Friday, 20 January 2012

Forbidden Planet

I'll be signing in London's Forbidden Planet tomorrow between 4 and 5pm. Hope to see some of you there.

http://forbiddenplanet.com/events/2012/01/21/alastair-reynolds-signing-blue-remembered-earth/

Meanwhile, a reminder that you can read a little bit about the book, as well as the prologue and first three chapters, over at the http://www.gollancz.co.uk/.

This week's progress: 11,000 words on the new book.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

The trailer, redux

I've heard from James Roberts, of thewholebuffalo.com, who was the writer, director and editor on the excellent Blue Remembered Earth trailer (well over 5000 hits, by the way, and climbing). James points out that there's a nice VFX/making-of montage to be seen here, after the main trailer:

http://vimeo.com/33059028

Go on. Watch it again. You know you want to...

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

A bit more

Some more of the book up on the Gollancz blog, for your enjoyment (or otherwise).

http://www.gollancz.co.uk/2012/01/blue-remembered-earth-prologue/

Glad to hear that copies of the book are reaching people, and indeed some are already well into the book.

Monday, 16 January 2012

Read an excerpt from Blue Remembered Earth

Over at the Gollancz blog, they'll be posting some chapters from the new book over the next few days. To kick off, my editor Simon Spanton has written a very kind piece about the author, and you can already read the start of the novel (kind of a pro-prologue, I think).

http://www.gollancz.co.uk/

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Blue Remembered Earth reviews

Some reviews of the new book have begun to appear. In one of his essays Gene Wolfe said something to the effect that, no matter the subsequent reactions, provided the first review is positive, you can always take consolation from that. Fortunately for me, I've never had a very bad first review, although doubtless it will happen one of these days. SFX, who have generally been kind to me, disliked Revelation Space rather intensely - but by the point I read that review, there had already been a handful of broadly positive ones, so the sting was lessened. Of course these things shouldn't matter too much, and they probably don't affect me as much now as they did at the start of my career (when, to be fair, a lot more was riding on those reviews). A wise writer once said that a bad review should spoil your breakfast, not your dinner.

Anyway, on to BRE.

Writing in Locus - you can read the complete review here Gary K Wolfe said: "By the end, when the plot accelerates from its initial methodical pace of investigation into flat-out, cliffhanging adventure, we realize that we’ve read a fairly long novel that seems like a pretty short one (I read this on a Kindle, and was surprised to learn the actual page count later). If Reynolds can keep this up – and there’s enough planted here for future volumes to already suggest that he can – he might have one of the most enjoyable series of the still-young decade."

Writing in the Guardian, Eric Brown said: "Reynolds's near-future is so brilliantly extrapolated, with original ideas fizzing off every page, that the reader is left awestruck at what further wonders await in the following volumes. Excellent." Again, you can read the entire review here.

Not online yet, SFX's reviewer Jonathan Wright had some problems with elements of the plot but went on to say "At other points though, the sheer quality of his writing reminds you why Reynolds is held in such high esteem", and concluded by saying that the book is "convincingly optimistic, life-affirming SF ... a measure of Reynolds's versatility and development as a novelist." The book gained 4/5 stars.

These days, blogging has all but eradicated the division between professional and amateur reviewer, to the point where book publishers are now willing to cite the opinions of online readers as if they carried just as much heft as the traditional reviewers - which perhaps, in the highly connected and web-savvy world of SF, is increasingly the case. Here's an extremely generous review (I don't know the author) which I think gets to the heart of the book, and raises some interesting points, or perhaps concerns, about the direction the future volumes are likely to take:

http://bookblagblog.wordpress.com/2012/01/05/blue-remembered-earth-alastair-reynolds/

Meanwhile, back in October, Adam Roberts was good enough to write this short piece in anticipation of the book's release this year:

http://punkadiddle.blogspot.com/2011/10/alastair-reynolds-blue-remembered-earth.html

That's it for now; I am sure other reviews will roll in and I will keep an eye out for them as they appear.

Guardian podcast

Many of you may have already been aware of this, but I did a Guardian podcast last week (along with Sarah Crown, Damien G Sullivan and Jeff Noon, and with contributions from Lauren Beukes and Michael Moorcock). Have a listen:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/audio/2012/jan/06/books-podcast-science-fiction-now-tomorrow

Thank you to Simon and Sarah for hosting such an enjoyable event. It was nice to meet Jeff Noon for the first time, too.