s it Like to be a Writer?’
- Elizabeth de Jager, guest-posting at The Book Swede’s blog, was very impressed by Stephenie Meyer’s new novel, The Host.
- Karen Miller will be attending Denvention, this year’s Worldcon, and will be appearing on no fewer than three panels, to boot.
- Philip Palmer ponders the future of batteries and concludes that he’s “essentially an optimist about the possibilities of scientific progress”, even if the universe he describes in Debatable Space is far from utopian…
- Brian Ruckley has been musing the possibilities of product placement in fantasy fiction (I do believe he might be serious… we’d best alert his editor).
- More how-to writing advice from Lilith Saintcrow; this week it’s a selection of ‘Quick and Dirty Ways to Write Better’.
- Jeff Somers spotted a copy of The Digital Plague on the Hachette USA stand at BEA this week (Hachette Book Group is Orbit’s parent company in the US).
- Charles Stross debunks the Singularity, or at least, some of the myths that have grown up around the concept as widely portrayed in science fiction.
- Scott Westerfeld has posted a clip from his recent TV news appearance.
- Sean Williams is delighted to announce that he’s had a novella accepted for inclusion in a Jonathan Strahan-edited anthology entitled Godlike Machines.
If you see any online articles, reviews or interviews that feature an Orbit author, please feel free to drop us a line and let us know!
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Category: All posts, Link Round-Ups, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Friday, June 13th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
The third of six cryptic clues linked to the world of Marie Brennan’s Midnight Never Come [UK/US] has been revealed today, over at the Competition Gallery page of www.midnightnevercome.com.
Remember, correctly answering all three questions gives you a triple chance of winning the first prize of £250 / $500 of vouchers from your favourite book retailer. And with another three conundrums to come next week, that will give you a half-dozen chances to win… tell me, what could you possibly be waiting for?
Oh, and have you made your way to Invidiana’s court yet? You haven’t? Well then, perhaps you should look to the night sky..?
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Category: All posts, Contests, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Alex Lencicki
Over at Jackie Kessler’s blog the faerie Lune from Midnight Never Come answered questions from Jezebel, a former demon. It’s surprisingly civil, all things considered. Check it out here.
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Category: All posts, Contents, Interviews, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Sean says:
I’ve always conceived Astropolis as three fairly different books. Saturn Returns is a complicated psychological piece (with lots of explosions) in which Imre Bergamasc puts his mind back together and decides that he’s going to do the same thing for the galaxy. Earth Ascendant is what he tries to do with the pieces. How does one go about managing an empire that large? At what cost success? (The third book is, naturally, a car-chase.)
The time-scales in Astropolis are huge. Every now and again I’d stop myself and think, “Did really send those guys on a journey that will last fifty thousand years?” It seems so wrong, and yet so right. In order to realistically manage a galactic civilisation, with no ftl technology at all, people will have to think this way.
And they’d better have a good knowledge of Edgar Allen Poe too, if Imre’s version of the future is anything to go by.
Saturn Returns, book one of the Astropolis sequence, is out now in the UK.
You can find our more about Sean’s writing over at his official website, www.seanwilliams.com and keep up to date with the latest developments via his LiveJournal page.
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Category: All posts, Guest Blogs, In Their Own Words, Orbit UK
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Brian says:
My new book – Bloodheir – is book two in my Godless World trilogy. It’s been entertaining to write, and will hopefully be entertaining to read, in part because it tracks the rise to power of the main villain in my story, and everyone likes writing and reading about the bad guys, right?
Bloodheir is where we get to see just how much trouble my invented world might be in. The battles are bigger, the stakes are getting higher, pretty much all the characters are learning just how easily things can run out of control, and I’m afraid one or two of them are heading for an untimely end…
In other words: all good, clean, honest fun.
Bloodheir is the second volume of Brian’s epic fantasy saga The Godless World and is out now in the UK and US. You can read the whole story so far by picking up a copy of Winterbirth [UK / US] and starting your journey there.
Find out more about Brian and his writing over at his official website, www.brianruckley.com, where he also writes a regularly-updated blog.
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Category: All posts, Guest Blogs, In Their Own Words, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Fiona says:
Goddess is the final ‘movement’ to the Percheron symphony. And if I continue with the orchestral reference then this is the book where the drums are rolling, the cymbals clashing and every musician is blowing, or strumming, or bowing, or banging. All the characters are on the move and we enjoy resolution to the myriad of storylines, especially who the Goddess is…
Always a high body count in my books and be assured that those that deserve it usually get their come uppance. Read it and see who survives - you may be surprised . Thanks to all who have read the story so far. Enjoy Goddess.
Goddess is out now in the UK and is, as Fiona says, the final part of the Percheron series, which began with Odalisque [UK] and continued in Emissary [UK].
You can find out more about Fiona and her work by visiting her official website: www.fionamcintosh.com.
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Category: All posts, Guest Blogs, In Their Own Words, Orbit UK
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Pamela says:
Blood Ties is the first volume of an epic fantasy about dispossession, trust, enchantment, revenge and the unreliability of history. It’s also about the Eleven Domains - created by invasion, ruled by warlords - where it is possible to foretell the future… accurately.
An unusual element in Blood Ties is that, interspersed in the larger adventure, you’ll find minor characters’ own stories, told in their own words, and will learn about daily life in the Domains, which is mixed with magic and love and sorrow and joy and death.
I hope you’ll like the book because of its characters, especially Bramble and Ash, and because the world of the Eleven Domains has more surprises in store with each turn in the Road…
Blood Ties is the first book of the Castings trilogy and is available now in the US and UK.
You can find out more about Pamela Freeman and the Castings trilogy at www.castingstrilogy.com.
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Category: All posts, Guest Blogs, In Their Own Words, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
We’re delighted to announce the launch of a new feature series for OrbitBooks.net - ‘In Their Own Words’ - in which we’ll be presenting a selection of short guest blog pieces by Orbit authors, introducing their brand new Orbit titles in (you guessed it) their own words.
We’ll be kicking off shortly with posts from Pamela Freeman (Blood Ties), Fiona McIntosh (Goddess), Brian Ruckley (Bloodheir) and Sean Williams (Saturn Returns).
We’re hoping that this will become a regular feature, and we invite you to leave your own feedback in the comments section of the individual articles.
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Category: All posts, Guest Blogs, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Tuesday, June 10th, 2008 by Samantha Smith
Marie Brennan, author of Midnight Never Come (UK/US) is guest blogging over at miladyinsanity about the perks of being a writer:
Then — cue the world’s smallest violin — the travel stopped. Well, not stopped, precisely; there was a stretch of time in graduate school where I averaged one out-of-state trip every month for a year and a half. But this wasn’t the exciting travel I’d done before, colorful places with fascinating sights. These were weekend jaunts to conventions or academic conferences, where I saw the exciting interiors of one hotel after another….
Last year, I figured out the best scam EVER for getting travel back into my life.
You can also read miladyinsanity’s fantastic, four star review of Midnight Never Come here.
In other great reviews, Fantasy Book Critic says:
Historical fantasies are hit-or-miss for me, so I was a little wary when starting Marie Brennan’s “Midnight Never Come”, but it wasn’t long before the book had me entranced and by the time the ending was in sight, I was doing everything in my power to make the novel last as long as possible. Spectacularly researched, beautifully imagined, and utterly charming, “Midnight Never Come” is as magical and spellbinding as the fae inhabiting Marie Brennan’s Onyx Court…(Read more)
Interested in finding out what all the fuss is about and getting a chance to win £250/$500 in book vouchers? Check out the Midnight Never Come site at www.midnightnevercome.com
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Category: All posts, Contents, Guest Blogs, Orbit UK, Orbit US, Reviews
Monday, June 9th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Today The Guardian’s online edition has posted a rather fascinating interview with Charles Stross, author of many fine Orbit titles, including Singularity Sky, Accelerando, Glasshouse, The Atrocity Archives, The Jennifer Morgue, Halting State, and Saturn’s Children (available from July ‘08).
Damien G. Walter is the man asking the questions and they cover a wide range of topics, including: the diversity of Stross’s writing, virtual reality and MMORPGs, the decidedly “old hat” concept of the Singularity, augmented intelligence, the author’s love affair with the novel as art-form, and the Trouble with Literary Fiction.
You can find out more about Charles Stross over at his website and get the pre-publication low-down on Saturn’s Children from www.littlebrown.co.uk.
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Category: All posts, Interviews, Orbit UK
Monday, June 9th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Midnight Never Come, Marie Brennan’s novel of suspense, intrigue and fae magic at the court of Queen Elizabeth I, is now available in both the UK and the US. To celebrate we’ve launched a micro-site, packed with background information on the characters and locations in the novel, over at www.midnightnevercome.com.
And as of today, there’s another reason to visit the site: the first phase of our prize competition - in which you could win £250 / $500 (or the local equivalent) of vouchers to spend with your chosen book retailer, with ten runners-up each receiving a signed copy of the UK edition of the book - has now gone live.
Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday for the next two weeks a new cryptic question will be posed via the Competition Gallery page of the site. Solving each puzzle will result in your being invited to submit your email address to enter the competition (so by answering all six questions correctly, you’ll be able to enter a total of six times). Full entry instructions, rules and regulations are available on the site and the usual entry restrictions (employees of the Hachette Book Group are unable to enter, etc.) apply.
The competition will be open for entries until Midnight (GMT) on June 30 and the overall winner and the ten runners-up will be announced by the end of that week.
So, what are you waiting for? Head on over to www.midnightnevercome.com, dust off your thinking cap and by the end of the month, £250 / $500 worth of book vouchers might very well be yours…
And meanwhile, in other Marie Brennan news, Marie has been interviewed by SF CrowsNest and we recently posted excerpts from a couple of great reviews of the book.
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Category: All posts, Contests, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Monday, June 9th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Congratulations to Jill B from Sheffield, UK who was the first weekly winner of our Brian Ruckley Facebook competition and who will be receiving a signed, personalised copy of Brian’s brand new novel, Bloodheir [UK/US].
Remember, there are still three more chances to win during June. Simply sign up as a Fan of Brian’s Winterbirth Facebook Page and you’ll be entered into the remaining draws on June 13, 20 and 27.
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Category: All posts, Contests, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Friday, June 6th, 2008 by Samantha Smith
Congratulations to Stuart M, Karina M, Karen W, Michael G and Eileen B, winners of our competition to win a free signed copy of Pamela Freeman’s Blood Ties, available in all good booksellers this month.
Many thanks to everyone that entered!
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Category: All posts, Contents, Contests, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Friday, June 6th, 2008 by Darren Turpin
Our weekly round-up of links of interest featuring Orbit authors that we’ve found (or have been pointed in the direction of) out there on T’Internet:
If you see any online articles, reviews or interviews that feature an Orbit author, please feel free to drop us a line and let us know!
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Category: All posts, Link Round-Ups, Orbit UK, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 4th, 2008 by Devi Pillai
Orbit US is excited to announce the acquisition of a debut fantasy trilogy by N. K. Jemisin that combines the politics of George R. R. Martin with the magic of Neil Gaiman. The trilogy will open with The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms in Fall 2009.
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Category: All posts, Contents, Deals and Deliveries, Orbit US
Wednesday, June 4th, 2008 by Samantha Smith
Big Dumb Object has a great review of Sean Williams’ Saturn Returns today, calling it:
Space opera with cool (far) future tech. Just up my street. The main plot follows Imre Bergamasc as he tracks down his old crack team of soldiers, along with trying to figure out what in the galaxy is going on. . .
The plot has a good pace, chunks of action, plenty of enigmas and time for the characters to think. There are also some great sensawunda set-pieces.
(Read more)
Saturn Returns is out in UK bookstores this week. Pick up your copy today!
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Category: All posts, Contents, New Titles, Orbit UK, Reviews
Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008 by Bella Pagan
Robert Buettner
Fans of military SF will be delighted to hear that Orbit UK will be publishing Robert Buettner’s action-packed Jason Wander series, starting with Orphanage, Orphan’s Destiny and Orphan’s Journey in August 2008.
Jaye Wells
Orbit UK will also be publishing Jaye Wells’ compulsively readable urban fantasy trilogy. The first book, Red-Headed Stepchild, is scheduled for April 2009.
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Category: All posts, Contents, Deals and Deliveries, Orbit UK