Showing posts with label The Royal Sorceress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Royal Sorceress. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The (Great) Game is Afoot!

Guest post by Chris Nuttall.

There are several aspects to a good alternate history novel, particularly one set several years after the Point of Divergence.  It must tell a good story, of course, but it must also explore and illuminate the alternate world.  Everyone knows how the modern-day world works, naturally, yet who can say the same of an alternate world?  After all, if the Roman Empire survived the barbarian invasions and remained intact, the world would be nothing like the one we know and love.

Detective (and spy) novels make excellent introductions to alternate worlds because the detective has a good reason to explore.  The detective, such as the main character of The Two Georges, needs to move from the alternate American seaboard up north to Quebec, through Indian-ruled territories and other places, which not only allows him to put together the pieces of the puzzle, but also lets us see the alternate world and admire the author’s handiwork in putting it together.

Alternate history novels can also help illuminate more about true history.  When we look back at the Nazi Regime, we know that it deliberately set out to murder upwards of six billion people for the crime of being undesirable, at least in Nazi Germany.  The people of that era, particularly in Germany, were largely unaware of the true scale of the holocaust.  As Fatherland’s hero starts investigating a murder, we know what the murder conceals and watch his horror as he realises that Germany is built on a pile of ashes and bones.

I drew much inspiration for The Royal Sorceress from Sherlock Holmes.  In many ways, The Great Game is my tribute to Holmes, although honesty leads me to admit that it doesn't really stand up to Conan Doyle’s work.  But then, Holmes — unless you believe this book — didn't have to labour under the twin disadvantages of being a woman and being young.  Lady Gwen, the heroine of The Royal Sorceress, does.

It was hard enough to be a detective in the 1800s.  There was nothing along the lines of CSI ... or even Life on Mars or The Bill.  With no fingerprint testing, no DNA scans, no cameras that might have caught the crime on tape ... it would be difficult to achieve a successful conviction unless one had a great deal of luck or skill.  For Gwen, magic gives her some advantages, but her gender and her youth are still great disadvantages since it was hard for men of that era to take women seriously.

Another aspect to a good alternate detective novel is that the stakes can be very different.  Just as the hero of The Two Georges fears an American uprising against the British Crown, Gwen fears that a treaty with Turkey will fall through if the murderer of a diplomat magician is not caught. With France threatening war, the treaty cannot be lost or Britain will be at a serious disadvantage in the coming unpleasantness.

And so Gwen, who was sheltered from many of the harsh realities of life before becoming The Royal Sorceress, plunges headlong into a tangled web of treachery, blackmail and murder, with some of her findings hitting dangerously close to home.

Continuing on from the end of The Royal Sorceress, The Great Game follows Gwen’s unfolding story as she assumes the role formerly held by Master Thomas. A satisfying blend of whodunit and magical fantasy; it is set against a backdrop of international political unrest in a believable yet simultaneously fantastic alternate history.

You can download a free sample of the story from my site and then obtain it from any of the links on this page.  Reviews welcome.

[I’d also like to mention that To The Shores, the latest novel in my bestselling The Empire’s Corps series, is available here.  Free sample on my site.]

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Christopher Nuttall is a long-standing alternate history fan and writer, author of The Royal Sorceress (alternate history/fantasy) and numerous Kindle books.  His webpage can be found here.  

Monday, June 10, 2013

Weekly Update #106 Part 1

Editor's Note

Holy crap what a long Weekly Update, I actually had to split it into two parts. You will see the rest of last week's news this afternoon.

No time to editorialize, too much to talk about. All I want to say is that tomorrow's New Releases post is cancelled since there is only one alternate history work coming out this week and I am moving its announcement to next week. Instead I will be sharing a book giveaway that I think you will all enjoy.

And now the news...

What if Romney had won?

It still might be too early to dust of your President Romney timeline (although that hasn't stopped some people) since it has only been a year since the 2012 US presidential election, but people wanting to write such an alternate history should check out the Romney Readiness Project: Retrospective & Lessons Learned by Christopher Liddell, Daniel Kroese and Clark Campbell. Here is the description from Amazon:
The importance of effective and well-planned presidential transitions has long been understood. The Presidential Transition Act of 1963 provided a formal recognition of this principle by providing the President-elect funding and other resources “To promote the orderly transfer of the executive power in connection with the expiration of the term of office of a President and the Inauguration of a new President.” The Act received minor amendments in the following decades, but until 2010 all support provided was entirely post-election. The Pre-Election Presidential Act of 2010 changed this by providing pre-election support to nominees of both parties. Its passing reinforced the belief that early transition planning is prudent, not presumptuous. The Romney Readiness Project was the first transition effort to operate with this enhanced pre-election focus. While Obama’s re-election prevented a Romney transition from occurring, it is hoped that the content of this book can provide a valuable insight to future transition teams of both parties.
In summary the book explains Romney's plan to reorganize the White House along the lines of the business and begin implementing new policy (rolling back Obamacare, tax reform, deregulation and increased military spending). Of course this book has spurred some commentators to imagine what a counterfactual Romney administration would have been like.

Mark Whittington at Yahoo used the book to highlight "what a Romney Administration would have been to the reality of the second term Obama Administration, careening from scandal to scandal, flailing about rudderless with no prospect for anything better for the next three or so years...The tragedy is that the American voters chose chaos over order, incompetence over sound management. Elections have consequences." Despite these strong word, Whittington did admit Romeny would have to deal with a divided Congress just as Obama has OTL.

David Gee at Staffing Talk, however, was a little critical of Romney's plan and shared an example of a client who was trying to find a successor and picked someone who was "a real my way or the highway type." The outcome wasn't pretty: "The staff basically mutinied and ran the VP and would-be CEO out, leaving the wounded company leader to begin his succession plan anew."

Again, it is still pretty early to start guessing whether a Romney presidency would be better then a second term Obama. The people who now think Obama's presidency is finished appear to have forgotten the failed predictions of an all but certain Romney victory. Let history become history, your counterfactual will be better for it.

Chris Nuttall's Great Week

Long-time contributor and friend of The Update Chris Nuttall has been having a great week. Among other things, it was recently announced that Blanvalet Verlag/Verlagsgruppe Random House GmbH will publish the German edition of Chris' novel Bookworm in 2015.

Set in a fantasy world of magic and political intrigue, Bookworm is a dark tale of power and temptation, fear and lust, secrets and destiny. When first published in January of this year it soared up the fantasy best-selling charts on Amazon in the US, UK and Germany, with significant sales across 12 different countries in both ebook and print editions.

This deal marks a significant milestone for Chris and for Elsewhen Press. Chris began self- publishing his novels in 2011. He also submitted his historical fantasy novel The Royal Sorceress to Elsewhen Press, beginning a successful relationship. Bookworm was the second of his fantasy novels to be published by Elsewhen Press. In July, Elsewhen Press will publish their next Chris Nuttall title, Sufficiently Advanced Technology, while August will see the release of The Great Game, the much- anticipated sequel to The Royal Sorceress. The acquisition by Blanvalet of rights for the German language edition of Bookworm serves to underline the quality and appeal of Chris’s writing to a global audience.

On top of this great news, Chris also started blogging at Amazing Stories. He is going to be doing a series of book reviews for the relaunched magazine and you can check out his first one on Allies and Aliens
by Roger Macbride Allen. I look forward to working with Chris at Amazing Stories. Chris has been a popular contributor here at The Update and I am confident the Amazing Stories audience will welcome him.

Apex Magazine’s June 2013 Issue

Issue 49 of the 2013 Hugo Award-nominated Apex Magazine has been released and it has some good stuff for alternate historians. Among other authors, we get new fiction from well-known alternate history authors Lavie Tidhar (Osama) and and Cherie Priest (Boneshaker). Priest also did an interview with Apex that you can check out.

The issue is free to read in its entirety at the Apex Magazine website., but formatted eBook editions are available at Apex Digital, Amazon, Nook, Weightless and other.

By the way, all of you aspiring authors out there should know that Apex Magazine is currently open for submissions.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

5 Conspiracy Theories That Are Shockingly Easy to Debunk by Douglas A. McDonnell and M. Asher Cantrell at Cracked.
11 Jaw-dropping Weapons From World War II You Probably Never Heard Of by George Dvorsky at io9.
Alternate history: Imagine if the Raiders had traded up for Colin Kaepernick? by David Fucillo at SB Nation.
Beyond the Tracks: The Locomotive in Science Fiction Literature by Jason Heller at Clarkesworld Magazine.
Britain and the euro: what if we'd joined? by Larry Elliott at The Guardian.
Coming Soon: “Writing Fantasy & Science Fiction” by Orson Scott Card, Philip Athans and Jay Lake at SF Signal.
Counterfactualism in Monuments by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
D is for DIVERGENCE POINT (part 2) by Guy Saville.
Fairy Tales and Steampunk: The Perfect Combination? By Ella Grey at Steamed!
'Falling Skies' showrunner's debut novel to take place on steampunk Pangea by Emily Rome at EW.
Gideon Smith short stories announcement by David Barnett at Postcards from the Hinterland.
Guest Post (& Giveaway): Clifford Beal, author of Gideon’s Angel at My Bookish Ways.
Have Tech, Will Travel: Big List of Tech-Based Time Travel Romances by Heather Massey at Heroes and Heartbreakers.
How to read Lovecraft: A practical beginner’s guide by Matt Cardin at The Teeming Brain.
HP Lovecraft: the writer out of time by David Barnett at The Guardian.
I've been awarded the Liebster Blog award by Alison Morton.
Ohio State football: What if? by Ted Glover at SB Nation.
On the Rhetorical Power of Counterfactuals by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
Recent Novels That Use Time Travel to Great Effect by John DeNardo at Kirkus.
RFK: What we lost, what we learned by Jeff Greenfield at Yahoo!
Romulus Buckle, Steampunk and the Female Swashbuckler by Richard Ellis Preston, Jr. at The Qwillery.
Story behind Ha'Penny by Jo Walton at Upcoming4me
TRAVELS OF DANGER IN THE YUCATAN: A Mayan Time Travel Odyssey a Novel by Hunter Liguore (Excerpt) at Amazing Stories.

Book Reviews

The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick at Dieselpunk.
The Watcher in the Shadows by Chris Moriarty at Random Musings of a Bibliophile.

Interviews

Beth Ciotta at My Bookish Ways.
Jay Lake at Oregon Live.
Jay Lake and Austin Sirkin at Locus Roundtable.
Alan Moore at The Believer.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. 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, February 14, 2013

An Introduction to Bookworm

Guest post from Chris Nuttall.

What sort of society would form if one group of humans was notably superior to the others?

Human history just isn't very encouraging.  Throughout history, men have been stronger and more durable than women – and our societies have been patriarchal, with women rarely being more than second-class citizens at best.  The barbaric treatment of women in Saudi Arabia is not much worse (if at all) than the treatment of women in Ancient Athens.  And sex isn't the only dividing line.  Human history tells us that the strong will eventually dominate the weak.

The world of Bookworm has one major difference to our own; a relatively small number of humans have magic.  They are effectively superior to the mundanes; brute force is largely useless against them.  Kings and princes only remain in power because the magicians allow it, using them as tools to ensure stability.  And even magicians have their social rankings according to power.  Those with little power are barely more important than a wealthy mundane merchant.

And the world also has a long history, obscured in the past.  There were wars against the necromancers, wars that savaged large parts of the world.  Out of the First and Second Necromantic Wars came the Empire, a magician-dominated society that is led by the Grand Sorcerer, the most powerful magician in the world, who is charged with keeping order.  The world of Bookworm has accepted what is effectively a dictatorship because the alternative – hundreds of powerful magicians fighting – is worse.

By our standards, the Bookworm universe is oddly skewed.  On one hand, it has swords and sorcery; on the other, science is advancing slowly, attempting to duplicate what magic can do.  They have railways and may be on the verge of gunpowder.  Some of the economy is remarkably advanced; parts of society seemed mired permanently in the dark ages, with royal families holding absolute power over many of their subjects.  It isn't always a comfortable place to live.

At the heart of the Empire is the Golden City, the seat of the Grand Sorcerer – and the location of the Great Library, the repository of all magical knowledge.  Deep inside the Black Vault, forbidden tomes – available only to the Grand Sorcerer – store the dark secrets of the ancient magicians, the ones who fought the Necromantic Wars.  So much history has been lost ...

...Until now.

Elaine No-Kin is a very minor magician, a young girl with barely enough magic to count.  An orphan, she’s little more than a mundane as far as the great and powerful magicians are concerned – and Elaine prefers it that way.  She doesn't want to get caught up in great events, even the contest to determine who will succeed the Grand Sorcerer.  But events conspire to ensure that she has no choice.  A magical trap, hidden within a book, explodes in her face ... and when she wakes up, she discovers that all of the knowledge in the Great Library has been crammed into her head, including the forbidden knowledge from the Black Vault.  All of a sudden, her life is in terrible danger.  If the Inquisition finds out what has happened to her, she’s dead.

And yet knowing more than any other magician gives her an advantage.  She can see more about the true workings of magic than anyone else, enough to allow her to work spells that do more for less energy.  If she chooses to become involved in political affairs, she could work wonders – but even if she doesn't someone else might make the choice for her.

One thing I love about the universe I designed is that much of its history has been forgotten by the main characters.  Bookworm is a fantasy world that doesn't actually have to follow our own history, not like The Royal Sorceress.  Their history is remarkable – and Elaine learns secrets that the greatest magicians of ages past sought to bury, including hidden powers threatening to explode in the faces of their successors.  But the greatest secret, to Elaine, is something more mundane – her own origins.  It may be that the two sets of mysteries are interlinked ...

I also had a great deal of fun slipping in sly references to other fantasy novels and television shows.  Why not see how many you can spot?

Bookworm is currently available in electronic format and will be out in paperback later this year.  The Royal Sorceress is out in paperback now.  Free samples of both books can be downloaded from http://www.chrishanger.net.

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Chris Nuttall blogs at The Chrishanger and has a website by the same name. His books can be found on Amazon Kindle. Check out his new book Bookworm and The Royal Sorceress, now in paperback.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

New Releases 2/5/13

Hardcover

Etiquette & Espionage by Gail Carriger

Description from Amazon.

It's one thing to learn to curtsy properly. It's quite another to learn to curtsy and throw a knife at the same time. Welcome to Finishing School.

Fourteen-year-old Sophronia is a great trial to her poor mother. Sophronia is more interested in dismantling clocks and climbing trees than proper manners--and the family can only hope that company never sees her atrocious curtsy. Mrs. Temminnick is desperate for her daughter to become a proper lady. So she enrolls Sophronia in Mademoiselle Geraldine's Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality.

But Sophronia soon realizes the school is not quite what her mother might have hoped. At Mademoiselle Geraldine's, young ladies learn to finish...everything. Certainly, they learn the fine arts of dance, dress, and etiquette, but the also learn to deal out death, diversion, and espionage--in the politest possible ways, of course. Sophronia and her friends are in for a rousing first year's education.

Set in the same world as the Parasol Protectorate, this YA series debut is filled with all the saucy adventure and droll humor Gail's legions of fans have come to adore.

The Queen Is Dead by Kate Locke

Description from Amazon.

When her brother Val gets in over his head in an investigation of Half-Blood disappearances and goes missing himself, it's up to Xandra, newly crowned Goblin Queen, to get him back and bring the atrocities to light. Xandra must frequent the seediest parts of London, while also coping with what she is, the political factions vying for her favor, and the all too-close scrutiny of Queen Victoria, who wants her head. Add this to a being a suspect in a murder investigation, a werewolf boyfriend with demands of his own, and a mother hell bent on destroying the monarchy, and Xandra barely knows which way is up. One thing she does know is that she's already lost one sibling, she's not about to lose another.

Xandra Varden is the newly crowned Goblin Queen of England. But her complicated life is by no means over.

There are the political factions vying for her favor, and the all too-close scrutiny of Queen Victoria, who for some reason wants her head. Not to mention her werewolf boyfriend with demands of his own, and a mother hell bent on destroying the monarchy. Now she's the suspect in a murder investigation --- and Xandra barely knows which way is up.

What she does know is that nothing lasts forever---and immortality isn't all its cracked up to be.

Paperback

The Damnation Affair by Lilith Saintcrow

Description from Amazon.

The West is a wild place, where the poison wind blows and the dead walk. But there is gold, and whiskey, and enough room for a man to forget what he once was--until he no longer can.

Jack Gabriel's been the sheriff in Damnation almost since the town grew out of the dust and the mud. He keeps the peace--sort of--and rides the circuit every dawn and dusk with the chartermage, making sure the wilderness doesn't seep into their fragile attempt at civilization. Away from the cities clinging to the New World's eastern rim, he doesn't remember what he was. At least, not much.

But Damnation is growing, and along comes a schoolmarm. Catherine Barrowe is a right proper Boston miss, and it's a mystery why she would choose this town where everything scandalous and dangerous is probably too much for a quality lady like her. Sometimes the sheriff wonders why she came out West--because everyone who does is running from something. He doesn't realize Cat may be prickly, delicate, and proper, but she is also determined. She's in Damnation to find her wayward older brother Robbie, whose letters were full of dark hints about gold, trouble...and something about a claim.

In a West where charm and charter live alongside clockwork and cold steel, where hot lead kills your enemy but it takes a blessing to make his corpse stay down, Cat will keep digging until she finds her brother. If Jack knew what she was after, he could solve the mystery--because he was the one who killed Robbie.

The thing is, Cat's brother just won't stay dead, and the undead are rising with him...

The Royal Sorceress by Chris Nuttall

Description from Amazon.

It's 1830, in an alternate Britain where the 'scientific' principles of magic were discovered sixty years previously, allowing the British to win the American War of Independence. Although Britain is now supreme among the Great Powers, the gulf between rich and poor in the Empire has widened and unrest is growing every day. Master Thomas, the King's Royal Sorcerer, is ageing and must find a successor to lead the Royal Sorcerers Corps. Most magicians can possess only one of the panoply of known magical powers, but Thomas needs to find a new Master of all the powers. There is only one candidate, one person who has displayed such a talent from an early age, but has been neither trained nor officially acknowledged. A perfect candidate to be Master Thomas' apprentice in all ways but one: the Royal College of Sorcerers has never admitted a girl before. But even before Lady Gwendolyn Crichton can begin her training, London is plunged into chaos by a campaign of terrorist attacks co-ordinated by Jack, a powerful and rebellious magician. The Royal Sorceress will certainly appeal to all fans of steampunk, alternate history, and fantasy. As well as the fun of the 'what-ifs' delivered by the rewriting of our past, it delights with an Empire empowered by magic - all the better for being one we can recognise. The scheming and intrigue of Jack and his rebels, the roof-top chases and the thrilling battles of magic are played out against the dark and unforgiving backdrop of life in the sordid slums and dangerous factories of London. Many of the rebels are drawn from a seedy and grimy underworld, while their Establishment targets prey on the weak and defenceless. The price for destroying the social imbalance and sexual inequality that underpin society may be more than anyone can imagine.

E-books

Stalemate - The Biographies by Colin Gee

Description from Amazon.

This is not a stand-alone book, but a support volume to the book itself. It should not be purchased by itself.

The third in the 'Red Gambit' series, Stalemate deals with the events of the Third World War, up to 25th October 1945. Relating the experiences from both sides of the divide, and from all levels. 'Stalemate' deals with the man in the trench, through the pilot in his fighter, through to the Generals who direct the war from their command centres. 'Stalemate' brings the first stages of WW3 to a climax on the Alsatian plain, a sleepy town in Holland, and an insignificant town in Germany, whose name is now synonymous with death on a grand scale.

[The ‘Red Gambit Series’ novels are works of fiction, and deal with fictional events. Most of the characters therein are a figment of the author’s imagination. Without exception, those characters that are historical figures of fact or based upon historical figures of fact are used fictitiously, and their actions, demeanour, conversations, and characters are similarly all figments of the author’s imagination.]

To fans, authors and publishers...

Do you want to see your work given a shout out on our New Releases segment? Contact Mitro 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, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. 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, January 31, 2013

The Winner of the No Americans Contest is...

Well guys the No Americans writing contest is finally over. We had a lot of great entries and in case you forgot here they are below in the order they appeared:

"Cherry Blossom in the Spring" by Rachel Saunders

"The Holy Land" by Kieran Colfer

Review: Dominion by C.J. Sansom (submitted by Alison Morton)

A Nation Once Again: An Alternate History of the Easter Rising by Andrew Schneider

Industria, Tecnologia, Potenza: An Italy AAR Chapter 1 by Tyler Bugg

"The Boy Who Dribbled" by Dimas Aditya Hanandito

"The Anointed One" by A.J. Nolte

It was difficult to make a final decision about who would win an e-book copy of Chris Nuttall's novel The Royal Sorceress, published by Elsewhen Press. Kieran's "The Holy Land" was a great read, as was Andrew's counterfactual essay on the Easter Rising. Plus, it is always good to see new faces like Rachel and Dimas. I hope we can read more alternate history from you all in the future.

However, rules are rules, and as I said in the initial announcement: "the person who generates the most page views will win the book." So the winner of the No Americans writing contest is...

ALISON MORTON.

Yes Alison's review of Dominion produced the most page views out of all of the entries, with "The Holy Land" and "A Nation Once Again" coming in second and third place respectively.

In the future I think I am going to have separate categories for fiction, non-fiction and reviews, but for now I am sticking with the winner take all format. So congrats to Alison and expect to be contacted soon about how you can retrieve your prize. For everyone else, thank you for participating and I hope to see your new entries for the the Balkanize Me contest and stay tuned for the announcement of the March contest.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. 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, October 25, 2012

Review: The Royal Sorceress by Chris Nuttall

Guest post by John Trofimuk.
I am not a guy who is really into magical/fantasy stories. Long ago as a young lad I decided that antimatter powered starships were more fun than fire breathing dragons. So usually I wouldn’t have been drawn to something titled The Royal Sorceress. However it was written by one of my favorite authors, Chris Nuttall, founder of Changing the Times. I decided to support him and bought a copy for my Kindle App. It was an excellent decision because I really did enjoy this book.

One of the first reasons I enjoyed the novel was its setting. The Royal Sorceress is as much an alternate history novel as it is a magical adventure. Its 1830 and the British Empire reigns supreme as the most powerful nation on Earth. This dominance has occurred because during the early days of the American Revolution, magic was discovered and quickly understood. Thanks to magic the Revolution was stopped at its inception during the Battle of New York. George Washington’s army is defeated and eventually the Founding Fathers were arrested, killed, or went into hiding. As the British grow to understand magic better they use it to ensure their position as a global power. France, Russia and the Ottoman Empire are all left in weaker positions thanks to Britain’s predominance in magic. The British eventually use magic to help them develop more advanced technology and this furthers their advantages (steam powered airships, magical lighting, earlier rapid fire weapons to cite a few examples). This isn't a fantasy land with places I've never heard of with arcane monarchies or evil kingdoms, it’s just a different version of our world which is far easier to understand and connect with.

Connecting and caring about this alternate Earth was also made possible because of the wonderful description of places and people. Despite its place on the world’s stage, England itself is suffering all the problems of the Industrial Revolution. There is corruption in government and high society. Masses of poorly educated improvised people struggle to survive while those of noble birth live well with no concern for those below them. Troublemakers are imprisoned in the Tower or London or exported to America, Australia, or South America. This is where the conflict lays in The Royal Sorceress; a social conflict between the masses and the elites. I really liked how this was the focus of the story and not the magic itself. Magic is a tool of the various characters nothing more, having very simple rules behind its use and thus not confusing or worse boring the reader with them.

The sorceress named in the title is Lady Gwendolyn Crichton, our protagonist. Gwen is from an upper class family. She has been educated through private tutors and lived a relatively sheltered life. Gwen though is not a prissy overbearing person like her mother, concerned with the rules and order of high society. She’s smart and feels that the random draw of her birth has constrained her. She is also frustrated at the beginning because she cannot practice her natural talent, she has magic. It is believed that magic in women is rare and only men are trained as magicians. Gwen probably would never have been allowed to grow her talents if she wasn't a Master. In the story magicians can master a single talent such as blazers who can produce fire or energy. There are rare special individuals though known as Masters who can have all the powers. Gwen is sought out by Master Thomas the current Royal Sorcerer. Since no new male Masters have been found and all the others have died; he has to take on Gwen as his apprentice. Thomas takes Gwen to the school of magic, Cavendish Hall where she begins her studies.

Our antagonist for the story is a rouge magician named Jack. He takes on the identity of ‘Captain Swing’ and he has returned to England with one goal in mind, to bring down the government. Jack is a strong antagonist because he is actually in the right. The lower class of England and its empire are being exploited. They don’t have freedom or choices, let alone a real chance to climb out of poverty.  You might disagree with his methods, but can you really say Jack’s goal of changing the status quo is wrong? He’s the contrast of Master Thomas who stands for that order, for the old world. Both characters will end up pulling on Gwen who finds herself in the middle. Another positive to Jack’s character is that he is not perfect. The man will make mistakes in the story and he doesn’t have any real idea what do once his revolution succeeds. Too often efforts to make the antagonist powerful or exciting result in them being ‘too smart’ or ‘too evil’. Jack is neither. He simply wants change for the better.

The secondary characters of the story are also well done. We get a nice slice of how magical powers have affected people. Some are arrogant, believing it makes them superior. Chris does a nice job of incorporating the ideas of the 1800s of evolution, Social Darwinism, and plain old assholes who believe magic simply makes them better.  They are contrasted with the more normal people who have magic but use it serve the country. The best thing that can be said of all the other characters in The Royal Sorceress is they come off as real people of the time.

The Royal Sorceress is an excellent tale of a young woman who is forced to grow quickly into a leader. Gwen is a believable character who is living in a well fleshed out alternate world. The characters from those who are Gwen’s allies and those who are her enemies come off as real people. Our strong protagonist is met by an equally strong antagonistic in Jack, a man who may be doing terrible things for the right reasons. I recommend The Royal Sorceress if you are a fan of alternate history and magic. Even for those who fantasy isn’t a real interest, the story delivers because the magic is secondary to the social conflict going on. I also like the possible set up for a sequel formed at the end of the book (want to know what it is, go buy it!).

I highly recommend Chris’s first published novel. It’s clear why this got picked up, it’s very good. The Royal Sorceress is currently available in electronic format and will be out in paperback February 2013.  A free sample of The Royal Sorceress can be downloaded from Chris’s site.

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John Trofimuk is "gtrof" at Counter Factual.Net.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

New Releases 10/9/12

New paperbacks

Dracula Cha Cha Cha by Kim Newman

Description from Amazon.

Written by award-winning novelist Kim Newman, this is a brand-new edition, with additional 40,000 word never-before-seen novella, of the popular third installment of the Anno Dracula series, Dracula Cha Cha Cha.

Rome. 1959. Count Dracula is about to marry the Moldavian Princess Asa Vajda - his sixth wife. Journalist Kate Reed flies into the city to visit the ailing Charles Beauregard and his vampire companion Geneviève. Finding herself caught up in the mystery of the Crimson Executioner who is bloodily dispatching vampire elders in the city, Kate discovers that she is not the only one on his trail...

Osama by Lavie Tidhar

Description from Amazon.

In a alternate world without global terrorism Joe, a private detective, is hired by a mysterious woman to find a man: the obscure author of pulp fiction novels featuring one Osama Bin Laden: Vigilante...

Joe’s quest to find the man takes him across the world, from the backwaters of Asia to the European Capitals of Paris and London, and as the mystery deepens around him there is one question he is trying hard not to ask: who is he, really, and how much of the books are fiction? Chased by unknown assailants, Joe’s identity slowly fragments as he discovers the shadowy world of the refugees, ghostly entities haunting the world in which he lives. Where do they come from? And what do they want? Joe knows how the story should end, but even he is not ready for the truths he’ll find in New York and, finally, on top a quiet hill above Kabul—nor for the choice he will at last have to make...

Tannhauser: Operation Night Eagle by Blaine Lee Pardoe

Description from Amazon.

The year is 1954, and in a dark and violent alternate history, the Great War never ended. When the occult-obsessed Reich sets its sights on an ancient artifact held in Washington, D.C.'s Smithsonian Castle, the ruthless General Hermann Von Heizinger plans an unprecedented raid on U.S. soil...and only Major John MacNeal and the elite soldiers of the 42nd Marines stand before them! There's more to this mission than meets the eye, however. Why has the enigmatic Matriarchy mobilized its forces? And to whom is the mysterious mercenary Wolf truly loyal? Prepare for an epic battle that will rage deep into America's heartland!

New e-books

The Royal Sorceress by Chris Nuttall

Description from Amazon.

It’s 1830, in an alternate Britain where the ‘scientific’ principles of magic were discovered sixty years previously, allowing the British to win the American War of Independence. Although Britain is now supreme among the Great Powers, the gulf between rich and poor in the Empire has widened and unrest is growing every day. Master Thomas, the King’s Royal Sorcerer, is ageing and must find a successor to lead the Royal Sorcerers Corps. Most magicians can possess only one of the panoply of known magical powers, but Thomas needs to find a new Master of all the powers. There is only one candidate, one person who has displayed such a talent from an early age, but has been neither trained nor officially acknowledged. A perfect candidate to be Master Thomas’ apprentice in all ways but one: the Royal College of Sorcerers has never admitted a girl before.

But even before Lady Gwendolyn Crichton can begin her training, London is plunged into chaos by a campaign of terrorist attacks co-ordinated by Jack, a powerful and rebellious magician.

Find all the places you can buy this novel on Bitly.

To fans, authors and publishers...

Do you want to see your work given a shout out on our New Releases segment? Contact Mitro 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, a volunteer editor for Alt Hist and a contributor to Just Below the Law. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and his own writing blog. When not writing he works as an attorney and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Interview: Chris Nuttall

Long-time contributor, online AH enthusiast and prolific writer Chris Nuttall sits down with me to discuss his upcoming book The Royal SorceressFind all the places you can buy this novel on Bitly.

Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

There isn't that much to tell, really.  I was born in Edinburgh, went to a set of terrible schools and spent much of my time reading.  Most of what I know comes from books rather than actual studies at school, I’m afraid, so I developed a wide range of interests.  Eventually, I started writing for myself after seeing too many books with great ideas and poor execution (a pet peeve).

Do you still live in Edinburgh?

No.  At the moment, I am living in Kota Kinabalu, Borneo, with my wife.  It’s hot!

What were some of your earliest writings about?

I messed around with a space opera when I was 17, but the first completed novel I wrote – The Gunpowder Plot, of 2004 – was focused around a coup d’état in Britain, led by an aristocrat who believed that the country was on the verge of collapsing into rubble unless drastic measures were taken.  In hindsight, it isn't too surprising that the novel was rejected; I made a whole series of mistakes, even if I did churn out 120’000 words of story.  One day, I will probably return to that book and rewrite it with everything I know now. 

That was followed by The Peacekeepers, which featured a multiracial alien invasion of Earth, heavily inspired by David Weber and John Ringo.  It was the first of many explorations of the alien invasion theme; I love those stories and there just aren't enough of them.  Again, I made a vast number of mistakes in writing the story and I’d prefer to forget that I wrote it. 

After that, there was Endeavour, which was set in a future universe effectively under military rule, and the first version of Outside Context Problem, which was another alien invasion story.  The name, of course, came from Iain M. Banks; it started with a UFO crash-landing on Earth and went onwards from there.  Empire featured a rebellion against a Galactic Empire, an idea that was partly inspired by Weber’s Insurrection, but went in a very different direction.  I made mistakes with that idea too, but I learned enough to use the same basic idea later for a far more readable book.  When The Empire Falls started with the alien-ruled Galactic Empire falling apart, leaving the human race (a relatively minor conquest) alone at the edge of the explored galaxy, with barbarians pressing against the gates.

Second Chance grew out of wondering what would happen if modern-day Britain was to be sent back in time to 1940, just before the Battle of Britain.  Britain is, of course, a full-fledged country, rather than a town or island.  I enjoyed writing the series, but in hindsight there were lots of niggles with that I will fix if I ever rewrite.  The Multiverse War grew out of the same basic concept; Carrier Wars, the first book in the series, transported the USS George Washington to a world where Britain won the American Revolutionary War and ‘America’ never really existed.  Cue cultural shock, particularly as this British Empire is at war with the French and the French have a carrier of their own from our France.  A later book in the series had a carrier from Nazi Germany being sent back to 1942, with the crew forced to come face-to-face with the evils of Nazi Germany.  I enjoyed a little joke too; the design for the Graf Zeppelin is cool, but rather impractical in real life.  But the Nazis did that quite a bit in OTL.

John Ringo was kind enough to allow me to write two books set in the Posleen Universe, both currently available from my website.  I could do a better job now, I have to admit, but I learned a great deal from writing them too. 

I should confess that some of my writing was inspired by frustration with books I’d read over the years.  The Gunpowder Plot came out of reading Six Days, which was a very interesting book...BUT had the bad guys so powerful they had to make idiot mistakes to lose.  I thought they should have won and a story set in that world would have been very interesting.  Of course, given the nature of the villains and the fact that I have gotten a bit more politically savvy over the years, it would either have been a politically-charged dystopia or utopia, depending upon your politics.

What got you interested in alternate history?

History did, really.

I started reading history at a young age and never really stopped.  Somewhere along the line, I ran into a book about the German invasion of Britain in 1940 and slipped, without realising it, into the world of alternate history.  Ironically, the second or third AH book I read was Stars and Stripes Forever, which I believe I reviewed for your site, followed by Tilting the Balance.  That got me hooked on Turtledove and I read most of his early work; I still remember being disappointed that How Few Remain wasn't a sequel to The Guns of the South.  Somewhere along the lines, I started reading AH on the web and founded Changing the Times in hopes of creating an Internet archive. 

My first foray into alternate history related material was United States Starship, followed rapidly by the Second Chance series and the Multiverse War.  All of them are now available for free download from my website.

What is The Royal Sorceress about?

Ah, a hard question.  <wink>

On the surface, The Royal Sorceress is centred around Lady Gwen, a teenage girl who grew up in an alternate world where magic was discovered during the Seven Years War and aided the British Empire to crush the American rebels in the Battle of New York.  Gwen is a magician, but 1830s Britain isn't keen on the idea of female magicians, at least until they realise that Gwen is the only known magician who can replace Master Thomas, the previous Royal Sorcerer.  Unluckily for all concerned, the gap between rich and poor has grown wider and Gwen finds herself in the heart of a revolutionary storm that threatens to tear the British Empire apart.

Underneath, the novel is a meditation on the dangers of both revolution and reaction, how revolutionaries can shatter social order completely and thus lead to tyranny and how reactionaries can impose a tyranny of their own – and therefore either crush a country or make a second revolt inevitable.  Gwen grows up in a world that is profoundly changing and that isn't something to delight many people on both sides of the divide. 

Under that, there is a subtext about the dangers – and foolishness – of class, race and gender prejudice.  Gwen would have been far more effective to the forces of reaction if she’d been allowed to become a magician much earlier; Jack wouldn't have become the villain (or antihero) if he hadn't been exposed to what we might as well call a social glass ceiling.

Who is Jack?

Jack is...well, he’s either a villain or a well-intentioned extremist, depending on your point of view.  I can't go into too many details without spoiling a major plot point, but suffice it to say that Jack got a very unpleasant wake-up call and ended up deserting the Establishment to join the rebels.  

There are many ways to look at him.  I tend to consider him someone so obsessed with his cause that he allows the ends to justify the means, not an uncommon pattern among historical revolutionaries.  Most revolutions end in bloodshed because revolutionaries either take their eyes off the prize or don’t know when to stop.  Or become so self-obsessed with their own brilliance that their plans fall apart.  Jack misses something of vital importance because he can’t be bothered thinking about something that isn't immediately important.  Gwen...doesn’t.

How does magic work in the story?

Bad question.  Don’t you know that if you look too closely at a magic system, it stops working?  <grin>

The simple answer is that magicians channel inherent power through their minds, which manifests itself in a number of different ways.  Blazers, for example, can produce lethal beams of light, or create hologram-like illusions.  Movers are (in our terms) powerful telekinetics, with the ability to pick up objects, throw them as weapons – and even fly.  Charmers can manipulate minds, although I played with the concept by having the weaker Charmers be more effective, as their powers are more subtle than the brute-force suggestion of their stronger brothers.  I don’t like the concept of perfect mind control, so someone who is logical and prone to thinking through their moves would be able to counter the manipulation without, perhaps, knowing what was happening.  

Most magicians have one particular talent; Gwen is almost unique because she is capable of using multiple talents, hence the decision to forget sexism and recruit her for the Royal Sorcerers Corps.  This makes her incredibly capable compared to a normal magician, although they tend to be more skillful with their own individual talents.   One combat team of sorcerers – who will be introduced in the next story – have team members with different talents, allowing them to complement each other.  I’m still trying to decide if I can get away with calling them Excalibur.

But there’s a lot the characters don’t really know about magic.  That will be important later.

What historical figures appear in The Royal Sorceress?

Only a handful appear, although many are mentioned.  The most significant figures for the story are Lord Liverpool and the Duke of India, who became the Duke of Wellington in our world.  And the epilogue features someone I don’t name directly, but who cast a long shadow over both worlds.

What inspired you to write the novel?

A very early inspiration was an early Christmas present from my Grandmother, a book containing the complete adventures of Sherlock Holmes. 

A second (and much later) inspiration was a book that tried to argue that Sherlock Holmes had been a woman in disguise.  It was surprisingly convincing.

A third inspiration came from reading about General Howe’s blunder at New York.  It was the moment when George Washington came closest to total defeat, pinned against the river by the advancing British.  But Howe moved slowly and Washington managed to escape, saving his army to fight again.  I started to wonder about what would have happened if Howe had radios to coordinate his forces...and, after a long rumination, the basic bones of the magic system took shape and form. 

And then there was all the reading I did on the French Revolutions, the major unrest that spread across Europe in the late 1800s, the unhappy rumblings in Russia...

What sources were particularly helpful when researching for the novel?

All sorts.  I researched the revolutionary era in Britain, America and Europe pretty intensely for basic ideas.  Then I looked into the social structure of the times, particularly its treatment of rich and/or aristocratic women, who were treated as minor children to a very great extent, and the poor, the lower classes as they would have called them. 

Who designed the cover?

Alison Buck, another writer for Elsewhen Press, designed, painted and produced the cover.  It’s very much in-period, with Gwen wearing the black uniform of the Royal Sorcerers Corps, with airships and London in the background.

Do you have any other projects you are working on?

Well, I suppose I should start by mentioning Bookworm, which has also been picked up by Elsewhen Press.  Bookworm is more a straight light fantasy novel, with a heroine who – unlike Gwen – would prefer to remain firmly out of the spotlight.  But she winds up caught up in an unfortunate series of events that threaten both her life and society itself. 

Beyond that, there are too many to list, really.  I have a long string of ideas in various stages of development, from basic ideas to outright plots that only need to be written up.  Right now, I have finished the first draft of Schooled in Magic, a story that puts a girl from our world in a magical academy in another world.  It is very different from The Royal Sorceress, not least because I gently poked fun at boarding school stories as well as stories where someone from our world, stranded in the past, changes the world completely within the year.

A major frustration I have is that I would like to write a series as wide-ranging as the Night’s Dawn trilogy, but that needs a publisher to agree to consider all three books. 

Many ideas, background notes and story outlines can be found on my blog.

What are you reading now?

Again, really, too much to say.  I read a LOT!

Right now, I have been studying Ancient Rome and the surrounding era, particularly the books written by Adrian Goldsworthy.  I’ve been picking up books on the American Founding Fathers in the local library (well worth a read).  And, most importantly for some of my work, I read everything I can get my hands on about the War on Terror. 

Do you have advice for would-be authors?

Basically, if you want to write, write

Yes, I know; that sounds like pointing out the obvious.  But I’ve seen a lot of people start to write, often coming up with promising ideas, and then abandoning it after a chapter or two.  Writing requires commitment; write, write, keep writing...that’s really the most important thing I can tell you.

Second, learn to tell the difference between a good critic and a bad critic – then pay attention to the good ones.  Someone who points out that you spelled a word wrong is doing you a favour – God knows that spelling mistakes slip past me because I know what it should say.  Having your work taken apart can be devastating, but you can learn a great deal from the process.  The good critic is NOT your enemy – he’s helping you to defeat the problems that can make the difference between publication and vanishing into nothingness.

Sometimes this can be embarrassing.  At one point, I wrote a line that unintentionally implied that interracial marriage was akin to incest, a statement that would have been very offensive to a large number of people, including my wife.  A critic pointed it out before anything actually happened with the book.  As embarrassing as that was, it was a good thing.  Like I said, the good critic is NOT your enemy.

Telling the difference between the good critic and the bad critic is easy, once you put your anger aside.  The good critic is pointing out issues with the story; the bad critic is making it personal.  If you write a story set in a Nazi-occupied USA, the good critic will press you to explain how the Nazis reached America with an army; the bad critic will call you a Nazi in alternate historian clothing.  And it goes downhill from there.  A really unpleasant species of bad critic – a troll, in other words – will nudge you into defending your position time and time again, either in the hopes you will say something he can slam or just to waste your time.  Ignore him. 

Third, keep researching.  If you want to write a story set in WW2, read around World War Two and learn how the different zones of combat interacted.  Soak up knowledge like a sponge; you never know what will come in handy as you write your stories.  Did you know that there was a good chance Hitler suffered from Parkinson’s Disease?  Or, for that matter, that both Goring and Himmler detested Theodor Morell and would probably have had him removed if Hitler hadn’t been so devoted to him?  In a Nazi Victory world, Hitler is unlikely to survive past 1950 anyway.  Who is likely to be best placed to be the next Fuhrer

Fourth, sort out the details of your world first, at least in general terms.  If you have the Nazis winning the war, work out how they did it and what happened afterwards.  You don’t need to hit your readers with all the details, but make sure that YOU are clear on what happened. 

I think that those are probably the best pieces of advice I can give.  If you want to read further, Eric Flint does an excellent series of articles on the subject.


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Check out Chris' Amazon page to see a list of his books you can buy.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Elsewhen Press Signs Chris Nuttall for First in an New Series of Steampunk Fantasy Novels


DARTFORD, KENT – 13 JUNE 2012 – Elsewhen Press, a small independent publisher specialising in Speculative Fiction, today announced that Christopher Nuttall, indie author of acclaimed alternate history and science fiction novels and contributor to Alternate History Weekly Update, has signed a publishing deal for an undisclosed sum for his latest novel The Royal Sorceress.  The story is set in 1830 in an alternate Britain where the ‘scientific’ principles of magic were discovered sixty years previously, allowing the British to win the American War of Independence.  Although Britain is now supreme among the Great Powers, the gulf between rich and poor in the Empire has widened and unrest is growing every day.  Master Thomas, the King’s Royal Sorcerer, is ageing and must find a successor to lead the Royal Sorcerers Corps; most magicians can possess only one of the panoply of known magical powers, but Thomas needs to find a new Master of all the powers.  There is only one candidate, one person who has displayed a talent for all the powers since an early age, but has been neither trained nor officially acknowledged.  A perfect candidate to be Master Thomas’ apprentice in all ways but one: The Royal College of Sorcerers has never admitted a girl before.  But even before Lady Gwendolyn Chrichton can begin her training, London is plunged into chaos by a campaign of terrorist attacks co-ordinated by Jack, a powerful and rebellious magician.

Al Murray, Managing Publisher of Elsewhen Press said “We are really excited to be publishing Christopher’s fantastic new novel, which fits in perfectly with our mission to publish beautifully written, quality stories, that captivate and entertain.  The Royal Sorceress will certainly appeal to all fans of steampunk, alternate history and fantasy.  As well as the fun of the ‘what-ifs’ delivered by rewriting our past, it delights with an Empire empowered by magic – all the better for being one we can recognise.  The plotting and intrigue of Jack and his rebels, roof-top chases and battles of magic all add to the thrills; but it is by no means just a cosy romp, with many of the rebels drawn from the seedy and grimy underworld of London while their establishment targets prey on the weak and defenceless.  Here, just as in our world, social imbalance and sexual inequality underpin society.”

Elsewhen Press adopts a digital-first policy, initially publishing new titles in ebook format and subsequently in print editions.  The Royal Sorceress by Christopher Nuttall will be published in a digital edition this autumn and in print early next year.

Weekly Update would like to congratulate Chris and wish him the best of luck with his new series.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for the Alt Hist magazine and a contributor to Just Below the Law. One of his short stories will be published in the upcoming Echelon Press anthology, Once Upon a Clockwork Tale (2013). When not writing he works as an attorney in the state of Illinois and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.