Looking forward to 2009

I'm waiting for a couple of books in the first couple of months of 2009. They are actually all available already, but I want them in specific editions to fit with the others I have of those series.

There's The Born Queen by Greg Keys. I'm really looking forward to this one, and I want it in the MMPB edition.

Then there's Every Last Drop
by Charlie Huston. This one might be the one I'm looking forward to the most, of these that are actually already out. I want the British edition, as I think it looks better, and because I have the first three in that edition as well.

And I'm looking forward to Last Arguments of Kings by Joe Abercrombie. I believe that I have the small editions of the first two books.


Besides those, I'm hoping that A Dance with Dragons by GRRM will be out next year, which is definately high on my list.
Patient Zero by Jonathan Maberry also looks very interesting.

and then there's the ninth trade paperback of The Walking Dead.
 
Patient Zero, from what I've read, is very good, Dayne. If you like zombies, that is. :)

Mark / Hobbit
 
Patient Zero, from what I've read, is very good, Dayne. If you like zombies, that is. :)

Mark / Hobbit
I LOVE zombies. :D

I hadn't read anything about it until I clicked on one of the links posted by Mithfânion above.
 
Might be up your street, then! There'll be a review later, so I'll say more then.

Mark / Hobbit
 
I LOVE zombies. :D

I hadn't read anything about it until I clicked on one of the links posted by Mithfânion above.

I can't remember if I put a review up before. If not, here it is:

Joe Ledger is an all-American hero. Impossibly square-jawed, he is an expert at both unarmed and armed combat, yet is sensitive to the emotional needs of his friends. He also has a cat. In what might be Patient Zero's most accomplished twist, he isn't ex-Special Forces, but merely has a few years in the army and the police force behind him. No, his awesomeness is purely innate. As someone says in the book, you can't train that kind of badassery. If this book had been written twenty years ago, he'd have been played by Steven Seagal in the movie version.

Ledger, being a one-man army, natural leader and patriot, is naturally recruited into the DMS, the Department of Military Services, an ultra-secret organisation created by the US government to combat terrorist threats on levels that go way beyond anything that gets out to the public. Answerable only to the President, the DMS has resources and budgets that even the CIA and FBI can barely dream of. And, for reasons never adequately explained, an attractive British female officer who is ex-SAS and has a stiff upper lip. Now, the DMS is facing a new threat: a group of Middle-Eastern terrorist groups have joined forces with an international pharmaceutical company to unleash a virus upon the United States, a virus that turns everyone it touches...into zombies.

At this point you may be wondering if Patient Zero is a black comedy, or an expertly-written piece of satire. The improbably chiselled hero, the zombies, and their creator (a beautiful-but-deadly female jihadist) all indicate this book is going for laughs, but the often gruesome violence and the dwelling on the psychological damage being done to the DMS team by the horrific situations they find themselves in suggest otherwise. I think Maberry decided to do a traditional action story but mixed in counter-terrorism with the walking dead and then played the whole thing straight.

Like many books with an absurd (but high-concept and possibly Hollywood-baiting) premise, it nevertheless strangely works as long as the author doesn't dwell on the sillier aspects of the story. Maberry is an accomplished writer of horror and is a winner of the Bram Stoker Award, and whilst this is first and foremost an action story, the horror elements are described very well. He has an expert way with pacing and the story is quite a page-turner. The structure is also interesting, with the book moving back and forth in time to show the build-up to the current crisis as well as its resolution. The book also mixes its perspectives, with Joe's chapters relayed in first-person but several other characters described in a standard third-person narrative. This works reasonably well. Finally, there's an interesting if predictable twist when it is revealed that there are really three factions at work here, all with their own agendas, which complicates the end of the book nicely and sets things up for the two sequels. Whilst Patient Zero is a stand-alone novel, Joe Ledger will return in Dragon Factory and The King of Plagues.

Patient Zero (***½) is an accomplished thriller which overcomes its dafter aspects to become an enjoyable novel. However, every time you really start to get lost in the story, a scene or line of staggering corniness smacks you over the head with as much subtlety as a brick. Whilst some may find this off-putting, it does help contribute to the feeling that this is basically the literary equivalent of a cheesy-but-enjoyable action movie. You'll probably have completely forgotten about it in a few months, but you'll have fun along the way
 
Thanks for the review, though I have to admit that it has somewhat lessened my interest in the book. I would have preferred it to be without any comical or corny moments, and without a mix of first and third person narrative.

Still, I won't give up on it just yet.
 
Another case of a brand new trilogy coming out in the space of 3 months is Charles Coleman Finlay's new series.

Traitor to the Crown, Book 1: The Patriot Witch
On sale April 28, 2009

The year is 1775. On the surface, Proctor Brown appears to be an ordinary young man working the family farm in New England. He is a minuteman, a member of the local militia, determined to defend the rights of the colonies. Yet Proctor is so much more. Magic is in his blood, a dark secret passed down from generation to generation. But Proctor’s mother has taught him to hide his talents, lest he be labeled a witch and find himself dangling at the end of a rope.

A chance encounter with an arrogant British officer bearing magic of his own catapults Proctor out of his comfortable existence and into the adventure of a lifetime, as resistance sparks rebellion and rebellion becomes revolution. Now, even as he fights alongside his fellow patriots from Lexington to Bunker Hill, Proctor finds himself enmeshed in a war of a different sort—a secret war of magic against magic, witch against witch, with the stakes not only the independence of a young nation but the future of humanity itself.


Looks cool. Terrific that the series will then be done two months later.
 
Wow. Next year looks good. I'm really hoping Abercrombie can return to the form of his first two novels. The third was one of the more disappointing books I've read in the last half-dozen years.
 
Quick question—
I've read that Scott Lynch's series has some weird chronological order where the odd-numbered novels occur before the even-numbered ones. The Republic of Thieves is #3 ... Does that mean its events occur before RSURS? I'm confuzzled.
 
Quick question—
I've read that Scott Lynch's series has some weird chronological order where the odd-numbered novels occur before the even-numbered ones. The Republic of Thieves is #3 ... Does that mean its events occur before RSURS? I'm confuzzled.

No. The odd-numbered ones have flashbacks that take place in Locke's childhood and expand on events before the series begin, but the 'present-day' events take place after RSURS. The even-numbered books, like RSURS, either won't have flashbacks at all or these will be set immediately before the events of the book.
 
No. The odd-numbered ones have flashbacks that take place in Locke's childhood and expand on events before the series begin, but the 'present-day' events take place after RSURS. The even-numbered books, like RSURS, either won't have flashbacks at all or these will be set immediately before the events of the book.

Ooohhhhhhhhhhhhh thank you for clearing that up :)
 
Stephen King's Under the Dome, a massive tome, will be published in the Fall of 2009. What I know of it is that it will deal with similar themes like The Stand but done in a different way, will feature a village in Maine that suddenly finds itself completely locked off from the rest of the world by an immense dome.
 
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Cool, that might bring me back to King's work.
 
3 new Fantasy releases due from TOR in the second half of 2009:

Servant of a Dark God- John Brown ( September1st)

First chapter here:

http://johndbrown.com/novels/

Spellwright by Blake Charlton (October 1st)

Sample chapters here:

http://www.spellwright.com/samples.html

Prospero Lost by Jagi Lamplighter ( October 1st):

http://www.sff.net/people/lamplighter/PLchap.htm

Lamplighter is married to or simply the partner of SF and Fantasy author John C. Wright. He provided a pretty cool blurb for her book. You may assume bias of course, but it's a good one nevertheless.

If you want to read about a missing master-wizard, a virgin sorceress of unaging
beauty, an ethereal spirit who yearns for freedom, a gumshoe in a trench coat
whose trusty lead pipe is how he deals with 'perps', unicorn hunters in their
chameleon cloaks, an occult séance gone bad, a kleptomaniacal teleporter, blind
hypnotist, a modern-day Circe, a Tom O'Bedlam who knows more than he will tell,
a door into Dante's dark Inferno, an angelic lover who lost his wings, a demon
hunter who lost his youth, the hunting hounds of hell, enchantments, ambushes,
escapes, fights, flights, riddles, intrigues, monsters, not to mention the
sinister Three Shadowed Ones, and a Feast at the house of Father Christmas, all
told with refreshing zest and humor in a tale that never pauses for breath, then
this is the story for you. You hold in your hand a book of wonders.

Locusmag also lists Watcher of the Dead by Jones for a September release. Who knows if this may prove to be true, the date keeps shifting. They also say Shadowrise by Williams is due in September. Both of these books have a November release by Orbit in the UK. Either there will really be a two months difference for these books between US and UK, or the dates are false.
 
Thanks for posting these three new ones from Tor. I've just taken quick looks at the three samples, though I didn't actually read all the way through any of them. Based on what I have read of the excerpts so far, these three seem to continue what might be very broadly generalized as Tor's tendency to dish out the lighter, less grim side of epic fantasy. The Brown sounds like a good ol' traditional epic, and I've been pining after one of 'em for a while. That being said, the opening pages contain a squabble between sibblings over stolen pants, during which the immortal insult "you smelly bum" is uttered, so ... yeah, ... we will just have to see about that one. The Charleton appears to have one of those clever magic systems that Sanderson is so good at going on, this one to do with the use of prose made manifest in material ways. There's not a lot of info in the prologue on how this works, which neatly avoids the tendency to infodump but also makes the esoteric and really fairly weird things that are going on rather less impactful than they might be. Again we will have to see. The Lamplighter is set in an alternate modern day, involves Shakespeare's Prospero, and looks conceptually very interesting. Making judgements on this without reading more is totally not fair, but I'd also say that prose-wise it's the most engrossing of the three, [though the sentence by sentence writing doesn't appear to be a particular draw for any of these three.] Again, not fair to try to predict at all this early, but my hunch for which of these will prove most intriguing tends just slightly towards the Lamplighter at this point.

Hope Williams's Shadowrise can make that September date, [if that really is the date at all], as then I can get on reading the trilogy which I haven't started yet. Williams seems to be fairly reliable: it takes him a while to write those big books, but they really do come out. Sticking with Daw, C S Friedman's Wings of Wrath, the second book in her Magister Trilogy, comes out in February.
________
Arizona Medical Marijuana Dispensaries
 
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Well the links to the Charlton and Brown contain several sample chapters actually.

I read the Prospero Lost prologue and unfortunately lost interest. I suspect I will not be buying that. Too whimsical.

The Brown I am unsure of and the Charlton is the same, though that one intrigues me the most.

I think the most interesting new releases from TOR next year in terms of epic Fantasy will be Ken Scholes with Lamentation and later on in October Canticle, as well as Eric Nylund's "Mortal Coils". Other Tor books I'm likely to buy are Green by Jay Lake, and Julian Comstock from RC Wilson.

On the whole Tor's epic Fantasy offerings have been somewhat disappointing in recent years where series are concerned. But there are definitly upshots. Book of Joby, God's Demon, that was very good from last year. Daniel Abraham's series. And though I personally did not care for the Mistborn series, it has had very great appeal to readers. Ken Scholes is their major hope for next year, apparently. With good reason, he is a very good writer, and I can certainly live with a two books per year release schedule :)
 
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I dug up something nifty through the wonder that is Google.

http://hbpub.vo.llnwd.net/o16/video/olmk/Spring09/Tor_SS09.pdf

Great find; some books I knew about but others I knew they were planned but had no idea they were scheduled. Land of the Dead, Green and Julian Comstock are 3 of this latter category that I am really looking forward to.

Green and Julian are based on short stories/novellas that I enjoyed a lot and Land of the Dead is the long awaited saga of archaeologyand mysteries in a star spanning Aztec Empire of which I loved volume 1 and liked volume 2.

Of the books I read (UK publ) Affinity Bridge and Kingdom Beyond the Waves have been big time favorites this year.
 
There are a couple of books due out in 2009 which I am anticipating, so it looks set to be a good year. Since I don't go for buying hardback editions, many of the titles I am looking forwards to are actually already released (just not in paperback). So I'll be looking forwards to those.

Of those on my list, there's the completion of the Tairen Soul Trilogy (the fourth book is out in January 09, I believe) plus the paperback release of Anne Bishop's Tangled Webs (can't wait for that) and book two in the Kingkiller Chronicles (though I believe I'll have to wait through most of 2009 before that's out).

I'm sure there are others, but I can't think what they are right now. Looks set to be a good year though.
 

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