And this just in: the advanced uncorrected proof of Mirror Kingdoms, the Peter Beagle ‘best of’ collection that I edited, dropped through the mailbox today. I’m delighted! Subterranean will publish it early 2010 with a cover by Wm. Michael Kaluta. The table of contents is over on the Subterranean website and, even if I do say so, this is a very fine book. Beagle, who has always been one of our finest novelists, has developed into one of our finest short story writers too.
Category Archives: Science fiction
Swords and Dark Magic table of contents
Lou Anders and I delivered our fantasy anthology, Swords and Dark Magic: The New Swords and Sorcery to HarperCollins in New York several weeks ago. We needed to finalise a few details first, but we’re now ready to announce the final table of contents for the book.
- Introduction, Lou Anders & Jonathan Strahan
- “Goats of Gloryâ€, Steven Erikson
- “Tides Elba: A Tale of the Black Companyâ€, Glen Cook
- “Bloodsportâ€, Gene Wolfe
- “The Singing Spearâ€, James Enge
- “A Wizard of Wiscezanâ€, C.J. Cherryh
- “A Rich Full Weekâ€, K. J. Parker
- “A Suitable Present for a Sorcerous Puppetâ€, Garth Nix
- “Red Pearls: An Elric Storyâ€, Michael Moorcock
- “The Deification of Dal Bamoreâ€, Tim Lebbon
- “Dark Times at the Midnight Marketâ€, Robert Silverberg
- “The Undefiledâ€, Greg Keyes
- “Dapple Hew the Tint Masterâ€, Michael Shea
- “In the Stacksâ€, Scott Lynch
- “Two Lions, A Witch, and the War-Robeâ€, Tanith Lee
- “The Sea Troll’s Daughterâ€, Caitlin R Kiernan
- “Thieves of Daringâ€, Bill Willingham
- “The Fool Jobsâ€, Joe Abercrombie
While there’s always someone else who could be in a book like this, we’re delighted with the quality of the stories we received, grateful to the authors for being involved and to our publisher for supporting the book. It’ll be out next July and is fabulous! Oh, and there’ll be a limited edition done by Subterranean Press too, which should be awesome in its own right.
ETA: And Lou’s announcement is here.
Wings of Fire

One of the projects I’m working on is reprint collection of dragon stories, Wings of Fire, for Night Shade Books. It’s due in the second half of 2010 and they’ve just sent me the absolutely awesome Todd Lockwood artwork. When you think that it’s a book of dragon stories you can see why this is perfect. I should have the near-final cover design shortly and will post it when I do. I love this.
Swords and Dark Magic
Well, you can now pre-order Swords and Dark Magic over at Amazon.com which is exciting and makes the whole thing seem very real all of a sudden. There’s still a lot of work to do – proofreading, copyediting etc – but the book will be out in June. We’re looking at cover roughs now – Diana Gill at HarperCollins has been incredibly kind and open to input on that – and hope to announce the table of contents just as soon as she gives the ok (which I imagine will be in the next week). The ToC will be announced simultaneously here and over at Lou’s blog. I know I’ve mentioned different dates on this, btw, but the moment Harper says its ok to announce, it’ll be online. We’re very excited about this book.
Elvis is in the building!
I am becoming a grumpy contrarian. I bought tickets to see Elvis Costello play a solo gig at the Fremantle Arts Centre. At the end of a long day, I realised, the last thing I wanted to do was drive for an hour, see a performance of the Secret, Profane and Sugarcane album, get home at 11pm, and be exhausted at work all the next day. Yes, it seemed like a good idea when I bought the tickets, but it didn’t at 4pm yesterday.
But, it was fricking awesome!! Stephen and I hoed down to Fremantle and got there around 5pm. We parked on the street across the road from the tiny venue (EC played on the ‘South Lawn’ of the Arts Centre, out of doors on a cool evening, to about 1,500 people). After ascertaining details, we wandered towards downtown Freo where we stumbled across an organic Japanese teahouse (it’s Fremantle, of course we did). Great food was imbibed over chatting about upcoming music events etc, and then back to the venue. We arrived just after the doors opened, so the best seats were gone. We were forced to sit right in front of the stage, nine rows back (70 feet?). Awful! The support act, Shelley Harland, was perfectly pleasant, but everyone was waiting for the star.
Costello strode onto the small stage at 8pm wearing a jaunty hat, waved at the crowd and launched into a spirited rendition of “(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes” and didn’t falter in his stride for the next hour and a half as he tore through new materials, classics, and odd covers. You can see the full setlist here, but highlights included an unexpected “Indoor Fireworks” (one of my fave EC tracks of all time), a cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “Brilliant Disguise” (he’d just played it with the Boss the previous week for the Spectacle), a beautiful performance of “Good Year for the Roses”, and many, many more. It was one of the best shows I’ve seen in years, and if he had done a second show tonight I’d be there. Truly a wonderful experience.