Wednesday, June 15, 2011

NEWS: Orbit Books Snaps up an Urban Fantasy Trilogy from debut author Amanda Carlson!!!

Little, Brown Book Group’s imprint, Orbit, has acquired the debut urban fantasy novel, Full Blooded, along with two sequels in the series by American author Amanda Carlson. Commissioning editor Anna Gregson bought UK and Commonwealth rights from Tracy Williams at Hachette Book Group USA.

Set in a world where all werewolves are male, the story follows Jessica—a girl who’s just become the only female werewolf in the world. And now she’s on the run, because a prophecy claims that her birth will signal the end of the werewolf race.

Gregson says: “I’m thrilled to be publishing this exceptionally fast-paced and irresistibly sexy urban fantasy trilogy that is just perfect for fans of Kelley Armstrong and Charlaine Harris. This debut stood out to us because it sizzles with energy, has a heart-thumping pace...and readers will want to consume it all in one sitting. So bearing that in mind that fans will be eager for the rest of the series, we’ll be keeping the schedule tight and will be publishing three books within a year.

Orbit UK and Orbit US will publish the series on both sides of the Atlantic, with the first book, Full Blooded, scheduled for release in all territories in September 2012.

“The Watchers” Video & Giveaway (Part Five)!!!

Order “The WatchersHERE
Read FBC’s Review of “The Watchers

In support of the June 9, 2011 UK Hardcover publication of Jon Steele’s The Watchers (priced £12.99) via Bantam Press, Fantasy Book Critic is hosting a series of videos that discuss the different locations found in the book. The first four videos are linked above. Today’s video, which covers The Nave in  Lausanne Cathedral, can be found below, followed by a brief explanation from the author, Jon Steele:


Growing up catholic, in the days of the Latin mass, I was a sucker for Gothic cathedrals. I mean just the word: “Gothic”. Cathedrak naves were designed to create the illusion of entering the kingdom of heaven, and I fell for it every time. Much of my young life I thought I would grow up to be a priest, and I would spend many hours before statues and crosses praying for an apparition...anything; a wink or a nod would do. It never happened. Then came sex and drugs and rock and roll, and that was that for me ever wanting to be a priest.

But I never lost the mystical feeling upon entering a Gothic cathedral. Many original Christian churches were built on pagan holy sites, much the way Christmas was tagged onto the pagan celebration of the Winter Solstice. This gave the early Christians a ready crowd, as pagans would come to mass not so much to come to Jesus, but because they believed in the holiness of the place.

Lausanne Cathedral is the site of one of the first Neolithic settlements in Europe; people who believed in many gods, and in life after death. And the entire cathedral sits atop hundreds of open graves with “ancient skeletons looking like seeds waiting to be reborn”, as Rochat describes them.

And as I wandered Lausanne Cathedral and the crypt, I came to believe—as Rochat and Harper came to believe (and what the pagans knew all along)—that the earth beneath the stones is sacred.

(BTW: I’m posting a picture of one of the skeletons on my twitter page @beforetimes, so you might get the same feeling about the place.)

In addition to the videos, Bantam Press has agreed to give away ONE AUTOGRAPHED COPY of Jon Steele’s The Watchers for each video, for a total of SEVEN WINNERS. All you have to do is leave a comment in the post, or send an email to fbcgiveaway@gmail.com with your Name, Mailing Address, and the subject: WATCHERS. However, to double your chances of winning, link this post or one of the videos on your blog, Facebook, Twitter page, etc., and you will be entered TWICE! The giveaway is open to Anyone and the seven winners will be randomly selected after the last video is posted on Friday, June 17. Thank you for entering and Good Luck!

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

“Fun & Games” by Duane Swierczynski (Reviewed by Robert Thompson)

Order “Fun & GamesHERE (US) + HERE (UK)
Read An Excerpt HERE
Read FBC’s Review of “Severance Package

AUTHOR INFORMATION: Duane Swierczynski is the author of several crime thrillers, many of which have been optioned for film adaptation, including The Blonde and Severance Package. He has also written six non-fiction books; is a regular writer for several Marvel Comics series (Cable, Punisher, Immortal Iron Fist, Werewolf By Night); and has collaborated with CSI creator Anthony E. Zuiker on the bestselling Level 26 series of “digi-novels”.

PLOT SUMMARY: Languishing in self-imposed exile because of what happened three years earlier, ex-cop Charlie Hardie has become a glorified house sitter. His latest gig comes replete with an illegally squatting B-movie actress who rants about someone trying to killer her.

Unfortunately, it’s the real deal and Hardie suddenly finds himself squared off against people who specialize in making deaths look like accidents. It’s nothing personal—the girl just happens to be the next name on their list. For Hardie, though, it’s intensely personal. He’s not about to let more innocent people die. Not on his watch...

CLASSIFICATION: If Charlie Huston, Dean Koontz, Quentin Tarantino and Guy Ritchie were to join forces one day and write a contemporary, pulp-influenced crime thriller set in Hollywood, it would look a little something like Duane Swierczynski’s Fun & Games...

FORMAT/INFO: Fun & Games is 304 pages long divided over thirty-four numbered chapters. Narration is in the third-person, mostly via the protagonist Charlie Hardie, but the narrative also ricochets between several other POVs, including actress Lane Madden, Factboy, O’Neal and Mann. Fun & Games wraps up some of the book’s major points, but ends on a minor cliffhanger and is the first book in a trilogy. Hell & Gone (Book 2) is scheduled for publication on October 31, 2011, while Point & Shoot (Book 3) will be released in March 2012.

June 20, 2011 marks the North American Trade Paperback publication of Fun & Games via Mulholland Books. The UK version (see below) will be published on June 23, 2011 via Mulholland UK.

ANALYSIS: Duane Swierczynski’s novels are tailor-made for the big screen and the author’s latest, Fun & Games, is no exception. Like his previous efforts, Fun & Games is a massively entertaining thrill ride highlighted by crisp prose, breakneck pacing, smart plotting and memorable characters.

Characters like the protagonist Charlie Hardie, a former consultant for the Philadelphia Police Department-turned-housesitter and drunkard, who believes his life has become a sort of purgatory due to tragic events three years earlier. A belief that fuels his actions when he finds himself in a unique situation to atone for his sins, which includes saving the life of B-list starlet Lane Madden.

Opposing Hardie in his quest for redemption are “the Accident People”, a highly trained secret organization who specialize in cleaning up messes, creating accidental deaths and writing history without leaving behind any evidence of the “hand behind the act”. Backed by “protection at the highest levels”, unlimited resources, and cool gadgets—a weaponized spray that can kill a person in minutes, an injectable heart attack pen, etc.—the Accident People are extremely dangerous, but they’ve never met anyone quite like Charlie Hardie.

Story-wise, Fun & Games can be a bit formulaic in the way it handles Lane & Charlie’s haunted pasts, but inventive scenarios, stylish action & violence, and well-executed plot twists involving serial killers Philip & Jane Kindred and a true-crime reality show, more than make up for any of the book’s familiar elements. Occasionally the novel borders on the impossible, like the number of times Hardie manages to avoid death living up to his nickname, “Unkillable Chuck”, or the numerous coincidences that pop up in the book, but Fun & Games doesn’t take itself too seriously, which is evidenced by interesting facts sprinkled throughout the novel—Number of accidental suffocations per year: 3,300—and dozens of quotes & references to action movies, Hollywood and filmmaking like the Accident People referring to Lane Madden’s death as a ‘production’ and ‘narrative’.

Negatively, I could complain about the novel’s cliffhanger and having to wait for the sequels, but that would be nitpicking. In all honesty, Fun & Games is a nearly flawless novel, led by Duane Swierczynski’s skillful writing, a badass protagonist that readers can really root for, and insanely cool concepts like the Accident People. In short, Fun & Games is a ridiculously fun start to Duane Swierczynski’s exciting new trilogy...

“The Watchers” Video & Giveaway (Part Four)!!!

Order “The WatchersHERE
Read FBC’s Review of “The Watchers

In support of the June 9, 2011 UK Hardcover publication of Jon Steele’s The Watchers (priced £12.99) via Bantam Press, Fantasy Book Critic is hosting a series of videos that discuss the different locations found in the book. The first three videos are linked above. Today’s video, which covers Escaliers du Marché, can be found below, followed by a brief explanation from the author, Jon Steele:


No one is really sure when the covered stairs of Escaliers du Marché were first built. Written records date back to the 13th century of the Middle Ages, or as Marc Rochat would say, ‘Middles of Ages’ but historians are sure there have been steps since there was a cathedral. The wood steps follow the highest of the seven hills of Lausanne up from the centre of medieval Lausanne at Place de la Palud (very near the door of Café du Grütli), to very doors of Lausanne Cathedral.

Set along the oldest buildings of the town, Escaliers du Marché is much loved by les lausannois, me too. They have a magical feel about them that seem to transport a person back in time. I instilled that feeling with Rochat in the open of the story as he climbs the steps. The world seems to bend in the corner of Rochat’s eyes and he slips into the place he calls ‘beforetimes.’

And as an English speaker, I loved the sound of the words themselves; so much so that I end both the first sentence of chapter one, and the last sentence of the book with…Escaliers du Marché...

In addition to the videos, Bantam Press has agreed to give away ONE AUTOGRAPHED COPY of Jon Steele’s The Watchers for each video, for a total of SEVEN WINNERS. All you have to do is leave a comment in the post, or send an email to fbcgiveaway@gmail.com with your Name, Mailing Address, and the subject: WATCHERS. However, to double your chances of winning, link this post or one of the videos on your blog, Facebook, Twitter page, etc., and you will be entered TWICE! The giveaway is open to Anyone and the seven winners will be randomly selected after the last video is posted on Friday, June 17. Thank you for entering and Good Luck!

Monday, June 13, 2011

“The Watchers” Video & Giveaway (Part Three)!!!

Order “The WatchersHERE
Read FBC’s Review of “The Watchers

In support of the June 9, 2011 UK Hardcover publication of Jon Steele’s The Watchers (priced £12.99) via Bantam Press, Fantasy Book Critic is hosting a series of videos that discuss the different locations found in the book. The first two videos are linked above. Today’s video, which covers Café Grutli, can be found below, followed by a brief explanation from the author, Jon Steele:


Café Grutli s a local place at the bottom of Escaliers du marché, the wood steps that climb the hill to Lausanne Cathedral. You can see the belfry from the café windows. When I first came to Lausanne to write The Watchers, I went there for dinner very often. The same people would come in every night and the owner of the café was a jolly sort who made a tour of the place, telling jokes and collecting plates. He still does.

I had started character sketches to the book, and as any writer can tell you, writing the first sentence of chapter one is tough. I had  tried a hundred times and ripped it up every time. I needed something to make the reader feel the curtain was rising on a strange and mysterious place. So, one dark and stormy night, I was in the café, finishing my dinner and working my way through many glasses of Swiss villette wine. Of a sudden, I realised the opening sentence of chapter one was staring me in the face. The faces, the conversations, the clatter of glasses and plates, the clouds of cigarette smoke floating above heads, the dark raining world outside. And I imagined Marc Rochat in the corner, like me, watching. I pulled out my notebook, I took a deep breath, and I wrote: Marc Rochat pulled aside the lace curtains and watched the rain fall through lamplight and fall onto the cobblestones of Escaliers du marché.

In addition to the videos, Bantam Press has agreed to give away ONE AUTOGRAPHED COPY of Jon Steele’s The Watchers for each video, for a total of SEVEN WINNERS. All you have to do is leave a comment in the post, or send an email to fbcgiveaway@gmail.com with your Name, Mailing Address, and the subject: WATCHERS. However, to double your chances of winning, link this post or one of the videos on your blog, Facebook, Twitter page, etc., and you will be entered TWICE! The giveaway is open to Anyone and the seven winners will be randomly selected after the last video is posted on Friday, June 17. Thank you for entering and Good Luck!