Malaclypse, on 27 September 2014 - 08:45 AM, said:
polishgenius, on 26 September 2014 - 11:18 PM, said:
You can get it on Kindle in the UK. Not available in... wherever you are (Canada?), then?
OK so I've downloaded Blade of Tyshalle, Heroes Die, Caine's Law and Caine Black Knife - does that about cover it?
Yep, that's all of them. Heroes Die is first, in case the blurbs don't make that clear.
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you want to say the genre is in great health so, and I'm not intending to pick a fight for its own sake here (though I do sometimes do that
, name some of the authors that make you feel this way?
I already know you don't agree with me, for various reasons, on Mieville or Abraham (or Butcher, though that's a whole different thing because I totally see all the criticisms there, I just find it too much fun to care). Not sure where you stand on Bakker.
Beyond those more-discussed names, though, there's a whole bunch of guys who don't seem to get quite as much discussion (certainly around here) who I think are right up to the standards of anyone:
Nnedi Okorafor - 'Who Fears Death' and 'Lagoon'. Superb African-set fantasies that tackle the genre in a whole different way to even the New Weird authors that get major airplay. Who Fears Death is a book that's just stuck with me since I read it a year and a half ago.
Felix Gilman - I described him in the reading topic after his most recent book as a 'happier China Mieville', and while that's a cheap-and-easy comparison that does a disservice to just how inventive in his own right Gilman is, it does more-or-less give you the idea of the mood and settings- a fascination with roughly late-19th-century corresponding settings, with an air of delight and joy about the whole thing.
Elizabeth Bear, who I discovered last year and whose work I have been voraciously devouring since. The Eternal Sky trilogy is her most recent work and appears to have garnered her a bit more attention - I read the first but after getting bored waiting for the other two to come down to a price I can justify in my present state (they still haven't
) I went back and smashed my way through her post-apocalyptic Norse-cyberpunk noir series, The Edda of Burdens. Completely different (Eternal Sky is a much more traditional fantasy, though in an Asian-inspired-setting), and going in directions I wasn't expecting, but great.
Catherynne M Valente, who I won't go into too much detail describing- she writes in roughly the same thematic ballpark as Neil Gaiman- but who I'll say is maybe the best prose artist in the genre right now.
Jeff VanDerMeer, a master of the weird and the other candidate to that last title.
There's others to mention: Hal Duncan, Lauren Beukes, Kate Griffin/Claire North (same person), Samit Basu, maybe Martha Wells (only read one of her books so far), Mary Gentle (Ash is just staggering), Nick Harkaway... but, ya know, things to do.
I think the above is enough to be getting on with for now.
I can't carry it for you, but I can carry you.