Monthly Archives: April 2009

From SFScope:

Tad Williams sold a new urban fantasy series to long-time editor Betsy Wollheim at DAW, via agent Matt Bialer of Sanford J. Greenburger Associates.

Bialer’s assistant, Lindsay Ribar, says that “as this is his first urban fantasy series, each book will be significantly shorter than his usual epic fantasy fare.”

In the series, “Doloriel is an angel. He doesn’t know who he used to be back on Earth, but now he works as an afterlife investigator for the Heavenly Host, making sure the souls being judged haven’t inflated their claims. It’s a minor job, but a cool one, since it means he often gets to go back to Earth to investigate, wearing a body and calling himself Bobby Dollar—or Bobby D. Doloriel’s latest assignment as Bobby D is supposed to be routine: figure out what happened to a recently disappeared soul, finish the paperwork, and make it look good for the folks upstairs. But a series of not-so-coincidental encounters—including one with a terribly attractive demon named Sennaie—makes him sure that there’s more at stake here than one missing soul.

“Knowing that he’s in over his head, Bobby D tries to pull out, but his bosses won’t let him. Somehow, his identity—more specifically, his identity from his former life back on Earth—is the key to the entire mystery, and he has to find out who he was before he becomes an unwitting pawn in a game of power that could end in the destruction of the entire human race.”

Working titles for the books seem to be SLEEPING LATE ON JUDGMENT DAY, HAPPY HOUR IN HELL, and ANGELS RUSH IN.

Tad Williams’ first stab at Urban Fantasy, The War of the Flowers, is one of my favourite novels and had a huge impact on me as a writer. To say I’m excited about this upcoming series would be an understatement.

Ahh, the power of twitter. Tim Pratt spilled some pretty interesting beans today:

Wow. Greg Bear is going to write a trilogy of Halo novels. That’s pretty crazy. Though he has often written about giant alien artifacts…

Which was then more or less confirmed by Tobias Buckell, who made waves when he penned Halo: The Cole Protocol:

@timpratt ah, the news is out! :-)

It’s interesting to see another prominent author putting out a tie-in novel. A prominent name in the Science Fiction field, Greg Bear certainly doesn’t need any more exposure (and I’m sure his bank account is doing just fine), so I’m curious what Microsoft/Bungie is putting on the table to get authors like Bear and Buckell to agree.

An official press release should be coming in the next few days.