The Shadow of the Sun Read Along Part V

Tofu sniffing my book suspiciously.

Tofu sniffing my book suspiciously.

The End. Yes, folks, we have reached the end of The Shadow of the Sun. Part of me is a little sniffly and part  of me is very eager to see what everyone thought. Barbara Friend Ish has been most awesome by taking part in this read along, a rare thing to happen. Having the author play along, answering a question a week about her creation and to know that she is reading my thoughts on her book, which we are dissecting, gave me goosebumps (in a good way!). Don’t forget about the giveaway going on through April 30th. You could get a signed copy of The Shadow of the Sun, or your choice of ebook from Mercury Retrograde Press, or a swag pack, or ebook of The Shadow of the Sun. Yeah, I know, it’s a crazy giveaway.

Let me take a moment to thank all the great ladies involved. The Bloggers Who Made It Happen: Sue from Coffee, Cookies, & Chili Peppers, Lynn from Lynn’s Book Blog, and Amybethe from Just Book Reading. Thank you all for taking an in depth look behind the bookish curtain. My thanks also go to Elizabeth of Darkcargo for instigating this whole bloggity love for Mercury Retrograde Press. Barbara Friend Ish also has my warmest thanks for being so very accommodating, giving her time to the read along, and generally making herself available to any kind of pestering I could come up with.

Without further babblings, here are this week’s questions. They cover Chapter 29-END. There are spoilers. They have teeth, claws, and imaginations. You have been warned.

1) These final chapters show us much more of Iminor’s character and his growing Talent. What stuck out the most for you about how he handled the various exploding aspects of his life?

Wow! This dude is made of something stronger than steel. We previously knew that he was chosen to play this role, that there wasn’t any really love in the relationship between him and Letitia, not yet. Now he has to deal with the reality that Letitia is at least infatuated, perhaps in love with another, and is in a very active, and loud, relationship with him. I also have to wonder how much of the details he glimpsed through his connection with Ellion while Ellion was busy creating the Power Channel of Darkness within him. Awkward. Like blush to your toes awkward. Unless you’re me, because I want all the little details anyway. Don’t smirk at me. I know you do too.

So, this Talent. Yes, back to the original question I came up with. So, magic is taboo among the Tanaan, but this Talent is a natural thing, comes without his calling it. So, it is right there on the border. Frowned upon, but won’t get him uninvited to dinner parties. Still, the headaches, the weirdness of it as he learns to control it must be annoying with all the other crap the dude is having to deal with. Personally, I hope he can find a nice lass to spend Bealtan with to take his minds off some of his worry.

2) While Rohini is a late addition to the party, she is an interesting one. What aspect of her character or objectives would you like to see more of in forthcoming book(s)?

Rohini is a badass. Just say her name. Do it! OK. Now, don’t you want to be her? Yes, I do! From the leather outfit, to the weather beaten face, to the high pain tolerance – these are all aspects that would work great on my little farm. The swordswinging would be a bonus. Now, I would love to see more of her character in future installments – does she ever win her kingdom back? Will she help Ellion and crew defeat Nechton? Most likely – afterall it is easier to take back her homeland from the original usurpers instead of Mr. Badass Wizard himself. She needs a nemesis – someone she can have an epic horseback swordfight with. Yeah.

3) Amien has been managing and maneuvering Ellion quite a bit in this last section. What do you think his motivations are?

Dear Amien, Ellion isn’t your son, your brother, nor your current lover (I think). How will he ever live up to your expectations if he doesn’t want to play in the first place? OK, in general, I think Amien’s intentions are well-meaning. I don’t think he is trying to get Ellion killed, incarcerated, or eunuched. Still, one can only push Ellion so much before you don’t get what you wanted at all. Kind of like trying to shove a donkey through a gate only to get your foot stepped on at the same time the blasted animal farts in your face. No, I am not going to give details on how that happened or what became of the donkey. And I expect Amien will end up in the same cone of shame and silence if he keeps shoving Ellion.

4) Letitia continued to learn more about her abilities, but everyone agrees she still lacks the ability to go toe to toe with Nechton. What more would you empower her with?

Well, I am inclined to go with Ellion’s suggestions of warriors, wizards, and knowledge. Hopefully Letitia will also learn to overcome the Tanaan taboo on magic and learn to do protective or healing magic, if nothing else. Also, it might be good for the strike team to embrace some disguises. Of course, the nosy me wants to read Carina’s diary from start to finish, giving me invaluable inside into Nechton, making me, personally, a necessary addition to the party. But that last bit is just pipe dreams. Sigh….Though I would bring my throwing knifes.

5) Throughout this entire book, the deities have played an important, if a backseat driver, role. As a reader, how as this worked for you in the world-building/plot department?

I find it far easier to believe in deities that have motives that equate to human motives on some level, rather than some all powerful god(s) that have some nebulous use for mortals (or none at all). So I quite enjoyed that Ellion started out with one set of believes, worshiping Lady Tela, etc. Yet by the end of the book he has had to acknowledge a variety of goddesses and gods, most of them in their native lands, and has this internal conflict about whether he is being untrue to Tela by noting their existence.

Pico consented to pose with my book.

Pico consented to pose with my book.

6) We had yet one more assassination attempt in the hot water baths of Sucello. Now that we are at the end of the book, what are your insights into who is behind these attempts?

I am not convinced that ALL of the assassins and death traps have been for Ellion (not counting the Basghilae, as they were obviously focused on Letitia). What if some faction at Aballo or some ard-righ or ard-harpist wannabe knew where Ellion was and decided to take him out because he is a strong contender for all those positions? Ellion hasn’t exactly endeared himself to the wizarding community, the royalty, or the harper’s union. He’s stolen lovers left and right, pissed on the wizards by breaking their Prince’s heart (Amien), and dissed the harpists by neglecting his ard-harpist duties for several months. It will be interesting to see how Ish unravels these threads in future installments.

7) Bealtan reveals much about our narrative hero, Ellion. From his reuniting with Conar, to the revelation of Amien’s intentions, to his argument with Letitia, and his own internal recriminations about himself. Here at the end, what are your lasting impressions of Ellion?

Idiot.

Five little letters sums it up. He’s a lovable, convoluted, damaged idiot. But still an idiot. If Conar is such a good man, and such a good friend, surely he could explain, in part at least, the accident that killed hi parents. Amien has wanted Ellion for well over a decade to follow in his footsteps. I don’t think Ellion had given his magical side and career choices much thought as he was wining and wenching on the Ruillin. Then, he could have spent more time chatting with Letitia about relationship stuff. Part of me wants to cheer her on for treating Ellion like she would a Tan consort. I mean, he treats women as interchangeable bed pillows, so why does he find it so strange that a female ruler doesn’t see him as an equal or above?

Still, in the end I want him to persevere over his own weaknesses and doubts and go kick some major wizard ass. He doesn’t have to do it for just purposes. I am totally OK with him doing it for selfish reasons – because he wants to feel the power bouncing between him and Nechton, because it will win Letitia’s bed side affections, because he wants to be the baddest wizard around. Well, OK, maybe not that last one. But you get that I don’t need your typical noble hero to carry the day.

Other Tidbits:

When Iminor told Letitia to not be a coward, I cheered him on. Letitia hasn’t done much to warrant a stern word, but her lack of consideration for Iminor’s feelings is one of them.

Rohini is pretty darn tough. Still, large gashes in the field should be tended to sooner rather than later. Especially if said gash came from a dead guy. Ew.

Amien. What will happen to the dude? He took a hit and still hasn’t allowed Ellion to open a channel for it.

I think Ellion and Letitia finally fully consummated their relationship. I think they will have a baby. I have to wonder if this is what Nechton feared or hoped.

My question for Barbara this week: Food and music weave their way in and out of the entire story, creating a strong sense of time, mood, and location for each section. What prompted you to use these as background constants for the novel?

Bonus question to Barbara (if she has time and inclination): Having participated in the read along, what were some of your fears and anxieties over it and what were some of the highlights and insights for you as the author?

What Others Think:

Lynn’s Book Blog

Coffee, Cookies, & Chili Peppers

Just Book Reading

The Shadow of the Sun Read Along Part III

Pico consented to pose with my book.

Pico consented to pose with my book.

Welcome back everyone. Today, as part III of the read along, we are covering Chapters 16-21 of The Shadow of the Sun. Over here is the SCHEDULE if you would like to join us. Barbara Friend Ish is graciously offering a free download of her book for the duration of the read along and you can find that over HERE. Also, there is a GIVEAWAY going on for the duration of April where you could win a signed paper copy of the book or your own choice of ebook from Mercury Retrograde Press.

1) Up to this section, we believed the Basghilae could not cross water, but we learn to the detriment of our heroes that this is not so. What further hidden abilities do you think might crop up from these walking dead?

Bows and arrows? I mean that would pretty much end the Tanaan and any who defended them. Would probably make for a shorter story. Hmm….Maybe the Basghilae can’t see good enough to operate bows appropriately – being dead and all with the soft tissues going first.

2) As the party enters the human lands, they come up with a cover story and request that Letitia remove her torc. She refuses. Do you think her decision was the correct one?

This is pure pride. Letitia even shot a look at Easca, probably gauging how she would take it if she did remove her torc. I get that the torc is a hard won crown. On the other hand, Letitia has already lost a great number of her retinue and if removing the torc would keep them (and consequently her) alive longer, that would be a simple and good thing to do. I am guessing that she is still shook up over the Tuaoh Stone not recognizing her at all. I say it’s just a stone and you can’t expect too much out of it anyway. It has a limited number of ways to express itself and apparently it was saving itself up for a big reaction to Ellion. And let’s face it, Ellion has gotten a big reaction out of everyone he’s come across in the book, from Coran Mourne to Letitia’s papa to Amien to Letitia and her retinue.

3) At one point Ellion lingers over the warding process, specifically warding Letitia, and how a person must be completely nude for wards to be put in place. I’m going to leave this one wide open for comment ;) .

Well, that alone should have motivated Ellion to give up his vow of no magic and do the personal wards himself. And why is Letitia the only one warded? Surely the closest of her retinue should also be warded too. Perhaps Amien only has so much magic, or he can only stand warding so many naked Tanaan a day. I wonder if the male Tan would be OK with human males doing personal wards on them? Do they have nudity taboos? And then Amien and Ellion could take some time to ward each other……which might be awkward and I as the reader would be OK with stepping outside for that scene.

4) Ellion makes a tough decision to leave the Tanaan and while he watches them leave he has a huge epiphany about his inner motives. How do you think this will affect his actions and motivations the rest of the book?

I think this is excellent characterization for several reasons. Many folks believe that men by and large have a one tract mind. Ellion certainly demonstrates this – he has this vow of no magic, and he sincerely believes that he is a threat to the party because of the mysteriously appearing/disappearing assassin. He hasn’t really thought outside those tracts and merely goes over them again and again until he makes this decision that he can’t go with the party. And as they float away he sees how selfish that decision is and how he could be an asset to the party, has been an asset, if he allows himself to be open to other possibilities.

Then of course the balloon crashes and the party is reunited. Ellion swears his undying protection for Letitia, which makes everyone uncomfortable, but made me sigh in satisfaction as the reader. And this of course takes us back to the one tract mind. He is now dedicated, completely focused, can’t even consider another path. I want to muss his hair and tell him he chose well.

5) We saw the Tanaan and Ellion in some interesting situations of a more personal nature in these chapters, from the Night Butterflies to cutting in at a dance. What did you make of these instances, what further cultural differences along these lines do you foresee happening, and have you ever been a part of such a situation?

Hehe! Comic relieve built specifically for ME. Yes, I found these situations funny, especially when Ellion had to explain to the Tanaan about purchasing the affections of the night butterflies. Of course, Letitia then has a closer look at her scarf and gives Ellion a look. I would too. I mean, we don’t really know what that scarf was used for…..It might have been subjected to hazards of the night life, right? Perhaps it was used to clean up after the last assignation. I hope it was a newish scarf…but still.

This feeds back into my question about nudity. Do the Tanaan in general have a nudity taboo? Could be interesting to find out.

As for personal faux pas along this line…..Explaining to a male cousin on my man’s side about the use of condoms was unexpected. Oh, and I read that book Bonk by Mary Roach and told my knitting circle all about it. Hmm…and I did use the phrase ‘wild monkey sex’ the other day in a mixed group. You could hear the crickets afterwards.

Once again, we were treated to some fight scenes. What stood out for you about these scenes?

Wow! When Ellion and Amien fought back to back, I could see them whirling and slicing and defending each other like some of the best choreographed sword scenes of Hollywood. How could you, as either one of them, not be addicted to the power and connection to another human that magic like that affords.

Then of course there is the scene with Manannan giving his life for the party. He was on his way out through a slow death anyway and he chose to take a quicker ending doing something to defend many. I felt like I needed a strong drink along with Ellion after that myself.

Other Tidbits:

Amien has been trying to summon aid and so far that aid has not arrived. At the end of Chapter 21, he fell into a elementary trap and now the Bard’s Wizard has his name. All these things do not bode well for the party.

When Ellion’s harp was ruined I was quite sad with him. Well, we don’t know how ruined yet. There may be a chance that it won’t warp. Perhaps, if things settle down and he can baby it.

My question for Barbara for this section: As we get to know Ellion more and more, we definitely are not spared from his private thoughts, including his romantic thoughts. In making your main character the opposite sex of yourself, what came easy and what came hard? How did you overcome obstacles of those nature?

For a nice long and entertaining answer, check out Barbara’s post: The Sex Lives of Male Characters

Here is an additional bit on the subject: Writing About Sex: Love Through Other Eyes

What Others Think:

Just Book Reading

Lynn’s Book Blog

Coffee, Cookies, & Chili Peppers

Giveaway: The Shadow of the Sun by Barbara Friend Ish

This month, Dab of Darkness is hosting the read along of the epic fantasy The Shadow of the Sun by Barbara Friend Ish. If you want to join in, HERE is the schedule.

Mercury Retrograde Press and Barbara Friend Ish are offering an awesome giveaway in conjunction with the read along. The prizes include 3 ebook copies of The Shadow of the Sun, 2 signed paper copies of The Shadow of the Sun, and a swag pack of various book marks, etc. featuring Mercury Retrograde Press books. Additionally, since April is my one year blogaversary, I will be offering 1 winner an ebook of their choice from the Mercury Retrograde Press catalog. All giveaways on this post are INTERNATIONAL.

Here is Chapter 1 told by Rachel Murasaki Ish.

IshShadowOfSunA Man Cannot Deny the Gods

Ten years ago, Ellion violated a sacred rule of magic and brought tragedy on his family. Forced to abandon his throne, exiled from the holy Aballo Order of wizards, and severed from his patron goddess, he swore never to work magic again. He retreated into music and a bard’s footlose existence: living in other men’s kingdoms, singing of other men’s victories.

A Man Cannot Escape Destiny

But then the ard-righ, the king of kings, is murdered in an act of insurrection by a rogue wizard who follows the old gods. As the human nations teeter on the verge of chaos and civil war, Ellion tries to slip even farther away to the Tanaan realms, only to discover that they are threatened by the same enemy.

A Man Cannot Hide from the Shadow of the Sun

Now Ellion finds himself the protector of Letitia: a Tanaan princess, daughter of one of the greatest Tanaan heroines, and unwitting key to a great arcane mystery. Pursued by the rogue wizard’s minions, enticed by gods he was taught to forswear, challenged by his former mentor, and tempted by the most enchanting woman he has ever encountered, Ellion must battle his faith, his vows, and the darkness his soul yearns to tap as he races to unravel the secret of the rogue’s power: the Shadow of the Sun.

Win 1 of 3 ebook copies of The Shadow of the Sun

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Win 1 of 2 signed paper copies of The Shadow of the Sun

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Win a swag pack of various bookmarks from Mercury Retrograde Press

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Win 1 ebook of your choice from the Mercury Retrograde Press catalog

a Rafflecopter giveaway

The Shadow of the Sun Read Along: The Schedule

Hello folks, Dab of Darkness shall be hosting the read along of The Shadow of the Sun by Barbara Friend Ish starting April 1st. And you would be a fool to miss out on it. As many of you know, this is the year of bloggity love for Mercury Retrograde Press. Through out the year I will be featuring interviews, guest posts, giveaways, and reviews from and by the authors of Mercury Retrograde Press. This read along is another such adventure. If you would like to know more about Barbara Friend Ish and Mercury Retrograde Press, check out this interview from earlier this year.

Here is the blurb from Mercury Retrograde Press about the book. If you are interested in joining the read along, leave me a comment to that affect and I shall track you down.

IshShadowOfSunA Man Cannot Deny the Gods

Ten years ago, Ellion violated a sacred rule of magic and brought tragedy on his family. Forced to abandon his throne, exiled from the holy Aballo Order of wizards, and severed from his patron goddess, he swore never to work magic again. He retreated into music and a bard’s footlose existence: living in other men’s kingdoms, singing of other men’s victories.

A Man Cannot Escape Destiny

But then the ard-righ, the king of kings, is murdered in an act of insurrection by a rogue wizard who follows the old gods. As the human nations teeter on the verge of chaos and civil war, Ellion tries to slip even farther away to the Tanaan realms, only to discover that they are threatened by the same enemy.

A Man Cannot Hide from the Shadow of the Sun

Now Ellion finds himself the protector of Letitia: a Tanaan princess, daughter of one of the greatest Tanaan heroines, and unwitting key to a great arcane mystery. Pursued by the rogue wizard’s minions, enticed by gods he was taught to forswear, challenged by his former mentor, and tempted by the most enchanting woman he has ever encountered, Ellion must battle his faith, his vows, and the darkness his soul yearns to tap as he races to unravel the secret of the rogue’s power: the Shadow of the Sun.

Here is the schedule:

36 chapters
483 pages

April 1st post: 1-7 (pg. 95)
April 8th post: 8-15 (pg. 187)
April 15th post: 16-21 (pg. 275)
April 22nd post: 22-28 (pg. 386)
April 29th post: 29-END (pg. 483) and then there’s a few pages of glossaries.

Mercury Retrograde Press does this cool thing – if you buy a paper version you automatically get the ebook free, your choice of format. You can also simply purchase the ebook if you don’t have room on your physical shelves.

Looking forward to sharing this book with folks as I quite enjoyed it when I read it some years ago. Here is my Darkcargo Review.

Interview & Giveaway: Barbara Friend Ish, Editor-in-Chief Mercury Retrograde Press

MercuryRetrogradePressBadgePlease welcome one of my favorite publishers, and authors, Barbara Friend Ish, the editor-in-chief of Mercury Retrograde Press. Today she is visiting my lovely blog to talk mostly about Mercury Retrograde Press, what it means to be a small publisher, games & songs as story telling, and the upcoming read along of her first novel The Shadow of the Sun. Lady Ish is also offering up 1 print book and 2 ebooks to a total of thee lucky winners in the giveaway at the end of the interview. Winners will get to pick 1 book of their choice from the Mercury Retrograde Press catalog.

Now on to the interview!

Mercury Retrograde publishes fantasy, science fiction, and the unclassifiable. Tell me more about the unclassifiable? In the past few years, I have noticed more and more cross-genre books becoming popular, and even carving out a niche genre, like urban fantasy. What is the Press looking for in ‘unclassifiable’?

The book business is all about classification. It has to be. When you go into a bookstore, you want to be able to find the type of books you like. In a general-purpose bookstore, science fiction, fantasy, and horror in all their flavors tend to be shelved together—but in electronic venues such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble online, and in SF/F specialty independent bookstores, the classifications for this genre are more finely-grained. Fantasy is not only separated from SF and Horror, but has types within it such as epic, dark, and urban. These categories can shift, gradually or without warning, as when a few years ago (ten, maybe?) the book business suddenly decided to redefine “urban fantasy”. Now we know it as werewolves, vampires, witches, tough-chick protags who are invariably shown in not a whole lot of leather and tattoos on the covers. Before that, “urban fantasy” was Charles de Lint and his ilk. Imagine how confusing it must be to be Mr. de Lint.

But I digress, as usual. When we talk about ‘unclassifiable’ books at Mercury Retrograde, we’re talking about works that aren’t easily categorized. Personally, I love mash-ups, things that steal from two or more existing categories and re-invent them. Steampunk, when it began, was considered interstitial, unclassifiable. Then it exploded and became a subgenre—and a cultural movement—all its own. We’re open to border-crossing things like steampunk, but also to border-crossing work that is too unique to be readily categorized: frex, things that present as fantasy and turn out to be SF, things that smell like literary but are actually firmly genre in their totality, or whatever a writer’s particular combination of peanut butter and chocolate may be. Those sorts of books worry publishers and booksellers, because they’re challenging to sell. But I know the world is full of readers like me, who want to find the unique, fresh works and love them. Connecting those writers with those readers is an important part of Mercury Retrograde’s charter.

IshShadowOfSun

Sometimes we like to amuse ourselves by making up crazy cross-genre ideas, just for fun. We tell them to one another and build up these ridiculous concepts the way people tell bar stories: far-future memoir; police procedural with fairies; high-medieval conspiracy theory. The strange magic of these mash-ups is that we can spin them into publishing jokes—or discover they are actually the next great thing, and they’re coming across our desks. To create top-notch SFF literature, we have to hold ourselves open to all the possibilities—but be aware of the fine line between “outrageously awesome” and “ridiculously bad”. That line is defined by the individual, of course—which is part of why interstitial and unclassifiable works are so high-risk. Ultimately our acquisitions in this area are unpredictable and guided by our own tastes.

Your press has a strong artistic bent. Can you give us an overview of your nonconformist publishing ways, such as collaborative works with singers/song writers and game creators?

I suppose we are nonconformist. I think it is our goal of putting the art of story ahead of our preconceptions that leads us to make decisions that look weird. I’ve been a book person for as long as I can remember, but I fell in love with books because I am entirely committed to ideas and story. And as technology has changed in the course of our lifetimes, the ways in which stories can be told has changed. Some of those changes encompass the revival of story traditions far older than the novel.

Novel, of course, means new. This form we think is classic is actually an upstart, only a few hundred years old. Telling stories through songs is much older. Games, of course, are at least as old—although game as a formal storytelling medium is a relatively new development, as far as I know.

WisokerSecretsOfSands

As a publisher of stories presented in text, we’re very focused on the longer lengths: the novella, the novel, and the series. That’s an outgrowth of the fact that SFF, as has been said before, is the literature of ideas—and as far as I’m concerned, the bigger the idea, the better. It’s this very expansiveness of our tastes in story that have led us to expand in more interstitial directions, by making room for our storytellers to delve into other media as ways of continuing or broadening the stories they tell. Several of our authors use games played by characters in their stories as avenues towards developing characters and plot; in a couple of cases, notably Leona Wisoker’s Children of the Desert series and my own Way of the Gods series, the writers have expanded the scope of what they do to include collaboration with game designers. Leona has worked with Chris Adotta on the development of chabi, a game reminiscent of and completely different from chess that illustrates the attitudes and survival techniques of a desert culture. Leona uses gameplay as an avenue of plot and character development in her novels, notably Guardians of the Desert and Fires of the Desert, which is slated for publication in April. I’ve been very fortunate to work with James Kempf and Anthony Thomas of Cliché Studio on the games for my series: the dicing game suabh (Sweep, in English) from my The Shadow of the Sun, and the card game Fortunes from my forthcoming The Heart of Darkness. I’m having an especially great time with Fortunes, which could be most succinctly explained by comparing it to playing poker with the Tarot: the cards and symbols of this Tarot variant are not only a working deck and divination system but also clues to the deeper mysteries of the series as a whole, while the games that occur in the novel are integral to the plot. We’ve had even more fun expanding this concept into the real world: I’ve been working with my most beloved artistic collaborator, Rachael Murasaki Ish, on development of the deck, having the pleasure of watching her take my ideas and develop them into images I could never have conceived on my own, and doing further work with my colleagues at Cliché to develop an electronic version of the Fortunes game that is fun to play in its own right, as well as an interesting window into the story world. Naturally I’ve got other game territory I’m looking forward to farming in conjunction with later volumes of the series. But it’s really too early to speak about them.

WisokerGuardiansOfDesert

Game is just one of the storytelling avenues we’re exploring. Artist Ari Warner, who does all the maps for Mercury Retrograde books, and I have been developing the maps for The Heart of Darkness as another window on the story. He’s done amazing work with using the maps to express not only two different world-views (loyalist and kharr, the antagonists in the war going on in these books) but also ideas on cartography as cultural history, public versus objective truth, and the fleeting accuracy of truth in times of war. And Renaissance Man Jonah Knight, the paranormal folk musician who made his bones as a playwright and mainstream singer/songwriter before he fell through the veil into this weird zone we call speculative fiction, has me absolutely agog with his magical union of the ancient tradition of storytelling through music and tales of the weird. While his work in this vein is generally not to be missed, I’m especially excited about the project we’re embarking on together, in which he is telling tales from the worlds built by Mercury Retrograde authors in song. In some cases the works he’s developing are retellings of the stories in the books; in other cases he takes those worlds and spins his own tales in them.

I’m absolutely in love with taking stories that begin in text into other media, particularly media that allow the participants formerly known as the audience to become a part of the action. When you play chabi or Fortunes, you can play these games strictly for amusement, on their own merits—but, should you choose, they can also be ways of dipping your toes into the worlds from which they came, of seeing things through the eyes of people who live there. When you sing one of Jonah’s songs, or just listen to it, you are transported into the world he’s writing and singing about. Great stories have a characteristic we call immersion: they suck you in, make you live and breathe them rather than just watching. Media that allow you to not only immerse yourself but participate are, to me, the most exciting storytelling experiences of all.

Mercury Retrograde Press currently has a small catalog. One can see from the publications dates between books in series, that the Press doesn’t pressure their authors to complete rapid-fire works. Can you speak to how this fits into the overall philosophy of Mercury Retrograde Press?

NiecShorn

I’m not completely certain, but I think we coined the term Slow Publishing. Our philosophy of publishing is inspired by the Slow Movement, which includes Slow Food and Slow Media. At its heart, the Slow Movement is about acknowledging that not everything can or should be produced according to Industrial Revolution business practices: that some of the best things we can experience can’t be mass-produced or even, really, effectively scheduled.

In recent years, book publishers have adopted the mindset that they are in the entertainment business, as opposed to the business of making art. This has to do with the fact that most major publishers are owned by international media conglomerates that insist on forcing publishing into a business model that puts product and profit ahead of writers and works. Publishing wasn’t always this way; a hundred years ago, and for decades afterwards, publishers took the time to nurture artists and works until they were ready for market. Not all the books that came out of that system were better, but books published under such a system certainly had a better chance of achieving the sort of transcendence that makes stories stick in hearts and minds.

At Mercury Retrograde, we envision a return to that sort of sensibility. I’m determined to give all the artists involved in developing books, from the writers to the editors and designers, space in which to do their best work: to aim for art rather than making products. It’s a healthier practice: artists held to production schedules not only have to make compromises in their art but tend to wreck their physical and mental health over time—or collapse under the pressure and quit. Imagine how many great works of art have been lost to us because the way the business works has broken the artists who would have created them. I am determined that Mercury Retrograde will remain a safe haven against that sort of problem. And I believe it’s ultimately a service not only to the artists, but to the readers, because the works we can offer under these circumstances are capable of achieving a completely different level of quality. I’ve observed that discerning readers would rather wait a little longer for an author’s next book, and receive something wonderful in return, than have something less than wonderful delivered in a timely fashion. And thank goodness there are so many artists working today that readers need not go hungry while they wait for the good stuff.

How did you come to the generous decision to offer a free ebook version for every paperbook bought? What are your thoughts on Digital Rights Media and the move by some large ebook publishers to go without it?

MorrisThereWasCrookedMan

We began offering free eBooks with purchase of Trade versions in 2009. The idea came from a conversation I held with a reader around that time, who lit up my brain with the idea that what readers are buying is stories. Once I sat with that idea for a while, I began to think very differently not only about the issue of eBook pricing but about book pricing generally.

If readers are buying stories, experiences, then why should they have to pay twice for the same story just because they want to be able to take a book along electronically when they leave the house? That’s essentially the same thing as a music company insisting consumers buy a separate copy of an album for each digital device they own. We have to charge more for Trade paperbacks than we do for eBooks, because they are much more expensive to put into readers’ hands. We must print and ship each copy, whether direct or through our wholesale and retail partners. But once an eBook is complete, with the exception of distribution fees, we can sell an infinite number of copies of that eBook without incurring additional costs. And the costs of eBook production are covered by eBook sales. As far as I’m concerned, if a reader buys the Trade paperback, she’s already paid for the story. Putting the eBook into her hands, as long as it’s distributed from our site, costs us nothing more. It seems only fair.

I think the purchase of stories is going to become increasingly uncoupled from the methods in which they are delivered over the coming years—and we’re already seeing the beginnings of that trend. Some people love their paper books, but others want to read far more stories than they actually want to own in print. Print is becoming increasingly a collector’s medium: we are already seeing people buy print books because the collectible object has value to them rather than because they simply want to read the story. And when print books cost easily twice as much as eBooks on average, why should they not make a distinction between what they buy cheaply to consume and what they pay more to treasure?

I’ve never been a fan of DRM, or Digital Rights Management. While its original intent, protecting the artist’s work to ensure artists get paid, is a worthy goal, as executed it really just creates hassles for honest readers. I’m particularly concerned by Amazon’s handling of DRM, in which books can be—are!—removed from the devices of people who paid for them at Amazon’s whim. I’ve been delighted to see DRM-free eBooks becoming normal, mostly because I am very well aware that the people who will pirate eBooks were never going to have enough respect for writers to pay for the works in the first place. Now that the mechanisms for it are in place, we’re making our eBooks DRM-free wherever the distributors we work with allow us to do so. And of course they continue to be DRM-free when purchased from our site.

The Authors Page shows yourself and 4 other authors. What great things (new publications, reading events, etc.) do you authors have planned for 2013?

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That’s a more complicated question than it might at first appear. As recently as last fall, I was still attempting to assign dates to things in advance: as serious as I’ve been about not asking artists to exceed their capacities, we have still collectively and individually continued to fall into the mental habits of the publishing industry. If you’d asked this question a few months ago, I would have offered you a very exciting and date-driven schedule of publications and events, which we were convinced we could live up to without too much craziness. But last year brought home to me, in completely new ways, the importance of drawing a protective circle around all our artists—myself included—and adopting an almost contrarian attitude towards dates. Our policy, as of this year, is to assign release dates when projects are altogether complete, and not before. So it is easier to talk about what’s in the pipeline than precisely what will be released and when.

Our next release will be Fires of the Desert by Leona Wisoker, Book 4 of her wonderful Children of the Desert series, which began with her acclaimed debut Secrets of the Sands. That book is slated for release on April 2; we’ll be hosting the official launch at Ravencon, in Richmond, VA, the weekend of April 5-7.

Beyond that, we have the second edition of There Was a Crooked Man by Edward Morris, a revised and expanded version that kicks off a series of eight novellas. I predict that this book will come out in late spring or summer; the remaining volumes will roll out behind it, as soon as the dream team of Ed, editor Joe Pulver, and artist Nick Gucker complete them.

Also coming up in the near term, but more likely next year, are Cael’s Shadow by Larissa N. Niec, the sequel to her stunning Shorn, and my next novel, The Heart of Darkness, which is the sequel to my The Shadow of the Sun. In conjunction with The Heart of Darkness we’ll be rolling out the Fortunes deck and book and the commercial version of the Fortunes electronic game. The Heart of Darkness is going to be an interesting release, because we’re trying something new, or at least new to us: while the book won’t be released until next spring, we’ll be releasing the story in installments by subscription in advance of the print release—and readers who choose to subscribe to the whole serial will receive the Trade paperback (and, of course, the eBook) for free at release. Because, in our view, they will already have paid for the story. Details on this, as with all our news, releases, and free-or-nearly-free expansions of our story worlds, will be available in our newsletter, our blog, and from the respective series pages on our website.

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Meanwhile, Zachary Steele is working on an as-yet-untitled sequel to his hilarious Anointed and Flutter. I’ve read the early chapters, and it looks like his best book yet. Leona Wisoker is already working on the as-yet-untitled concluding volume of her Children of the Desert series. And I’m working with several authors who are not yet officially part of our roster, who have some very exciting projects in the works. I’m looking forward to sharing more about them when the time is right.

Our events schedule, on the other hand, is easier to quantify. I’ll be appearing at StellarCon in Charlotte, N.C. the weekend of March 1-3 and at MidSouthCon in Memphis, TN the weekend of March 22-24. Leona Wisoker and I will be appearing at Ravencon in Richmond, VA, along with a significant subset of the Mercury Retrograde crew, April 5-7. In May, I’ll be appearing at MobiCon in Mobile, AL, the weekend of the 17th-19th, and at ConCarolinas on the weekend of May 31-June 2. I’ll be appearing at ApolloCon in Houston, the weekend of June 21-23. Dates later in the year are still in the works.

Lastly, there is an upcoming read along for your book, The Shadow of the Sun. As an author and a publisher, what do you look forward to and also maybe have a little anxiety over concerning a group read along?

To say I’m excited about this would be an understatement! The author and the publisher in me are excited for different reasons. Like all authors, I tell stories because some kink in my wiring routes much of my drive to connect with other humans through the impulse to construct and share stories. Storytelling is a universal human trait, but for those of us who are optimized for that particular trait beyond all adaptive usefulness, sharing our fictional stories is at least as important as the sharing of true or subjectively-true stories that drives so much of human relationships. I am honored and delighted by the prospect of a group of discerning readers who have made their mark on the genre community by discovering and sharing great stories taking the time to read, discuss, and share mine. Additionally, the publisher in me is excited by this because I know that reader blogs and other social media shared by readers are the heart of book discovery for today’s readers. Word-of-mouth has always been the primary vector of book recommendation; the social internet has made that even more powerful, even while traditional methods of getting the word out about new books become increasingly irrelevant. The publisher in me is more pleased than I can say to see influential book bloggers giving eyeballs to Mercury Retrograde books. As both publisher and author, I am very excited by the prospect of meeting new readers who share my tastes in reading—because, like all writers, I am a reader first, and anyone who enjoys my work will naturally have a fair amount in common with me as a reader. So even while I’m connecting with people by telling my story, I’m also connecting with people through our shared love of the sort of SF/F that lights me up.

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As to anxiety—it is always a somewhat anxious experience to have people whose opinions matter read one’s work. I so hope the read-along participants love my work, because in sharing our stories authors are sharing parts of our souls. It can feel intensely personal. And yet any professional knows that readers’ tastes are entirely involuntary, and what I think is world-changing may not move you at all. Or worse. But this is the risk all writers take when they send their stories out into the world: we send out little emissaries of ourselves, and hope they will meet new friends. In this, as in all avenues of human connection, the benefits far outweigh the risks—and whether the assembled readers enjoy my work or not, their discussion will teach me things I can take back to my study to improve future works.

It’s a huge gift to me as a writer, this read-along, and I’m very grateful to receive it. I’m looking forward to seeing it unfold.

Thank you very much for inviting me to talk with you and sharing our visit with your readers! Although it’s a bit outside the scope here, I also want to express my gratitude for the instrumental role you’re playing in the read-along. I so appreciate the opportunity to connect with fellow lovers of story and share my passions. It is, as always, so very stimulating to talk with you!

See! This is why I keep interviewing this woman. If you want more, check out an interview I did with Lady Ish on Darkcargo back in 2011. As always, I deeply appreciate Barbara taking the time to be a part of my blog. Just a note: The upcoming read along of The Shadow of the Sun will be April 2013 hosted here at Dab of Darkness. An announcement post with details will go up in March.

On to the giveaway!

There will be 3 winners. Mercury Retrograde Press is giving away 1 print book (USA only) and 2 ebooks (International).  You must enter the rafflecopter to have a chance at winning. The contest will run for 2 weeks and then winners will be randomly chosen, verified, and contacted. Yes, I verify that you play by the rules. Because I care. With that, have fun!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

McCaffrey, Jordan, & Some SciFi

BradburyGermanMcCaffreyDumasProvost2013 is upon us and my reading date calendar is already getting full. I plan to participate in some exciting things this year, of which below is just part of them.

Dark cargo is hosting the year-long Ye Olde Booke Clubbe in which folks pick some classics to challenge themselves with. This year, I have picked 11 books to attempt, and perhaps even finish, by the end of 2013 that fit into YOBC. I have never read any of these books, so it should be educational if nothing else.

The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, Sr.

The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas, Sr.

The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Sr.

Lolita by Vladimir Nobokov

Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Emmuska Orczy

The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

The Pearl by John Steinbeck

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I will also be doing several science fiction reading events the first part of the year. First off, Carl over at Stainless Steel Droppings is hosting The Science Fiction Experience that goes from Jan. 1st through the end of February. I have several For-Review books that are scifi and this reading event will encourage me to get to them sooner instead of later. He is also hosting a read along for Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey that I am most excited about – I read most of the series as a kid and look forward to this kicking me into a reread of several of her books over the year. These two events coincide perfectly with Little Red Reviewer‘s Vintage Scifi Month (January). For this event, I picked out several possible reads, though I am not sure I will get through them all:

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Pebble in the Sky by Isaac Asimov

The Forever War by Joe Haldeman

Dark is the Sun by Philip Jose Farmer

A variety of Heinlein and Vonnegut novellas

I also have some things in the works with Mercury Retrograde Press, run by the most accommodating Barabara Friend Ish. Mercury Retrograde is a small press with several fine authors and I am looking forward to working my way through the catalog this year. I hope to participate in one or more read alongs of Mercury Retrograde books, along with reviews and author interviews. Of course, as things become more concrete, there will be the usual read along announcements to see if others are interested in joining Lynn from Lynn’s Book Blog, Sue from Coffee Cookies & Chili Peppers, and myself. Dark Cargo, by the way, was quite the instigator in getting the ball rolling on this.

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Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time series read along is still going strong, co-hosted by Anya from On Starships and Dragonwings. Currently, we are on The Eye of the World and we’ll be at the 300-something-page mark this coming Sunday (Jan. 6th). If you would like to see the schedule or sign up to join us, click HERE. Also, here are Part I and Part II.

Being a read along junkie, there may be some Terry Pratchett and Andre Norton stuff coming out later, but again, I will put up announcement posts once those things are ironed out.

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