Gender: Male
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 43
Sign: Capricorn
Country: UK
Signup Date:
01/10/06
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Sunday, July 06, 2008
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Online Book Reading and Questions
Category: Writing and Poetry
There's an extract of me reading from The Burning Man on This is Derbyshire, along with a brief interview and a call to email questions for me to answer - on anything, writing, fantasy, my work, life in general...
Send me something to make me ponder.
4:00 AM
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Thursday, July 03, 2008
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Sign Up For Fantasy Social Networking Site
Category: Writing and Poetry
A fantasy social networking site - forum, events, author chats and more - is being established at wonderlands.ning.com. Worth a look.
3:18 AM
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Tuesday, July 01, 2008
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New Six-Book US Deal
Category: Writing and Poetry
Hot on the heels of yesterday's announcement, I can reveal that I've just agreed a six-book deal with US publisher Pyr.
The highly-acclaimed SF and fantasy imprint will publish the first of my epic Elizabethan fantasy sequence, The Swords of Albion, in Fall 2009, with books two and three in subsequent years.
Pyr has also acquired the rights to my British Fantasy Award-nominated Age of Misrule sequence. The three books – World's End, Darkest Hour and Always Forever – will be published in Spring/Summer 2009.
Here's the rest of the press release:
Chadbourn says: "I'm very excited to be working with Pyr on the launch of The Swords of Albion and the US debut of Age of Misrule. Pyr has a dynamic, cool and smart approach to the genre, which, of course, is an excellent fit for my writing!"
Pyr Editorial Director Lou Anders says: "Mark is a brilliant writer - who not only has a tremendous imagination but manages to marry his vision to a very readable, accessible and fast-paced style. It's amazing to me it's taken this long to get him to America, but between these six books and the epic fantasy trilogy that Solaris recently acquired, that egregious oversight is about to be resoundingly corrected."
The Swords of Albion, which will be published in the UK and Commonwealth by Transworld, follows Elizabethan England's greatest spy, Will Swyfte – adventurer, swordsman, rake, swashbuckler, wit and scholar.
Lou says of The Swords of Albion: "I first encountered Elizabethan Superspy Will Swyfte in the short story "Who Slays the Gyant, Wounds the Beast," originally published in The Solaris Book of New Fantasy (and subsequently selected for Hartwell and Cramer's Year's Best Fantasy), and fell in love at first read. I was weaned on Ian Fleming and Fritz Leiber, and this wonderfully fun character seemed to marry both these loves into one. I wrote Mark to ask if there were any more planned outings for Swyfte, and was thrilled to hear back within minutes that a proposal for a trilogy was going out the very next day. Naturally, I couldn't wait for the next day. Now, I can't wait for him to finish writing the first novel. And the second. And the third…"
The Age of Misrule deals with the return of the Celtic gods to modern day Britain and is steeped in the mysticism and mythology of the Isles with an edgy modern take – from Fabulous Beasts firebombing the rush hour-packed motorway outside London to the ancient secrets of Avebury stone circle.
Lou says of The Age of Misrule: "Every once in a while you read a work that treats its subject so well you realize it's the last and final word on the topic. Like the way a certain Boy Wizard pretty much owns the school for magic space, and the idea of all of reality being a virtual illusion ends (for the foreseeable future) with the film The Matrix. That's the sense I got reading the books of the Age of Misrule. Mark's rigorously-researched exploration of Britain's sacred sites reads with such authenticity that I can't imagine there being any other explanation. That it underpins a fantastic adventure story chocked full of great characters - a sort of modern day Lord of the Rings transposed onto contemporary Britain - makes for a simply irresistible combination. I can't wait to spring it on unsuspecting Americans - they have no idea what's in store for them!"
With the Solaris book, and another unannounced tome, I've got six books out in the US next year, which, I think, justifies a trip...
2:36 PM
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Monday, June 30, 2008
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New Book Deal - The Swords of Albion
Category: Writing and Poetry
Today I signed a major three-book deal with UK publisher Transworld for an epic Elizabethan fantasy. 'The Swords of Albion' will be published annually from 2010, in the UK and Commonwealth. The sequence has also been acquired by a US publisher, and I'll be talking more about that later.
It's an epic story filled with intrigue, mystery, adventure and romance, set against the rich backdrop of the Elizabethan era. I hope it'll appeal to readers of both fantasy and historical fiction. I'm very excited to be working with Transworld for the first time on the launch of this new series.
You want to know what it's about? Here's the pitch:
'Spies are men of doubtful credit, who make a show of one thing and speak another.' ~ Mary, Queen of Scots
A devilish plot to assassinate the Queen, a Cold War enemy hell-bent on destroying the nation, incredible gadgets, a race against time around the world to stop the ultimate doomsday device…and Elizabethan England's greatest spy!
Meet Will Swyfte – adventurer, swordsman, rake, swashbuckler, wit, scholar and the greatest of Walsingham's new band of spies. His exploits against the forces of Philip of Spain have made him a national hero, lauded from Carlisle to Kent. Yet his associates can barely disguise their incredulity – what is the point of a spy whose face and name is known across Europe?
But Swyfte's public image is a carefully-crafted façade to give the people of England something to believe in, and to allow them to sleep peacefully at night. It deflects attention from his real work – and the true reason why Walsingham's spy network was established.
A Cold War seethes, and England remains under a state of threat. The forces of Faerie have been preying on humanity for millennia. Responsible for our myths and legends, of gods and fairies, dragons, griffins, devils, imps and every other supernatural menace that has haunted our dreams, this power in the darkness has seen humans as playthings to be tormented, hunted or eradicated.
But now England is fighting back!
Magical defences have been put in place by the Queen's sorcerer Dr John Dee, who is also a senior member of Walsingham's secret service and provides many of the bizarre gadgets utilised by the spies. Finally there is a balance of power. But the Cold War is threatening to turn hot at any moment…
Will now plays a constant game of deceit and death, holding back the Enemy's repeated incursions, dealing in a shadowy world of plots and counter-plots, deceptions, secrets, murder, where no one… and no thing…is quite what it seems.
The entire world is the battleground – from Russia, across Europe, to the Caribbean and the New World. And while great events play out in the public eye, the true struggle takes place behind the scenes: the Spanish Armada, the Throckmorton Plot, the colonisation of the Americas, the Court intrigues, the battles in Ireland and against Spain, the death of Marlowe, the plagues, the art, the music, the piracy, the great discoveries…all are simply window-dressing as the great sweep of recorded history is peeled back to show the truth behind.
12:15 PM
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11 Comments - 18 Kudos
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Thursday, June 19, 2008
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New Blog at Red Room
Category: Writing and Poetry
I'm starting to blog about politics, environmental issues, social issues and some of my other interests at Red Room, which is a community of writers and readers.
This site will still continue with its usual litany of me-me-me publishing news and personal stuff.
2:34 AM
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008
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New Podcast Interview
Category: Writing and Poetry
Every month best-selling fantasy author Gail Z. Martin interviews genre writers from around the world for her Ghost in the Machine podcast. This month it's my turn. You can go straight to the audio file here or for other options head to Gail's homepage at chroniclesofthenecromancer.com.
4:22 AM
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Saturday, June 07, 2008
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Books, Comics and DVDs
Category: Writing and Poetry
One upside of being pathetically weak and sickly for the last week is the ability to put work on one side completely and indulge in all the books, comics and dvds that have been piling up.
Actually, I didn't get very far on the book front - I'm still wading through House of Leaves by Mark Z Danielewski. 'Wading' is perhaps the wrong term - I do love the book - but it is hard-going. It's a very modern, scary, supernatural story, but written without a hint of familiar genre-isms, and designed to put the reader through as many torments as the characters. In the tale, a tattoo artist inherits the notes of an aged academic investigating a seemingly-famous Amityville-style house with an otherworldly labyrinth - except no one beyond the academic appears to know about it. In that description, you can already see the layered density of the story. Yet the design of the book has been created to mimic the house's labyrinth, with footnotes sending you back and forth, appendices, upside down and mirror text, hidden codes and more. You wonder if the footnotes are even slightly relevant until you get to, say, number 313 and find buried away a one-line revelation that explains a character's entire psychology. A great book, particularly for navel-gazers and self-styled intellectuals, but it does take time following that cord through the twists and turns.
Some comics caught my eye over the last few days. House of Mystery, the new release from DC's Vertigo imprint, written by Matt Sturges and Bill Willingham with art by Luca Rossi, was very enjoyable. I was a fan of this title back in the seventies, when it was a straightforward horror (or 'mystery') anthology, with art by such greats as Neal Adams, Berni Wrightson, Alex Toth and Sergio Aragones. In Alan Moore's Swamp Thing and Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, the house and its caretaker Cain was established as a residence that existed in dreams. In this incarnation, the house has been stolen and re-sited 'somewhere else'. A group of strange characters are forced to live there telling stories to pay for their board while they attempt to find a way back to the real world. The first issue sets up lots of mysteries, so it comes across a bit like Lost, only creepier.
I also started a collection of the first five issues of The Exterminators, another Vertigo title (now cancelled) about a group of bug and vermin exterminators operating in the more sordid parts of Los Angeles. At first it appears a great slice of life story with strong characterisation, until a hint of fantasy arises like the first sign of one of the infestations - the bugs are becoming stronger? Smarter? Looks like there's a war brewing. Great writing by Simon Oliver and suitably grimy art by Tony Moore, who made a name for himself on Image's The Walking Dead. Highly recommended, as those critics like to say.
I also read the first issue of DC's summer blockbuster Final Crisis by Grant Morrison and J G Jones. It's early days yet, and there's a lot of clear set-up for story to come, but again very enjoyable. Grant can do no wrong in my eyes, from Zenith for 2000AD to Doom Patrol, Animal Man and The Invisibles, which is why I name-checked his excellent Seven Soldiers series in The Burning Man.
On the movie front, my tastes have always been eclectic, but I can't imagine many people reading this enjoying the early 1940s films of British comedians Arthur Askey and George Formby. Kept me happy, though. I also finally got round to seeing SF greats This Island Earth and Invaders From Mars. Ones for fans only, I think, though there's a pleasantly creepy aspect to the latter.
6:57 AM
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Wednesday, April 16, 2008
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The Burning Man published today
Category: Writing and Poetry
The Burning Man is published by Orion/Victor Gollancz today. You can read about it and order it here.
5:38 AM
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Monday, April 14, 2008
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National Newspaper Article on Fantasy
Category: Writing and Poetry
UK national newspaper, the Daily Telegraph, asked me to write an article on fantasy for those not familiar with the genre. The result is here.
3:59 AM
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2 Comments - 2 Kudos
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