Good news for Grim Hill fans: Carnival of Secrets, number 6 in Linda Demeulemeester's popular series of YA novels, is now available as a kindle and kobo e-book.
In book six of the award winning and best selling Grim Hill series, is
the thrilling Grim Hill climax. Cat has lost everything she holds dear.
Sookie has gone over to dark magic and is a diabolical threat. A
sinister carnival has crept into town and has everyone under its thrall.
Only Cat’s fairy friend Lea thinks there might be a sliver of hope that
all the harm can be undone. But even she quakes at the danger. Still,
Cat is determined to do whatever it takes, except this time even the
gang isn’t prepared for the most harrowing adventure of all. Has Cat
gone too far?
The Lonely Cry is an informal west coast association of Canadian science fiction and fantasy writers. Our members are Mary E. Choo, Dave Duncan, Matthew Hughes, Eileen Kernaghan, Linda Demeulemeester, Clélie Rich, Rhea Rose and Casey Wolf.
Reviews and interviews
Reviews and interviews
- Challenging Destiny interview with Eileen Kernaghan
- C.June Wolf interviews Eileen Kernaghan at Strange Horizons
- Locus interview with Dave Duncan
- SFrevu interviews The Lonely Cry
- Casey Wolf: Bitten By Books Video Interview & Chat
- Strange Horizons Interview with Casey Wolf
- Theakus Free Quarterly interview with Matthew Hughes
- Innsmouth Free Press Interview with Mary E. Choo
- Iceberg Ink interview with Dave Duncan
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Friday, November 1, 2013
The Secret of Grim Hill, the first title in Linda DeMeulemeester's award winning Grim Hill series, is now available as a kindle e-book.
More in the series are to follow.
More in the series are to follow.
Friday, October 4, 2013
Colleen Anderson interviews Rhea Rose at her Tesseracts Seventeen blog. In an earlier posting Colleen interviews Eileen Kernaghan, another Tesseracts Seventeen contributor.
And here's the Tesseracts Seventeen YouTube trailer.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Hell to Pay reviewed
"Avianca's Bezel," a 15,000-word novelette starring Raffalon, Matthew Hughes' Dying-Earthesque thief, has sold to Gordon Van Gelder at The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction; and "The Village," the fifth episode in the serialized novel The Kaslo & Chronicles, sold to John Joseph Adams at Lightspeed magazine.
Here's a review of Hell to Pay, the concluding volume in Matthew Hughes' To Hell and Back urban fantasy trilogy. David Marshall says, "Overall, Hell to Pay is a very satisfying conclusion to an immensely pleasing trilogy. I suspect even Christians would enjoy it."
Here's a review of Hell to Pay, the concluding volume in Matthew Hughes' To Hell and Back urban fantasy trilogy. David Marshall says, "Overall, Hell to Pay is a very satisfying conclusion to an immensely pleasing trilogy. I suspect even Christians would enjoy it."
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Matthew Hughes shortlisted for the Endeavour Award
Costume Not Included, the second novel in Matt Hughes To Hell and Back series, has been shortlisted for the Endeavour Award. The award is named for the ship captained by the great navigator James Cook when he explored and mapped the Pacific Northwest from Oregon up to Haida Gwai (the Queen Charlotte Islands). It's a juried award, given for a distinguished science fiction or fantasy book written by a Pacific Northwest author or authors and published in the previous year.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Dragon-Rain and Other Stories, a collection of Eileen Kernaghan's published SF and fantasy short stories, is now available from amazon sites as a kindle e-book.
Black Bon sorcery in a mythical Himalayan kingdom; a mysterious death at a fashionable London dinner-party; a bleak look at near-future medicine; an apocalyptic North America where the only things left to sell are stones. Here are nine tales of dark fantasy, shamanist rituals, the nineteenth century occult, near-future science and dystopic future worlds.
The title story, "Dragon-Rain", appeared in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror, ninth annual edition.
Black Bon sorcery in a mythical Himalayan kingdom; a mysterious death at a fashionable London dinner-party; a bleak look at near-future medicine; an apocalyptic North America where the only things left to sell are stones. Here are nine tales of dark fantasy, shamanist rituals, the nineteenth century occult, near-future science and dystopic future worlds.
The title story, "Dragon-Rain", appeared in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror, ninth annual edition.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Women in Horror interview
Colleen Anderson interviews Eileen Kernaghan for Women in Horror month at her blog.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Matthew Hughes' three Henghis Hapthorn novels -- Majestrum, The Spiral Labyrinth, and Hespira -- are now available as ebooks in Kindle and Epub formats on Matt's web page. The price is $2.99 each. A pdf format file will follow soon. They'll also be for sale on Amazon and Kobo in the near future.
http://www.matthewhughes.org/the-archonate-bookstore/
As well, Matt is using Amazon's CreateSpace subsidiary to offer some of his self-published ebooks as print-on-demand paperbacks. The first two titles are the short story collections 9 Tales of Henghis Hapthorn and The Meaning of Luff and Other Stories. They're now available from Amazon and directly from CreateSpace's e-store.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Eileen Kernaghan's 2004 historical fantasy Winter on the Plain of Ghosts: a Novel of Mohenjo-daro is also now available from Amazon sites as a kindle e-book.
Also on e-books: the groundbreaking anthology of fusion fiction, Like Water for Quarks, (Elton Elliott and Bruce Taylor, eds.,) which includes Mary E. Choo's short story, "The Man Who Loved Lightning," is now available from Baen e-books. You can find information at this link on the Baen Books website.
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Friday, January 11, 2013
In recent news
English writer and blogger Rebeccah Giltrow interviews Eileen Kernaghan at http://rebeccahgiltrow.blogspot.co.uk/2013/01/writer-eileen-kernaghan.html
Monday, January 7, 2013
Canadian Gothic: An interview with Mary E. Choo Part One
/Q: Mary, tell me how you got started as a writer -- what was the first thing you had accepted for publication? /
MC: I first started composing rhymes, orally, when I was about four or five. As a child I wrote and illustrated my own novels -- often in lurid detail. I won a prize -- a ticket to the Ice Capades-- for a rehash of "Cinderella", when I was ten. The first thing I had accepted for publication was a poem, "Nocturne" (for the literary magazine Mamashee) in 1983.
/Q: What drew you to fantastic//speculative literature --as opposed to mainstream? /
MC: I find the medium more flexible. The writer can create her own situation as opposed to being confined by established conventions. There's also opportunity, particularly in fantasy, to embellish a situation with the use of imaginative language, to expand horizons while incorporating aspects of the "real" world.
/Q: Recently, you've been writing and publishing horror and dark fantasy. What led you in that direction -- and where do you find your inspiration? /
MC: Horror and dark fantasy seemed to come naturally. In a way, it's a means of using elaborate metaphor to exorcise personal demons. I come from what could be described as a rather Gothic background. Much of that nuance has worked its way into my plots and characters, though in a greatly altered state. I try to write from compassion, to explore the motivation of my characters and aim for perspective.
/Q: There's a dream-like, almost hallucinatory quality to much of your work. Are you influenced by dreams?
MC: I dream a good deal. The dreams are generally complex and riddled with bizarre symbolism -- the antlered man is a recurring figure. Many dreams are a catalyst for poems such as "Dreamwalker" or "A Tale for Pandora", and from there they often find their way into short stories. And I do dream in colour.
/Q: You're married to a Southeast Asian, and you've travelled and worked abroad. Your writing is enriched with many cultural (and cross-cultural) references, both actual and created. How has your exposure to other
cultures influenced your work and helped you to shape your characters?
MC: I've co-existed with the Southeast Asian//Chinese culture for a number of years. I'm frequently exposed not only to my husband's dialect and customs, but to the traditions of the Chinese community as a whole. I've also studied French and Spanish, and in a very limited way, Egyptian hieroglyphs -- this when I was living in London, and working at the British Museum. It goes without saying that travel and living in another country enriches the mind and spirit. All this has given me a strong sense that there are things outside my own experience, and has shown me how customs both unite and separate people. There are intrinsic, subtle meanings and connotations in every culture that are lost in translation. For instance, much of the significance of an Asian ritual like the traditional Lion Dance might escape a westerner. In the trilogy I'm currently writing, I've been influenced by all of the above. I've endeavoured to build detailed, convincing societies, and to incorporate some idea of the challenges of intercultural marriage into the main relationship.
Several members of my family have had training in various Asian disciplines, and I've observed a lot from sitting through countless competitions. One family member studied under the masters in Japan. He's also a successful competitor and qualified instructor, and now works in film and TV. This has provided some insight into action scenes and how to construct them. I'm most interested in the discipline aspect, and the ways in which --externally and internally -- the arts make you strong.
(to be continued)
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Canadian Gothic: an interview with Mary E. Choo Part 2
/Q: You write in three mediums: poetry, short fiction and novels. Do you have a preference?
MC. Each medium fulfills a specific need. I feel totally free to express myself in poetry. Short fiction is more of a discipline, a means of dealing with ideas and characters in limited word space. In a novel, there is more opportunity for plot and character development, and a variation in pace that can't be achieved in short fiction.
/Q: You've published in both U.S. and Canadian publications. Do you feel there is any difference between these two markets? That is, do have U.S.and Canadian editors (and readers) have different standards and expectations? Do you write differently for the two markets?
MC. That's a difficult one to answer, these days, as market needs are changing rapidly. I think many Canadian writers tend to layer their stories more, and that a number of U.S. publications have been leaning more towards this kind of fiction the last few years. I don't consciously write for either market, particularly when I'm writing dark fantasy or horror, but I do pare my work down much more than I used to -- with the U.S. market in mind.
/Q: What do you see as your strengths as a writer, and your weaknesses?
MC: Hopefully, I attain some depth of character, and I do try to use language imaginatively. I had early training in piano, and I'm very disciplined. All those five-finger exercises and scales taught me the meaning of hard work and patience, the will to get it just right. In the end, all of it went into the actual music, and made for better, more competent execution and expression. I feel the same is true of good writing. It's important to try to say it well. I have a tendency, though, to overwork a manuscript, particularly short fiction, and to worry over things that don't matter and not see things that do. It helps to have at least one other person review your work. My husband speaks three other languages and came late to fluent English. However, he's marvellous at pointing out basic flaws in my prose. He also knocks my ideas and concerns into perspective when I get too involved.
/Q: What are you working on at present?
MC: A poetry collection, short stories, and the final book of a trilogy.
/Q: There seems to be a literary trend towards the Gothic and the grotesque. What do you think accounts for this current taste for the macabre?
MC: A couple of things, really. Ours has become an intensely market-driven society, fast-paced and in many ways ruthless and impersonal. I suspect a lot of people feel a tremendous void in their lives, and long for something divorced from all the clutter and technology, some improbable adventure in which they can lose themselves.I also think the current Gothic writing reflects, in metaphor, many of the darker aspects of the human condition -- readers identify with this and are drawn to it.
/Q: Where do you see yourself going, as writer? What would you like to achieve?
MC: As writer, one always hopes for improvement -- and if you're lucky, some recognition. The publishing aspect, as I'm sure many writers would agree is a large and difficult part of the picture. It's very hard to second-guess the market, which gets more competitive all the time.
MC. Each medium fulfills a specific need. I feel totally free to express myself in poetry. Short fiction is more of a discipline, a means of dealing with ideas and characters in limited word space. In a novel, there is more opportunity for plot and character development, and a variation in pace that can't be achieved in short fiction.
/Q: You've published in both U.S. and Canadian publications. Do you feel there is any difference between these two markets? That is, do have U.S.and Canadian editors (and readers) have different standards and expectations? Do you write differently for the two markets?
MC. That's a difficult one to answer, these days, as market needs are changing rapidly. I think many Canadian writers tend to layer their stories more, and that a number of U.S. publications have been leaning more towards this kind of fiction the last few years. I don't consciously write for either market, particularly when I'm writing dark fantasy or horror, but I do pare my work down much more than I used to -- with the U.S. market in mind.
/Q: What do you see as your strengths as a writer, and your weaknesses?
MC: Hopefully, I attain some depth of character, and I do try to use language imaginatively. I had early training in piano, and I'm very disciplined. All those five-finger exercises and scales taught me the meaning of hard work and patience, the will to get it just right. In the end, all of it went into the actual music, and made for better, more competent execution and expression. I feel the same is true of good writing. It's important to try to say it well. I have a tendency, though, to overwork a manuscript, particularly short fiction, and to worry over things that don't matter and not see things that do. It helps to have at least one other person review your work. My husband speaks three other languages and came late to fluent English. However, he's marvellous at pointing out basic flaws in my prose. He also knocks my ideas and concerns into perspective when I get too involved.
/Q: What are you working on at present?
MC: A poetry collection, short stories, and the final book of a trilogy.
/Q: There seems to be a literary trend towards the Gothic and the grotesque. What do you think accounts for this current taste for the macabre?
MC: A couple of things, really. Ours has become an intensely market-driven society, fast-paced and in many ways ruthless and impersonal. I suspect a lot of people feel a tremendous void in their lives, and long for something divorced from all the clutter and technology, some improbable adventure in which they can lose themselves.I also think the current Gothic writing reflects, in metaphor, many of the darker aspects of the human condition -- readers identify with this and are drawn to it.
/Q: Where do you see yourself going, as writer? What would you like to achieve?
MC: As writer, one always hopes for improvement -- and if you're lucky, some recognition. The publishing aspect, as I'm sure many writers would agree is a large and difficult part of the picture. It's very hard to second-guess the market, which gets more competitive all the time.
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The Lonely Cry is an informal west coast association of Canadian science fiction and fantasy writers. Our members are Mary E. Choo, Dave Duncan, Matthew Hughes, Eileen Kernaghan, Linda DeMeulemeester, Clélie Rich, Casey Wolf and Rhea Rose. Visit our website at www.lonelycry.ca
Reviews and interviews
- Innsmouth Free Press interview with Mary E. Choo
- Strange Horizons interview with Casey Wolf
- Bitten by Books interview with Casey Wolf
- Canadian Gothic: an Interview with Mary E. Choo
- Challenging Destiny interview with Eileen Kernaghan
- C.June Wolf interviews Eileen Kernaghan at Strange Horizons
- SFCanada interview with Janine Cross
- Locus interview with Dave Duncan
- SFrevu interviews The Lonely Cry