Book Sale 3.1

Here’s an update of the list:

Book
Detail
Number
Price
Brass Man
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
5
£8
Trade paperback
USA
21
£10
MM paperback
USA
16
£6
Polity Agent
MM paperback
UK Old cover
1
£4
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
7
£8
Prador Moon
Trade paperback
US Night Shade Books issue
17
£10
Voyage of the Sable Keech
MM paperback
UK old cover
3
£4
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
4
£8
Cowl
MM paperback
US
3
£5.50
Trade paperback
US
7
£10
Shadow of the Scorpion
Trade paperback
UK old cover
3
£12
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
4
£8
The Technician
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
5
£8
The Gabble
MM paperback
UK old cover
3
£8
The Departure
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
6
£8
Zero Point
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
6
£8

Contact me at the email below my biog on the right if interested.

Other Stuff

Right, fuck that shit – it’s starting to get a bit whiny on this blog. Let me waffle about some other stuff. You all probably know about the upshot of the Night Shade Books saga and how their lists were bought up by Start & Sky Horse Publishing (the former is ebooks the latter the paper version) but what I haven’t mentioned here is how Jarred Weisfeld of Start was determined to buy up my backlist. Those books not taken on by Tor US were being sold as ebooks in the US by Tor UK (yeah, gets confusing doesn’t it). This was, incidentally, something Tor UK weren’t going to do because a US publisher might be put off buying the rights… Anyway, Jarred has essentially bought the rights to ebooks that were already being sold over there. How good a thing for me this is I don’t know. Certainly the advance is nice but does this mean Sky Horse will be bringing out the paper version of those books? Does this mean US fans will be seeing their own copies of books like The Line of Polity? I just don’t know.
Meanwhile my books are still going into translation. The books you see turned up at our house just a few days back. These are the German Baste Lubbe version of The Technician.
And while I’m on the subject of foreign copies of my books. I’ve been selling off my loft stock of books (here you see the latest pile of parcels ready to go)
and wonder if there’s anyone out there who would like some signed foreign editions (mainly German) copies? I have plenty: 

Book Sale Again

Okay, seeing as I’m back in England with access to my loft, time to try and clear out the stock up there. Below you’ll find the list of what I have (English language) along with the price, but I’ll need to know where you are to work out the cost of postage and packaging. They will be signed of course. If you want anything here please email me at ndotasheratvirgindotnet. I also have numerous foreign editions, for example I just received five of the Baste Lubbe German edition of The Technician, so get in contact if you fancy any of them.

Book
Detail
Number
Price
Brass Man
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
11
£8
Trade paperback
USA
22
£10
MM paperback
USA
16
£6
Polity Agent
MM paperback
UK Old cover
2
£4
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
10
£8
Prador Moon
Trade paperback
US Night Shade Books issue
21
£10
Voyage of the Sable Keech
MM paperback
UK old cover
5
£4
MM paperback
UK Sullivan cover
7
£8
Orbus
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
4
£8
Cowl
MM paperback
UK wraparound
4
£8
MM paperback
US
4
£5.50
Trade paperback
US
8
£10
Hilldiggers
MM paperback
UK old cover
3
£4
Shadow of the Scorpion
Trade paperback
UK old cover
4
£12
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
7
£8
The Technician
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
7
£8
The Gabble
MM paperback
UK old cover
8
£8
The Departure
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
19
£8
Zero Point
MM paperback
UK Sullivan
11
£8

Poison Study & Magic Study

A week ago I picked up the first of a fantasy series by Maria V Snyder: Poison Study. I started reading it, immediately engaged with the characters and found it was a book I didn’t want to put down. Many other books I read I have little difficulty abandoning when there might be something else to do, like farting about on Twitter and Facebook, playing a game of Candy Crush or going for a swim. This one kept hold of me, and even kept me down on an uncomfortable sun bed when a carafe of wine was calling. I also didn’t feel any need for a break to read something else when I finished it and immediately picked up Magic Study. This was just as good and I polished it off over a couple of days. I’ve now stuck Fire Study in my backpack and am looking forward to starting that.

Trading in Danger – Elizabeth Moon

Elizabeth Moon is a name I’ve heard in science fiction for a long time but I’ve never read one of her novels before. She’s American (and a former marine) and I may have come across her in Asimov’s. I guess the fact that I’ve now read one of her novels is down to the power of having a book, with an eye-catching cover, sitting on the shelf in a book shop. Now I have read one I’m happy to discover she’s written over 20 of them, and I’ll be happy to buy some more.

Trading in Danger has a slightly old-fashioned feel to it in that it could have been written 30 or 40 years ago. You’ve got the space ships, space marines and merchants, the needle guns and the ansible that were all staples of the kind of books I was grabbing from the second-hand book shop to feed my rapidly expanding teenage SF habit. No off-putting slide-rules are being used to calculate a ship’s course and there are concessions to the modern age in cerebral implants and advanced medical technology however, that there isn’t much detail about the tech you’ll find in the Hamilton GNR or in my books doesn’t matter at all, because this is about the characters and story. I began to care about the people quite rapidly, thoroughly enjoyed their interactions, and was engaged and dragged along in their story from page one. Highly recommended.

Great North Road – Peter F. Hamilton

    
It’s been a while since I picked up a Peter Hamilton book, mainly because of an aversion to great big doorstops. However, I really shouldn’t have let that effect me since I very much enjoyed his previous enormous tomes including a trade paperback version of The Naked God that made my wrist bones crunch every time I turned a page. My version of The Great North Road weighs in at over a thousand pages and, had I not started it in England and then finished it in Crete (with much ado between) I would have finished much sooner than now. Was there stuff that could have been cut without detriment to the plot? Well, yes, but that was world-building and thoroughly enjoyable. Did I find myself skipping any of this and thinking, ‘Oh get on with it?’ Not at all. Right from the start I enjoyed this look into this future and every time I put the book down it was with growing confidence in future enjoyment when I picked it up again. A great big sprawling enjoyable science fiction read. Does what it says on the tin. I finally closed it with a sense of satisfaction and the intention to now get hold of the Void trilogy…     

Waffleblog

Right, I just managed to do my 2,000 words. This was after drinking far too much red wine last night, which resulted in me waking up at 3.30 in the morning and only dozing intermittently thereafter. And this was after I’d deleted some drunken tweets from the night before and while our house was overrun with plumbers – doors open, central heating off, electric fire just managing to stave off the cold. I’m not sure they’re very good words, but they’re down now and I can knock them into a shape another time. I then felt I should do a blog post and asked for suggestions on a subject. These included: hovering robotic coffee cups, steampunk prador, xenobiology and neural warfare.
Nah, as I noted on Twitter, I have a dead pigeon in my mental reservoir.
So I’m just waffling to see what surfaces (hopefully not the pigeon). Some bright spark suggested I do a post about Margaret Thatcher but, just like some of my old posts on Global Warming, I suspect that’d go down as well as bacon sandwiches in a Mosque. People’s opinions on both subjects have petrified and long since moved into the territory of confirmation bias. I have to wonder how much spittle is being wiped off computer screens lately.
More about the Night Shade Books thing perhaps? All you need to know is that I’ll be signing up for the new contract and crossing my fingers. I haven’t got the time to be too paranoid about books I wrote years ago because I’ve got books to write. And as for another idea I’ve been toying with – of all that’s been involved in getting my books published in the US – that I’ve promised elsewhere.
A book review perhaps? Well, I’ve just started Peter Hamilton’s Great North Road so there won’t be any reviews here for a while. Enjoying it btw, and was amused to see a character in there who works in publicity at Macmillan.
No, I’ll go back to those 2,000 words even though it’s territory I’ve visited before.
It’s not actually 2,000 words in total but of fiction. In reality, after I get up in the morning I first fill in a page in my journal so that’s about 200 words. This is sometimes quite difficult as you would expect in extending ‘got up, pissed about on the internet, wrote 2,000 words, ate stuff, went to bed’ to fill a page. Then there are the tweets, occasional blog posts and stuff on Facebook. I kid myself that this is all justifiable advertising and that writing on twitter is a good exercise in précis, but I just enjoy that shit. So, as I alternately muck about on the internet and write, I normally do my 2,000 words of fiction by about 3 or 4. On those occasions when things are going a bit slow the count might be 1,000 to 1,300 at that time, and by then and I’m thinking to myself I’m not going to hit my target. At 4 we have a dance to the Wii because the glamorous life of a writer is sadly lacking in exercise. After 4 I then usually polish off any remainder within an hour. Don’t ask me why. The workings of my brain are a mystery.  
 But next week things will change because we’re heading back to Crete. There, without an internet connection, I open up my laptop and have few alternatives but to write. There, because hell it’s sunny and I want to get outside, I usually polish off my word count by about 2. This year it’ll be the same for a few weeks as I complete the first draft of Penny Royal III, then I’m going to spend plenty of time editing and generally tidying up those three books, also writing synopses and blurbs. I look forward to the time, after that, when I can sit down and work on some short stories.
So, how do I end this? I know…
That’s all for now.

Final Days – Gary Gibson

“Science fiction asks what it means to be human; how we relate to our technology; and what our place is in the vastness of time and space” – Gareth L Powell (Ack-Ack Macaque). Gary Gibson’s Final Days fits neatly in there with its wormholes, ancient alien technology, questions about predestination, much more closely linked networked technology (in the form of contact lenses). But it also does all this in the form of Philip (Mortal Engines) Reeve’s reply to Gareth: “But crucially it asks these questions through the medium of explosions and running about in corridors.” Both of them have put their finger on it. And this book is another fine addition to the vast questions with explosions genre. Enjoyable.

Update: I have to add that he’s definitely been watching those video clips of ‘Big Dog’ from Boston Dynamics!