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Win a signed copy of INSIDE STRAIGHT

November 21, 2007 at 11:35 am
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For those of you who are eager to get a head start on the Wild Cards relaunch — whether you’re fans of the original series, or newcomers curious to find out what all the excitement is about — Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist will be giving away two copies of the ARC for INSIDE STRAIGHT, signed by all nine contributors.

Details of the contest can be found on Pat’s site at http://fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com/

Enter early, but not often.

Despite being a fan of the despicable Dallas Cowboys, Pat gives good contest.

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PW reviews INSIDE STRAIGHT

November 19, 2007 at 1:42 pm
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PUBLISHER’S WEEKLY has weighed in with a nice review of INSIDE STRAIGHT in today’s issue.

For those of you who do not read PW, the review is also available online at the PW site:

http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6501524.html?industryid=47159

They say, “this fast-paced and sardonic story will appeal to comic book aficionados and heroic fantasy fans alike.”

Amen to that.

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Wild Cards interview

November 19, 2007 at 12:27 pm
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A long interview with me about INSIDE STRAIGHT and the new Wild Cards triad has just been posted at SFF World, and can be found at http://www.sffworld.com/interview/250p0.html.

The interview was actually done last February, when we had just finished and delivered INSIDE STRAIGHT, so certain aspects of it are already outdated, but there’s still a good information there, for those interested in Wild Cards.

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Two Wins in One Day

November 18, 2007 at 11:26 pm
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Life is magical and full of joy.

Somehow both of my teams won today. The Giants defeated the Detroit Lions in the morning… just barely, admittedly, but a win is a win, and I’ll take it. And then somehow the Jets won as well, against a very good Pittsburgh Steeler team. That one shocked even me. I have never believed that the Jets were as bad as their record suggested and I figured they’d pull out of the tailspin and win one sooner or later, but I never expected it to be against the Steelers, supposedly the third best team in the AFC. I’ll take that one too, however. The Jets D stepped up big, and Mangini took advantage of the bye week to install a number of nice new wrinkles and schemes.

Of course, the hated Cowboys and despised Patriots both won huge, so the day wasn’t perfect.

The G-Men look to be in pretty good position for a wild card, though they had several costly injuries today. For four years in a row the Giants have been crippled by injuries in the second half of the season, one of the big factors in their late season collapses. This year they have been relatively injury-free, so seeing Kiwi and Brandon go down produced deep forebodings. I fear Kiwi is lost for the year, though I hope Jacobs can return soon. If not, I hope Coughlin gives this kid Bradshaw some carries to spell Reuben Droughns. He showed a lot of flashes in pre-season, and could have the makings of another Tiki Barber, if he can only learn to hold on to the ball. I also wish Coughlin would sit down Plaxico Burress for a couple of games. It’s plain that his ankle is getting worse. He’s playing with pain and without practice. Let him sit on the bench for two or three weeks and heal. Go with Amani Toomer and Sinorice Moss, Steve Smith if he’s healthy, and bring back that kid Anthony Mix. Mix is raw, but has the size, and pretty good hands too.

As for the Jets… well, I don’t expect they’ll be able to stay with the hated Cowboys on Turkey Day, or with the despised Patriots later on, but they will probably win a few more before the season is done… just enough to make sure they don’t get a top five draft pick. Sigh. Kellen Clemens showed promise today, Thomas Jones finally looked like the runner he was supposed to be, the O-line and D-line both played well… but Leon Washington won the game. Amazing how the Steelers schemed to avoid kicking to Leon all game long, only to punt it straight at him in overtime, with the game on the line. He made them pay. Let’s send Leon to the Pro Bowl…

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Football

November 16, 2007 at 5:55 pm
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Life is meaningless and has no purpose.

I don’t know which was more painful, watching the Giants lose again to the Cowboys, or sitting in a sports bar in Saratoga as the Colts collapsed and Evil Little Bill and his Patriots won another one. Damn you, Belicheat! Damn you, Brady! Damn you, Stego!

I have a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach that we’re headed toward a Cowboys – Patriots Superbowl. There’s no teams I loathe more. I’ll have no one to root for. Is there some way both of them can lose?

Unless the Cowboys choke, it looks as though a grisly death is in store for Patrick St. Denis. I think I’ll kill a couple of guys named Romo and Teo along with him.

(Sits down to sharpen his axe).

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SALVATION RUN

November 16, 2007 at 4:40 pm
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The first issue of the new DC Comics miniseries SALVATION RUN has just hit the stands, and I’ve gotten a number of questions about my involvement with the project. Rather than try and respond individually by email, I thought it best to address the questions here, lay out the history, and put the matter to rest.

Those who’ve picked up the comic will have read the “DC Nation” afterword, where DC Executive Editor Dan DiDio gives a brief history of the project, and credits the original idea to me. His account is accurate for the most part, but there’s a huge and important omission. My involvement in this project, which goes back a decade, was always as one-half of a team. The other half was my friend and sometime collaborator John Jos. Miller, one of the mainstays of my Wild Cards series, and a talented writer and comic scriptor in his own right. John and I came up with the idea together, developed it together, pitched it together, sold it together, wrote it together (to the extent that we wrote it). It’s true that I did have more meetings with Dan than John did, simply because I get to New York more often, but John was just as much a part of SALVATION RUN as I was, start to finish. I have no idea why Dan omitted any mention of John’s name in his account of the project, but the record should be corrected. SALVATION RUN was never just me. It was always John and me.

In the beginning, it wasn’t SALVATION RUN either. The origins of this go back a decade. At the time DC was publishing a line of books called ELSEWORLDS, their version of Marvel’s “What If” stories, tales that took place outside the on-going DC continuity. The editor of the line was a fellow named Andy Helfer. The idea that John and I pitched him, way back then, can be summed up in one word: Australia. What if the world finally got sick of all these super-villains and decided to get rid of them once and for all by transporting them to a distant planet, with no way home? Our title was EXILES IN PARADISE. Andy loved it, and bought it, and John and I set to work on what was originally to be a ten-issue series.

It was an Elseworlds series from day one, however. A “what if” story. When Britain sent convicts to Australia, they were transported “for the term of your natural life,” and that was the premise of our story too. There was no escape. The planet was in another galaxy, millions of light years away, accessible only by Boom Tube. We wanted to tell a story that would span decades. Characters would die, would change, would marry, would have children. Wars would be fought, but eventually, from the chaos and brutality of the early days, a society would be born. Some of the villains would find only death on the new world, but for others it would be a second chance, and they would find redemption. The whole tale, once told, would span decades. None of the villains would ever return to Earth. (Nor did they have to. This was an ELSEWORLDS series).

The project began well enough. Barry Kitson was assigned to do the art, John and I plotted the first issue and wrote the script, and Kitson did the pencils… and did a terrific job, too. After that, however, problems developed. “Creative differences,” as they say in Hollywood. As we plotted out the second issue, it became clear that the story John and I wanted to tell was a good deal darker and grittier than what Andy Helfer was comfortable with. A dozen villains died in issue one alone, some of them “name” villains, and that was just to start. There was murder, there was sex, there were even porta-potties (which became a big issue, somehow). We found ourselves unable to resolve those differences, so finally a settlement was reached, and EXILES IN PARADISE was shelved.

It remained on the shelf for long years, during which time Andy left DC, and the entire Elseworlds line was discontinued, but when Dan DiDio came to DC, he took it off the shelf, dusted it off, and decided to revive the project… but with a crucial difference. Dan wanted to do the idea as part of DC’s main, ongoing continuity. It would no longer be an “imaginary story” or a “what if,” it would become part of the history of the DC universe. He laid out the idea to me over a lunch in New York several years ago, I took it back to New Mexico and hashed it out with John. Thus SALVATION RUN was born.

Changing the tale from a “what if” to something that “really happens” had huge ramifications, however. At first, John and I were both excited by the prospect. Even as a kid in Bayonne, reading my Superman funnies, I always thought that “imaginary stories” were vaguely unsatisfying, somehow. When a story begins with a disclaimed that says no, this didn’t really happen, the stakes are lowered from page one. So the prospect of being able to work within the actual ongoing continuity sound cool.

Once we got into the nitty-gritty, however, we soon ran into difficulties. The whole concept had originally been built around the idea of these villains being sent to another world for “for the terms of [their] natural lives,” to live or die as they would. That worked great for Elseworlds. Not so much for the main continuity. We wanted major characters to die, to change and find redemption, to marry, to love, to hate, to have children… but DC was not about to write off virtually all of its major and minor supervillains, which is really what our version of the story would have required.

John and I gave it our best shot, I’ll say that much, but it soon became clear that we could not make it work that way that DC wanted. So we stepped down, came to an amicable agreement, and returned to our myriad other projects while DC brought in Bill Willingham to take over the plotting and writing of SALVATION RUN.

Bill is a first rate writer, has done some terrific work on FABLES, and is much better versed in the current DC universe and all its complexities than either John or me. He was a good choice to take over the writing, and like any comic fan, I’m looking forward to seeing what he does with the idea. I know that Bill started fresh, however, without consulting any of the prior work that John and I had done, and from reading the first issue, it’s plain to see that he’s taking the book in a much different direction than what we’d planned.

One of these days, John Miller and I may go back and do our own version of the story, with a cast of original characters of our own creation. That won’t be for a while, however. Not until after A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE is done, and John has finished BLACK TRAIN COMING, the big vampire novel that he’s writing,

Meanwhile, comic fans can enjoy Bill Willingham’s take on the tale. Prison planets are nothing new, after all, and Australia is big enough to inspire many different stories.

(This is all I care to say on this topic, so I am closing comments on this one. If you want to talk about SALVATION RUN, the place to do it is on a board like Newsarama, not here).

Anyway, that’s the story.

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Wild Cards Reviewed

November 16, 2007 at 4:28 pm
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INSIDE STRAIGHT is coming out in January, and there’s lots of cool stuff happening on the Wild Cards front… most of which I can’t get talk about yet (watch this space for future updates, however).

I can say that we’ve gotten our first review on INSIDE STRAIGHT, from the Fantasy Book Spot, which can be found at http://www.fantasybookspot.com/node/2179

It’s just what you want in a first review: on a scale of 1 to 10, he gives us an 11.

We also got a great quote from… well, no, best wait on that one.

There’s a great Wild Cards forum at http://www.captaincomics.us/forums/index.php?board=35.0 where fans of the series — and those who aren’t fans yet, but might be if they’d check it out — can talk about the books, characters, etc. A number of my Wild Cards writers drop in there from time to time as well, so it’s a good place for readers and authors to interact.

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Home from WFC

November 16, 2007 at 4:07 pm
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I’m back home again from World Fantasy Con and a week in New York City.

There’s a hundred things to talk about, and I haven’t posted for a long time, so I’m going to break this up into a number of subject-specific posts. Should make it easier for commenting.

WFC first. It’s been a few years since I’ve attended World Fantasy, and I’d forgotten how good they can be. This year’s was the biggest WFC ever held (mind you, that still makes it only about a fifth the size of worldcon, which is turn is almost nothing compared to something like the San Diego Comicon), and one of the best. Saratoga seems to be a lovely city, though I didn’t get to see as much of it as I might have liked. There was a huge turnouts of writers, editors, artists, and publishers. I got to hang around with old friends and make new ones. It was great to spend some time with Lisa Tuttle and sit down with Gardner Dozois again and talk about our anthology projects, but I also got the chance to meet some fellow fantasists I had never met before, including Steven Erikson, Scott Lynch, and David Anthony Durham. As usual, the Brotherhood Without Banners threw the best parties at the con. (Jetboy Lives!) I enjoyed the awards banquet as well, even though the prime rib was grey and tasted as if it had been boiled. Gene Wolfe won the award for best novel, Ellen Asher got some much deserved recognition for her decades of editorial service at the Science Fiction Book Club, and toastmaster Guy Gavriel Kay gave a moving tribute to Robert Jordan, speaking eloquently about his importance to the field.

And when I read the prologue of A DANCE WITH DRAGONS, I liked it a lot better than the earlier version I read at a couple cons last summer.

All in all, a terrific con. It almost — but not quite — makes up for me missing Japan.

Next year’s World Fantasy Con will be in Calgary, in Canada. I had so much fun at this year’s WFC that Parris and I are adding that one to our schedule. See you there!

(Must also mention that the train ride from Saratoga to New York City is not to be missed. The rails run right along the Hudson, and the river in its fall foliage was gorgeous).

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FEVRE DREAM steaming this way

October 24, 2007 at 3:13 pm
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Subterranean’s deluxe leatherbound limited edition of my historical horror novel FEVRE DREAM is now at the printers, Bill Schafer informs me. He expects to ship in January.

This edition is gorgeously illustrated by Justin Sweet — cover, three color plates, lots of wonderful pen & ink interiors. Collectors and fans of great art should check it out.

For more details, take a look at the story on my news page.

To place an order, go to Subterranean’s website.

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Highs and Lows

October 22, 2007 at 4:14 pm
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Another Sunday, and two more football games. Sometimes it’s good to have two teams. The Giants are really on a roll, looking better with each game. I’m especially pleased by the way their defense is playing. Like any old-time Giants fan, I love defense, and the swarming four-headed sack monster the G-men are fielding with Osi, Kiwi, Strahan, and Tuck is splendid to watch. So far I like what I’ve seen of our rookie CB Aaron Ross too. The offense is looking pretty formidable as well.

As for the Jets… oy… what can I say? Chad is getting all the blame, but truth be told, it’s not all his fault. In fact, I’d lay most of the Jet problems on the defense. The run defense can’t even stop backups from having 100 yard games, the pass rush is nonexistent, and the cornerbacks commit penalties at the worst possible times. Whether Mangini stays with Chad or switches to Kellen Clemens, I expect we’ll be drafting very high next spring. Let’s see, any superstar defensive players coming out of college?

And on other fronts, for all of you who hate American football…

The first volume of DREAMSONGS should be in U.S. bookstores by now, in hardcover. Volume two will follow in a month. Yes, this is the same collection originally published by Subterranean in 2003 as GRRM: A RRETROSPECTIVE. Same contents, but if you missed that one, here’s the chance to make up for that oversight. The new edition has some nice interior artwork by Mike Kaluta as well.

The American edition of HUNTER’S RUN and the first volume of the new Wild Cards triad, INSIDE STRAIGHT, are both due for release in January. Amazing covers on both, I think. Stephen Martiniere did the HUNTER’S RUN cover, Michael Komarck INSIDE STRAIGHT. Oh, and if you’re a fan of fantasy art, check out the news page on my website to a glimpse of the artwork on the new Italian edition of THE ICE DRAGON.

Meanwhile, Gardner Dozois (my friend and co-editor) and I have gotten the first stories in on the two big original anthologies we’re editing — WARRIORS and SONGS OF THE DYING EARTH (the Jack Vance tribute anthology). The books won’t be out until 2009, of course, but Gardner and I are excited about them both, and it would seem our writers are as well.

And yes, I am trying to finish up the third Dunk & Egg story as my own contribution to WARRIORS. Right now I’m calling it “The Mystery Knight.” That’s the fourth or fifth title I’ve slapped on this one. We’ll see if it sticks.

DANCE WITH DRAGONS? Yes, working on that too. Lately it’s been Tyrion and more Tyrion. When I finish these three chapters, I will need to double back and pick up some of the other POVs lest my devious dwarf get too far ahead.

An email asked why I disabled comments on my last Not-A-Blog post, about the Dark Sword Miniatures. My intent was not to discourage comments, but to redirect them to more appropriate places. Dark Sword has its own message board. So does Tom Meier, on his Thunderbolt Mountain website. Jim and Tom have much more “hands on” (literally) involvement with the figures than I do, and I know both of them would be pleased to hear your thoughts and field your questions. So take your comments to those forums, please. I provided the appropriate links in my last post.

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