Blog Archives
June Reading List Poll
Posted by AJ
In January and February, I ran two highly successful polls where I asked all the readers of the blog to help me pick my reading list for the following months. The first one was for novels, the second one for comics. I managed to meet the reading goals for the first of those polls, but am still progressing through the second one, mostly because I’ve been traveling a bit too much of late, and reading time has generally been at a premium due to work and more time devoted to my writing.
However, I should be done with it by the end of this month, so keep an eye out for updates on that.
In the meantime, here’s my next reading poll, and this one is for novels once again. Hit the break to find out more.
Posted in 2013 Reading Challenge, Book Lists, Challenges
Tags: 2013 Most Anticipated, 2013 Reading Challenge, 25 In 2013, 51 For 2013, A Discourse in Steel, Adrian Tchaikovsky, Agents of Artifice, Angry Robot Books, Ari Marmell, Assassin's Apprentice, Betsy Dornbusch, Billy Fox, Black Library, Blood of Nagash, Book Lists, Cold Fire, Dan O'Shea, David Annandale, Dawn of the Jedi, Del Rey Spectra, Dire Earth Cycle, Eberron, Egil & Nix, Eli Monpress, Elspeth Cooper, Epic Fantasy, Exhibit A Books, Exile, Fantasy, Farseer, Gathering of the Lost, Helen Lowe, Heroic Fantasy, James Swallow, Jason M. Hough, John C. Scott, Josh Reynolds, Kate Elliott, Kevin J. Anderson, List Polls, Magic The Gathering, Marsheila Rockwell, Neferata, Nightshade Books, Orbit Books, Paul S. Kemp, Penance, Planeswalker, Playing Tyler, Pocket Books, Poll, Rachel Aaron, Reading List, Reading List Poll, Recon One-Five, Richard Lee Byers, Robin Hobb, Science Fiction, Self-published, Seven Eyes, Seven Suns, Shadows of the Apt, Simon & Schuster, Space Marine Battles, Space Opera, Spiritwalker, Star Trek, Strange Chemistry, T. L. Costa, The Black and Gold, The Darwin Elevator, The Death of Antagonis, The Hidden Empire, The Spirit Rebellion, The Wall of Night, Tie-in fiction, Tim Lebbon, Top 25 Series 2013, Tor Books, Trinity Rising, Urban Fantasy, Wild Hunt, Wizards of the Coast, Young Adult
51 Most Anticipated Releases For 2013
Posted by AJ
With regards reading, 2012 was a fantastic year for me. It was the year that I stepped out of my comfort zone and read in genres that I normally would not read, such as urban fantasy (involving angels, vampires, werewolves etc) and historical fiction. It was also the year that I read more than the traditional fantasy, and tie-in fantasy at that. My experiments seem to have mostly been successful as I’ve started to really like reading these kind of books.
My goal for this year is to continue on that same path and read as widely as I can. Which is why this massive list is so huge in scope, with tons of variety. I went through the catalogues for most of these publishers and picked out things I liked,and which caught my eye. Getting through the entire list this year will probably not happen, but then again, never say never!
Posted in 2013 Reading Challenge, Book Lists
Tags: 2013 Most Anticipated, A Discourse in Steel, A. E. Rought, Adam Christopher, Aliens, Amanda Carlson, Androids, Angry Robot Books, Baneblade, Before The Fall, Ben Bova, Ben Counter, Between Two Thorns, Billy Fox, Binding, Black Feathers, Black Library, Blighted Empire, Blood of Asaheim, Blood's Pride, Brian McClellan, Broken, C. L. Werner, Carol Wolf, Cassandra Rose Clarke, Cat Adams, Chris Wraight, Christian Schoon, Chuck Wendig, Cora Oglesby, Cracked, David Annandale, David Guymer, Egil and Nix, Eliza Crewe, Elspeth Cooper, Emillie and The Hollow World, Emma Newman, Epic Fantasy, Evie Manieri, Fade To Black, Fantasy, Far Future, Farside, Fortune's Pawn, Francis Knight, Gemsigns, Gotrek & Felix, Guy Haley, Heroic Fantasy, Hot Blooded, Ian Irvine, Imperial Guard, Jessica McClain, Jo Fletcher Books, Joseph D’Lacey, Josh Reynolds, Julianna Scott, Lee Collins, Linda Stasi, M. C. Planck, Mark Teppo, Marked, Martha Wells, Michael J. Martinez, Michael J. Sullivan, Moon Saga, Near Future, Nightshade Books, No Return, Orbit Books, Paul S. Kemp, Paul Tobin, Playing Tyler, Powder Mage, Promise of Blood, Rachel Aaron, Rebellion, Richard Lee Byers, Riyria Chronicles, Road of Skulls, Robots, Rojan Dizon, Science Fiction, She Returns From War, Space Marine Battles, Space Opera, Space Wolves, Split Worlds, Steampunk, Stephanie Saulter, Sword and Sorcery, T. L. Costa, The Age Atomic, The Black Plague, The Blue Blazes, The Constantine Affliction, The Crown Tower, The Curse of the Everliving, The Daedalus Incident, The Death of Antagonis, The Eldritch Conspiracy, The Holders, The Immortals of Meluha, The Kassa Gambit, The Lives of Tao, The Mad Scientist’s Daughter, The Secret of the Nagas, The Sixth Station, Tor Books, Trinity Rising, Urban Fantasy, Vampires, Van Horstmann, Warhammer, Warhammer Heroes, Werewolves, Wesley Chu, Wild Hunt, Zachary Jernigan, Zenn Scarlett
The Names Schedule
Posted by AJ
Last time I announced that I had gotten in touch with a few debut authors from this year and the past about a series of guest posts for the blog – Names: A New Perspective. This was borne out of my fascination and interest for how I name things in my fiction, and how published authors do it as well. All the relevant details are all in that first post. Over the last few days I’ve received all the entries for the first wave of posts and I just wanted to share the schedule with all of you. The response has been excellent and I can’t thank the authors enough for their own interest.
Posted in Debut Authors Guest Series, Guest Posts
Tags: Anne Lyle, Chris F. Holm, Courtney Schafer, David Annandale, Debut Authors, Debut Authors Guest Series, Elspeth Cooper, Guest Post, Gwenda Bond, Helen Lowe, Jeff Salyards, Kim Curran, Lou Morgan, Myke Cole, Names, Sarah Cawkwell, Stina Leicht, Teresa Frohock, The meaning of Names
Names: A New Perspective
Posted by AJ
As I briefly mentioned in my August Report, I’ve been hammering out a series of guest posts on the blog, all written by debut authors of this year and the last and the one before. The topic is how the names of characters and places and other things within their novels (and other works where appropriate) fit into their setting, their relevance and their power. My own (old) thoughts on the matter can be found here and here. Here are the details of how I’m approaching all these guest posts.