Tuesday, November 1, 2022

New Gaunt and Bone and More

Hope Halloween found everyone well! I'm delighted to report new Gaunt and Bone stories.

"To the Darkhouse" appears in Tales from the Magician's Skull #8 in the august company of W.J Lewis, James Enge, Sean Crow, Jeremy Pak Nelson, C.L Werner, Daniel J. Ouellette, Alexander James, and Robert Rhodes (and by the way I encourage anyone who loves a mix of great action and beautiful writing to check out Robert Rhodes' story collection Shadow, Light, and Steel.)

"On Magog's Pond" appears in Beneath Ceaseless Skies #367 where it gets to be in the mighty presence of an Angel Azrael story by Peter Darbyshire, "The Angel Azrael and the War Ghosts." The Angel Azrael stories, all of which I believe have appeared in BCS, are what I imagine you'd get if Michael Moorcock's Elric was put in a blender with Stephen King's Gunslinger -- the action is furious, the scenery is bizarre, and the emotions feel true. If that sounds at all up your dusty demon-beset and tumbleweed-haunted alley, check them out!

And in still more Gaunt and Bone news, Black Cat Weekly reprinted the G&B story "A Wizard of the Old School" in their issue #57! It originally appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in the August 2007 issue. Many thanks to the SFF editor for Black Cat Weekly, Cynthia Ward, for choosing it. (And speaking of Cynthia Ward, I recently read her very enjoyable steampunk-ish adventure novel The Adventure of the Incognita Countess. This book brings together various characters with links to classic adventure novels -- expect to see nods to Bram Stoker, Edgar Rice Burroughs, H.G. Wells and many more. It's reminiscent of Alan Moore's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen but with its own distinct style and a nice eye for its early 20th Century setting, namely the doomed voyage of the Titanic. I'm looking forward to reading the sequels.)

Moving on from Gaunt and Bone, I was also over the moon to have a standalone science fantasy story in Clarkesworld #189. "The Odyssey Problem" is an offbeat story for me and somewhat experimental, so I was surprised and thrilled when editor Neil Clarke decided to run it. He also had great suggestions for improving it and clarifying the text.

I also can announce more great news -- Asimov's Science Fiction has just bought my story "The Second Labyrinth!" I'll say more when it's scheduled.

Lastly, I got to contribute to a project that is still under wraps, but I will be excited to share more details when I can.

[Edited to add additional news and reflect that in the title.]



Tuesday, May 31, 2022

New stories and Eldshore Timeline

Hope you are all doing well and staying safe. I'm delighted to report stories forthcoming in the magazines Clarkesworld, Tales from the Magician's Skull, and Beneath Ceaseless Skies. The Clarkesworld story is a standalone science fantasy. The other two are new stories about Gaunt and Bone.

Speaking of Gaunt and Bone, I thought it might be fun to share my draft version of a timeline for their world. I'm getting into the habit of calling the whole setting "The Eldshore," after one of the more prominent countries in it. Its capital is Archaeopolis, home turf of Shadowdrop the black cat, who along with Gaunt and Bone is an important recurring character. Gaunt and Bone often pass through the Eldshore proper as well.

I've been making up most things about the setting story by story. That's just how my brain works. I admire people who can work out a detailed setting in advance but I seem to need a narrative first. By now the accumulated detail is substantial enough that a timeline will help keep it all consistent.

Dates in the Eldshore, and many of the surrounding lands, are reckoned since Eldshore's founding in 0 E.Y., or Eldshore Year Zero. I went through the stories and novels looking for date references. I started with some officially dated events:

313 E.Y. -- A meteor hits Archaeopolis. The immediate area becomes fascinating to alchemists.

744 E.Y. -- A great storm hits Archaeopolis.

797 E.Y. -- "The Lions of Karthagar," in which Eldshore's Empress Nayne leads an army into the far eastern Ruby Waste. Eldshore was never more powerful than in this year.

888 E.Y. -- A great earthquake hits Archaeopolis.

1096 E.Y. -- The Chart of Tomorrows, in which a great many events occur. What most people will have noticed is a balloon-enabled invasion of the region by the nomadic Karvaks.

1096. E.Y. -- "A Manslaughter of Crows," in which the Eldshore experiences a very strange election.

Aside from those dates what I've got is hypothetical, but I think it all fits.

Uncertain, perhaps 1000 E.Y.? -- The events of "How the Wicker Knight Would Not Move."

1091 E.Y. -- "The Thief with Two Deaths," "The Mermaid and the Mortal Thing," "To the Darkhouse" (forthcoming in Tales from the Magician's Skull), "Shadowdrop," "The Sword of Loving Kindness."

1092 E.Y. -- "Eyetooth," "King Rainjoy's Tears."

1093 E.Y. -- "Penultima Thule," "What Lies in Ice," "On Magog's Pond" (forthcoming in Beneath Ceaseless Skies.)

1094 E.Y. -- "A Wizard of the Old School."

1095 E.Y. -- The Scroll of Years and The Silk Map.

1096 E.Y. -- The Chart of Tomorrows and "A Manslaughter of Crows."

That's not set in stone, and I've got more stories in development that might make me change things a bit, but that's the general scheme. I have a tendency to hop all over the place in the timeline, but I'm trying to be disciplined now and finish all my pre-novel ideas before zooming off past 1096! It's easier to keep everything organized if it's linear.

(Although writing out of order has let me do some fun things like having a little bit of the time travel from The Chart of Tomorrows influencing events in "Eyetooth," which I wrote afterward but is set before.)