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2nd Starred Review in PW for Kay Kenyon’s Entire & the Rose

Publishers Weekly has given a starred review to Kay Kenyon’s forthcoming A World Too Near. This is the second such for The Entire and The Rose series, as the first book, Bright of the Sky, was also starred (and went on to make their Best Books of the Year list too).

A World Too Near Kay Kenyon Pyr, $25 (456p) ISBN 978-1-59102-642-6

“The fate of two universes hangs in the balance in this intricately plotted sequel to Bright of the Sky (2007)….Tangled motivations, complex characters and intriguing world-building will keep readers on the edges of their seats.

Perfect timing too, as the paperback of Bright of the Sky comes out next month. And I just finished reading the manuscript to book three, City Without End, and can’t imagine it’s going to do any less.

2nd Starred Review in PW for Kay Kenyon’s Entire & the Rose Read More »

Gradisil Short-listed for the PKD Award

Big news this morning. Adam Roberts’ Gradisilhas been short-listed for the Philip K. Dick Award. Congratulations, Adam!We’re thrilled. (Remember: sample chapters online here.) Here’s the full press release:

2007 Philip K. Dick Award Nominees Announced

The judges of the 2007 Philip K. Dick Award and the Philadelphia SF Society are pleased to announce seven nominated works that comprise the final ballot for the award:

GREY by Jon Armstrong (Night Shade Books)
UNDERTOW by Elizabeth Bear (Bantam Spectra)
FROM THE NOTEBOOKS OF DR. BRAIN by Minister Faust (Del Rey)
NOVA SWING by M. John Harrison (Bantam Spectra)
GRADISIL by Adam Roberts (Pyr)
ALLY by Karen Traviss (Eos)
SATURN RETURNS by Sean Williams (Ace Books)

First prize and any special citations will be announced on Friday, March 21, 2008 at Norwescon 31 at the Doubletree Hotel Seattle Airport, SeaTac, Washington.

The Philip K. Dick Award is presented annually with the support of the Philip K. Dick Trust for distinguished science fiction published in paperback original form in the United States. The award is sponsored by the Philadelphia Science Fiction Society and the award ceremony is sponsored by the NorthWest Science Fiction Society. Last year’s winner was SPIN CONTROL by Chris Moriarty (Bantam Spectra) with a special citation to CARNIVAL by Elizabeth Bear
(Bantam Spectra). The 2007 judges are Steve Miller, Chris Moriarty (chair), Steven Piziks, Randy Schroeder, Ann Tonsor Zeddies.

For more information, contact the award administration:
David G. Hartwell (914) 769-5545.
Gordon Van Gelder (201) 876-2551
For more information about the Philadelphia Science Fiction Society,
http://www.psfs.org/:
Contact Gary Feldbaum (215) 563-2511
For more information about Norwescon: http://www.norwescon.org/:
Contact NorthWest SF Society: (360) 438-0871

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Michael Moorcock: Top 50 English Language Writers since 1945

The Times Online have just released their list of The 50 Greatest British Writers Since 1945. Quite a few genre names on the list, including Tolkien, Lewis, Pullman and Rowling, and also, coming in at number 50, our own Michael Moorcock. They say, ” Most of Moorcock’s 80-plus novels are unashamedly pulp. But he wins his place for a series of genre-crossing novels linked by a taste for metafictional devices — he often appears in them himself and characters occur and recur in ‘historical’ and ‘fantasy’ guises.” They discuss his major works and his influences on such notables as William Gibson, Neil Gaiman, Iain Sinclair and Peter Ackroyd.

Meanwhile, Andrew McKie reviews The Metatemporal Detectivefor the Telegraph, in a piece called “Michael Moorcock: His Own Private Multiverse.” McKie opens by crediting Moorcock with bringing the term Multiverse to quantum physicists and philosophers, then describes his latest as, “tremendous fun for fans of Sherlock Holmes, or perhaps Sexton Blake, so long as they are prepared for occasional forays into the milieu of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, as well as Robert E Howard, creator of Conan the Barbarian… This is all pastiche, and Moorcock’s fans will not be surprised to find that it is astoundingly sure-footed….I think it, on the whole, terrific. “

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Killswitch: The Heroine Bionic Woman Should Have Been

JP on SF Signal gives Joel Shepherd’s Killswitchfour and a half stars, with a review that says, “These books cry out for some type of screen (big or small) time. (I’m looking at you Sci Fi Channel. Convince Kate Beckinsale to play Cassandra and you won’t be able to keep the SF fans from storming the channel.) …If there’s anything Shepherd can do well, it’s action sequences. Everything you’d expect a synthetic being like Kresnov to do, she does. And Shepherd’s prose brings it to life with widescreen clarity. This is the heroine the Bionic Woman should have been. Smart and supremely confident…”

JP says he even paused in his playing of a videogame to read. Can there be any higher praise in our current century?

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For Your Consideration: Pyr Books I Edited in 2007

Since everybody’s doing it, here’s my 2007 output. Or rather, here are the 17 books that Pyr released in 2007, on which I served as editor, in order of appearance.

The Man Who Melted, Jack Dann (reprint)
Fast Forward 1, Edited by Lou Anders (anthology)
Gradisil, Adam Roberts
Keeping It Real, Justina Robson
Breakaway, Joel Shepherd
Bright of the Sky, Kay Kenyon
Context, John Meaney (paperback after hardcover)
Brasyl, Ian McDonald
The Hanging Mountains, Sean Williams
Hurricane Moon, Alexis Glynn Latner
Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future, Mike Resnick (reprint)
The Blade Itself, Joe Abercrombie
River of Gods, Ian McDonald (paperback after hardcover)
The Metatemporal Detective, Micheal Moorcock
Selling Out, Justina Robson
Killswitch, Joel Shepherd
Starship: Mercenary, Mike Resnick

More on these titles on the catalog page of the Pyr website, including substantial excerpts for many of them.

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In with the New Year, Out with the Old

A few more end of the year round ups showing up.

John of SFSignal posts his 2007: A Year in Review – John’s Take. He lists his personal favorite reads from the year – not necessarily all books published in 2007, but all books he read, liked, and rated a 4.5/5 or higher. Two Pyr books make the list: Martin Sketchley’s The Liberty Gunand Mike Resnick’s Ivory: A Legend of Past and Future.

Meanwhile, over at Futurismic, Tomas Martin takes A New Year’s Look at 2007’s Science Fiction. Listing his Top Five Books of 2007, we’re pleased to see Joel Shepherd tying with himself in fifth place for Breakawayand Killswitch, Ian McDonald coming in at number three for Brasyl,and (thank you) a “special mention” for my own Fast Forward 1: Future Fiction from the Cutting Edge.

Meanwhile, the interestingly titled The Breathing Corpse blog lists The Years Best Reads – Science Fiction. Mike Resnick’s Starship: Pirateand New Dreams for Oldboth make the list with the comments that, “I read a bunch of Mike Resnick this year but these are the best. Starship: Mercenaryis out now and I’ll be reading it soon. Resnick is now one of my favorite writers.” Meanwhile, their 2008’s Books I Can’t Wait to Read includes several Resnick titles as well, including the forthcoming Stalking the Vampire: A Fable of Tonight.

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Bookgasm’s 5 Best Sci-Fi Books of 2007

Bookgasm has just announced their 5 Best Sci-Fi Books of 2007. Ryun Patterson has chosen Ian McDonald’s Brasylas the # 1 title of the year. He says:

“Holy wow. Once I started reading Brasyl, I knew I would never see the world quite the same way again… Brasyl shows that Pyr has serious chops in acquiring new material in addition to picking up previously published gems. Read the review if you want more, but my first recommendation is this: Close your browser, put your computer to sleep, go to the bookstore, buy Brasyl, take off the dust jacket without reading it, and clear your calendar. You’re in for a treat. Along with McDonald’s River of Gods,it is easily one of the best books of the last 10 years.”

Meanwhile, Joel Shepherd’s two 2007 Cassandra Kresnov novels, Breakawayand Killswitch,tie for # 5.

“There’s not a lot about these books that I haven’t already said in my pair of breathless reviews, and while one probably would have made the list on its own merits, having two of these tomes in the span of a year really takes the cake. Pyr books has been knocking down doors in both publishing original fiction and bringing foreign work to North America, and Shepherd’s Cassandra Kresnov series demonstrates the second half of this equation wonderfully. Why weren’t these books brought over sooner? How many other authors and ideas are just waiting to get picked up, gussied up with holy-cow-amazing cover art by the likes of Stephan Martiniere, and unleashed upon the unsuspecting North American public? More, I hope.”

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SFFWorld Review of the Year

The guys at SFFWorld have put up their annual Review of the Year in two parts. They run through their opinions on the best fantasy books, best SF books, best films and tv shows, best comics and games. Very glad to see both Joe Abercrombie (The Blade Itself /Before They Are Hanged)and Ian McDonald (Brasyl)getting heavy mentions, as well as Kay Kenyon (Bright of the Sky) and my own Fast Forward 1anthology. Thanks guys!

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