They’re monsters, I tell you. They team up with publishers and become real horrors. My colleague here at UMM, Josh Johnson, has written a book I’ve been looking forward to for a while, The Forever Sea, and I get the alert this morning that it has been automatically downloaded into my Kindle app. Today! 19 January! The first day of spring semester classes! So now it’s going to be sitting there, taunting me, and I’m not going to be able to get to it for a while.
Did he do this intentionally, knowing what our academic calendar looks like? Does DAW books routinely torment their academic clients with this kind of scheduling? Temptation is unkind.
The first book in a new environmental epic fantasy series set in a world where ships kept afloat by magical hearthfires sail an endless grass sea.
Hah. The first book in a series. We’ll get even — he’s going to have to write more books while holding down a teaching load!
Since I haven’t read it yet, you’ll have to get by with the testimonials of those who have.
“I can rarely remember being this excited for a debut novel. This was everything I wanted it to be. Wind-swept prairie seas, pirates, magic, and found families.” —Mary Robinette Kowal, Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Award-winning author of the Lady Astronaut series
“Richly imagined and beautifully written, with a highly original and very creepy magic system—The Forever Sea is wonderful.” —R. F. Kuang, Astounding Award-winning author of The Poppy War
“Loved The Forever Sea. Loved it. Sheer joy.” —Joanne Harris, internationally bestselling author of Chocolat
“A beautifully imagined dive into the unknown.” —G.V. Anderson, World Fantasy Award winning author of “Das Steingeschöpf”
“Beautifully lyrical and imaginative, Johnson’s debut sings a twisting tale of adventure full of diverse characters and a lush world ripe to fall in love with. With a heart that will haunt you, this ecopunk story is unlike any you’ve seen before.” —Linden A. Lewis, author of The First Sister
“Lush descriptions of plant life abound… When combined with the exceptional protagonist and themes of embracing the unknown, [The Forever Sea] calls to mind Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea series. With a good balance of grit and tenderness, this entertaining story makes a nice addition to the growing hopepunk subgenre.” —Publishers Weekly
“Hopepunk”? Is that a thing now?
Bruce Fuentes says
Nope, nope. Resisting temptation. I buy these fantasy books and then I wait years for the next book. The last time I bought a fantasy book written by an English professor there was never a final book. Patrick Rothfuss had a fanatastic debut in The Name of the Wind and the sequel A Wise Man’s Fear was equally wonderful. The problem is the final book never came out. We have been waiting since 2011. I doubt I will even read it if it does because I would need to reread the others again.
Maybe just this one time I will buy the first book of a trilogy again.
davidc1 says
So it’s a Discworld type book with extra pirates ?Since that rat bastard Pratchett did dun do die on us ,been on the
look out for someone to replace him ,an impossible task .A couple of authors come pretty close ,Toby Frost ,and his Space Captain Smith series .
And Jasper Fforde and his Tuesday Next novels ,which has cloned Dodo’s which is a plus .
F.O. says
Hopepunk: because in the face of a shitty and uncaring world, hope is punk as fuck.
blf says
The mildly deranged penguin offers a range of adjusted, as well as custom, calendars. Need a few extra days in a week? No problem — including extended weekends, holidays, fewer Mondays or extra Fridays, in the order of your choice (the traditional SuMoTuWeThFrSa is so boring, try a SaSaSaFrWeSaSaXyWhOoPiEe model, for instance). Similar adjustments can be made to months, hours per day, and direction of the Sun’s apparent travel across the sky (loop-the-loop is popular, albeit flight sickness bags are suggested). One may find a prebuilt, and can very probably design your own, calendar so that, e.g., all of 2020 repeats on a daily basis, or every day is Yellow Pig Day, or the book you wanted to read is available at the start of a long paid vacation. Prices upon application.
anthonybarcellos says
This puts me in mind of Philip José Farmer’s Green Odyssey, although that was a science fiction novel and not a fantasy.
Ronald Couch says
Today is January 19. On the other hand it is entirely possible that I’m completely missing the joke here. Not an unusual experience for me.
PZ Myers says
I’ve got 20 January on the brain. There’s the real hopepunk.
birgerjohansson says
Grass sea? That is as hard to accept as a world shaped as a…disc.
Bruce Fuentes says
Ok. Bought it. One, because it looks like it could be quite good. Two, to support a new author. He better not wait 5 years to release the next one.
Artor says
Sounds cool, I’ll put it on my lost to look for. The concept reminds me of this classic song:
https://youtu.be/DuGGNsE3_8Y
brightmoon says
Windwagon Smith in a descent fantasy novel . I could get behind that . You guys need to keep up with more folktales than just biblical ones
doctorcorey says
I wish words came easier for me when I try to write. I wish I had more time to write. :)
James Fehlinger says
Just like J. R. R. Tolkien. ;->
Denys Gueroult of the BBC interviewed Tolkien (on January 20, 1965;
though it wasn’t actually broadcast until December 16, 1970):
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p021jx7j
During the course of the interview, Tolkien mentions the
not-altogether-friendly reactions of his professional colleagues
after the publication of The Lord of the Rings :
G: Do you feel any sense of guilt at all that, as a philologist, as a
professor of English language, with which you were concerned
with the factual sources of language, you devoted a large part of
your life to a fictional thing?
T: No, no, I should’ve thought it’s done language a lot of good, yes.
No, I’ve… why… No, no, there’s quite a lot of linguistic
wisdom in it. I don’t feel any guilt complex about The Lord of
the Rings , though many people have said, “Now we know what you’ve
wasted, wasted the last fourteen years upon. You can now
get on and complete some of the professional tasks which you’ve
neglected.” And so, initially after I retired I was more busy, working
at my proper things, than I’d been for a long while. Yes.
Tabby Lavalamp says
Every book needs to be part of a series now, and honestly? I’m starting to pass those by. Just give me stand alone novels, please.
Pierce R. Butler says
Why do book-cover sailing ships always tilt to starboard?
Pierce R. Butler says
Oops @ # 15 – I meant the other starboard!
cafebabe says
@ #13
An apocryphal story about Tolkien had him informing his literary circle that he was working on another book the storyline of which he then summarized. His audience immediately shouted in unison “No more fucking elves!”