Unbound pre-order special!

With bonus ebook!

Guess what? Unbound is now available for pre-order over at FableCroft! From now until the print and ebook are released (scheduled for April 2014!) you get a special price if you pre-order AND a free bonus ebook. This is a collection of short stories and interviews from the Veiled Worlds and includes a brand new story ‘A Varsnian Name’. Check it out:

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Contents:

Story: Grandeur

Interview: Tanyana

*NEW* Story: A Varsnian Name

Interview: Lad

Story: A Memory Trapped in Light

Intervention and group interview with reader questions 

The Movoc Under Keeper Tourism Brochure

 

 

 

So head over HERE and grab your special deal 🙂

 

Ahem… book three

I have FAR too much energy this morning! Last night we went to see the always amazing and hilarious Devin Townsend in concert and I might have gone a little crazy (they played Save Our Now! I wrote MOST of the Bone Gardens book to this song and I love it with so much love!) Somehow, after not much sleep, I sprung out of bed and buzzed through my workout. And I’m still buzzy! But at least now I have a good reason…

It makes me so happy to be able to announce that Unbound, book three of the Veiled Worlds Trilogy, will be released through FableCroft Publishing early next year. Official announcement is here:

FableCroft Publishing is pleased to announce the acquisition of Unbound by Jo Anderton. Unbound is the final book of the Veiled Worlds series, completing the story of Tanyana and the strange world she inhabits.

Editor Tehani Wessely has been a fan of Jo’s work for several years, and published her debut short story collection in May 2013. Jo has placed several stories with FableCroft in the past and says, “Tehani is a fantastic editor, who has supported and encouraged me from the very beginning of my writing career. I’m absolutely thrilled to be working with her, and FableCroft Publishing, on Unbound.”

The grand city of Movoc-under-Keeper lies in ruins. The sinister puppet men have revealed their true nature, and their plan to tear down the veil between worlds. To have a chance of defeating them, Tanyana must do the impossible, and return to the world where they were created, on the other side of the veil. Her journey will force her into a terrible choice, and test just how much she is willing to sacrifice for the fate of two worlds.

Tehani is very excited to be working on this novel with Jo, which will form part of FableCroft’s fledgling original novel range.

Unbound will be published in early 2014. Watch this space for a pre-order special offer later this year!

 

We’ve got something exciting planned for when the preorders go up, so watch this space! 🙂
Now I think I should go run around some more or something, or me and my buzzy energy is going to drive everyone MAD!

How is it October?

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This year = too fast. Way too fast.

Anyhoo, I got exciting contributor copies in the post yesterday! They’re both such wonderful publications, and I’m a little overwhelmed by the company O.o

“Tied to the Waste” is in The Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2012

“Always a Price” is in Award Winning Australian Writing 2013!

Huzzah!

 

 

 

 

 

In other reprint news “Sanaa’s Army” has found it’s way into a new ebook from FableCroft, called Focus 2012: Highlights of Australian Short Fiction.

The first of an annual series, the anthology collects an elite selection of work which has received acclaim via national and international Awards shortlisting. In creating this collection, we anticipate bringing international attention to the very best of Australian speculative fiction.

Isn’t that nice? There are some amazing names in this book and it’s an honour to be among them. It’d due for release in… well… October! So do check it out 🙂

Regular programming…

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After a brief hiatus we now return to our regular, scheduled programming!

And what’s been going on? Well, let’s see…

“The Last Tiger” was published over at Daily SF! Actually, it’s still up there. So go check it out. It has tigers… and robots… but also tigers. You know you love tigers…

The Bone Chime Song and Other Stories is available in ebook format all over the place! To celebrate, it got itself its own page on the website (optimistically titled ‘Collections‘) 🙂

‘Always a Price’ will be reprinted in the 2013 edition of Award Winning Australian Writing alongside some other amazing writers. I’m still a little amazed about that!

Oh, and I finished the second draft of The Bone Gardens earlier in the week! It actually looks like a book now. Which is nice.

On collaboration

The story behind ‘Sand and Seawater’, from One Small Step

I don’t play well with others. In school I would happily fake an injury to get out of team sports, and I was one of those irritating brats who would rather do the whole assignment by myself than work in a group. Just as well then, that writing is such a solitary pursuit? Right?

Well, this is what I’ve been telling myself for so long. But, you know, maybe I was wrong.

I’ve never really entertained the idea of collaborative writing, and have always been a little bit in awe and at the same time a little bit unsettled by the writers who do it. They couldn’t really enjoy all that sharing, could they?

When I first started taking this writing thing seriously, I knew I’d need to get feedback. Critique. So I joined the Online Writing Workship for SFF, and met a whole bunch of other writers. One of these was with an amazing writer named Rabia Gale. We read each other’s work. We shared critiques. We got chatting, outside of the OWW. Somehow, we just clicked. On different sides of the planet, with only our writing in common, we forged a strong professional connection and an even stronger friendship.

I didn’t even notice it happen, but writing wasn’t so solitary anymore. Yeah, we work on separate things (Rabia has this way of twisting fairytales that I wouldn’t ever even attempt) and our styles are quite different (I would kill for her kind of lyricism) but, somehow, we work well together.

Even so, the idea of collaboration felt alien. I even remember a conversation in which we discussed collaboration — how it was odd, and we could never do it. No sir. (Do you remember that, Rabia? 🙂 ) And then Tehani Wessley from Fablecroft Publishing came along. Would we like to collaborate on a story for her One Small Step anthology? What do you say when an editor like Tehani invites you to write for her? You sure as hell say yes!

When it came right down to the actual work, to the plotting, writing, revising and editing of a story, collaborating with Rabia was entirely natural. It was like an extension of what we’d already been doing. We brainstormed ideas for a while but, you know, that wasn’t actually anything new. We’ve been helping each other grow and solidify our plots and characters for ages, and this was nothing different. I threw an interesting photo at her, she came back at me with a cool myth, we exchanged excited conversations full of “But what if…?” “And then that…?” and lots of “Oh CREEPY!”

And that, my friends, is how stories are born.

Sand and Seawater itself has two POVs, and we each wrote one, which made the mechanics of being in completely different time zones and rarely able to actually write at the same time much easier. It meant we were also able to grow the plot and the world together — Rabia’s character might mention something that would spark and idea for mine, and visa versa. At first I was a little worried that the story would feel fragmented — that there would be a discernable difference and even a disconnect between my sections and her sections, and it would suffer as a whole. But my fears were unfounded, and I think that’s because the story developed so organically, one layer after the other.

And when we finally had a draft, I gave Rabia a red pen and let her go nuts with it. Never stand between this woman and an unnecessary word.

Maybe it’s because we’ve spent so much time in each other’s worlds and heads? Maybe it’s because we already knew how to work together, we’d had practice over the years. Whatever it was, collaborating with Rabia on Sand and Seawater really worked. I hope readers will enjoy the story and think it worked too!

Hey, maybe we’ll be doing some more of this collaboration thing in the future? And maybe team sports aren’t so scary after all… as long as you get to pick your teammates!

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Rabia talks about her side of the experience over here. As usual she’s way more organised than me 🙂