Warcraft, Lovecraft and Horrible Things

But not on this site — and not kinden stories. I'm proud to announce some new writing that's turning up here and there in the next few months.
You may recall my story The Dissipation Club that was published in the collection "Dead but Dreaming 2" — I also submitted a story for a similar collection from Miskatonic River […]

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Javert in Space!

OK, I lie. But Javert in the future, anyway. Just been to see In Time and it's a very well done piece of proper SF with some involving action sequences and a tight cast of good actors. It's one of those Big Concept pieces of SF (1), and the basic idea (that in the future time is currency […]

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The Usual Suspects

Thieves are back. Possibly they never went away but were just being sneaky.
They're a staple of fantasy fiction that goes back to its most influential roots (1), and recently there's been a grand resurgence of books specifically showcasing thief leads.
(1) And I'm not qualified to go into the whole mythic archetype businss but, suffice to say, legendary tricksters […]

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Films v Games

Thieves later, films now.
Or: not film. This is just something that I've started noticing, and it's hard to ignore. There's a lot of fuss at the moment about computer games eating into the profits of the film industry — just the same fuss, as MovieBob has pointed out in his Studio System set of articles, as there […]

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New post under construction

Yes, yes, after hearing Adam Christopher wax lyrical about the importance of regular updates, I swore I'd get at least one entry a week in, and lo! I have missed it. However, there's a good reason. I was all set to do a spot about the return of thieves in fantasy, using Scott Lynch, Douglas Hulick and David Tallerman as examples […]

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Heirs of the Blade — further reading.

Keen-eyed readers may have noticed that Heirs of the Blade brings in a number of characters previously seen in the short stories on this site. This is obviously because of my immense skill in foreshadowing and plotting ahead and not at all because several of those characters just wouldn't leave me alone until they got a serious […]

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Desperate fights require desperate measures

Firstly, thank you to everyone who turned up to the signings at Reading and London.
Secondly, I have reached a point in book 9 where I am faced with a phenomenally complicated skirmish between about a dozen named and distinct characters, and below, as an insight into the writer's mind, is my visual aid to help me keep track of it all:

Sad, I know.

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Oxford and Leeds signings and more reviews

Another post! What do I think this is, Twitter? Anyway, the signing mills are grinding somewhat faster these days so this is really an upd
Hmm. Just as well this isn't twitter. Can't be brief to save my life (1).
Anyway, an update of the last one — so grand Heirs of the Blade tour is now:
Friday 14th October (vis: tomorrow) […]

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Event news revised — and first review for Heirs of the Blade

The Reading signing, this Friday 14th at 6-8pm, will be at the Oracle shopping centre Waterstones, not the Broad Street one I've been at before (1). Saturday's threeway signathon at Forbidden Planet, London, 1-2pm is still on as advertised.
I will also be signing somewhat festively at the Leeds Waterstones 12–2 on Friday the 16th December […]

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The most asked question

Mark Charan Newton, author of the excellent Legends of the Red Sun series has a clip and a muse on the great question almost every author gets at one time or another (1): Where do ideas come from.
That got me thinking. Technically, my published long fiction to date represents only a single set of initial ideas — that's the […]

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Heirs of the Blade by Adrian Tchaikovsky

The Sea Watch by Adrian Tchaikovsky

The Scarab Path by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Salute the Dark by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Blood of the Mantis by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Dragonfly Falling by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Empire in Black and Gold by Adrian Tchaikovsky

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