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Hello peeps. It’s been a while…..

I rarely do these things, but I’m pleased to announce I will be at Edge Lit in Derby on Saturday 14th July 2018 – if you want any of my books signing (ranging from Spiral, War Machine, Biohell, Kell’s Legend, The Iron Wolves, The Dragon Engine all the way to A Song For No Man’s Land, Return of Souls etc. etc.), or indeed, my film Memoirs of a Spectrum Addict, then please pop along. I don’t bite.

 

At 11am I’ll be on a panel with esteemed agent Julie Crisp, Anna Smith-Spark and Gav Thorpe on ‘The Life and Work of David Gemmell’.

I’ll be conducting a workshop at 3pm on ‘How to Improve Your Chances of Getting Published’. This will be an informal affair and it you want to bring the opening of a short story/novel to be critiqued in a “workshop” environment that would be fun. There are only fifteen places so you’ll have to be quick (or maybe not, lol).

And, finally, I’ll be Guest Speaker at the tenth David Gemmell Awards for Fantasy, from 8pm to 9pm in the Sir John Hurt Cinema, where I will regale you with anecdotes of writing to, and meeting, the late, great David Gemmell.

It’s going to be a cool gig.

https://www.derbyquad.co.uk/events/edge-lit-7.aspx

http://www.gemmellawards.com/

https://andyremic.wordpress.com/

http://www.remicmedia.com/speccyaddict/

Okay, I was tagged last week in The Next Big Thing. Thus, here are my own tags passing on the flaming baton, four absolutely fabulous authors who I very much recommend, and their subsequent TNBG posts…… Enjoy!!

Ian Graham – https://andyremic.wordpress.com/2012/11/29/ian-graham-the-next-big-thing/

Stan Nicholls – https://andyremic.wordpress.com/2012/11/29/stan-nicholls-the-next-big-thing/

Richard Ford – http://richard4ord.wordpress.com/2012/11/26/the-next-big-thing/

Ian Watson – http://www.ianwatson.info/the-next-big-thing/

Stan Nicholls has been a reviewer and interviewer in the UK for more than 20 years and is a key figure on the genre scene. He writes a regular column for TIME OUT and contributes to both INTERZONE and STARBURST. Since the original Orcs trilogy his Quicksilver fantasy trilogy has been an international hit.

“I can personally recommend Stan’s ORC series of novels – fast paced, great battles, and you get to see the world from the eyes of an orc! Go on. You know you want to…” – Andy Remic.

 

STAN NICHOLLS

1) What is the working title of your next book?
At this moment I’m waiting for the reaction to a proposal I have in for my next novel. Until I hear, I can’t talk about it. Ditto the working title, which in any case has already changed several times and probably will again. But I’m currently working on something else that has a title that’s unlikely to change. It’s called ‘Shake Me To Wake Me’. We can talk about that.

2) Where did the idea come from for the book?
This question is perilously close to the classic “Where do you get your ideas?” that we all know and love. ‘Shake Me … ’ is a collection of short stories, some reprint, the rest newly written. The stories range in date from 1993 to the present, so we’d be talking about ideas that struck over quite a lengthy period. I don’t know where the seed of an idea comes from. I only know about sweating it to full plumpness.

3) What genre does your book fall under?
All of them. Well, no; that’s ridiculous. Fantasy, science fiction, supernatural, a dash of crime and stuff it’s hard to put a handle on. Let’s say “fantastical”.

4) What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

Considering the range of stories … I don’t know, but off the top of my head it’d be nice to have Nathan Fillion, Ron Perlman, David Boreanaz, Lucy Lia, Claudia Black, Mila Jovovich *maybe*, Jet Li, Eddie Izzard, Alan Rickman … And assuming I can have dead people I’d like Vincent Price, Peter Cushing and Alec Guinness. I’m tempted to have Kenneth Williams.

But maybe animation would be better for some of it.

5) What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
It’s about different stuff.

6) Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
Agency.

7) How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
About twenty years. Short stories, remember.

8) What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I honestly can’t make a comparison that covers the range of content. Or if I did it’d be to writers infinitely more talented than I am, which makes me look a schmuck.

9) Who or what inspired you to write this book?
I suppose I kind of inspired myself, given the writing gunk coating my DNA. I’ve always written and always made up stories. A host of writers I admire inspired me too; they gave me the desire to try to be as good as them. The collection contains what I consider to be my best stories. Or rather the ones that were the least unsatisfying, that had a germ of an interesting idea or just made me feel okay about being a writer.

10) What else about the book might pique the reader’s interest?
Well, the content’s eclectic but still within the speculative category, so hopefully it’ll appeal to readers of fantasy, and what we might call the offbeat. Readers of my orcs series of novels might be interested to know that there are going to be two or three – I’m not sure yet – new orcs stories, and one of them is over 20,000 words. That’ll be accompanied by either two orcs shorts or another long, almost novella length piece. Oh, and we’ve got one of the best genre artists doing the cover.

 

OrcsOK, two absolutely stonking books this month.

First up is ORCS by Stan Nicholls, which is fast paced, funny, visceral, fast paced, violent, and puts a brilliant spin on following the adventures of the “bad guys”. It reminds me a lot of that old Bullfrog game Dungeon Keeper, but with a damn sight more plotting and storyline thrown in. Very much recommended! Can’t wait to finish it, so I can read the new ORCS books!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ElricThe second text is something I’ve been meaning to get to grips with for, err, about two decades. The Elric series by Michael Moorcock. For some reason I worked my way through Dancers at the End of Time, Castle Brass, Hawkmoon and Warhound and the World’s Pain (my personal fave MM book – awesome!). Elric, although regularly recommended by friends, escaped me. Well, now I’m putting the record straight, enjoying every paragraph, and thoroughly enjoying one of Moorcock’s forgotten (by me) masterpieces.