Search blog.co.uk

Archives for: May 2008

Supping with Panthers by Tom Holland

by Shipscook @ Thursday, May. 29, 2008 - 14:19:19

This is one for anyone who enjoys a touch of the gothic horrors. Late 19th century on the frontier of India a group of British soldiers are sent to investigate reports of Russian soldiers in the province of Kalikshutra. Teaming up with medic Jack Eliot and Professor Huree a Hindoo academic who specialises in the supernatural the advance party head off for the border. It turns out the Russians have joined up with a cult of Kali worshiping vampires, don't you just hate it when that happens? Naturally the stiff upper lip prevails and the vampires are defeated in a pitched battle of Bernard Cornwell type action and adventure. Just think of Sharpe fighting an army of blood crazed zombies and you are nearly there.

Back in London Eliot is working as a Doctor in Whitechapel when he is approached to find a missing MP who is working on a bill to anex Kalikshutra to the British Empire. Without giving to much away Eliot soon finds himself drawn into a web that involves a supposedly long dead vampire poet who inspired his doctor to write one of the earliest vampire stories in the western tradition, a mysterious ancient vampire from the East, Bram Stoker (author of Dracula) and the Whitechapel ripper.

Holland has very cleverly woven into the plot of this very well written book a set of events that could have served to inspire Stoker to write his best known tale as a sub plot. His descriptions of Victorian London complete with its respectable middle classes and seedy underside of squalid opium dens and prostitution are extremely well rendered. Sadly I thought the role of Jack the Ripper towards the end of the book was all too predictable taking a bit of the shine of an otherwise cracking good read.

If you fancy reading this book I'd suggest that to get the most out of it read Dracula, The Vampyre by John Polidori and Conan Doyle's A Study in Scarlet first otherwise you will miss much of the detail concealed within and that would be shame.


 
 

When World Views Collide - An Evening With Lois McMaster Bujold

by Reinette58 @ Monday, May. 19, 2008 - 14:11:04

barrayar

Back in my VISION days, I had the honour of interviewing multiple award-winning fantasy author Lois McMaster Bujold.

VISION is a Brisbane-based group in Australia for writers of Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy and was founded by children’s author and fantasy writer, Rowena Cory Daniells. Check it out at www.visionwriters.org

This article, my first, was a surprise challenge and was published in the VISION Newsletter in April 1998.

‘Hi, this is Rowena. Lois McMaster Bujold will be in Brisbane next Thursday night and we’re trying to organize a get-together for her at Adrianne’s place. She writes space opera. Please let me know as soon as possible if you can come …’

The message on the answering machine sounded intriguing. I returned our illustrious leader’s call and accepted without hesitation, but was ashamed to admit I’d never heard of the woman, let alone read any of her books. Then again, I hadn’t read much of anything lately. I’d cold-turkeyed off my five-novel-per-week habit several years ago, thanks to eye problems and the demands of motherhood.

As a fledgling fantasy writer, I knew I was woefully out of touch. Still, what better way to remedy the situation than to meet a genuine author? I was eager to learn more about her, so I did some research. Here’s what I discovered.

Lois McMaster Bujold was born in 1949 and attended Ohio State University, but didn’t graduate. She describes her education as reading 5 books per week for 10 years (now, that sounded vaguely familiar), reading enormous amounts of science fiction as a teenager, and listening to her father, an engineer. She is divorced, with a son and a daughter.

She started writing in 1982 and sold her first story to Twilight Zone in 1985. Baen bought her first three books, publishing them in 1986. Her central character, Miles Vorkosigan, is a puny aristocrat who prefers to use wit rather than military might when it comes to solving problems.

Bujold won Hugo Awards for her novels, The Vor Game, Barrayar, Mirror Dance and Mountains of Mourning; and six of her books (including Brothers in Arms and Labyrinth) are on Locus’ recommended reading list. She also won Locus Awards for Barrayar and Mirror Dance. In addition to winning Nebula Awards for Falling Free and Mountains of Mourning, she was also nominated for the John W Campbell Award in 1987.

Awesome! It promised to be a most interesting meeting indeed.

A week later, I arrived at Adrianne’s home and knocked on her door. It was a cold, miserable April evening and the rain was beating a listless tattoo on the roof of her carport.

‘Am I early?’ I called cheerily, trying not to trip over her cat. The digital clock in my car was 6 hours 20 minutes slow. No-one seemed to know how to fix it. I prayed my mental arithmetic was correct.

‘A little,’ Adrianne replied. ‘But that’s okay. Come on in. We’re just finishing dinner.’

Unlocking the screen door, she ushered me in, sat me down at the dinner table and offered me cheesecake. I hunched over in my chair in an attempt to present the smallest possible target to the world. After a brief lull, the dinner conversation continued.

‘Don’t you just love American conventions?’ asked a vivacious woman with short, brown hair. ‘They schedule about twelve really interesting events simultaneously and you wish you could see them all. There’s so much to do …’

As inconspicuously as possible, I began to inch my chair toward the living room. I’d almost escaped when a young man (later identified as Ron from Pulp Fiction) said, ‘Don’t be shy. Come, sit closer.’ I smiled weakly and obeyed.

Five minutes later, Chris and Sally arrived and, with much clinking of plates and cutlery, we adjourned to the living room before I could embarrass myself any further. Selecting a comfy chair between Sally and the vivacious, brown-haired woman, I sipped my coffee and whined to them about the weather. The woman turned to me and smiled.

‘Cold? You gotta be kidding. Back in Minnesota, we used to drive on the lakes. They were frozen at the time, of course.’

Suddenly, realization dawned. I was talking to Lois McMaster Bujold! For someone so successfully, she seemed remarkably friendly and down-to-earth.

By 7.30pm, twenty-one V.I.S.I.O.N members, two visiting SF fans, three of Adrianne’s students and a large, fluffy feline had assembled to welcome our guest of honour to Australia. Bujold put us all at ease by asking us to introduce ourselves and give a brief outline of our writing interests before launching into an informal Q & A session. The questions came thick and fast. I whipped out my notebook and jotted down some of Bujold’s pearls of wisdom …

Bad news comes by mail – good news with a phone call.

When you finish one book, move onto the next ASAP.

Contracts aren’t permanent. You can always fix your mistakes next time round.

Never write back to a reviewer. It’s unprofessional.

Writer’s block is your friend. Your back-brain is telling you you’re going in the wrong direction.

After about an hour, we paused for refreshment and mingled. I nearly choked on my coffee when both Adrianne and Rowena approached me to do this article on Bujold for the V.I.S.I.O.N Newsletter. They’d seen me taking notes. I agreed (with a certain amount of trepidation) and returned to my scribbling with renewed zeal for I was now a roving reporter.

Midway through the proceedings, Bujold delivered an eloquent speech (‘When World Views Collide’) that explored the way people really read.

‘Each time someone reads a book, two world views collide. For example, if a cynical, angry reader reads a cynical, angry book, he will feel comfortable … No two people reading the same text will experience it in the same way or at two different points in their lives. When you were twelve, it was impossible to read something that didn’t expand the mind … Reading is very subjective. People read books for different reasons. Some people need to get away from life … Writers become spoiled readers. They start proofreading everything … They look at transitions and are conscious of structure and weak dialogue … Theme is what a book is really about.’

After the speech, Bujold fielded another barrage of questions with her usual warmth and wit.

Who are your favourite authors?
‘Terry Pratchett. I’d pay to see him any day. Also Heinlein, Tolkien, Asimov, Cord Wainer-Smith, Dorothy Sayers, Arthur Conan Doyle and Poul Anderson. I actually went to dinner with him once.’

Do you have an agent?
‘Yes, Eleanor Wood. She was Heinlein’s agent.’

How much to you write each day?
‘Hard to say. My professional production schedule is two chapters per month. Normally I try to write about 1500 words per day – 500 if I’m working through a sticky bit. I write in ‘chunks’ or sections and amass notes for several months before starting a novel.’

How accurate does the scientific information have to be?
‘If used in the foreground, it has to be correct science. If it’s not central to the story, you have to make sure it’s not noticeably wrong. I try to keep up to date with modern technology by reading Scientific American. It also helps having a background in biology and being able to draw on my Dad’s experience as an engineer. I used to work as a drug administration technician in a hospital. Elizabeth Moon was an emergency medical technician and she appreciates the fact that I do my medicine right. Still, you get the occasional problem. An exercise physiologist contacted me and complained about my use of the phrase, ‘lactic acid buildup’. She said the term was obsolete.’

What about co-writing?
‘There are as many different techniques as there are writers. There’s no right or wrong way.’

Have the Baen people approached you about franchising?

‘Yes, after my first Hugo Award. But no, I wouldn’t like to do it. It’s too opposite to the way I work. I like to have the power to make my own settings.’

When writing the seventh or eighth book in a series, how do you bring readers up to speed?
‘I must admit it’s getting more difficult. The problem is how to get in enough back-story. You can either tell it from a different viewpoint or get a different character to tell it with a different attitude. For example, you could have a couple of characters talking about something that happened previously and flip the viewpoints around. In doing this, each book enriches the other and eventually, the whole series begins to cross-fertilise.’

Do you have to re-read so you don’t forget things?
‘Yes.’

Have you thought of writing a prequel?

‘Actually, I’ve written two. With prequels, the ending is constrained. That makes them harder to write. You can overcome this problem by setting the story in a place you’ve never been before. Or, you can use new characters. No-one knows if they’re going to live or die.’

What are your favourite novels?
‘Out of the ones I’ve written?’

Yes
‘’Mirror Dance’ and ‘Memory’.’

Do you have anything you wish had never been printed?
‘No. I just think to myself, ‘that’s the best she could do at the time.’ I can live with that.’

Tension is one of your calling cards. Can you comment on this?
‘I try to keep Miles continually challenged. He’s a very self-conscious hero. Not your usual tall, dark and handsome stereotype. There’s something a bit subversive about him. I like to have my characters emotionally involved. But, different readers have different tolerance levels for tension. You can’t cater for the idiosyncratic. To create the new, you have to annihilate the old and force change onto the reader.’

In what countries are your books selling?
‘Australia, Britain, USA, Canada, Japan, Russia, Poland, France, Italy, Germany, Spain. Fourteen foreign languages in all. I was pirated in Bulgaria and they stole some novellas in Greece. My books have also been translated into Hebrew, Lithuanian and Croatian.’

Do you work with the translators?
‘No, not normally. But it’s interesting to see what survives translation.’

Have you thought of adapting your work to a TV series or movie?

‘I was actually presented with a script for ‘Warrior’s Apprentice’. It was horrible. The characters had my names, but that was where the similarity ended. The story was entirely different, too. Let me give you a word of advice. Before signing a contract, make sure you pay special attention to the clause, ‘moral rights’. It means ‘the right for a work to be accurately presented.’

Would you consider writing the script to a movie?
‘No, it’s a different discipline. Scripting is the career of the future, but I think I’ll stick to novels. I’m lucky enough to be financially comfortable. My need for money is limited only by my teenagers’ ability to spend it.’

As laughter flooded the room, Adrianne called the session to a close and presented Bujold with a thank-you give: an Australiana bookmarker and a box of chocolates which the author generously shared around the room. After refreshments and some more mingling, I purchased a copy of Barrayar, which Bujold graciously autographed, and headed for home.

Two world views collided most favourably later that night as I snuggled up beneath my doona and devoured my new book into the wee hours of the morning. I was well and truly hooked. The only sound I could hear was the voice of legendary Betan jump-ship commander, Cordelia Naismith-Vorkosigan (Miles’ Mum), echoing in the soundstage of my mind.

Funnily enough, she sounded just like Lois McMaster Bujold.

Reinette58
www.warping2gallifrey.blog.co.uk

Sign of the Cross by Chris Kuzneski

by faffajane @ Monday, May. 05, 2008 - 15:52:44

518GolScyIL._SL500_BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-dp-500-arrow,TopRight,45,-64_OU02_AA240_SH20_

A vatican Priest is found murdered on the shores of Denmark, nailed to a cross int he shadow of Hamlet's castle. He is the first victim of a vicious killing spree that spans the world. Each horrific murder exactly mirrors the crucifixion of Christ...

After reading some very bad reviews about this book, it took a long while for me to get round to buying it. It was one of those books you see in the shop pick up, flick through and put down again before walking out empty handed. However, there came the day when I thought what the heck and actually took the book to the cash desk and paid for it.

Few books make me want to dash to a computer to look up what else the author has written as soon as I have finished reading it, like this book has. Forget the bad reviews, read the book and make your own judgement. If you like a book that has clues in abundance, a good mystery and has several subplots running through it then this is the book for you. I spent this weekend unable to put this book down. Plots go in different directions but manage to come together nicely towards the end. The characters work well, you can almost see them play the book out in front of your eyes. It is easy to read, no confusing twists and turns like you get in some books, and although I had managed to work out what was going on about half way through, it didn't spoil the rest of the book for me. As hubby says if you gt frustrated with a character that you want to scream at them, like you would if they were being played on the telly then you know you are reading something good.

Not Stupid by Anna Kennedy

by dancingzita @ Saturday, May. 03, 2008 - 17:51:05

Not Stupid by Anna Kennedy
I have written my first book Not Stupid.
It gives a vivid account of parenting 2 children with autism and marraige to a man diagnosed with Aspergers syndrome five years ago.

Out of desperation both my husband and I remortgaged our home and set up a school in London for our boys after they were rejected by 26 schools within an hours drive of where we lived.

Both my eldest son Patrick and husband Sean talk about their experiences at school and employment and share strategies that worked for them.

Our school now has 90 children aged from 3 to 19 and is a Centre of Excellence www.hillingdonmanorschool.org we have also set up a Further Education College for adults affected by autism as well.

My books is available on Amazon it has been ranked No1 on autism and raising children.


 
 

Footer

The content of this website belongs to a private person, blog.co.uk is not responsible for the content of this website.