Book Review: Witch Hunts: A Graphic History of the Burning Times

Witch Hunts cover

When I purchased this book I was looking forward to read it, as the subject matter was one I had an interest in, and I haven't read a graphic novel in a long while. It was pleasurable to find that Witch Hunts: A Graphic History of the Burning Times, exceeded both my cravings.

It isn't easy to produce a non-fiction graphic novel – how do you encapsulate complex concepts or events in graphical form, in just a few pages, if that? While a picture may represent a thousand words, will you create the right picture, or doom the reader to the wrong thousand words? How can a bundle of pages of graphics with brief phrases, truly represent the overall theme?. Well, Rocky Wood and Lisa Morton's research and words, combined with Greg Chapman's excellent craftsmanship, certainly does tick those boxes. The reading experience is emmersive, emotional, educational.

In terms of the graphics, I particularly liked the tastefulness of the product. Sexuality, particularly the predatory side, is a part of the Witch Hunt experience, alongside brutality and sadism (all, mind you, perpetrated by those persecuting alleged witches), and yet Greg Chapman is careful in terms of how much graphic violence is portrayed – without losing the sense of what was happening. Kudos to him.

The narration, stemming from the research, is clear and concise, and equally importantly, is consistent from start to finish in terms of style. A dimension that I appreciated was the clarity of the moral message coming from the writers – this was a despicable period and it was more than just a matter of superstitious fear, it was also entwined with greed, avarice and misogyny. It was important to call a spade a spade.

As you can tell by my spiel, I really enjoyed the work, and because it is so crammed with interesting history, it is a book I can refer back to, and reread with pleasure.

A well deserved 5 stars, and worthy of winning awards.
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Book Review: The Rebels by Elizabeth Lang

The Rebels, by Elizabeth Lang, sequel to The Empire, is an entertaining, clever book.

I say 'clever' for several reasons. Firstly, Lang's greatest strength is her dialogue, which engages the reader with the characters and adds a sense of realism. Secondly, her backdrop is tangible, a future society where dystopian nightmares come true, but on a galactic level. Finally, and perhaps most pertinently, Lang cleverly continues themes from her first book, but at the same time twists them in ingenious ways.

In The Empire, a great amount of Lang's book is devoted to Adrian, the tortured soul of a genius scientist. It continues into The Rebels, but we have another soul (the bounty hunter Drel Argus) who in fact is the most poignant, noticeable tortured character.

I simplify when it would be unfair to Lang. There are many characters who have depth and turn this science fiction novel into a memorable one indeed.

The Rebels Cover

Five deserved stars.

Market News: Dark Fantasy, Ginger Fred, The Pavement Artist, published in Ticon4

Glad to have published Ginger Fred, The Pavement Artist in Ticon4, a very good speculative fiction ezine run by Ticonderoga Publishing. This story is quintessentially Australian in flavour and needed to be published by an Australian publisher, so this is a great result for me.

By all means, visit the site and read my story.
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Market News: scifi Flash Piece Now in Print

Happy to announce that my scifi flash fiction, 'Fred Has A Productive Day', is now out in Kindle and Paperback through Amazon, in the anthology Battlespace Vol1 (a military themed science fiction). It has an extensive and quality selection of short stories and flash pieces, and all proceeds go to a worthy cause. Details are here.

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Appointed Judge for ASA

Very pleased to have been appointed one of a small team of judges for long fiction (novels and novellas) for the Australian Shadows Awards 2012 (that is, work published in 2012, short lists and awards given in 2013), run by the Australian Horror Writers Association, which I am a member of.

For me this quite a commitment, but it is also a part of my journey to be recognized as a serious writer and (in this case) a serious participant in genre publishing. This will also be fun.

Here is the link to the announcement, which in turn has the link to the actual judges.
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Market News: A Far Away Place available now

A Far Away Place is probably my favorite kid's story and I was pleased to publish it in Beyond Centauri 31 a few years ago. Kid's 'Magination, an online children's site, is a fantastic place for families to visit and I am happy indeed that they chose to reprint my story for everyone to see.

Visit Issue 11 of Kid's 'Magination and let your children read this story – it is about overcoming pain and I warn you, it is sad (but in a good way).

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