Monthly Archives: September 2009

Brandon Sanderson has, after being approved by Tor Books, has announced the title of the 13th, and penultimate, volume of The Wheel of Time series:

Towers of Midnight

Sanderson on the title:

We’ve been calling it Shifting Winds up until this point, but that was never intended to be the final title. After a long round of conversations with Tor and Harriet, we settled on TOWERS OF MIDNIGHT as the title. There are various reasons for this, which I’ll go into more once the book is out next year. I’m pleased, however, as this was the title I suggested. It’s actually appropriate in an interesting way. Harriet was the one who came up with the name for the first of the three, and the second one gets the title I proposed. And so, we will (as I’ve been saying for a while) use Mr. Jordan’s title for the final of the three, A MEMORY OF LIGHT.

I thought for a while on that last choice. If you’ve been following along these last couple of years, you know that my original intention was for this to be one book. When it was split, I still wanted it to be one book in name, in an attempt to honor Mr. Jordan’s wishes that it be one book. (I still plan to suggest an omnibus edition at a later point, but the three books together will probably be too long for that to be an option.) Anyway, I was going to have A MEMORY OF LIGHT be the title (along with a subtitle) for each of the three books. When that fell through, I was left thinking on my next step.

Mr. Jordan named the final book A MEMORY OF LIGHT. It’s one of the things we have from him, and I wanted very badly to use it. But at the same time, he named the three books AMOL, and I wondered if it wouldn’t be better to let fans think of them as AMOL together, never using the title itself in case we managed to get that omnibus done. In the end, however, I decided that the title was simply too good not to use. I can’t count on that omnibus, and I feel that using the title on the last third of the book is the best way to honor Mr. Jordan’s wishes. It wasn’t an easy decision, and some will disagree with it.

Over on the Terry Brooks Forum, Adam from The Wertzone, sheds a little light on what the title might suggest about the book:

This is a reference to the Towers of Midnight located outside the city of Imfaral in Seanchan. The significance is that the Towers is a fortress complex with thirteen spires, and was the place where the a’dam was created (or at least handed over to the first Seanchan Emperor). This to me suggestions that the book will resolve the Seanchan plot thread ahead of the Last Battle in the finale book which is, as it should be, A MEMORY OF LIGHT.

As hype for the upcoming release of The Gathering Storm reaches a fever pitch, every little bit of news like this seems to be making fans of Jordan’s series more fantatical. Even I, someone who stopped reading the series mid-way through, can’t help but have a bit of the excitement rub off on them.

What do you think of the title?

Snagged from Suvudu:

Warriors, an anthology edited by George R.R. Martin

The stories and authors included:

  • Stories from the Spinner Rack by George R.R. Martin
  • The King of Norway by Cecilia Holland
  • Forever Bound by Joe Haldeman
  • The Triumph by Robin Hobb
  • Clean Slate by Lawrence Block
  • And Ministers of Grace by Tad Williams
  • Soldierin’ by Joe Lansdale
  • Dirae by Peter S. Beagle
  • The Eagle and the Rabbit by Steven Saylor
  • Seven Years from Home by Naomi Novik
  • The Custom of the Army by Diana Gabaldon
  • The Pit by James Rollins
  • Out of the Dark by David Weber
  • The Girls from Avenger by Carrie Vaughn
  • Ancient Ways by S.M. Stirling
  • Ninieslando by Howard Waldrop
  • Recidivist by Gardner Dozois
  • My Name is Legion by David Morrell
  • Defenders of the Frontier by Robert Silverberg
  • The Scroll by David Ball
  • The Mystery Knight by George R.R. Martin

This, along with Swords and Dark Magic, have me all hot and bothered about anthologies. How can I say ‘no’ to a new Dunk and Egg story from Martin?

The Gathering Storm by Robert Jordan and Brandon SandersonTor.com brought us the first chapter of Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson’s The Gathering Storm, 11th volume in the Wheel of Time series, and now they, along with several other online retailers, have made the 20,000 word prologue, reportedly written mostly by Jordan, before his death, available to purchase for $2.99.

Synopsis:

In “What The Storm Means,” Rand al’Thor, the Dragon Reborn, struggles to unite a fractured network of kingdoms and alliances in preparation for the Last Battle. As he attempts to halt the Seanchan encroachment northward—wishing he could form at least a temporary truce with the invaders—his allies watch in terror the shadow that seems to be growing within the heart of the Dragon Reborn himself.

Dragonmount explains why the eBook costs $2.99:

This is the 4th time that the prologue to a Wheel of Time novel has been released online as an eBook. The previous prologues were published by Simon & Schuster. If you’re wondering why you have to “pay twice” for this content, keep in mind a few things: First, you don’t have to buy it. It is being made available to you over a month early, and you’re paying for that opportunity. Also, the prologue is about 20,000 words, which is close to 100 pages in some books. Thirdly, if you would rather not pay, you can still get free content from this book in the form of chapter 1, Tears from Steel, which is currently available for free from Tor.com.

My favourite excuse? Well, you don’t have to buy it!. In any case, at 20,000 words, the prologue is more of a novelette, than anything, and when one considers it in that sense, $2.99 seems fair(ish). Still, it would have been a good show of faith by the publisher to release the prologue for free.

The prologue can be purchased at the following places:

If the prologues from previous volumes are anything to go by, this is sure to be a meaty look at what The Gathering Storm has to offer. I won’t be downloading it myself, since I never made it past A Crown of Swords, but I’m certainly getting closer and closer to jumping into an extended re-read of the series. Maybe I’ll be ready by the time the real final volume is out!

The Other Lands by David Anthony DurhamAs they’re known to do, Suvudu held an interactive chat yesterday, inviting their readers to chat with David Anthony Durham, author of the recently released The Other Lands (with a surprise appearance by Jay Lake!)

A little taste:

Shawn: Many writers don’t have an opportunity to pick their cover art. They barely have a hand in it. How has your experience been with cover art and the art departments who are supplying them?

[…]

I’ve been pretty happy with my covers, but I’ve only been there to nod and say yes to them. Not much more input than that. Every now and then they’ll change a small thing if I want, but that’s about it. Mostly, I’ve been lucky and happy with my publishers’ choices.

[…]

[Comment From Nalo Hopkinson]: Do you have your plot all worked out ahead of time?

David Anthony Durham: Nalo, I have the beginning and the end worked out. The middle is often a mystery. The writing process for me is really about exploring that middle, and figuring out how to get to the ending I know is coming.

So head on over and check out the whole chat!

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And Another Thing... by Eoin Colfer

The release of And Another Thing… by Eoin Colfer, the sixth volume in Douglas Adam’s famous Hitchhiker’s Trilogy, is sure to raise some eyebrows. Still, whether you’re in support of the novel being written or against it, it’s hard to lay a knock against the cover art.