Yearly Archives: 2008

I dunno how many times I’ve mentioned this on A Dribble of Ink, but Patrick Rothfuss more or less rocks my world.

I’m a little late on this, but I wanted to make sure to spread the word. Rothfuss, making generous use of all that cash rolling in from the success of The Name of the Wind, is raising money for his favourite charity, Heifer International. Not only is he urging fans to donate, but he’s matching (!!!) any donations made by them, dollar for dollar. Talk about a generous soul.

Rothfuss explains why he chose Heifer:

My favorite charity is called Heifer International. They are a great force for good in the world, and I’d like to help them raise some money.

There are a lot of worthwhile charities out there. Important causes. Things I feel strongly about. But Heifer is my favorite. Here’s why.

Let’s say by some miracle I raised ten thousand dollars to help fight cancer, or Parkinson’s, or Alzheimer’s. While it would help the cause, it would just be a tiny drop in the bucket. Enough to help fund some lab’s research for a couple weeks.

But we don’t need to research a cure for hunger or poverty. We know how that works. Heifer doesn’t just hand out bags of rice, Heifer gives a family a goat and teaches them how to take care of it. Then that family has a continual source of milk for their children. They can sell the extra milk to make money. When the goat has babies, they give those babies to other members of their community, sharing the gift.

Heifer helps people become self-reliant. As someone who has just recently become self-reliant, I know what a nice feeling that is.

My Mom loved Heifer. Every Christmas I would donate enough money for a goat, then give it to her as a present. I remember the first year I did it. She opened the envelope where I had drawn a crude picture of a goat and a happy stick-figure child.

She knew what it meant right off the bat. “Oh! I love it!” she said. And she got a little weepy, because she loved nothing better than helping people who needed it. She had a heart as big as the sky.

This is why I love Heifer. If we raise a couple thousand dollars for them, it will make peoples’ lives better. A couple thousand dollars means little kids get milk to drink. It means families get sheep, which means wool for warm blankets and clothes. It means better wells, so moms with babies can have clean water to drink.

I think this is something we can all get behind, can’t we?

So here’s my plan, the bare bones version.

1. You will help by spreading the word, and making donations.

2. I will match all of the donations, dollar for dollar.

3. We both have a big warm fuzzy feeling in our chests that lets us know we’ve helped make the world a better place.

4. Finally, as a gesture of my appreciation, I will supply gifts for the people who participated: Signed books, maps, sneak peaks of book two, stuff like that.

This blog is to explain *why* I’m doing this. The details about *how* are over here on THIS BLOG. There are links to my Heifer Team page and details about the prizes. So hop on over there and check it out.

You can find out more about the fundraiser (along with some of the incredible pieces of swag being given away, including a signed manuscript of The Name of the Wind and signed ARCs of The Wise Man’s Fear) and how to take part HERE.

To date he’s already raised nearly $20,000, which is just another sign at how awesome Pat’s legion of fans really is.

It only lasts until December 11th, so head on over to the Team Heifer donation page or Pat’s blog for more information on all the various ways you can help Pat reach his goal.

Good on ye, Rothfuss.

Well, after two (and a bit) long months, my vagabond days are over. I have my Macbook back in my possesion, a consistently solid roof over my head (some hostels are dodgy) and certainly won’t have to be waiting for anymore trains!

So what does this mean for you and A Dribble of Ink? Well, simply that things should be back to our regular broadcasting schedule!

I took every chance I could to blog over there, but it just wasn’t enough to satisfy me. Now that I’m back home I’ve got a load of content I’m just itching to put together. This includes reviews of Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan, The Ten Thousand by Paul Kearney (a less formal review of my re-read) and Blood Ties by Pamela Freeman. It was certainly a damn good 9 weeks of reading for me, so keep an eye out for those reviews over the next couple of weeks.
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Peter V. Brett’s debut novel, The Painted Man (The Warded Man in North America), has been making some waves since its release in the UK earlier this year. The concept is novel, and the fact that Brett wrote most of the novel on his Blackberry (talk about hand cramps!) certainly have the novel on my radar.

So I was interested to see that Harper Voyager has released the cover art for the second novel in the trilogy, The Desert Spear.

The cover art for Peter V. Brett’s The Desert Spear.

Continuing in the tradition of Joe Abercrombie, Brian Ruckley and David Abraham, it looks like Brett is yet another first-time author who really lucked out in the cover art department!

Here’s the equally cool cover for The Painted Man:

The cover art for Peter V. Brett’s The Painted Man.

You can visit Peter’s web site HERE.

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Over on his blog, Joe’s released a near final version of the cover art for his upcoming stand alone, Best Served Cold

The cover art for Joe Abercrombie’s Best Served Cold.

Continuing in the tradition of his previous novels, Best Served Cold doesn’t disappoint with its cover art. Gollancz has certainly been on their game with Joe’s novels.

Even Joe loves the cover:

In case you’re wondering, I fricking love it. I feel that it expands on the tone set by the previous covers, and establishes something of a unique identity for the books as a whole – a brand, even – which has got to be a good thing. It communicates a lot about the feel and the content – and a real sense of action and violence – without straying into the difficult ground of literal cover art. It manages to be classy and pulpy at once. I think overall the covers achieve the extremely difficult trick of being entirely un-generic, striking, and standing out from the crowd of fantasy artwork while at the same time not seeming to be deliberately NOT FANTASY. I think that’s what fantasy covers need to try and achieve, these days, ideally – to not alienate the hardcore fantasy fan while still appealing to the more occasional reader.

And the full wrap around:

The full wrap around cover for Best Served Cold.

Click HERE for a bigger version.

Also on the web site, is a short blurb about the book:

Monzcarro Murcatto is the most infamous mercenary in Styria, a land blighted by war and corruption. Left for dead by her employer, Grand Duke Orso, she recruits a band of outcasts, misfits, and killers to aid her in a quest for vengeance. One way or another, there will be blood.

Considering how much I loved Joe’s other novels, this certainly has my interest piqued!

The first two novels in Ruckley’s trilogy, Winterbirth and Bloodheir, both had attractive covers, and it looks like the concluding volume will continue that trend.

Cover art for Fall of Thanes by Brian Ruckley.

A little known fact is that that that grizzly looking fellow on the cover is in fact Brian Ruckley himself!*

*This is not true.