Saturday, January 31, 2009

In the mailbox

I am always happy when I receive books and it almost always brightens my day. I am expecting a package next week that certainly will make me very happy, a Romanian publishing house made an almost unbelievable cost reduction and I got 10 books (some of them hardcover) at the price of a little more than 2 $ each. But here are some of my latest received books, although one of them I received it for some time now, but I haven’t got the chance to thank its sender properly until now.

- "The Reach of Children" by Tim Lebbon (through the courtesy of Tim Lebbon);
- "The Crown Conspiracy" by Michael J. Sullivan (through the courtesy of Robin Sullivan and Michael J. Sullivan);
- "Twelve" by Jasper Kent (through the courtesy of Jasper Kent and Bantam Press UK);
- "Heaven's Bones" by Samantha Henderson (through the courtesy of Samantha Henderson);
- "EON: Rise of the Dragoneye" by Alison Goodman (through the courtesy of Alison Goodman and David Fickling Books);
- "The Suicide Collectors" by David Oppegaard (through the courtesy of David Oppegaard and St. Martin's Press);
- "Johnny Gruesome" by Gregory Lamberson (through the courtesy of Gregory Lamberson).

Thank you all very much!

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Fantasy Art - Les Edwards/Edward Miller

© The artwork presented on this post is used with the permission of its author. All the artwork is copyrighted. Please do not use the images without the permission of the artist or owner.

Les Edwards is a professional illustrator, with a great career of over 35 years, and renowned for his fantasy, horror and science fiction illustrations. He studied at Hornsey College of Art from 1968 to 1972 and after graduation he was recruited by the Young Artists Agency. Besides the huge number of book jackets and covers made in Fantasy, Horror and Science Fiction genres Les’ wonderful career gathers works produced in film and gaming industry, advertising campaigns and movie posters for John Carpenter’s “The Thing” and Clive Barker’s “Nightbreed”. Les Edwards also illustrated two graphic novels based on stories by Clive Barker, “Son of Celluloid” and “Rawhead Rex”. Recently Les started to work under the pseudonym Edward Miller for a more different style of art. Les Edwards’ talent, and Edward Miller’s as well, was recognized and rewarded through time with 7 British Fantasy Award for Best Artist, nominated 5 times for the World Fantasy Award (winning it in 2008 as Edward Miller) and nominated 5 times for the Chesley Award. Les Edwards was the Guest of Honor at the 2005 World Science Fiction Convention.

Interview - Les Edwards

Dark Wolf: Les, thank you very much for the opportunity of this interview.
Your biography states that you were advised that you would never be an illustrator, but what attracted you toward art in the first place? Do you remember the first attempt to manifest your lack of talent? :)
Les Edwards: I can't remember a time when I didn't draw. It was something that came naturally to me and I think I assumed when I was very young that everyone could do it. I was forever drawing the things that excited me at the time like movies or comic strips. When I went to Art School I was told that it was too difficult to become an illustrator and I should stick to graphic design. It was the general opinion among the teaching staff and they said the same thing to most students. They were partly right because it is a very insecure existence.

Dark Wolf: You start studying at the Hornsey College of Art in a tumultuous year in the history of college, 1968, and I know that in that period many artists visited the college. Did you met with such an artist that later influenced your work? Did other artists inspire and influence your career?
Les Edwards: It was certainly a very interesting time in '68. My most abiding memory is that the person chosen to deal with the college “troubles” was Lord Longford. He was well known as an anti-pornography campaigner and, later, as the champion of Myra Hindley, a notorious child murderer. Although he was well meaning I can't think of anyone less likely to have been able to deal with a bunch of disaffected students. Sadly I don't think I learned much at college which was of use in later years.

Dark Wolf: In your long and inspiring career you worked in different genres. Which one is your favorite one? Do you feel more attracted by the fantastic themes than by the more realistic ones?
Les Edwards: I still think that Horror is my favourite genre, although there is less and less Horror being published today. Most of what there is seems to be aimed at teenagers, which I am not, and it's usually some sort of TV tie-in. There are some great Horror writers around still but the major publishers seem uninterested in them. I've always been attracted to the strange and the bizarre in any form so it was natural for me to gravitate towards the fantastic genres. However I do occcasionaly like to paint something more realistic. It's all painting after all which is what I really like.

DW: You have a great number of pieces produced in the Fantasy, Sci-Fi and Horror genres. Is your interest in these genres only professional or is a more personal one? Do you enjoy these genres outside art as well?
LE: I do read Science Fiction and Horror, although not exclusively, and I tend not to read much in the way of “High Fantasy” these days, although some of the things I've read in that field for work recently have been truly excellent. It's not that I don't like High fantasy, it's just that it seems to have slipped under my radar in recent years.

DW: Your Horror pieces are part of your “Red Period” part of your career. May I ask what the “Red Period” is? And how did it manifest?
LE: The “Red Period” is a joke because I went through a time when there was a lot of blood in my paintings. For a while publishers seemed to compete to see who could have the goriest covers. It didn't last very long but I used to joke about buying extra large tubes of red paint. I think I'm in a “Blue Period” now.

DW: Many books covers and jackets benefit from your work. Can you tell me what such a work involves? Do you talk to the authors as well for a better result?
LE: Ideally I will be given a manuscript to read and will come up with a few ideas from that. More often, especially with the larger publishers, I will be given pretty strict instructions about what image is to go on the cover. This has usually been decided by a committee. Obviously I prefer to work in the former manner which is why I like working for the independent publishers. They tend to be more flexible. I occasionaly talk to the author, which I enjoy, but it doesn't happen too often and I have the impression that the big publishers positively discourage it.

DW: You made some wonderful pieces for smaller publishing houses. But for which one do you prefer to work for the smaller or the big names of publishing?
LE: Both have their advantages. I like the independents because they are happy to give me much more freedom, but, of course their fees don't compare with the larger publishers. I think that is gradually changing though. The big publishers are much more restrictive and usually insist that you do exactly as they instruct you.

DW: I’ve seen on your portfolio a few works made with the digital tools. How different is working with these tools? Do you prefer the traditional way (oil, acrylics, pencil) to the digital ones?
LE: I still prefer traditional tools although I do enjoy playing around on the computer. I can't quite think of it in the same way. The possibilities are endless with digital tools and you don't need the discipline that is required for, say, oil paint because the computer will let you do anything. Obviously you can create wonderful effects in the digital medium which you could never achieve with traditional methods. There is some beautiful work being created by digital artists but I find that I enjoy the restrictions that real paint imposes on you.

DW: Your work seems focused on portrait. Do you prefer working on portraits than on landscapes or scenes? Is the work on a portrait more challenging than the one on scenes?
LE: I certainly enjoy portraits and I do tend to concentrate on faces because that's where we see character and emotion. Perhaps I should have been a portrait painter. For a long time I felt that I didn't really understand landscapes. In a way I thought that I didn't know what the rules were. However it's just a difficult to create a good landscape as it is to paint a convincing portrait. It's just that you have to concentrate on different things.

DW: One of your passions is fencing. When painting a fighting scene does your passion for fencing help? Does your fencing experience help you make a more realistic scene?
LE: There is a big difference between Fencing as a sport and real combat and an even bigger one between either of those and what you see in the movies. What you see on screen is meant to look good but is usually hopelessly unrealistic. However, looking good is just what you need for a painting so no “real” Fencing gets into my work; it just wouldn't look right. I do have an interest in arms and armour though, so I try to make my weapons look realistic and practical. Some of the weaponry you see in fantasy art is pretty hilarious.

DW: You illustrated two graphic novels based on stories by Clive Barker. What involves the work on a graphic novel? How much different is such a project than the creation of a single piece?
LE: Steve Niles, who adapted Clive Barker's stories for the Graphic Novel medium, supplied me with a detailed break-down of each page and, as I'd never worked in comics before, I was very happy to follow his suggestions. I would draw up a page in the way I wanted the panels to be arranged and then just paint each individual panel. Obviously you can't put in as much detail as you might in a single piece and I learned that the hard way. Some panels need more work than others and some are just there to progress the story. Frank Miller is a master at this, and if you look closely at his work you'll see what I mean. Also it's important to remember that you are telling a story and that's what's important. Artistic “showing off” is not a good idea; your artwork should help the story along and not get in the way. I learned a lot doing those books and I'd like to have another go at it one day.

DW: You also have worked on film and gaming productions. What new satisfactions brought you these work experiences? Would you like to work again on these fields?
LE: I like to be involved in different fields because I've always wanted to do a wide variety of work and it's always interesting to meet a new group of people and perhaps, reach a wider audience. The really important thing to me though is painting, so it's not all that important what area I'm working in as long as I can keep doing that.

DW: I know that you gathered your works in a book, “Blood and Iron”. Is there a chance for the lovers of your works to have a new book containing your works?
LE: There are no definite plans for a new book but it's an idea that crops up from time to time. Part of the difficulty would be finding a publisher as books of that kind rarely make any money. I'd really like to do a book featuring the best of Les Edwards and Edward Miller.

DW: Why did you choose to adopt the pseudonym Edward Miller?
LE: Edward Miller was invented because, as Les Edwards, I was very well known for doing a particular kind of work. I felt that I wanted to branch out into different areas but most clients only thought of me as a ”Horror” illustrator. The idea was that Edward could work in a different way and not have the Les Edwards “baggage”. Clients would have no preconceived ideas.

DW: What differences are in the works of Les Edwards and Edward Miller? When do you decide that a particular work is made by Edward Miller?
LE: The difference is both in technique and approach. Les paints in oils on a smooth board and Edward uses acrylics on canvas board. Also because Les tends to concentrate on figures and characters Edward always takes a more landscape oriented approach with smaller figures. The important thing about an Edward Miller painting is the atmosphere and the “feel” whereas Les's work is more about portraying imaginary things in a more precise manner, without, of course, trying to be photographic, something that really doesn't work in the fantasy fields.

DW: You have an impressive list of Awards and Award nominations. How do you feel when winning such an award? Isn’t Les Edwards envious on Edward Miller for winning the World Fantasy Award? :)
LE: Winning awards is always wonderful because people actually go to the trouble of voting. It's always said that being nominated is an honour and that's true. It means your work has been noticed. Yes Les is jealous of Edward, but those two are always arguing anyway.

DW: What aspects of your work would you like to still improve? If it were possible is there anything you would like to change in your career?
LE: The great thing about painting is that you can never learn everything, but you can improve throughout your life. I just hope to get better at what I do. As far as changing anything I feel that in the past I've been rather disparaging of my own work when I compare it to others. I could wish that I was more confident of my own abilities. On the other hand there are some illustrators with egos the size of Antarctica, so perhaps I should aim for a happy medium.

DW: At what are you working now and what are your future projects?
LE: I'm about to start illustrating “Conan's Brethren” for Gollancz, which is a collection of Robert E Howard's stories of heroes other than Conan. Then I will be doing some things for next year's Terry Pratchett calendar. There are some non-genre jobs in the pipeline and a few things that have yet to be confirmed but about which I'm quite excited.

Thank you very much for your answers and amiability. It has been an honor and a pleasure.
For complete information about Les Edwards and a comprehensive portfolio, please visit his website, The Art of Les Edwards. Also for a complete portfolio of works made under the pseudonym Edward Miller, please visit the website, The Art of Edward Miller.

© The artwork presented on this post is used with the permission of its author. All the artwork is copyrighted. Please do not use the images without the permission of the artist or owner.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

"Grants Pass"

With the great help of books like Stephen King’s “The Stand”, movies like the three Mad Max and games like Fallout I fell in love with the post-apocalyptic scenarios. And since my first encounter with a post-apocalyptic world I am always looking for such scenarios to read, watch or play. Last year I came upon news from Morrigan Books announcing one their upcoming titles, “Grants Pass”, a collection of stories set in a post-apocalyptic world it immediately caught my interest. The synopsis of that title stirred my interest further one:

The world has ended.
It was an act of bio-terrorism gone horribly wrong. A drug resistant version of the Black Death, an airborne mutation of the Ebola virus and the “Super Flu” were let loose on the world. Barely anyone survived.
A year before the collapse, Grants Pass, Oregon, USA, was labelled as a place of meeting and sanctuary in a whimsical online, “what if” post. Now, it has become one of the last known refuges, and the hope, of mankind.
Would you go to Grants Pass based on the words of someone you’ve never met?

As I eagerly await the release date of “Grants Pass”, July 2009, I was treated recently with the line-up of the anthology edited by Jennifer Brozek and Amanda Pillar:

Prelude by Kayley Allard
An Unkindness of Ravens by Stephanie Gunn
Boudha by KV Taylor
Hells Bells by Cherie Priest
Ascension by Martin Livings
Animal Husbandry by Seanan McGuire
Men of Faith by Ivan Ewert
The Chateau de Mons by Jennifer Brozek
The Few that are Good by Scott Almes
Rites of Passage by Pete Kempshall
A Perfect Night to Watch Detroit Burn by Ed Greenwood
Final Edition by Jeff Parish
The Discomfort of Words by Carole Johnstone
Newfound Gap by Lee Clark Zumpe
Ink Blots by Amanda Pillar
Black Heart, White Mourning by Jay Lake
By the Sea by Shannon Page
Remembrance by James M. Sullivan
Epilogue by Kayley Allard

Also it looks like two stories set in the “Grants Pass” universe, “Warlord of Rhode Island” by Rick Silva and “Snake Oil” by David Priebe, will be released online prior to the official launch. The release date is already marked on my calendar.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Cover art - "Desolation Road" by Ian McDonald

This July a much appreciated novel will see a reprint. Ian McDonald’s debut novel, “Desolation Road”, published for the first time in 1988 will be re-published by Pyr SF. The novel was nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award and gathered many praising words since its first publishing.

It all began thirty years ago on Mars, with a greenperson. But by the time it all finished, the town of Desolation Road had experienced every conceivable abnormality from Adam Black's Wonderful Travelling Chautauqua and Educational ‘Stravaganza (complete with its very own captive angel) to the Astounding Tatterdemalion Air Bazaar. Its inhabitants ranged from Dr. Alimantando, the town’s founder and resident genius, to the Babooshka, a barren grandmother who just wants her own child—grown in a fruit jar; from Rajendra Das, mechanical hobo who has a mystical way with machines to the Gallacelli brothers, identical triplets who fell in love with—and married—the same woman.

And as you can see the new edition benefits from a very interesting cover art, which to be honest would have caught my eye although I didn’t know the title or the author. The cover was created by the multiple award winner and fascinating Stephan Martiniere.

Monday, January 26, 2009

"EON: Dragoneye Reborn" contest winner

I wish to thank to all the contestants for entering the Alison Goodman’s “EON: Dragoneye Reborn” competition. As much as I would like to award each one of you the contest has only one winner:

Melanie Galvan from New York, USA

Thank you all once again and congratulations, Melanie!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

"The Tower of Shadows" by Drew Bowling

"The Tower of Shadows"
Format: Paperback, 384 pages
Publisher: Del Rey Books

In a fantasy field of young authors dominated by Christopher Paolini and his “Inheritance” series it might be easy to overlook another young author, Drew Bowling, and his debut fantasy novel “The Tower of Shadows”. But I believe that every author deserves his chance and that’s the case with Drew Bowling as well.

Fifteen years ago Corin Starcross was saved by Dale, a wizard, and Wren Tident, a mercenary, from a village attacked by demons, but his brother Cade remained behind. Now, Cade Starcross seeks revenge on the demon that killed his parents and for that he needs his separated brother. But his revenge affects the entire world and Dale and Wren have to save Corin once again from a tragic fate.

Drew Bowling uses in his novel “The Tower of Shadows” a plot and many elements which will be very familiar for the fantasy novels. The specific good and evil characters with their occupations, a retreated mercenary, an apprentice magician, a knight in search of good, an evil wizard, assassins involved in a story of revenge and the eternal battle between good and evil. But taken as a light and easy read, without exaggerated pretentions “The Tower of Shadows” is an action packed adventure. However, I have to admit that for a short (just over 300 pages) and light novel I had difficulties finishing it.

I am always interested in my fantasy readings in world-building and characterization, I like rich worlds and appealing characters, but these aspects fall behind in this novel, mainly because it is a short one and focused on action scenes. Because of Drew Bowling’s descriptions the world looks interesting, but faltered to captivate me more than the initial interest because it is not entirely developed. The religious aspect captured my interest at first too, but after the initial introduction it fails to come to attention again. In the same line with these aspects is the characterization, with characters that fail to entertain and that in many occasions sound untrue. For instance, Wren is a mercenary, but in many fighting scenes looks rather like an amateur than a seasoned fighter and he seems to have more trouble with humans than a particular dragon. Adriel is a young wizard who just finished his apprenticeship, but who doesn’t seem to know how to use magic and who is a boy defending a boy. When it comes to the main negative character he isn’t touched almost at all, without a proper reason behind his actions and motivations.

I also have to say that despite all this Drew Bowling proves to have a talent for writing, creating some beautiful descriptions which capture the reader’s attention. Also on many places his author’s voice sounds more mature than it actually is and I mean that in the good way. I think that Drew Bowling made an effort in writing “The Tower of Shadows” which I don’t believe I would have made in my high-school years. I also believe that he has a lot of room for development and with the proper writing experience he can become an interesting author in the future.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Book Blogger Convention

As I said before the wonderful Tia, the editor of Fantasy Debut, came up with a wonderful idea about a Book Blogger Convention. Since then that idea grew and took shape in a blog, Book Blogger Convention Blog, in a forum, The Dragon Federation, and now in a ning social network, Book Blogger Convention. The last one was created by another wonderful blogger, Hagelrat the editor of Unbound. I know that there are several such social networks dedicated to the book bloggers (I am part of some of them), but I found this one to be a step closer to the initial idea and project, a Book Blogger Convention. I also think that such a convention will kick off virtually first and someday we will meet in a physical location. But until then, see you on the Book Blogger Convention as well :)