Archive for Contents

You Say Data, I Say Dattah …

The April issue of Locus magazine carries its annual “British Book Summary” – a report on SFF publishing in the UK. I admire and appreciate Locus’s amazingly comprehensive reporting on all things SFF-y from around the world, but as somebody in the publishing industry I have to say that this survey always bothers me. (more…)

Robert Buettner talks to Jennifer Rardin

Orphan’s JourneyOrbit UK & US author Jennifer Rardin posted an interview with Orbit US author Robert Buettner, over at her blog just yesterday.

They talk about Robert’s ‘Jason Wander’ series, what he sees as the main differences between science fiction and urban fantasy, his life in interesting times as “soldier, Spook, palaeontologist and lawyer” and his approach to world-building. Plus, Robert offers his advice to aspiring writers.

That’s not the only interview Robert has given recently; he’s also chatted to SciFi.com‘s John Joseph Adams for a piece that was posted on the site today.

Find out more about Robert Buettner’s ‘Jason Wander’ series at www.robertbuettner.com, and Jennifer Rardin’s ‘Jaz Parks’ books at www.jenniferrardin.com.

Announcing the Orbit Facebook page

Facebook logoWe’ve just this minute unveiled the brand new Orbit Facebook page.

If you’re a Facebook user, please feel free to head on over and sign up as a fan. We’ll be posting a range of regular updates, including news updates from the main website, as well as monthly cover galleries of our new releases, details of forthcoming Orbit-related events, exclusive previews and giveaways, along with anything else we can think of that’s relevant and interesting to Orbit Books fans.

If you have any suggestions for additional content you’d like to see on the page, please do drop us a line via the contact page of the Orbit site.

Small Favour is a Big Deal

Following our exciting Codex Alera acquisition, we have more great Jim Butcher news. This week Small Favour hits a fantastic (yet very much grounded in reality) No.2 spot in the New York Times bestsellers chart!

In the UK’s Nielsen BookScan listings, Small Favour is also showing a great third week in the top 10, on the SFF hardback bestsellers chart. Oh, and there’s yet another listing to report, a bullish No.1 at Publisher’s Weekly. All good to see, and I’ll certainly be getting out my special inspecting-monocle to scrutinise next week’s charts …

Win a copy of Small Favour with Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist

Fantasy fiction mega-blogger Pat St. Denis, of Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist fame, is currently running a sweepstake to win one of two copies of Small Favour, the brand new Dresden Files novel by Jim Butcher.

The entry conditions are simplicity itself: all you have to do is send Pat an email with your postal address. Just the once, though; he’s very strict about disqualifying multiple entrants (and quite right, too).

Full details can be found over at fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com.

Stross and Miller named on Tiptree Award Honor List

This year’s James Tiptree Jr Award – the annual literary prize for science fiction or fantasy that expands or explores our understanding of gender – was announced this week.

Alongside the winner, the award committee also announced the 2007 Honor List and Orbit authors Charles Stross and Karen Miller were both named, for (respectively) Glasshouse and Empress / The Riven Kingdom (which we’re publishing in October) .

Many congrats to Charles and Karen! Visit sfawardswatch.com for the full details of this year’s award.

Interview with Kate Elliott

Fantasy Book Critic has just posted a great interview with Kate Elliott, author of Shadow Gate, over at his site:

For someone who hasn’t read any of your titles, how would you describe your writing style and where would you recommend they start?

I write lurid adventure fiction.I write historical novels set in imaginary worlds.I write HBO-style fantasy and SF, heavy on the characterization and detail with a big canvas and complex narrative. Take your pick, or ask me to come up with a different description.
While there are many “traditional” elements to the novels I write, I also work to bring stories and characters into the epic fantasy (and epic space opera, when I’ve written it) that are normally not considered to be part of “the tradition”. Whose lives are “worth” examining? Whose stories get neglected or overlooked because they aren’t deemed “important enough”? Who decides what matters? As a writer, I get to decide for my own books, and I always try to challenge my own expectations and assumptions about who needs, and gets, a voice.

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