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Posts Tagged ‘fantasy series’

Win signed fantasy books!

10 Oct

Signed copy of the fantasy book The Riddler's Gift by Greg HamertonGet the first and second book in The Tale of the Lifesong fantasy series in time for Christmas. In print. For free!

You could win signed copies of this growing fantasy story by giving it a thumbs up on Facebook. Simply click LIKE on the pages for The Riddler’s Gift and Second Sight, then write a word or two on the wall so I can count you in.

The competition closes on the 30th November 2011.

You can enter from anywhere in the world.
It’s a random draw from the wall, with one winner.

Go on, it’s as easy as raising your thumb! Twice!

 

Last Argument of Kings by Joe Abercrombie

24 May

Last Argument of Kings by Joe AbercrombieWhatever it was that Mr A withheld in the second part of his dark heroic fantasy trilogy, he brings it back with tripled texterity. The magic is back! I was left a bit puzzled at the end of book 2, Before They Are Hanged, wondering if I had misjudged book 1, The First Law – was it really that good?

*****

Yes, it was! Logen is spectacular. What Mr A achieves here is worth emulating – he makes me care about this barbarian despite the awkward fact that even Logen can’t deny – he is a killer. I don’t like killers. Nobody does. But we really care about this guy. How does he do that? It seems that part of the art is withholding the truth about Logen’s past, giving us glimpses that worsen through the tale, but never enough to overbalance the empathy that develops as we endure hardships with Logen. The crux of it is that Logen is trying to be better than he was. It’s enlightening to learn how much one can forgive a man when is honestly trying. This only makes the horror of what he is and does more intense.

The humour is back: “Jezal sat in a haze of awkwardness, in a dreamlike silence, startling from time to time like a sick rabbit as a powdered footman blindsided him with vegetables.” I giggled myself to tears. My fellow commuters looked on like sheep eyeing a naked farmer. He’s gone mad – is he dangerous?

The characters all develop and (finally) assert their will: West comes into his power, Jezal too, despite the clear sense that all the lead characters are being carried along in events greater than themselves, they also begin to take command of their little patch, which is greatly satisfying to read. And this goes some way to explaining what was going on in terms of character development in book 2 – nothing.

The launch into the story world was expertly planned, and the conclusion was dazzling with a hell of a lot happening. The middle seemed, by comparison, to go nowhere. I was beginning to think that it may be better to take a story in a surprising direction in book 2 or simply eliminate the book altogether – if the plot goes up up and away and comes down with a crunch, we probably don’t need much of the bit in between. But there seems to be a lesson for the characters and this reader in the rambling arc of the middle book – nothing seems to work out the way we want it to. We’re all left feeling disappointed, which sets us up for the finale. I might have set the series aside, but I’m very glad I didn’t.

Bayaz is the best wizard I have ever read of. In the Last Argument of Kings Mr A passes on a revelation about what the wizard was actually doing and the book suddenly came alive! Bayaz is cunning, terrifying, manipulative and untrustworthy, arrogant, too wise, inhumanly inspired, and his magic is more in politics than in spells, yet he doesn’t shy away from destroying someone if he needs to. He is masterfully crafted, and this series is worth studying just for Bayaz alone. He is to be feared.

As the real battle begins in the North, Logen is in his element and the tension around him is incredible. The way the hard men fear and hate him, yet respect him gives you a hint of what he is capable of, yet you aren’t shown the truth of it until you really need Logen to reveal his dark nature, and then there’s this complicated resolution to events where Logen doesn’t ever really save the day (but we want him to).

To write like this is a great achievement, in my opinion. Such despicable people, yet we care about their fortunes and want them to do right, in the end. It would be so easy to slip up in the telling, to lose the reader in a moment of revulsion and never regain the interest in the character. Mr A comes very close sometimes, so expect a bloody tale. But then the barbarian gets philosophical, and I’m speechless with respect for Logen (and his creator, back there in the shadows):
“You can have enemies you never really meet, Logen had plenty. You can kill men you don’t know, he’d done it often. But you can’t truly hate a man without loving him first, and there’s always a trace of that love left over.”

Five stars. Now sneak over to Joe Abercrombie’s website and watch what he’s up to. I know I’m going to. I just hope Bayaz doesn’t (ever) notice me.

 

Are the best fantasy books like Tolkien’s, or not?

02 Feb

The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. TolkienThe danger of writing epic fantasy is that anything you write will be compared with Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. So I thought I’d explain how I tackled this in my new fantasy series.

When I began writing the Tale of the Lifesong, the LOTR movies had not yet appeared, and I hadn’t read the book for more than a decade. ‘There and back again’ had become submerged under many great fantasy books by David Eddings, Stephen Donaldson, Robert Jordan and Robin Hobb: new fantasy written in an appealing modern style. The influence of LOTR was far from my mind.

I like the idea of an old world, mapped out on parchment, stuffed with legends; a place one can have an adventure, possibly find treasure and learn magic. I had this idea before I read Tolkien – as a boy I used to collect maps and go on adventures in the mountains. I was seeking a special treasure, looking for a hidden world, or just enjoying the search. It’s because of that idea that I enjoyed Tolkien’s writing. The idea is fantasy: a world that might be there. Reading about it is the adventure.

However, it is impossible to write epic fantasy without acknowledging the presence of Tolkien. If you’re going to write a new fantasy novel that starts with a map, you have two paths: you can choose to be just like Tolkien, or not at all like Tolkien. To write a book that isn’t like something else works against creativity, as new (forming) ideas are constantly compared to the (formed) masterpiece, and by their insubstantiality, seem inferior. You get a poor kind of mirror-image, written in the negative space that surrounds The Lord of the Rings.

If you try to write just like Tolkien, you get cliché after cliché, because his writing was full of them and now defines the things you can’t use (magic ring, dark lord, orphaned hero, stupid orcs, wise elves, dark riders, ancient language, runes, abandoned underground civilisations, dragons…). Write like Tolkien? Damned if you do; damned if you don’t.

This realisation offered me a sense of freedom: the only sensible response to the paradox was to develop ideas I loved and not worry about Tolkien at all. This left me free to explore the world of myths without debilitating copycat-complex. The funny thing is, as a fantasy author, the further you go down the rabbit hole, the more you begin to encounter the archetypes and ideas that drove the great fantasy stories in the first place. Truly unique ideas that have not already been expressed are very hard to find in that mythic plane of consciousness. Myths, being very old, have been told before. Our bones remember a time when there were dragons.

Is the dragon from a myth, or from imagination?Take the idea of a magical ring, for instance, where all the trouble begins. If you want to contain a magical ability in order to pass it on, you need something you can carry, which could be lost, stolen or coveted. You need a talisman, and none is as simple and elegant as a ring. It is hand-crafted in an almost mystical alchemical process, it is small enough to lose, and the idea of a ring having special power is instantly believable (a wedding ring is more than the metal, there’s the idea that it symbolises some magic, not so?). Magical rings make sense to us, they don’t seem weird.

That’s because the magical ring is not Tolkien’s idea. It goes back beyond the earliest legends. But some critics get as far as the T in Tolkien, and look no further for the source of inspiration, overwhelmed by their amazing powers of deduction. Yes, The Tale of the Lifesong has magic rings, but they are different in important ways.

Tolkien’s ring contained the malice of an evil soul. Tabitha’s ring offers clarity of thought. Tolkien’s ring made the bearer invisible. Tabitha’s ring is only visible to those with talent and has no magical powers beyond being a catalyst. Tolkien’s ring was essentially evil and never changes. Tabitha’s ring is neither good nor evil, it just offers enlightenment. Tolkien’s ring-bearer is on the run to destroy the ring. Tabitha is on the run to understand it. Tolkien’s wizard wore a pointy hat. Tabitha’s wizard has a flat-topped one.

Do you see how futile it is to make comparisons? It’s like Tolkien, but not like Tolkien. One reviewer recently pointed up all the moments when a character in The Riddler’s Gift seemed similar to another in LOTR. Of course they do: at some level all characters share an archetype, so do people, and stories. You can’t write sword and sorcery novels without, um, a sorcerer and ah, a sword-wielder. Another critic complained that Tolkien stalked every page. No doubt he could find echoes of Tolkien in any fantasy. Or, if Tolkienism was absent, decry the paucity of invention by comparison. Cynics try to find faults, and become so absorbed in comparing details they can’t enjoy the mood, atmosphere and world of the story.

Stories should never be read in terms of other stories: they must be read on their own terms. At the heart of what makes a great fantasy novel is a reader who wants to be spellbound. Library Girl Reads recently reviewed the same book and wrote, “Wonderfully crafted”; Mary on Goodreads said, “Full of everything you want in a book. Perfect!” Same story, different readers.

Can you guess who has discovered the secret of reading fantasy? It’s a kind of magic.

 
 

A flurry of great reviews for the Lifesong

24 Nov

The Tale of the Lifesong fantasy series gets 5 starsAs the northern winter closes in, it seems everyone is snuggling up inside … and reading books! Reviewers have recently taken notice of The Tale of the Lifesong fantasy series and are helping to spread the word.

The Slowest Bookworm mostly reads Young Adult fiction; occasionally adult romance, historical fiction, fantasy or thrillers. She’s not accustomed to tackling epic fantasy, which makes her reviews more interesting because she can form an opinion untainted by familiarity with the genre. She finally braved the mountain of words and disappeared into Eyri.

sounds of munching. a page moved. an i became an o, then a capital O, and suddenly, there was the bookworm emerging from the page, blinking, wondering where all the sprites had gone.

Now Zarost will tell you, it isn’t easy to get a worm on a hook, and this worm is crafty. Although she pretends to be idle she eats up words faster than the Wranglewrithe, so all that’s left of my copy of the review is: “… Main … Amazing … Great … In … Characters … And … Lifesong” but you can read the rest of The Riddler’s Gift review on the Slowest Bookworm’s site.

The verdict on The Riddler’s Gift? “Magical! I was hooked …”

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The Happy Booker reviews mainly epic, urban, and dark fantasy and most recently, Second Sight. Well it’s no fun being a parrot (just ask Zaul) and Zarost taught me that leaving out bits can make you holy, so I’ll recommend that you read the review of Second Sight on The Happy Booker’s book review site.

“I would recommend this to anyone that wants to be utterly swept away into a story of epic proportions. I was quite honestly blown away by this book …”

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Finally, Fantasy Book Review is on a mission to find the Top 100 Fantasy Books Of All Time. I would respond ‘I haven’t written them yet!’ but I’d better step quietly away from the whistling precipice. I’m glad to have impressed the reviewer enough for Second Sight to be selected to stand beside The Riddler’s Gift in their hall of fame and jostle merrily for position with the great names of fantasy.

You’ll find the review of Second Sight and other spellbinding fantasy novels on their website.

They made an interesting comment on similarities. “If you are a fan of Stephen R Donaldson’s Thomas Covenant books then you will find much within that pleases you, especially if you wished they were slightly more light-hearted!” I found much to admire in Donaldson’s writing. It’s not a conscious decision to ‘write like him’ but I do try to take the best of what I’ve read and infuse my writing with the themes that excite me. Thanks to Donaldson, Hobb and Pratchett (and many others) I have a rich world of fantasy literature to draw upon for inspiration … but the Tale of the Lifesong is my own.

“An epic tale of justice, forgiveness, beauty and temptation.”

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A Gift for a Friend: win a signed fantasy book!

08 Nov

Signed copy of the fantasy book The Riddler's Gift by Greg HamertonGet the first book in The Tale of the Lifesong fantasy series sent to your friend in the UK in time for Christmas.

By entering the competition you could win a free signed copy of The Riddler’s Gift for a friend! Simply join my mailing list and you’ll be entered in the draw. You’ll get occasional emails about site updates and news. You’ll also get a voucher for 5% off my books.

The competition closes 15th December 2010 at 12h00. You can enter from anywhere in the world, but due to international postage costs, the friend you nominate to receive the book must be in the UK.

One entry per person, random draw, one winner. > ENTER NOW

 

What’s so fantastic about The Blade Itself?

18 Oct

The Blade Itself - Joe Abercrombie

Snap review: 5 stars, a dark, gritty and wry fantasy based on the sword-and-sorcery and epic fantasy templates. There’s no safe middle ground here: you’ll either love the raw gleeful energy, or you’ll find it too slapstick and cynical. Joe Abercrombie’s prose is deadly: witty and violent, well plotted and brilliantly told.

I was reluctant to begin a book with a blood-spattered cover lauded as ‘delightfully twisted and evil’. I’m not a psycho. I don’t fantasise about blood. But as a fantasy author, I want to know what’s happening in the fantasy genre, and so I stuck my neck out and got it chopped right off by the blade itself. It’s not what I was expecting. The Blade Itself is personal, brutish, and brilliant. Joe Abercrombie really packs it in, and I get the feeling that he takes great pleasure in writing this way. If he doesn’t like someone, they get smacked.

His characters scream “Character!” In a few lines of dialogue we meet some unforgettable rogues. Logen’s viewpoint shines! To enter a city for the first time and see all of its strangeness through the eyes of a barbarian was so very funny. (I felt not unlike a South African arriving in London). The book is worth reading for this character alone. But Abercrombie himself is the lead character – he expresses himself so strongly that I found myself wanting to read on just because of the way he told his story.
Read the rest of this entry »

 

The first law of selling fantasy novels

12 Oct

The First Law fantasy series ... with a holeI heard about the Joe Abercrombie’s fantasy series, The First Law, on the internet, so I went to Amazon, because it was the closest retailer. I bought number one, The Blade Itself, as a used book for less than half price. Most people buy from the cheapest and most convenient source.

That’s bad news for bookstores, that’s bad news for Mr. A: they don’t get a cent from that because it’s a used copy. But I usually try new authors via discounted copies, because it limits my gamble … or maybe it’s because I’m just cheap.

I thought it was an excellent fantasy novel, so I went looking for the second book, Before They Are Hanged. Being on holiday, away from the wonders of Amazon and short of cash, I began in the remainder store. I couldn’t find it, but I found the third book, Last Argument of Kings, for less than half price. More bad news for Joe Abercrombie: he won’t get royalties for remaindered books unless he has an abnormal publishing contract. I tell myself that at least I’ve supported part of the system that helps to keep Joe’s publisher in business.  Which is just rubbish: Joe is still not being paid for his work.

So, being a fantasy author myself I resolved to Do The Right Thing, and buy a full priced copy from a Real Bookstore. After driving, parking, walking, browsing … here’s the thing: it wasn’t on the shelf. They had book one and three, but not two. They weren’t planning on stocking book two because the series wasn’t selling strongly enough in that particular store, and therein lies the fundamental problem for bookstores and authors with series fantasy. The stores will develop gaps in stock and you lose readers through those gaps. Sure, I could have got them to order it in, but I couldn’t be bothered to go back to the store.

JoeAbercrombie.com pointed me back to the solution: Amazon, where I could buy the book for about half price including delivery (assuming I was in Amazon country, which is most of the market anyway). From that sale Mr A. can collect his royalty and the publisher makes a bit. It’s plain to see that the bookstore doesn’t have much future in this space unless it is exceptional at anticipating demand.

I love modern bookstores, I love all those new books crammed together, the impression of a marketplace of fresh ideas, combined with the helpful staff and their tireless efforts to create appealing book stacks. But they will never have the stock range, convenience or price advantage of Amazon. Their recommendations will never be as complete as the reviews available online. Authors, being the rogues of enlightened self-interest that they are, will point their readers to the most reliable supply system that still yields a royalty sale (and some affiliate commission too): Amazon.

We already see blockbuster bestsellers in supermarkets. I suspect that bookstores will have to downsize to survive, and will soon stock only expensive coffee-table books and children’s colour books: books with high prices and therefore enough profit to support the cost of shelf space, things that sell based on their visual appeal and so need to be displayed. Most fiction, especially series fantasy? I don’t think we will see it in the bookstores for much longer, and unless it’s phenomenal it won’t be in the supermarkets either; it will all end up on Amazon, and only on Amazon, because it is the cheapest and most convenient.

And so the mighty river grows.

 

Who won the fantasy fiction giveaway?

11 Oct

The Tale of the Lifesong fantasy seriesMy new fantasy novel, Second Sight, is causing quite a stir on Goodreads. I ran a giveaway for a free book during September and received 980 entrants! If you haven’t tried the Goodreads giveaways before, it’s worth checking them out: the freshest fiction, free, and all you have to do is to rate the books. Sharanya Soori from Canada was the lucky winner of a signed copy.

At the same time, Dave-Brendon hosted a giveaway in South Africa for a free signed set of the two books in the Tale of the Lifesong fantasy series. It’s great to meet such an proactive bookseller (Dave-Brendan runs the SFF section of the Exclusive Books store in Pretoria). If all booksellers were this enthusiastic about South African fantasy novels, we’d be able to redefine the fantasy genre in a few short years. The winner of the South African fantasy giveaway is: Sarah Bibi Setar!

I’d love to have everyone reading my books, but if I gave all of them away I wouldn’t be able to afford to write any more. So there are no more free copies available, but if you order books from my website I can offer you some special deals.

 

Second Sight reviewed: ‘Breath-taking’

23 Sep

SFbook fantasy story book review of Second SightWhat would motivate a man to lock himself in a small room for years to stare at the blinking cursor?

Writing fantasy? It would be more fun to simply read the latest sparkling fantasy novel from Trudi Canavan, Patrick Rothfuss or Joe Abercrombie. But instead, I wrestle with words, because I believe I am crafting something different, something inspiring; something that must be written.

When it is done, I can’t judge if my book is good, because I wrote it: I stand inside the sculpture; I am the music. So I rely on my readers to evaluate the work and spread the Lifesong by word of mouth.

I sent a review copy of Second Sight to SFbook a while ago and I was really looking forward to Ant’s review, because I knew from his excellent review of The Riddler’s Gift that he could appreciate the deeper visions of the Lifesong. Even so, I was blown away by his five star rave review:

“Greg Hamerton is truly one of those rare breed of storytellers, where you forget the words written on a page and simply find yourself within the story and the characters around you – your friends and enemies.”
“… this is high fantasy at its very best. Quite simply breath-taking …”

He analyses the twisted paths that Ametheus takes, the darker nature of the story and the parallels with Tolkien within fantasy fiction.

Read the full review here >

 

New fantasy book giveaway

26 Aug

If the best things in life are free, then free things must be the best
but if it costs nothing to write a book, why do they charge for the rest? — Zarost

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Second Sight: Second Tale of the Lifesong (Paperback) by Greg Hamerton

Second Sight

by Greg Hamerton

Giveaway ends October 01, 2010.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win