Showing posts with label Alan Gratz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Gratz. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Interview: Alan Gratz

Check out my interview with Alan Gratz, author of The League of Seven:

Who is Alan Gratz?

I'm the author of a bunch of novels for young readers, including Samurai Shortstop, The Brooklyn Nine, Starfleet Academy: The Assassination Game, Prisoner B-3087, and The League of Seven. I write history, mystery, sports, science fiction, and fantasy—basically, whatever I like to read, I write! A Knoxville, Tennessee native, I'm now a full-time writer living in Western North Carolina.

What got you interested in alternate history?

I've always loved history, but even more, I've always loved the “What if?” game. What if the Axis won World War II? (Robert Harris's Fatherland, Phillip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle, et al.) What if Charles Babbage had built his mechanical computer? (Gibson & Sterling's The Difference Engine) What if a Jewish state was established not in the Middle East, but in Alaska? (Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policeman's Union) I can't really say what my first exposure to alternate history was, but Robert Harris's Fatherland was certainly a big book for me in college. Ever since then, I've been fascinated by the different paths life can take based on the simplest of choices.

What is The League of Seven about?

The League of Seven is the story of seven super-powered kids who use rayguns and airships and clockwork machine men to battle giant electrical monsters in an alternate America of the 1870s. So, definitely Alien Space Bats. My Alien Space Bats (the Mangleborn) rise up and destroy Europe in 1770, leaving the relatively few European settlers in the New World stranded and alone. To survive, the settlers in New England join the Iroquois League of Nations as the “Yankee” tribe, eventually becoming one of the founding members of the United Nations of America, a USA analogue that by the 1870s stretched from the east coast to the Mississippi River. The monsters are also the source of the aether used in the rayguns—a mystical energy source that's so alien (it operates on a “different geometry,” to quote Lovecraft) all humans can figure out to do with it is channel it through crystals and shoot it at each other. Since the Mangleborn feed on electricity, the world has to maintain a perpetual Victorian level of technology—which explains why the world is steampunk.

What inspired you to write your novel?

For The League of Seven, I wanted to write a book that ten year old me would think was awesome. A book ten year old me couldn't leave the bookstore or library without taking home with him. (And 42 year old me, really.) So I started with a blank bulletin board and a single notecard right in the center that said “FULL OF AWESOME.” Then I started adding new note cards all around it, in no special place or order, each with something awesome on it: Rayguns. Airships. Clockwork Machine Men. Giant Monsters. Submarines. Secret Societies. Heads in Jars. I put up maybe two dozen ideas, then sat back in my chair for a week just staring at them, trying to build a story out of as many of them as possible. Not all of them made it, but a lot of them did. The result was heroes and villains and gadgets and a world that was totally awesome. Or at least I thought so. :-)

Who designed the cover?

That cover is really full of awesome, isn't it? It's done by a fabulous artist named Brett Helquist, who is also responsible for the covers on Lemony Snicket's Series of Unfortunate Events, among others. Most authors are never consulted on the covers of their own books. For each of my seven previous books, no one asked me what I wanted the cover to look like. One day it just appeared in my inbox, and the editors who sent them never even said, “What do you think?” It was always, “Here it is!” Unless you love it, they don't really want to know what you think, because they're not going to change it for you.

So when my terrific editor at Tor/Starscape, Susan Chang, e-mailed me one day to ask me what I wanted the cover to look like, I just about fell out of my chair. I told her I wasn't going to say WHAT the cover should look like, because I'm not a trained artist. Instead I put together a Pinterest board with art from a lot of my favorite book cover and comic book illustrators' work on it. One of the artists I pinned to the board was Brett Helquist. My note was, “I know we can't get him, but if we could find somebody who draws like Brett Helquist, that would be awesome.” A month later Susan called me up and told me they'd hired Brett Helquist to do the cover, and I fell out of my chair all over again. I'm so thrilled we got him to do the cover, and I couldn't be happier with the result. People say “Don't judge a book by its cover,” but I hope in this case they do.

Any advice for aspiring authors?

Persistence. A lot of people want to write books, and some people actually do it. But then a lot of those people get one rejection and they're out. They either quit altogether, or they self-pub because they “just want to see the book in print.” Others keep sending out the same novel forever, flogging the same tired old manuscript for years and years and years, recycling it, rewriting it, or worse, writing sequels to a book they haven't even sold yet. If you're interested in a traditionally-published career, you can't quit when you get one rejection or two dozen rejections, and you can't cling to one manuscript to the exclusion of all else. Write one book, then rewrite it and rewrite it and rewrite it to make it the best book you can, then send it out to agents. Then, while that book is still in those agents' mailboxes, start writing the next book. A totally different book. Write it, edit it, send it out, and repeat the process all over again. That's what I did, and that's what most of the successfully published authors I know did. Write, revise, submit, repeat. It's all about persistence.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Videos for Alternate Historians #5

From last week in videos, we begin with two new what ifs from Cody Franklin of the Alternate History Hub. First up, what if South Korea won the Korean War:
I have to admit that what if is rarely asked. Next from Cody we have an ASB what if, with a little splash of humor. asking what if nuclear weapons never existed:
I also enjoy how Cody's figures are starting to resemble Polandball more and more. We move on to a book trailer for Alan Gratz's The League of Seven:
You can also check out my review of the book over at Amazing Stories. Finally we end with the preview for the next Doctor Who episode, "Robot of Sherwood":
Got any videos to recommend? Let us know in the comments below or email us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Monday, August 25, 2014

Weekly Update #158

Editor's Note

Still trying to balance work, home life and writing. Weekly Updates can be especially difficult due to the Links of the Multiverse section. Sadly its probably something I am going to be struggling with my entire life.

And now the news...

What is Outlander?

The speculative fiction community can't shut up about the TV series Outlander, but what is the show about? I haven't watched any episodes yet, but I do have the Internet to answer all of my questions. Outlander is a TV series on Starz based on the books by Diana Gabaldon (there are also graphic novels). The premise is that in 1945, married World War II nurse Claire Beauchamp Randall finds herself transported back to Scotland in 1743, where she finds civil war and the dashing Scottish warrior Jamie Fraser.

The fist episode generated record breaking ratings for the network and they have already renewed it for a second season. The show is notable for its "female gaze" and the critics love the show so far. Sharlene Mousfar at Geek Syndicate gave the first episode a 5 out of 5 and said "I really love the interpretation of this series thus far and I HIGHLY recommend you re-watch the episode."

Well looks I need to check this show out. Hopefully I can have a review in the near future.

More on The League of Seven by Alan Gratz

Some of you may remember that I am currently reading Alan Gratz's The League of Seven, so of course I noticed these articles on Tor promoting the book. The first is a guest article by the author himself discussing the pneumatic postal system New York City used from 1897 to 1953. On that same day Rajan Khanna posted a review of the book calling it a "thrilling and exciting (and sometimes dark) beginning to what I hope is a long series to come. Highly recommended for anyone who enjoys middle-grade fiction."

Well that is some good news for Alan. So far I am enjoying the book (it stirs up old memories of Animorphs) so we will see my final verdict in the days to come.

Links to the Multiverse

Books


Boleyn trilogy author argues that 'twisted history' is still historical fiction by Hikari Loftus at Deseret News.
Cover & Synopsis: OF NOBLE FAMILY by Mary Robinette Kowal (Plus: A GLAMOURIST HISTORIES Cover Gallery!) at SF Signal.
Eric Brown on What Steampunk Means To Me at SF Signal.
How Not To Choose Alternate History Scenarios by Kate Paulk at Mad Genius Club.
Read an Excerpt from Chris Wooding’s Steampunk Adventure THE ACE OF SKULLS: A TALE OF THE KETTY JAY at SF Signal.
Read an Excerpt from George Mann’s SHERLOCK HOLMES: THE SPIRIT BOX at SF Signal.
Review: Beyond Apollo by Barry N Malzberg at Thinking about books.
Review: Coming Home by Roy E. Stolworthy at Alt Hist.
Review: Flawed by J.L. Spelbring at The Library Canary.
Review: Last Orders by Harry Turtledove at Bloggin with Badger.
Review: The Madonna and the Starship by James Morrow.
Sneak Preview: "Hi Hitler!" by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
Time Traveler's Wife sequel from Niffenegger at The Bookseller.

Comics

Review: Steampunk Battlestar Galactica 1880 #1 at RWG.

Counterfactuals, History and News

10 (More) Gorgeous Colorized Photos That Put History In A New Light by Priscilla Frank The Huffington Post.
The Greatest Fake Religion of All Time by Jesse Walker at io9.
Obama's and Hillary's Competing Syrian Counterfactuals by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
Plenty of Room at the Top of Ukraine’s Fading Rebellion by Andre E Kramer at The New York Times.
What if Rocky Marciano Fought On? by Fox Doucette at The Boxing Tribune.
Would arming Syria’s rebels have stopped the Islamic State? by Marc Lynch at The Washington Tribune.

Films and Television

Now This Is The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen Movie We Deserve by Lauren Davis at io9.
To Boldly Go Where No Comrade Has ... by Eric Hynes at The New York Times.

Games

Bioshock: Complex and Alternate Histories by Ryan Lizardi at Game Studies.
Mod of the Week: After the End, for Crusader Kings II by Christopher Livingston at PC Gamer.

Interviews

Rod Duncan at The Qwillery.

Podcasts

Hard and Soft Alternate Histories: The Time Roads by Beth Bernobich, The Shadow Master by Craig Cormick and Rod Duncan’s The Bullet Catcher’s Daughter at The Skiffy and Fanty Show.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

New Releases 8/19/14

You can support The Update by clicking the banner to your right or the links below if you are purchasing through Amazon!

Hardcovers

The League of Seven by Alan Gratz

The League of Seven is the first book in an action-packed, steampunk series by the acclaimed author of Samurai Shortstop, Alan Gratz.

In an alternate 1875 America electricity is forbidden, Native Americans and Yankees are united, and eldritch evil lurks in the shadows. Young Archie Dent knows there really are monsters in the world. His parents are members of the Septemberist Society, whose job it is to protect humanity from hideous giants called the Mangleborn. Trapped in underground prisons for a thousand years, the giant monsters have been all but forgotten—but now they are rising again as the steam-driven America of 1875 rediscovers electricity, the lifeblood of the Mangleborn. When his parents and the rest of the Septemberists are brainwashed by one of the evil creatures, Archie must assemble a team of seven young heroes to save the world.

Paperbacks

The Clockwork Sky, Volume Two by Madeleine Rosca

The conclusion to this exciting all-ages steampunk manga Clockwork Sky!

Madeleine Rosca’s sharp-edged style perfectly matches her sharp-tongued lead character’s personality. Sally Peppers is the highly-curious, ambitious niece of steambot magnate Erasmus Croach, who has supplied Britain's factories with an apparently endless supply of near-perfect robot employees, displacing flesh-and-blood humans. Unemployed people have begun to demonstrate in the streets of London and more than one near-riot has been put down by Croach's latest and greatest invention, the steambot police-boy, Sky.

Sky is troubled by dreams where he, like Pinocchio, has become a “real boy.” Then he meets Sally, who has run away from home, and begins to learn of the poverty and hardships faced by these workers. Together, Sally and Sky venture into the tunnels beneath London in search of a missing child.

Sally has always been a bit of a tinkerer and quickly figures out the terrifying truth about her uncle's magnificent steambot factory. But it might be too late—Erasmus Croach has new steambots ready to deploy—and they are bigger and stronger than the heroic Sky. Can Sally’s wits and Sky’s pure heart save the day?

Coloring With Your Octopus: A Coloring Book For Domesticated Cephalopods by Brian Kesinger

A cinematically proportioned coloring book based on Brian Kesinger's popular picture book "Walking Your Octopus" which showcases the day-to-day adventures of independent girl-about-town Victoria Psismall and her pet land octopus Otto. Forty-eight ready-to-color illustrations humorously chronicle the duo's home life, travels and social adventures. The Victorian era characters and period-influenced design elements provide a visual spectacle that is as fun to look at as it is to color.

The Ripper Affair by Lilith Saintcrow

The enthralling conclusion to the Bannon and Clare trilogy from New York Times bestselling author, Lilith Saintcrow.

Sorcery. Treason. Madness. And, of course, murder most foul...

A shattering accident places Archibald Clare, mentath in the service of Britannia, in the care of Emma Bannon, sorceress Prime. Clare needs a measure of calm to repair his faculties of Logic and Reason. Without them, he is not his best. At all.

Unfortunately, calm and rest will not be found. There is a killer hiding in the sorcerous steam-hells of Londinium, murdering poor women of a certain reputation. A handful of frails murdered on cold autumn nights would make no difference...but the killings echo in the highest circles, and threaten to bring the Empire down in smoking ruins.

Once more Emma Bannon is pressed into service; once more Archibald Clare is determined to aid her. The secrets between these two old friends may give an ambitious sorcerer the means to bring down the Crown. And there is still no way to reliably find a hansom when one needs it most.

The game is afoot...

Sherlock Holmes: The Spirit Box by George Mann

Summer, 1915. As Zeppelins rain death upon the rooftops of London, eminent members of society begin to behave erratically: a Member of Parliament throws himself naked into the Thames after giving a pro-German speech to the House; a senior military advisor suggests surrender before feeding himself to a tiger at London Zoo; a famed suffragette suddenly renounces the women's liberation movement and throws herself under a train.

In desperation, an aged Mycroft Holmes sends to Sussex for the help of his brother, Sherlock.

Steampunk Fables by Rod Espinosa

Collects Steampunk Snow White, Steampunk Cinderella and Steampunk Red Riding Hood. Presenting a an instant classic from Rod Espinosa, creator of The Courageous Princess and Neotopia and Antarctic Press's own master of the new-age fairy tale. This collection of timeless tales has been galvanized and refueled to charge full steam ahead with a new angle on these familiar favorites!

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is your story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Preview: The League of Seven by Alan Gratz

You guys really enjoyed Alan Gratz's Maps of The United Nations of America, so I am pleased to announce that I will be reviewing his novel The League of Seven. Here is the description from Amazon:

The League of Seven is the first book in an action-packed, steampunk series by the acclaimed author of Samurai Shortstop, Alan Gratz.

In an alternate 1875 America electricity is forbidden, Native Americans and Yankees are united, and eldritch evil lurks in the shadows. Young Archie Dent knows there really are monsters in the world. His parents are members of the Septemberist Society, whose job it is to protect humanity from hideous giants called the Mangleborn. Trapped in underground prisons for a thousand years, the giant monsters have been all but forgotten—but now they are rising again as the steam-driven America of 1875 rediscovers electricity, the lifeblood of the Mangleborn. When his parents and the rest of the Septemberists are brainwashed by one of the evil creatures, Archie must assemble a team of seven young heroes to save the world.

If you guys would like to learn more check out Alan's site or The Septemberist Society for background on The League of Seven universe. In the meantime, stay tuned for my review either here or at Amazing Stories.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Maps of The United Nations of America

Guest post by Alan Gratz.


When I was a kid, I loved books with maps in them. And I still do! So when I began developing the idea for my forthcoming alternate history middle grade steampunk adventure, The League of Seven, I started with a map.
My world is steampunk because there are giant, ancient monsters in it called the Mangleborn (think Lovecraftian creatures like Cthulhu) that feed on electricity. Every time human civilization discovers electricity and covers the world with generators and electric lines, the monsters rise up and destroy the world. Seven archetypal heroes rise each time to put the Mangleborn back in their prisons beneath the earth and the sea, but in time people forget, the Mangleborn become creatures of myth and legend, and we do it all over again. Mu, Lemuria, Atlantis, Rome, they've all conquered the world, discovered electricity, and been destroyed by the Mangleborn.

To break the cycle, a group called the Septemberist Society arose after the last cataclysm with a dual mission: keep an eye on the Mangleborn, and keep humanity from rediscovering and developing electricity again. They've been successful in the Americas, but in Europe they failed. Most alternate histories I've read have one pivotal point where history diverged from what we know, and although my world history is very different (Mu, Lemuria, and Atlantis were all real civilizations, originating in China, South America, and North America, respectively), my world of 1875 America has a lot of similarities to the real America of the 1870s. (Because that's more fun, right?)

In my world, the Mangleborn rose in Europe in 1770. The moon turned blood red, the seas became choppy an impassable, and all contact with the Old World was lost. Stranded, starving, and alone, the thirteen colonies turned to the Iroquois League and became their seventh “tribe”—the Yankee tribe. In time, more First Nations joined the league, and by 1875 the United Nations of America stretches from the Atlantis Ocean in the east to the Mississippi River in the west and the Gulf of Mexico in the south to Acadia in the north.

New Spain still exists in the south—they had a much stronger foothold there by 1770 than did the English in North America by that time. Louisiana is a monarchy, ruled by Queen Theodosia, daughter of King Aaron Burr, whose conspiracy to conquer New Orleans was never stopped by the fledgling United States of America in my world. Texas and California are their own countries (naturally), and the Japanese have a colonial foothold in the Pacific Northwest, pushed east by the rise of Mangleborn in China (Cathay). Between the United Nations and California are the remaining unaffiliated tribes of North America, all of whom are nations unto themselves. But these are not the American Indians of the Westerns—they are the remnants of a once-great Atlantean civilization, with rayguns and steam engines and advanced cities all their own.
When I sold the book to Tor/Starscape, they redesigned the map for the front of the book. I changed some of the tribe names as I did more research and clarified who would be where by 1875. I also added a few more Native American cities, like Cahokia, Sonnionto, and Broken Arrow, all of which really had been large settlements prior to the coming of Europeans. The Tor map doesn't have the benefit of color like my original map, unfortunately; it had to be black and white to be printed in the book. Still, I'm just excited to have a map in one of my books at last. After seven published novels for young readers, this will be my first with a map in it—and it's definitely one I would have pored over as a kid.

The League of Seven debuts on August 19, 2014. I'm partnering with my local indie bookstore, Malaprop's Bookstore in Asheville, North Carolina, to publish a special prequel short story called “Join, or Die,” that's about the formation of the United Nations of America. It also has Benjamin Franklin battling a sea serpent during a very different version of the Boston Tea Party. The prequel chapbook is available exclusively to folks who pre-order The League of Seven from Malaprop's Bookstore. For more information about the book and links to get it and the free chapbook, please visit www.septemberistsociety.com.

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Alan Gratz is the author of a number of books for young readers, including Samurai Shortstop, The Brooklyn Nine, and PrisonerB-3087, none of which, alas, include maps.