A Trifle Cheap

By day she is a fantasy writer, podcaster and a fearless crusader for women’s rights, but by night she dons her secret identity of crime fiction author, Livia Day…

Yes, I’m talking about Tansy Rayner Roberts. You’ll be delighted to know that the debut Livia Day crime now, A Trifle Dead, is currently available for the knock down price of just £3.99 (previously £6.49). Why? Well Alisa has had this gorgeous book trailer made for the book, and she figured that a celebratory sale was in order. Pink champagne, anyone?

While I’m talking about books, I’m pleased to note that Sharon Kae Reamer’s novel, Primary Fault, is now only £1.99 (previously £2.99).

There is lots more good bookstore news to come, but I have to find time to work on it first. Hopefully more tomorrow.

Small Blue Planet – The Philippines

The latest Small Blue Planet podcast is now live at Locus. It visits The Philippines and features a very fine writer, Dean Francis Alfar, and the inimitable Charles A. Tan.

During the podcast we mention two of Dean’s books — How to Traverse Terra Incognita & The Kite of Stars — plus an anthology of fantasy stories — Alternative Alamat. All of them come from Flipside Publishing, the company that Charles works for; and all of them are in my bookstore. Charles has also just sent me a collection of stories by Eliza Victoria, which I will get in the store as soon as I can.

Piracy! – New From Fox Spirit

The very busy UK small press, Fox Spirit, has another new anthology out. This one comes with added parrots, timber-shivering and pieces of eight, not to mention a skull & crossbones and plenty of Aaaarrrrrrrrr! Yes, me hearties, ’tis Piracy!, and you can buy it here.

Locus Awards 2013

This year’s Locus Awards winners were announced last night. Thanks to Liz Argall for live tweeting the event. You can see the full list of finalists and winners here.

There are lots of great winners there, and quite a few interesting pointers for the Hugos. I’m particularly pleased to see Pat Cadigan win Novelette for “The Girl Thing Who Went Out For Sushi”, and I also note that there’s a lot of correlation between being a Guest of Honor at Finncon and winning a Locus Award. Pat was a GoH in 2010, and one of this year’s GoHs is Aliette de Bodard who won Short Story with “Immersion”. That, of course, is freely available online at Clarkesworld, though if you want to help Neil keep the magazine going you could always buy the issue. Next year’s GoHs include Elizabeth Bear, who won Collection for Shoggoths in Bloom, which is also in the bookstore.

You’ll note that all of those winners are women. Indeed, with Nancy Kress carrying off Novella for “After the Fall, Before the Fall, During the Fall” all of the short fiction prizes went to women. In contrast all of the novel prizes went to men (Miéville, Ahmed, Stross, Scalzi). Editing prizes were 50:50 between Datlow and Strahan. I have no idea if this means anything, but it seemed weird.

Meanwhile, I must do more Hugo reading. After all, I’m on a panel about the awards at Finncon…

Yet More From Aqueduct

The last of the batch of new books from Aqueduct Press includes some non-fiction, and one book I am not sure about.

Missing Links and Secret Histories, edited by L Timmel Duchamp, purports to be, “A Selection of Wikipedia entries from Across the Known Multiverse.” But are they about real things, or made up? You may have to read the book to find out. And you may still be confused after reading it.

Strange Matings, edited by Rebecca J. Holden & Nisi Shawl, is a collection of essays about the work of the great Octavia Butler. It is absolutely essential for anyone with interest in Feminist science fiction.

The WisCon Chronicles is a regular series of books highlighting issues discussed at the annual Feminist science fiction convention. The latest issue, #7, is edited by JoSelle Vanderhooft and focuses on disability issues.

New Short Fiction From Aqueduct

The collection of new Aqueduct Press books that I have been adding to the bookstore includes some interesting short fiction.

Big Mama Stories is a collection by Eleanor Arnason. The stories are all linked to: “The quirky, nearly omnipotent members of the colorful tribe of Big Mamas and Big Poppas [who] rove the Universe, able to leap vast expanses of time and space in a single bound. Little can harm a Mama or Poppa, except large, mythological monsters and world-historical trends.” I suspect that it is very funny, probably at the expense of those pesky humans.

Feminist Voices, edited by Batya Susan Weinbaum is a collection of fiction and poetry from the first 10 years of the journal, Femspec.

A finally — something of a surprise to me, but I’m delighted it exists — Space is Just A Starry Night, a collection of science fiction stories from the great Tanith Lee.

New Translation From Le Guin

I uploaded a number of new books from Aqueduct Press today. I’ll get around to talking about them all in the coming days, but I want to give pride of place to a translation. The original work was presumably in Romanian, because that’s where Gheorghe Săsărman is from (he grew up in Cluj, the capital of Transylvania). I’m not sure what route the stories took to get into English, but I do know that they were selected and translated by Ursula K. Le Guin.

Do you need more motivation? No, of course not. But I should mention that Squaring the Circle is a collection of fictional writing about imaginary cities. It is subtitled A Pseudotreatise of Urbogony, and the Publishers Weekly review compares it to Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities. It goes on to say, “Săsărman’s masterfully crafted prose poems feel more immediate, serving as spellbinding descriptions of architectural impossibilities as well as slyly subversive social commentary.”

Janus: An SF Novel From ChiZine

Many of the books that ChiZine puts out veer towards the horror end of the genre. This one, however, is most definitely science fiction. Janus, by John Park, is a tale of a colony world reachable only via a wormhole whose transit randomly wipes memories from those who pass through. Thus we have a classic tale of people who don’t know who they are slowly finding out dark secrets from their past. The cover is vaguely suggestive of the book having a trans character, but as far as I can make out from the blurb, and the fairly enthusiastic review in Locus, that’s not the case. However, it does appear that the heroine is bisexual. I’m interested, though of course I have far too many other books to read.

More From ChiZine

Here’s the final batch of new books from ChiZine. I don’t know much about any of these, though they do all appear to fit with ChiZine’s usual preference for the darker end of fantasy and horror.

Every House is Haunted by Ian Rogers is a debut collection of horror novels with a rave recommendation from no less than Laird Barron.

Hair Side, Flesh Side by Helen Marshall is also a debut horror collection. I remember Alisa Krasnostein enthusing about this one on Galactic Suburbia. Alisa, of course, if known for publishing the likes of Kaaron Warren and Margo Lanagan (and a Kirstyn McDermott book just launched, I believe), so her opinions on such books should be highly respected.

Stories from the Plague Years by Michael Marano also appears to be a horror collection. I see from the blurb that one of the stories, “Displacement”, was a Shirley Jackson award nominee.

The odd book out is The Book of Thomas, Volume One: Heaven by Robert Boyczuk. It is a novel, and despite the creepy cover it appears to be more grim satire than horror. Boyczuk has a Big Idea post at John Scalzi’s blog explaining his concept for the books.

Karen & Karen: Back in the Saddle

I have joyous news. One of my favorite podcasts is back in action. Yes, there is a new episode of SF Crossing the Gulf. And in this Karen Burnham and Karen Lord talk about Gene Wolfe.

Well, to be precise, they talk about The Shadow of the Torturer, which is merely the first volume in the first series of Wolfe’s magnus opus. And they only have an hour or so of podcast in which to talk. All of which means that they hardly scratch the surface of the complex edifice that Wolfe is building. This does not detract from the interest of the episode. Indeed, it is a positive delight to hear someone as smart as Karen L. discovering Wolfe for the first time (because, you know, no one can have read everything).

I note also that the next episode will be devoted to Derryl Murphy’s novel, Napier’s Bones (which Karen L. describes as “math-fi”). This is a book that I have been wanting to read for some time, but have never found the time for. I look forward to hearing what Karen and Karen make of it. Should you want to read along with them, ebook copies are available in the bookstore.

Novels From ChiZine

Adding to our new material from our friends in Canada, I’m delighted to be stocking these two novels.

Swallowing a Donkey’s Eye by Paul Tremblay is a satirical science fiction story. I can’t explain any better than the blurb:

Farm is the mega-conglomerate food supplier for City, populated with rabidly bureaucratic superiors, and sexually deviant tour guides dressed in chicken and duck suits. City is sprawling, technocratic, and rests hundreds of feet above the coastline on the creaking shoulders of a giant wooden pier. When the narrator’s single mother, whom he left behind in City, falls out of contact, he fears the worst: his mother is homeless and subsequently to be deported under City to the Pier. On his desperate search to find his mother, he encounters ecoterrorists wearing plush animal suits, City’s all-powerful Mayor who is infatuated with magic refrigerators and outlaw campaigns, and an over-sexed priest who may or may not have ESP, but who is most certainly his deadbeat dad.

Jeff Ford and Lucius Shepard love it. What more do I need to add?

The Indigo Pheasant is an entirely different animal. It is the sequel to The Choir Boats, completing Daniel A. Rabuzzi’s Longing For Yount series. Delia Sherman describes the books as, “Dickens by way of C.S. Lewis and Jane Austen, set in a London where literature, history, science, and magic are all real.” I’ve been wanting to read these books for some time. My apologies to Daniel for not having made time to do so yet.

Anthologies From Fablecroft

Continuing my updates from the bookstore, I have two anthologies from the Australian small press, Fablecroft.

Canterbury 2100 is a science fiction re-imagining of the Canterbury Tales. Edited by Dirk Flinthart, it includes stories by Angela Slatter, Stephen Dedman, Kaaron Warren, Thoraiya Dyer, Trent Jamieson and Lisa L. Hannett. You might wonder how travelers in the 22nd Century would have time to tell tales, but this is England we are talking about. In the future we will apparently have nuclear-powered steam trains, but they will still be subject to horrendous delays.

One Small Step is edited by Fablecroft’s supremo, Tehani Wessley. The theme of the anthology is discoveries, and contributors include Joanne Anderton, Deborah Biancotti, Rowena Cory Daniells, Thoraiya Dyer, Lisa L. Hannett, Angela Slatter and Tansy Rayner Roberts.

Airship Shape Reminder

The submissions deadline for Wizard’s Tower’s latest anthology project, Airship Shape and Bristol Fashion, is this weekend. If you are working on something, do let us know. We have had a number of stories in already, but I know how writers love leaving things to the last minute. And then sometimes life intervenes. The deadline is there to focus your minds, not to give us an excuse to omit good stories. And if you need a reminder of what it is all about, the Call for Submissions is here.

New from ChiZine – Robert Shearman

And finally, a writer that I am absolutely overjoyed to have in the store. Rob Shearman is one of the finest writers of creepy short fiction ever. Here we have a selection of some of his best, plus 10 entirely new stories. The book is a nominee for the Shirley Jackson Awards. And yes, Rob did write “Dalek” for Doctor Who, and the book does have rave plugs from Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat.

Possibly the scariest thing about it is the number of reviews that say how funny it is. I’m sure they are right, but that just makes it much worse when you turn the page and, oops, something dreadful happens. Remember Why You Fear Me, says Rob. Oh dear me yes, I do.

New From Lethe – Melissa Scott

Any Melissa Scott fans out there? I hope so. Lethe Press has a new book out by her, co-written with Amy Griswold. This is not science fiction, it is a fantasy gaslight mystery. And given where the book is published, I think you can be confident in some queer content as well. This is from the blurb:

Ned and Julian explore London’s criminal underworld and sodomitical demimonde, uncover secrets and scandals, confront the unexpected murderer and the mysteries of their own relationship.

So if sodomitical demimondes are your thing, check out Death by Silver.

New From Fablecroft – Joanne Anderton

Having been away for a week, and collapsed for several days afterwards, I have a lot of catching up to do in the bookstore. I’ll be announcing new books all week, but I figured I’d start with some highlights.

First up we have a debut short fiction collection from Australian publisher, Fablecroft. If you have enjoyed Joanne Anderton’s novels from Angry Robot, why not check out her short fiction as well? The Bone Chime Song and Other Stories includes both science fiction and horror, and has an introduction from Kaaron Warren.

New In Store – Bulls and Trifles

I’ve just uploaded a couple of new books to the Wizard’s Tower store.

The first is the Spring 2013 issue of Bull Spec magazine. I see it includes Paul Kincaid interviewing Kim Stanley Robinson, which should be interesting.

The other is a new book from Twelfth Planet. This one is actually a mystery, but if you are a regular listener to Galactic Suburbia then you should have a good idea of who Livia Day might be, and why Alisa is publishing her book. Besides, how can you not like a book called A Trifle Dead?

While I’m here, I should remind you about the two fabulous books I put in the store during the week. That’s Aliette de Bodard’s Hugo and Nebula nominated novella, On A Red Station, Drifting, and the first issue of Jonathan Wright’s wonderful magazine, Adventure Rocketship!

Adventure Rocketship! – The Ebook

Adventure Rocketship! #1 - Jonathan WrightI am delighted to announce that Wizard’s Tower has been asked to publish the ebook edition of Adventure Rocketship! #1. This resulted in a significant amount of squee in these here parts. After all, I can now claim to have published a book containing work by Lavie Tidhar, N.K. Jemisin, Minister Faust, Liz Williams, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Tim Maughan and many other fabulous people.

The book is currently available from the Wizard’s Tower store, and will also be available through the usual outlets over the next few days.

You want this, people, you really do. It has Liz Williams’ story about David Bowie; it has Minister Faust writing about George Clinton and N.K. Jemisin writing about Janelle Monáe; it has interviews with China Miéville and Michael Moorcock. In addition to Liz’s story there is fiction by Lavie Tidhar, Nir Yaniv, Martin Millar and Tim Maughan. And there’s lots more. What are you waiting for?