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Jun 4 2009

Salamander is back from the printers and here in my hand!

That’s right folks, it was like Christmas all over again for me today as the brand spanking new copies of Salamander, hot from the printing presses, hit my desk.

In my humble opinion, it looks totally awesome. I congratulate the printers and the artist, indeed everyone involved in sealing my words into such an attractive package. Colour me pleased (green then).

You probably can’t tell from the photos below, but it has a matte finish to the colour with gloss, embossed lettering for the title (man, I sound like Patrick Batemen going through his business cards or something). The cover treatments, as they’re called, really set off the wonderfully powerful artwork by Cheoljoo Lee, and I am a very happy author indeed. The back fades into salamander scales, likewise the spine which sports a natty Salamander’s Chapter icon. Me likey! :-)

Check out the interiors too, as each chapter start has a cooly rendered line art version of said Chapter icon. Burn baby, burn…

The book itself is also slightly bigger than your average 40K novel, weighing in at a slightly portly 448 pages to accommodate the extra 22,000 words I insisted upon writing. ;-)

As you can tell, I’m very, very excitement. I love it. Fingers crossed that you do too.

If you want to read about the further adventures of my Salamander characters as depicted in Salamander then look no further than Heroes of the Space Marines and the short story ‘Fires of War’. You’ll also find a whole host of other great tales by my fellow Black Library authors – great work it is, too.

After Salamander, the next time you’ll be able to read about Dak’ir and Tsu’gan is in ‘Hell Night’, which is due to appear in the short story anthology Legends of the Space Marines. And following that the sequel, Firedrake, book two in the Tome of Fire Trilogy, which I’m planning now.

So far, signing appearances for Salamander are limited to Games Day Chicago on the 25th of July and Games Day UK on the 27th of September. I will also be attending an advanced signing session as Bugman’s in Nottingham on the evening of the 17th of June but this is restricted to Games Workshop Managers as part of a sales conference. If you have a local GW and get bend your manager’s arm, who knows… Future dates may be announced closer to the official release date at the end of August. Legends of the Space Marines is released in May 2010.

For all events and signings, check out the events calendar next to the blog. All my appearances etc will be here and updated on a regular basis.

Check out the pics of the new book below…

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Jun 1 2009

The soundtrack to your novel

I mentioned a few days back about the fact that I tend to write my novels and short stories to a soundtrack. It’s the one or so albums that I listen to over and over whilst I’m writing to help inspire me and provoke a mood.

For Salamander and ‘Fires of War’ it was The Dark Knight, a really superlative score full of power and menace. I also threw in a little Batman Begins for the sake of being comprehensive. Both albums are courtesy of a Hans Zimmer/James Newton Howard collaboration and some of the composers’ best work in my humble opinion.

In Batman Begins ‘Vespertilio’ (which actually refers to a genus of bats in the Vespertilionidae family) opens proceedings superbly with verve and drama, and I totally love this track. Both ‘Artibeusand ‘Tadarida’ (also both a genus of bats, the former within the Stenodermatinaeare subfamily and the latter having eight separate species spread throughout the world) are harrowing, but of all the tracks ‘Molossus’ (another genus – see the pattern? – but also he son of Neoptolemus and Andromache) is my favourite. It has such power and dynamism – it is great to write an action sequence too and really gets the creative juices racing, especially when I’m already in the flow. I actually find myself looking forward to that track in the listing and revelling in its drama and pace when it comes around.

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The Dark Knight has a slightly different flavour, although it is the work of the same excellent composers. For me, there’s an immediacy and a sense of dark bombast to the proceedings here. It’s edgy and hugely dramatic, possessed of euphoric highs and desperate lows. ‘Why So Serious?’ is very much the Joker’s theme in the movie, a rush of anarchic, poised violins, suggesting imminent violence and a calm before the storm. The ‘Batman theme’ plays under most of the tracks in this score with its tonality firmly established in ‘I’m Not A Hero’, which also possesses an undercurrent of threat but also a sense of resolve in the face of chaos and moral disintegration. Much like ‘Molossus’ in Batman Begins, ‘Introduce A Little Anarchy’ has pace and drama in abundance, full with heroic violins, pseudo-police sirens and a wonderful heart-racing, invigorating flavour that dips and peaks, and dips and peaks. There are a host of great tracks on this album and to analyse them all with any measure of doing them justice would take pages, but suffice it to say that this is probably my favourite of The Dark Knight tracks.

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For earlier novels from the Warhammer fantasy genre, I was inspired aurally by fantasy or historical movie soundtracks. Gladiator (again composed by the excellent Hans Zimmer with Lisa Gerrard) is a favourite that I listen to a lot, even if it has been co-opted at various gaming conventions and events to the point of overkill – I try to shut my areas so it doesn’t become passe and only listen to it if I feel the need when I’m writing. Obviously ‘The Battle’ stands out in this score for all its power and urgency, but I’m also a huge fan of ‘The Might of Rome’, a track of great grandeur, hope and civility, but my favourite is ‘Barbarian Horde’, which has elements of ‘The Battle’ and really builds to a relentless, heart-pounding crescendo – stirring stuff, indeed.

gladiator

During Oathbreaker, my first dwarf novel and the first novel I wrote after a long break since my debut, Back from the Dead, I listened to two OSTs: The 13th Warrior and Pathfinder – Legend of the Ghost Warrior. Unsurprisingly, both albums – by Jerry Goldsmith and Jonathan Elias, respectively – deal with a strong Nordic theme that I felt was entirely in keeping with the dwarf mindset and cultural inspiration. Dour choirs mix with rampant and bombastic drums and trumpets. They’re both very strong scores and I remember them guiding me through the underground caverns of Karak Varn and across the grassy plains near to Black Water. Courageous and redoubtable, the tracks on both scores seemed to emulate the dwarf spirit and I revisited them both during the writing of Honourkeeper, too. If I ever write another dwarf tale (likely, I hope), I’ll be digging these scores out again. There was a mystery and slight sense of otherworldliness about them, too, that seemed to fit with the undiscovered country of a dwarf hold, long abandoned and given in to ruin.

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Of the other soundtracks in my collection (I’ve got a few, to be fair), I listen to Howard Shore’s wonderful The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Who, that has listened to it, could possibly forget ‘The Bridge of Khazad Dum’, from The Fellowship of the Ring, for its bombastic opening and desperate, danger-filled flavour. I find it rousing and terrifying at the same time. The Last Samurai is another of my favourites, (Zimmer again; man, that guy is good) with some wonderfully stirring battle music that is, in part, oddly wistful, even supernatural. Special mention must go to Band of Brothers, a score composed by Michael Kamen from the superb mini-series by HBO. This score, for me, has a lot of drama and action, but also heart and a rousing core of defiance that seems to echo the plight and resolve of the men depicted in the series’ ten, unforgettable episodes.

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As a last little nod to my works, Assault on Black Reach: The Novel was written to the striking tones of both The Dark Knight and Iron Man by Ramin Djawadi. There’s a wonderful blend of strong music and machine tones to a lot of tracks on this score, which I really connected with whilst writing about the Ultramarines, though if I ever revisit this Chapter I might go down the 300 route with its echoes of the classical world.

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So, onto the next novel then. Truth be told, it’s actually an Empire army book called Grimblades about a band of halberdiers from Reikland who get caught up in a desperate war, set about eighty years from the present day and the reign of Karl Franz. Honestly, I’ve not pegged a soundtrack for this yet , so I’d better get to thinking about it. Maybe I’ll shop around and see if I can find something new? Though I might see how Gladiator and Band of Brothers inspire. There’s the right emotional blend of pulse-pounding drama and camaraderie there…

One I forget to mention, and bringing me neatly back onto the Salamanders, was ‘Hell Night’, the short for Legends of the Space Marines. In a break in form, I actually listened to a Thunderstorm track for the entire project. Just rain and thunder, the imagined cracks of lightning – it proved to be an excellent choice. Certainly, it was atmospheric and wholly appropriate given that the entire story takes place of the monsoon world of Vaporis, where it is always raining.

I said I was bringing the matter back to the Salamanders and the next novel (maybe the next two), Firedrake, will have the OST for 300 ringing in my ears (by Tyler Bates, who also did the excellent Watchmen). I purchased this on a whim from iTunes and totally loved it. During my extremely fruitful sojourn to Waterstones, it really inspired me, a curious blend of the antiquated and the modern, which sort of sums up Zack Snyder’s vision for the movie. ‘Returns a King’ is so dramatic with its deep-voiced choirs and sense of impending majesty and event. ‘Message for a Queen’ is wonderfully understated and moving, but full of hope and promise for the future. The haunting vocals give me goosebumps everytime, a warbling lament that takes your heartstrings and breaks them. I think this soundtrack will be a very good fit for both books, it has tragedy and drama; there is fire and passion; hope and honour; a sense of lost days and uncertain futures. It’s the emotional inspiration I will draw upon and try to tap into for the novels.

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Well, I hope that was interesting and perhaps offered an insight into my musical tastes if nothing else. I know a lot of authors can only write in total silence, and sometimes I need that too, but more often than not I had music to stir my emotions…


May 28 2009

In other, more sedate, news…

…I’m pleased to say that ‘Hell Night’ has been approved for publication and given the green light. My editor even said it was the best thing I’d ever written, so colour me pleased.

With no redrafts or corrections needed, it’s frees me up to work on some thorough plans for the second and third Salamander novels (two is pretty much nailed down and three is almost at the fully-fledged stage too) and then start thinking about my Empire army novel (which is not on the agenda).

That should keep me busy…


May 26 2009

Behold… I am dingus!

Okay, so after slogging like a beast to get ‘Hell Night’ done for my Tuesday deadline I realise, upon looking at my diary, that the deadline isn’t actually until the 1st of June – so, err… next week.

See? Dingus. Yes sir, I am guilty as charged.

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What it basically means is, I’m finished early – woo hoo! It’ll actually give me a little more time to read through the first draft and make it all minty for my editor. I’m sure he’ll appreciate that. I don’t plan on doing much, except reading through once and finessing. I think there’s a temptation sometimes when you’ve discovered a bit of extra leg room you didn’t think you add to stretch yourself too much and start overdoing it – ‘If I just move this…’, ‘If I just tweak that and that…’  Not for me.

Mentally, I’m done with this right now. Going back and using my time for anything except a read through wouldn’t only be counter productive, it also takes a step onto the road of the bane of every writer – the persistent editor. I’ve got an editor; let him worry about that stuff. I’ve nailed my story (okay, so it’s a bit over – there’s still no flab, I tells ya), I just need to polish it so its nice and shiny.

With the ‘extra’ time I have, I’ll likely start working up some synopses so I’ve got my next few projects ready to go when I am. Nothing worse than hanging around whilst someone is reading your synopsis or chapter breakdown (my apologies to any authors that I do that to – get ‘em earlier next time and remember the three h’s: harangue, harangue, harangue.)

Until next time…


May 25 2009

Hell Night is finished!

Can I get a ‘hell yeah!’?  After two cups of coffee, about four hours of thunderstorms on my ipod and a lot of mental perspiration, I have finished the first draft of ‘Hell Night’ for Legends of the Space Marines.

Given that it’s bank holiday, I reckoned I’ve earned a bit of a rest. I’ll be getting Louise to look this over for an objective view on the story, and then do one last read through and tweak before submitting it to Christian tomorrow.

As predicted, it weighed in a little heavy at just short of 15,000 words but I feel that’s acceptable and it makes for a better story.

Colour me well pleased.