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Author: John ONeill

New Treasures: The Gates of Tagmeth by P. C. Hodgell

New Treasures: The Gates of Tagmeth by P. C. Hodgell

The Gates of Tagmeth-smallFletcher Vredenburgh has been steadily reviewing P. C. Hodgell’s Chronicles of the Kencyrath series here at Black Gate. In his article on the opening volume, God Stalk, Fletcher wrote:

Out of the haunted north comes Jame the Kencyr to Rathilien’s greatest city, Tai-Tastigon. From the hills above, the city appears strangely dark and silent. She arrives at its gates with large gaps in her memory and cat claws instead of fingernails. She’s carrying a pack full of strange artifacts, including a ring still on its owner’s finger… and she’s been bitten by a zombie. Wary, but in desperate need of a place to heal, Jame enters the city. So begins God Stalk, the first book in P.C. Hodgell’s Kencyrath series and one of my absolute, bar none, don’t-bother-me-if-you-see-me-reading-it, favorite fantasy novels…

I’m so grateful Carl gave me this book thirty years ago. P.C. Hodgell seems so far below the general fantasy radar, I don’t know if I would have ever heard of her at all, which is pretty darn shameful.

You can read his compete review here.

Fletcher wrapped up with volume 7, The Sea of Time, back in December, writing,

Now I, and every other fan of Hodgell’s, will have to wait nearly a year for the next volume, The Gates of Tagmeth… It’s taken over thirty years to get to this point, so I guess I can wait another eight months.

The Gates of Tagmeth arrived in trade paperback from Baen right on time on August 1st. I’m looking forward to Fletcher’s review, but you can get the jump on him by ordering a copy today. Here’s the description.

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The Late September Fantasy Magazine Rack

The Late September Fantasy Magazine Rack

Apex September 2017-rack Back Issue 100-small Pulp Literature magazine 16 Autumn 2017-rack Lightspeed September 2017-rack
Interzone September October 2017-rack Meeple Monthly September 2017-rack Space and Time Magazine Summer 2017-rack Uncanny September October 2017-rack

I know, I know. We’re in October already. But I’m still not finished with all of September’s great magazines yet. Here are the ones that grabbed my attention in the last half of the month (links will bring you to magazine websites).

Apex Magazine — Issue #100, with new fiction from Andrea Tang, plus reprints by Kameron Hurley & others
Back Issue #100 — our second issue #100 this month is a 100-page centennial featuring Bronze Age comic fanzines
Pulp Literature — with a story by Black Gate blogger Brandon Crilly!
Lightspeed — new fiction from Tony Ballantyne, Timothy Mudie, and others
Interzone — Aliya Whiteley, Paul Jessup, T.R. Napper, and Erica L. Satifka
Meeple Monthly — covering November board game releases
Space and Time — new fiction from Paul Michael Anderson, Gordon Linzner, and others
Uncanny — great new stuff from N. K. Jemisin, Fran Wilde, Catherynne M. Valente, Delia Sherman — and our very own C. S. E. Cooney!

That’s not all, of course. Earlier this month Fletcher Vredenburgh checked in with his September Short Story Roundup, featuring the latest issues of Cirsova and Swords & Sorcery magazine.

Click any of the thumbnail images above for bigger images. Our early September Fantasy Magazine Rack is here.

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Check out the Table of Contents for The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2017, edited by Charles Yu and John Joseph Adams

Check out the Table of Contents for The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2017, edited by Charles Yu and John Joseph Adams

The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2017-small The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2017-back-small

Charles Yu, the author of How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, named one of the best books of the year by Time magazine, also knows his way around a short story, with two collections to his credit, Third Class Superhero (2006) and Sorry Please Thank You (2012). He’s a fine choice to edit this year’s edition of Mariner Books’ The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, which was edited by Joe Hill in 2015, and Karen Joy Fowler in 2016. The Series Editor is John Joseph Adams, editor of Lightspeed, Nightmare, and about a zillion SF and fantasy anthologies.

This year’s volume officially goes on sale on Tuesday, but I saw a copy on the shelf yesterday at Barnes & Noble, so it’s out in the wild. It’s the last of the Year’s Best volumes we track here at Black Gate, but it’s also one of the most interesting. It contains fiction by Leigh Bardugo, E. Lily Yu,y Nisi Shawl, Jeremiah Tolbert, Peter S. Beagle, N.K. Jemisin, Genevieve Valentine, Catherynne M. Valente, Greg van Eekhout, Caroline M. Yoachim, and many others — including two stories by Dale Bailey. Here’s the complete TOC.

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Future Treasures: John Silence–Physician Extraordinary / The Wave by Algernon Blackwood

Future Treasures: John Silence–Physician Extraordinary / The Wave by Algernon Blackwood

John Silence Physician Extraordinary - The Wave-back-small John Silence Physician Extraordinary - The Wave-small

I’ve heard a lot of praise heaped on Algernon Blackwood’s 1908 collection John Silence–Physician Extraordinary over the years. In his review of Blackwood’s 1914 collection Incredible Adventures, Ryan Harvey wrote:

Of all the practitioners of the classic “weird tale,” which flourished in the early twentieth century before morphing into the more easily discerned genres of fantasy and horror, none entrances me more than Algernon Blackwood. Looking at the stable of the foundational authors of horror — luminaries like Poe, James, le Fanu, Machen, Lovecraft — it is Blackwood who has the strongest effect on me. Of all his lofty company, he is the one who seems to achieve the most numinous “weird” of all…

In my view, Blackwood achieved his finest work in his earlier collections The Listener and Other Stories (1907), John Silence — Physician Extraordinary (1908), and The Lost Valley and Other Stories (1910), where he combined his weird adventures with aspects of horror and fear. These earlier classics are supernatural horror, but are also superb works of mood.

Josh Reynolds discussed the collection in detail as part of his occult detective series The Nightmare Men here at Black Gate.

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Murder, Mystery and Intrigue: The Grim Company Trilogy by Luke Scull

Murder, Mystery and Intrigue: The Grim Company Trilogy by Luke Scull

The Grim Company-small Sword of the North-small Dead Man's Steel-small

When I first heard of Luke Scull’s debut fantasy novel The Grim Company, which features a band of mercenaries in the service of the White Lady, I assumed it was an homage to Glen Cook’s classic debut novel The Black Company, about a band of mercenaries in the service of the Lady. But folks have compared it more frequently to Joe Abercrombie than Cook. Here’s Niall Alexander at Tor.com.

The Grim Company is as grimdark as fantasy gets… [it] is a genuinely great debut: fun yet fearsome, gritty and gripping in equal measure… In truth, no-one does grimdark fantasy better than Joe Abercrombie, but by the dead, Luke Scull comes incredibly close. The Grim Company can’t quite eclipse the likes of The Heroes, or Red Country; all told, though, this is a more satisfying debut than The Blade Itself.

In large part that’s thanks to an action-packed narrative, paced like a race. There’s never [a] dull moment in The Grim Company — even in the middle, where most stories sag. Here, there and everywhere there are extraordinary set-pieces: battles, by and large, but what battles they are! In the interim, there’s murder, mystery and intrigue; a meaningful, if somewhat simplistic magic system; no shortage of snappy banter; and such smooth worldbuilding that I hardly noticed it happening… Shiver me timbers, The Grim Company is pretty brilliant… a sterling exemplar of what the genre has to offer today.

Read the complete review here.

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New Treasures: The Tensorate Series by Jy Yang

New Treasures: The Tensorate Series by Jy Yang

The Red Threads of Fortune-small The Black Tides of Heaven-small

I continue to be impressed with the scope and ambition of the Tor.com novella series. With a release nearly every week for the past two years, the line has rapidly grown to some 100 novellas and full-length novels, and it shows no signs of slowing down.

It’s also doing some innovative and exciting things that no one else is attempting (and I don’t just mean hogging nearly all the novella-length award nominations). Case in point: JY Yang’s ambitious story cycle The Tensorate Series, composed of the twin novellas The Red Threads of Fortune, The Black Tides of Heaven, and two more upcoming novellas. The New York Times calls the first two volumes “Joyously wild stuff. Highly recommended.”

They were published simultaneously today. Here’s the descriptions.

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Future Treasures: The Tiger’s Daughter by K Arsenault Rivera

Future Treasures: The Tiger’s Daughter by K Arsenault Rivera

The Tiger's Daughter bookmark-small

Check out the cool bookmark that came with my review copy of The Tiger’s Daughter, the debut novel by K Arsenault Rivera!

It’s instructing me to “Plant flower seed paper under 1/8″ of soil. Water thoroughly.” Okay, but…. what does it GROW? A geranium? Violets? An alien seed pod like that horrifying episode of Johnny Sokko?

I guess there’s only one way to find out. And it involves sticking this super-cool book collectible in a bunch of dirt. Marketing departments, man. They thrive on cruelty.

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Kit Reed, June 7, 1932 — September 24, 2017

Kit Reed, June 7, 1932 — September 24, 2017

Tiger Rag Kit Reed-small The Baby Merchant-small Where Kit Reed-small

Reports are pouring in that author Kit Reed has died.

BG author Jeffrey Ford writes:

Saw today online that my friend, Kit Reed, passed away. A professional author from 1957 to just this year, and her work was exceptional. I especially loved her stories. Kit was one of a kind. Did not stand on ceremony and would not shy away from telling it like it was. Perhaps that’s why she was never lauded for having been a leading female voice in those earlier completely male centric years… She was also wonderfully generous with young writers and helped to start many careers. I’m gonna miss her honesty and her insights… One of the greats.

Reed was the author of 16 novels and 10 collections, including the Campbell nominee Where (2016), Tiptree Award nominee Little Sisters of the Apocalypse (1994), and Shirley Jackson Award nominee The Story Until Now: A Great Big Book of Stories (2013).

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Vintage Treasures: Ghosts and Grisly Things by Ramsey Campbell

Vintage Treasures: Ghosts and Grisly Things by Ramsey Campbell

Weird Tales Summer 1991-small Dark Love-small Dark Terrors 2 The Gollancz Book of Horror-small
Fantasy Tales Summer 1985-small Night Visions 3-small Narrow Houses-small

We’re on the cusp of October, and you know what that means. Goth Chick will decorate the entire office with candles, pumpkins, and shrunken heads, and we’re about to get deluged with a fresh crop of horror books. It’s pretty exciting actually, and many of us look forward to this time of year (in addition to Goth Chick and her band of terrified interns, I mean). So to help kick off the season, I thought I’d showcase a classic horror collection as my latest Vintage Treasure.

Have a look at the assortment of magazines and anthologies above, and see if you notice a recurring theme. It’s not too hard to spot… the name Ramsey Campbell was ubiquitous in the market throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s, and for good reason. He’s one of the most accomplished horror writers in the business, and his name has graced many a magazine cover and Table of Contents. Campbell produced some 18 collections between 1964 and 2015, and the 80s and 90s were his most productive decades. The stories which appeared in the above volumes, and nearly a dozen more, were reprinted in Ghosts and Grisly Things, a collection from Pumpkin Books (UK, 1998) and Tor Books (US, 2000).

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The September Fantasy Magazine Rack

The September Fantasy Magazine Rack

Beneath Ceaseless Skies 234-rack Cirsova 6-small Knights of the Diner Table 245-rack Clarkesworld September 2017-rack
Galaxy's Edge September 2017-rack Locus September 2017-rack The Dark September 2017-rack Nightmare Magazine September 2017-rack

Plenty of great fiction to distract us in September! Here are the magazines that grabbed my attention this month (links will bring you to magazine websites).

Beneath Ceaseless Skies — new fiction from Michael J. DeLuca and William Broom
Cirsova #6 — stories by Adrian Cole, Harold R. Thompson, and others
Knights of the Dinner Table 245 — with a great Jack Kirby tribute cover!
Clarkesworld — new fiction from Suzanne Palmer, A. Brym, and others
Galaxy’s Edge — John DeChancie, Barry N. Malzberg, Joan Slonczewski, and others
Locus — report on the Hugo Winners, an obit for Brian Aldiss, and forthcoming books for the US and UK
The Dark — new fiction from Erica L. Satifka and Lora Gray.
Nightmare — new stuff from Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Ashok K. Banker

That’s not all, of course. Earlier this month we reported on the latest issues of Asimov’s SF and Fantasy & Science Fiction; Adrian Simmons reviewed the July/August F&SF and Rich Horton covered the December 1964 Amazing Stories.

Click any of the thumbnail images above for bigger images. Our August Fantasy Magazine Rack is here.

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