Blog Archives
NANP: Names In Context
Posted by AJ
Another’s week here on Names: A New Perspective, and today’s guest is E. J. Swift, author of the post-apocalyptic Osiris, released by Night Shade Books last year. Osiris was quite a fun novel (my review), notable for the fact that it was set in a world where extreme climate changes have forced the survivors to all live in one crowded city and one of the protagonists is Indian, among other things. Any book that goes for ethnic diversity in its characters should always be applauded I feel, especially when it doesn’t come across as contrived. While you rush off to your favourite bookseller to buy a copy of the book, here’s what E. J. has to say on the topic of names.
Names: A New Perspective Part 3
Posted by AJ
The last two weeks have been spent in a mad scramble to get people on board for the next phase of Names: A New Perspective. I really should have gotten this done a month ago, but I kept getting sidetracked by other things (Game of Thrones, finishing edits on Project Dharmayoddha, reading a ton of graphic novels, catching up on my monthly reading, etc), that it just didn’t happen on time.
But, I have the new schedule done and all worked out, and my thanks to everyone who has agreed to participate. The last few guest posts that have gone up have not been mentioned in any of the schedules, since I was mostly just winging it all, but now everything is set for the most part. This is the schedule that I will be referring to in the coming weeks, and I will also be expanding on this one as I contact yet more authors and bring them on board.
Here they are:
Posted in Debut Authors Guest Series, Guest Posts
Tags: Adrian Tchaikovsky, Amy McCulloch, Andy Smillie, Angel Exterminatus, Beneath The Flesh, Bruce Cordell, Bryony Pearce, C. L. Werner, Christian Schoon, Cold Magic, DAW Books, Deathwatch, Debut Authors Guest Series, Django Wexler, Dragonfly Falling, E. J. Swift, Elizabeth Bear, Empire In Black and Gold, Epic Fantasy, Evie Manieri, Fantasy, Flesh of Cretacia, Forgotten Realms, Francis Knight, Generation V, Gini Koch, Graham McNeill, Guest Posts, Horus Heresy, James Maxey, Jean Johnson, Joe Parrino, John C. Scott, Kate Elliott, King's Dragon, M L Brennan, Names, Names A New Perspective, Nathan Long, Orbit Books, Patrick Hester, Priests of Mars, Robbie MacNiven, Science Fiction, Scott Lynch, Shadows of the Apt, Solaris Books, Space Opera, Spinner of Lies, Stephanie Saulter, Steve Parker, Sword of the Gods, Tau, The meaning of Names, The Patient Hunter, The Thousand Names, The Weight of Souls, Urban Fantasy, Warhammer 40000, Wizards of the Coast, Young Adult
Names: A New Perspective Part 2
Posted by AJ
A little late, but I finally have the schedule of posts down. Post-NaNoWriMo blues and a massive reviewing/reading backlog plus my Advent Reviews series has kept me rather busy. Which reminds me, I still need to do that NaNoWriMo “after-action” report too! Ack! You can read any of the previous posts by using the series tag: “Names A New Perspective“. The previous line-up of authors is here. So, without further ado, here you are.
Posted in Debut Authors Guest Series, Guest Posts
Tags: 2012 Debuts, Adam Christopher, Aliette de Bodard, Amanda Carlson, Angry Robot Books, Black Library, Bradley P. Beaulieu, Cassandra Rose Clarke, Chuck Wendig, Ciara Ballintyne, David Guymer, Debut Authors, E. J. Swift, Erin M. Evans, Fantasy, Forgotten Realms, Gareth Powell, Genre Magazines, Guest Posts, Janet Edwards, Jo Anderton, Jocelyn Koehler, Lee Collins, Lyndsay Faye, Matt Forbeck, Names A New Perspective, Nightshade Books, Science Fiction, Self-published, Solaris Books, The meaning of Names, Tim Marquitz, Urban Fantasy, Warhammer Fantasy, Wizards of the Coast
Advent Reviews Day 2: Osiris by E. J. Swift
Posted by AJ
For Day 2 of my Advent Reviews series, I bring to you my thoughts on the this debut novel by author E. J. Swift, the first in the Osiris Project series being published by Night Shade Books, who have put out such gems as Teresa Frohock’s Miserere: An Autumn’s Tale and Nathan Long’s Jane Carver of Waar.