Back in April, I posted the US cover art to Tom Lloyd’s The Grave Thief, and the reaction wasn’t terribly in its favour. Well, it looks like Pyr Books, the publisher, caught wind of the reaction here (and elsewhere on the web) and did a bit of touch-up work on it.

The Old Cover
The US Cover for The Grave Thief by Tom Lloyd

The New Cover
The Grave Thief by Tom Lloyd

Thoughts?

I definitely appreciate the change in typeface – more aggresive, more eye catching, more interesting. Though it’s still not an incredible cover, it’s nice to see Pyr taking a step back and admitting when they have a dud of a cover.

Cory Doctorow is well known for his support of the creative commons license, and releasing his novels, including the Hugo Nominated Little Brother completely free for download. Well, in keeping with this tradition, Doctorow is partnering with Tor.com to release a serialized version of his next novel, Makers, for free.

Makers by Cory Doctorow

From Tor.com:

Starting today around noon (Eastern Standard Tribe, of course) and through January 2010, Tor.com will be serializing Makers, Cory Doctorow’s upcoming novel, which goes on sale from Tor Books in October. We’ll be serializing the entirety of the novel, with a new installment every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Each installment of Makers will be accompanied by a new illustration from Idiots’Books, each one a kind of tile that will interconnect with the other illustrations in the series, offering limitless possibilities for mixing and matching. In a week or so, after we’ve posted a number of tiles, we’ll release a Flash game in which you will be able to re-arrange the illustration tiles on a grid and create your own combination of layouts and designs.

Each segment of the story will be illustrated by a square illustration that relates, at least in part, to the theme or content of that segment. While each illustration will function as a standalone “illustration,” each one will will be drawn in such a way as to share common crossovers along all four sides, which means that any of the illustrations may be placed alongside any other illustration (and in any axial configuration) with guaranteed “crossovers”. [These] will form a coherently-designed 8 x 9 grid of illustrations when the thing is fully assembled. There will be one “right” way for the illustrations to be assembled; in this configuration, an uber-illustration with visual coherence that stands as the “cover” of the Makers book will be revealed. However, the chunks can be recombined into a vast number of other [9 x 9] grids. Or it could be assembled into a [3 x 27] grid. Or it could be assembled as a [81]-panel horizontal “comic.” Or it could be made into a sprawling, multi-tentacled beast of surprising crossovers that resembled a crossword puzzle in its grid-based unpredictably.”

We’re all really excited about Makers at Tor.com—we think it’s a good and important book, just like Little Brother was before it. We also think that this is a fun and interesting way to send a novel out into the world, and we’re looking forward to hearing what you think. As the year progresses, and we get deeper into serializing the book, we’ll make other announcements about things we may do with this book as we explore alternatives to traditional publishing. Cory is an awesome guy to work with, and in keeping with his overarching philosophy in regards to creative works, has been very supportive of our playing around with his baby. We hope you enjoy what we’ve come up with.

Considering Doctorow’s success as a novelist, his philosophy of releasing his work for free obviously has some merit. I’m a huge fan of Doctorow’s approach to free distribution of his novel, and I’m thrilled to see Tor.com supporting him. These serialized are sure to keep me entertained at work!

Part one (of 81!) is already available HERE.

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If you’re anything like me (and I’d guess you are, since you’re reading a web site about books and writing!), you’re probably always on the prowl for new quality web sites about writing and reading. Well, thanks to Shaun at The World in a Satin Bag, I found a web site that does all the dirty work for us!

Websites for Writers Logo

About

Websites for writers is an independent directory of online writing resources.

The internet is littered with useful websites aimed at writers of all shapes and sizes. Websites for writers showcases the best of those sites to celebrate their wonderfulness and point writers in the right direction.

You can subscribe to the RSS feed or get regular updates via email for free by submitting your address using the form opposite.

Get involved

This directory is a collaborative effort. It’s not one long list of unmoderated links. The sites featured here are chosen by professional, practising writers. It’s designed to grow and evolve, not sit and stagnate.

And you can help. If you think a site should be included on Websites for writers, let us know through our submission page.

It’s a new website, and still in the early stages of growing, but already it’s chock full of some great sites for readers and writers. I’ve submitted A Dribble of Ink (which I hope will be added!), and even found a few new websites for perusal.

You can find Websites for Writers HERE. So why not head on over and check it out, even submit your site if you have one and it applies. It’s sure to be a great resource in the future.

A couple of days ago, Patrick over at Stomping the Yeti approached me with the idea of doing a Mid-year in review. I’m not the speediest reader, so my numbers aren’t all that impressive, but it’s always nice to take a step back and reflect on some of the things I’ve read in the past six months. So, taking Patrick’s forumla, and adding some things of my own, here’s a little review of what I’ve been up to in the past six months:

Books Read and Reviewed

Read | 11 Novels

Science Fiction: 2
Fantasy: 3
Young Adult Books: 1
Fiction Writers I Hadn’t Read Before: 10
Graphic Novels: 1
Male Authors: 7
Female Authors: 1

Reviewed | 8
Read More »

Thanks to The Wertzone, I came across this post by Daniel Abraham detailing his next project, which won’t be published by Tor Books (his previous publisher), but rather by Orbit Books.

“Now It Can Be Told.

Bad news first: The new project didn’t get picked up by Tor. That’s a bummer, because I really liked working with those guys, and I’ll miss them. But the economy’s in the crapper, and apparently they’re being very bottom-line conscious, and the Long Price books — despite great reviews and all — didn’t move as many copies as they had hoped. I’m not happy about it, but I respect that it’s business.

Too bad Tor feels that way, but I suppose if the books didn’t move enough units, they’re in their right not to pick up his next project. Still, it would have been nice if they had given him a better shot by, say, actually getting his novels onto store shelves? I don’t know about elsewhere, but it was very hard to find any of the Long Price Quartet without resorting to the Internet.

Good news next: My agent shopped the new proposal around, and we got a fair amount of interest from other publishers, with the upshot that Orbit (my UK publisher) bought world rights to the new series in what the trade papers are calling “a good deal.” One thing I thought was particularly interesting: there’s a clause in it that dock’s a fair percentage of my advance if I don’t turn the books in on time. So just be aware that the guys at Orbit have got all y’all’s back.

No big delays (one hopes) is always good, but Abraham seems pretty consistent in his writing anyway. It’s more interesting to find out that Tor didn’t have a similar clause in their original contract with Abraham. In any case, Orbit is a good publisher and will, hopefully, put more stock in Abraham’s work than Tor did.

But the new project — The Dagger and the Coin — starts up next year. It’s a very different project from the Long Price books. I’m not using the same jump between books I did with Long Price. The magic system’s totally different (and I love the hell out of it). The pace is faster. I’m very conscious of the influences I’m cultivating going into it — Walter Tevis, Alexandre Dumas, Tolkien, J. Michael Straczynski, Joss Whedon, GRRM, Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen, Dorothy Dunnett, Tim Parks — and I’m trying to take the things that I love about each one of them and make a stew out of it. It’s set right at the friction point between the medieval period and the renaissance, so we’ve got knights and kings, but we also have merchant houses and finance. There’s some magic of the understated magic. There’s political intrigue. There’s a girl who was raised as the ward of a Medici-style bank, there’s a high nobleman who’s gotten himself and his family in over his head, there’s an emotionally scarred mercenary captain straight out of Dumas.

The point of it all is to make a book that reads to me now the way that the Belgariad did when I was 16. I’m going to be swimming in everything I think is cool for the next year. I’m *really* looking forward to it.”

Though I haven’t read The Long Price Quartet (which I’ll rectify this summer now that the final volume has been released), I’m already getting a little hot and bothered about the way Abraham’s describing this next project. I’ve heard a few times around the ‘net that the reason some people haven’t read Abraham’s first work is that it just doesn’t sound interesting enough to them. I can’t imagine they’ll be saying the same about The Dagger and the Coin.