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So news news news news news

I promised news and here is news. This is turning into a year of news (let’s hope!).

This time the news is R. F. Long news. I’ve signed a contract with Taliesin Publishing for a new paranormal romance called The Mirror of Her Power.

It’s the first in hopefully a series about magicians and magic and steaming hot heroes… well, it’s not a YA book. Hence the R. F. Long name on it.

But if you liked Soul Fire you’re going to love this!

We’re hoping it will be out in the Spring so not long to wait at all.

Authors for the Philippines

phil_badge21First off, and most importantly, Authors for the Philippines! The Treachery of Beautiful Things and a gorgeous Tree of Life Pendant can be yours, along with a host of other amazing things. Just bid at Authors for the Philippines

Bidding is now live and will close at 8pm GMT on Wednesday 20th November.

Bids are in UK Pounds £, and money goes to the British Red Cross.

In other less serious news, can someone explain what on earth possessed me to get two cookery books and a sewing book out of the library today when I have a book to write and characters who are not cooperating with me???

Happy Release Day: “A Flight of Thieves” & an interview with David Bridger

Today marks the launch of A Flight of Thieves, a YA steampunk adventure by my good friend and critter David Bridger. So to celebrate I have the lovely cover and an interview!
Why am I excited about A Flight of Thieves? I’ve seen this one develop for a while now, had the privilege of reading the early drafts and it’s awesome. So is the cover!

A_Flight_of_Thieves-David_Bridger-500x800In a world of isolated island communities, a thousand years after Earth’s apocalyptic flood, Princess Victoria and her robot mentor, King Henry, recruit a ragtag band of airship adventurers to help her fight the military traitors who intend to murder her family and enslave the kingdom.

Victoria has spent all of her sixteen years in a secluded palace on Ben Nevis Island under the protection of King Henry, one of the three original robots programmed by the ancestors to rule the flooded planet Earth. She’s safe there, but her family and their intelligent clockwork servants treat her like the tomboy child she used to be—and sometimes still is. She yearns to fly away in one of the great iron airships to see the world.

It seems too good to be true when Henry asks Victoria to board the Royal Airship Elizabeth, with him disguised as her robot footman, and fly over the sea to meet the Lord of Ireland. Victoria jumps at the chance for an adventure and they take to the skies together. But the world is a dangerous place. Air pirates prowl trade routes, and slaver fleets cross the oceans to raid unprotected islands. The Royal Navy is building up to a war, and Henry’s old friend, the Lord of Ireland, is accused of giving safe harbor to pirates. Victoria and Henry must overcome them all in order to make their way home to a kingdom that might not still be standing.

So I came up with some questions for David, all about writing, this book and what his plans are.

When did you start writing?

I learned to read early and inhaled books as if they were oxygen, so it was the most natural thing in the world for me to want to be a writer when I grew up. But I wanted to do other things with my life too. Mostly, I wanted to go to sea. I still started writing my first novel at sixteen when I was still at school, but I didn’t have a clue what the story would be about and only got about halfway down the first page.

My next attempt came ten years later, while I was watchkeeping somewhere in the Arctic Ocean. Working conditions were rough and writing fiction was an escape from uncomfortable reality, but that one wasn’t much better that my first and it died at the end of its opening chapter. I wrote lots of other things. Mainly work stuff, with some articles and satirical poetry in my downtime, but what I was really hungry for was to be a novelist.

That started in earnest after I came home from sea, quite badly injured. It took me several years to regain mobility, and what stopped me from going mad during that time was learning how to write. I still inhaled novels, but now I was inhaling How To Write books too. The good, the bad and the ugly, I read them all. By the time I was sitting up in bed, I was writing my apprenticeship novel. By the time I was in a wheelchair, I’d finished its first draft. By the time I was walking with sticks, it was polished to a high gleam and I was submitting it.

Which writers influenced you the most when you were younger?

There were several, all of them superb storytellers, but I think the two most influential were Rosemary Sutcliff (The Eagle of the Ninth) and Alexander Kent (the Nelson’s navy Bolitho novels).

Which writers influence you the most now?

For enthusiastic storytelling extravagance: Neil Gaiman. For wonderfully imagined distant futures and pasts: Philip Reeve. And for beautifully lyrical writing and characters I’d love to meet: you, Ruth Frances Long. 😀

What inspired you to write this book?

A yearning for my old freedom of movement around the globe, transposed in my imagination to the skies on great steam-driven airships and the smaller, faster vessels of air pirates and adventurers.

What’s your writing routine? What do you need (or not need) in order to write?

My day starts early. When my world is ideal I do thirty minutes yoga breathing up on our roof garden around dawn. It’s the only part of our gardens our two big dogs can’t reach, so they can’t disturb my relaxed state with their curious wet noses. Zen’s a good way to start any day, but I have to admit I’m a fair weather yogic. Then it’s breakfast at the keyboard while I catch up with emails. Then I write. It’s a nice morning routine, but to be honest the only things I must have before I start writing is a glass of fresh orange juice and my daily jug of strong, black, Italian coffee.

Do you plan out your books in advance or write them as they come to you?

These days I don’t plan everything in detail the way I used to, but I do make a skeleton outline. Just as a rough guide and to know where and when the ending will be. I’ve discovered the joy of learning more about my characters and their worlds as we go.

Why did you change to writing Young Adult?

For the honesty and wisdom. I believe many of us are at our most honest and wise when we’re teenagers. Later on other stuff weighs us down and can make us forget, but it’s still there beneath the world’s nonsense and when it shines out it’s what I enjoy most about myself and others. I like and respect that in my readers.

Why Steampunk?

Great iron airships! Steam engines! Sky pirates! Intelligent robots! Adventure! Brass and glass and leather and lace! An untamed world and the freedom to explore it! What’s not to love?

If you could only have one CD on repeat what would it be?

Melody Gardot’s My One and Only Thrill

Do you have any other projects in the works?

Yes, several, and all of them YA. I have a trilogy of space opera novellas coming out this winter, the first of which is scheduled for release in December. I’m working with Dayna Hart, my lovely Taliesin editor, on Gifted, which is a neo-gothic timeslip fantasy. Then there are two more novels lined up, one epic fantasy and one science fiction story that Lea Griffith and I plan to co-author. Then it’ll be time for the next book in the Sky Ships series. Wow. Looks a lot all listed in the harsh light of day like that, doesn’t it? I’d better start writing. J

Thanks David. So glad to have you visit the blog. And I couldn’t agree more on the airships!!!

David BridgerDavid Bridger settled with his family and their two monstrous dogs in England’s West Country after twenty years of ocean-based mischief, during which he worked as a lifeguard, a sailor, an intelligence gatherer and an investigator in the Royal Navy. He writes science fiction and fantasy for teens.

A Flight of Thieves is available from Taliesin Press, and for launch day it’s reduced by a whopping 25%! Go and buy it now!

Dublin 2019 – A bid for the 77th Worldcon

I’m back from holidays and I’ve loads of things to share but first and foremost I wanted to share THIS! I’m one of the supporters and I’m really really excited about it. As part of the group who visited the convention center where it is proposed Worldcon would be held, I was seriously impressed.

The (rather beautiful) website is http://dublin2019.com/

You can download the brochure http://dublin2019.com/the-plan/  , explore the proposed venue, the CCD  http://dublin2019.com/our-venue/ and see all the reasons why this would be totally awesome!

Likes and follows are much appreciated

Help spread the word!

Here’s the press release:

A collective of dedicated fans within the Irish science fiction community has announced its intentions to launch a bid to host the 77th Worldcon in Ireland in 2019. The plans were made public at the 71st Worldcon, LoneStarCon in Texas on Friday, August 30.

For many fans of the genre, the World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon) is one of the biggest events of the year. The convention is chiefly known for presenting the annual Hugo Awards Ceremony. The Hugo Awards are classed among the highest honours bestowed for science fiction and fantasy writing. However, the convention is also a celebration of all forms of speculative fiction, film and more, from comics to cosplay and manga and anime to gaming.

There will be an open meeting on the Dublin bid for all interested parties at Octocon, the National Science Fiction Convention in Ireland on Saturday the 12th of October.

Volunteers from all areas of Irish conrunning and fandom as well as people who may never have been involved in or even attended a convention before are welcome at any stage of planning and can contact organisers by email at volunteer@dublin 2019.com. The website can be found at www.dublin2019.com and there is a Facebook page at facebook.com/Dublin2019 and a Twitter account @dublin 2019.

Planning and bidding to host a Worldcon is no small endeavour. Ireland already has a huge community of science fiction fans as well as a plethora of writers and artists that work in the genre in its many forms, and Irish fandom has been gaining momentum and building strong foundations on which to successfully host a Worldcon..

Irish fandom is also constantly generating interest and enthusiasm through the host of conventions that are run every year such as Octocon, Arcade Con, Nom Con, Eirtakon and more. Irish fans started making waves in international fandom when they won the bid for Dublin to host Eurocon in August 2014, officially called Shamrokon.

A convention such as Worldcon deserves a welcoming and engaging atmosphere for fans both international as well as local, which is why the Convention Centre Dublin has been put forward as an ideal venue for a Dublin Worldcon. The CCD has fully built-in technical facilities needed to support an event like Worldcon and among other features boasts a 2,000 seat auditorium with a full theatrical stage, six spacious foyers and 4,500 square metres of exhibition space.

The CCD also has the advantage of a very central location in Dublin City, easily accessible by public transport as well as by car. In the centre of the newly developed Dublin Docklands the CCD affords easy access to a range of hotels and cultural sites. A visit to the CCD is also planned for the 14th of October for all interested parties.

The official launch of the Dublin Bid is set to take place at the 72nd Worldcon in London next year followed by a launch at Shamrokon.

Look at the new shiny!

I’m so excited to launch my new look website today. The wonderful Crystal Jordan did an incredible job capturing my rambling descriptions of what I wanted the website to look like and actually make it a reality. She even made me a pretty banner to share!

Ruth_banner_animated2

Sometimes it moves. That seems to depend on where it is and whether if wants to mess with my head or not! 😀

I’m so thrilled with the whole thing and hope you like it too. The launch of the paperback of The Treachery of Beautiful Things is just over a week away so I’m sure to be doing a giveaway and a number of posts to coincide with that.

More exciting things to come!

Shiny!

A day off, a day out

We were back in Marlay Park yesterday in search of the fairy tree. Spring has well and truly arrived and the fairies appear to have been hard at work expanding their treetop fortress. Last week I finished the first draft on a new WIP, a timeslip story which is making me squee quite a bit (it also accounts for my uncharacteristic quietness). So I needed some down time and a day in the park is the perfect thing. I recently came across a new word (new to me) – a Nemophilist – One who is fond of forest or forest scenery; a haunter of the woods. So I have a word for me now! I’m hoping this down time will last for a short while. I have lots of books to read, some things to crit and some crits to wait for. In the meantime, here are some photos from yesterday.