2008-09-30 18:23:39
Still reading World War Z. I think my ARC of The Temporal Void has vanished, so I might just go and buy a copy tomorrow, and I'm also due an ARC of Gollancz's 'big debut' for next year, The Admantine Palace, which sounds interesting (DRAGONS! apparently).
2008-09-25 09:27:58
Alright so this series is in dire need of like ...clarity.
There is plenty of crap that occurs that leaves me scratching my head. I've yet to see any real answers, therefor the not so frequently asked questions.
2008-09-23 05:43:58
Longclaw is being produced as we speak, the first 600 (the first shipment) should arrive by Christmas. Late November or early December to be precise. Needle will be entering the prototyping phasing of production soon as well. And, we have decided sword #3 will be Ice.
2008-09-22 12:19:45
Hi. On behalf of the people organising Finncon, I wish to welcome you to Helsinki on 10th to 12th of July 2009. As many already know, GRRM is (one of) our Guest of Honour(s).
We would like to know what YOU want from our con. What kind of programme do you want to see? If you already know you're coming, can we help you with something? This is the thread.
Finncon 2009 homepage.
As our page is yet quite unfinished but if you want to know more about what Finncon is and what has been done, check out Finncon 2008 page. One thing I'm sure of - there will be a lot of
2008-09-21 10:04:08
Jaimie is in the KG, Cersei is a woman, and Tyrion has basically been expatriated from all lands and holdings. Kevan is probably castellan, but now that he has assumed regency, do you think he will pass the Rock onto himself and his family?
2008-09-15 12:31:44
What did Euron give the Faceless Men as payment for his brother?
We have been told about the high cost, what would the Faceless want that Euron has?
2008-09-11 08:39:41
Hey all - I'm almost all settled in DC and would love to meet all of you. Anyone down with meeting up in October? I was thinking the 24th or 25th, and Nanny's is fine with me if it works for all of you. I'm cool with November too, if that works for more of you.
ETA: Looks like my sister might be visiting in October, so let's go with November in hopes that AG can make it, cool?
2008-09-07 08:43:12
Right, so following on from the success of London, Oxford and Galway, do we want to start thinking about a possible big meet-up for 2009? I remember it was around this time last year that we started talking about 2008's meet-up, and that led to the Galway meet-up, which seemed to work out okay (aside from a few issues I'll mention in a sec).
There's been a couple of tentative discussions about this already at the last few BwB meets. I already put forward my home town of Colchester on the grounds of: proximity to London and transport hubs (it's less than 40 minutes by direct bus link from Stansted), lots of history and culture (2,000-year-old Roman temple in the basement of a 1,000-year-old Norman castle = badassery), lots of pubs (essential) and fairly close to other locations and sites of interest (such as the Dedham Vale, Mersea Island). We also have the Medieval Fayre at the start of June which could be a good date for a meet. The lack of preplanned activities in Galway (and the cancellation of the only one we did have by the pub going out of business) did seem to be a problem last year, so some better forward planning could be the way to go this year. Holding it at the start of June could mean better weather, but may also bring it quite close to Worldcon, which could be an issue for those saving for that.
The only other major issue I see to holding it here would be accomodation. There seemed to be a suggestion this time around we rent a big holiday house and pack people into it so we have a solid base of operations where we could perhaps hold a big party one night, rather than constantly going to pubs. Whilst that's doable, those houses are pretty pricey around here (£1000 for a week in May-June minimum and I couldn't find any that which room for more than 12 people at once, whilst we'd need more), even split a dozen or more ways. The normal hostel option is out on the grounds that Colchester doesn't have any. We have a few good hotels (including the mighty George Hotel in High Street), but nothing for hostel prices, which may make the idea prohibitively expensive.
Other options would be to revisit some of the discarded suggestions from previous years, such as Cardiff or York (which were discarded in favour of Oxford), or perhaps to say sod it and go to one of our usual haunts, such as London or Edinburgh. Or, if people wanted to try something further afield, I could see what my dad would charge us for using their holiday home in the south of France. We could probably fit over 20 people in there and it's quite close to the historic French towns of Pau and Lourdes, plus people can also go skiing in the Pyrynees or get a private visit the planetarium on top of one of the nearby mountains (note: this is Pure Awesome). Other sites of interest include mountain-top cable cars, surfing and day trips to the beach or parts of Spain, although transport would obviously have to be considered.
Ideas and thoughts?
2008-09-06 12:41:31
From the blog:
QUOTE
The Painted Man (aka The Warded Man in the USA) is the first book of The Demon Trilogy and is this year's big debut fantasy series from HarperCollins Voyager. I hadn't heard of it prior to receiving the review copy, which is a shame as it's an excellent debut novel that can stand alongside a number of other recent high-profile debuts quite comfortably. I enjoyed it more than Ruckley's Winterbirth, and at about the same quality of enjoyment as Abercrombie's The Blade Itself, for example.
The Painted Man is set in a world where people live in terror of the night. When the sun goes down, demons - or 'corelings' - from below the ground emerge on the surface to kill and feast on human flesh until morning comes. Humanity has discovered powerful defensive magic in the form of wards which can protect their homes, or even patches of ground, but this magic is not always perfect and the different varieties of demons have different ways to overcome the wards.
Eleven-year-old Arlen lives on his parent's farmstead, but a coreling attack leaves his family decimated and many friends and neighbours dead. Despising his father's cowardice for getting his mother killed, Arlen runs away from home, surviving by carving wards into the dirt every night. Eventually he reaches safety in a big city and finds a new, loving family...but memories of his childhood continue to haunt him and he becomes obsessed with the idea of leading humanity to an ultimate victory over the demons, to stop cowering in fear behind walls and wards and go on the offensive.
Meanwhile, thirteen-year-old Leesha is set up for a prosperous life, ready to inherit her father's business and marry one of the most popular boys in her village. However, her mother's bitterness and her betrothed's error in judgement instead leads her on a very different path as she learns the arts of herblore and healing from the town's wise woman.
An entire town is obliterated by a coreling attack, leaving only a single survivor: a three-year-old boy named Rojer. A visiting Jongleur decides to take Rojer her his wing as his apprentice, setting them both on an dangerous path.
The Painted Man is a page-turning book. Whilst at heart it doesn't necessarily journey too far from established tropes (it even starts in a village), it mixes them up nicely. The land of Thesa owes as much to Westerns in its scenery than to traditional epic fantasy, whilst the ward magic is notably different to the wizards 'n' warlocks found in other works. The notions of paranoia and fear, and the price of overcoming that, are also explored in-depth. The characters are likable and interesting. To some extent they follow the traditional 'callow youths come good' model, but the central character of Arlen takes a rather different course and there are hints that his dark and dangerous journey have left him a scarred and bitter character, for all that he finds some happiness at the end of the book. Brett's worldbuilding is pretty good, best exemplified when in a sequence lasting just a few chapters he takes Arlen into a burning desert kingdom and is able to paint it in as much detail and bring it to life as well as does the Free Cities and surrounding villages where the bulk of the narrative takes place. The plotting is also nicely done, with a huge amount of incident and character-building set up in the book, along with a reasonable amount of exposition. The book also comes to a definitive climax rather than a cliffhanger, meaning that whilst there is clearly plenty more to come you're not left hanging in mid-air for a year for the next instalment.
The Painted Man (****) is a most enjoyable novel with an interesting premise that is well-developed and explored. I look forward to reading the sequels. The novel is available now from Voyager in the UK, and will be published (as The Warded Man) in the USA by Del Rey in March 2009. The author has a website here.