Book Week

Book Week, an event run by the Children’s Book Council of Australia, is one of the highlights of my year. It means a week of visiting schools to do talks and workshops, mixing with other authors, and finding out who won the Book of the Year awards. It’s hard work, but it’s a lot of fun.

Today I ran a workshop at St Francis Xavier, a private highschool here in Canberra. Most of the students had laptops with them, and during the workshop a couple of them started laughing for no apparent reason. It turned out they had just loaded up this website and had seen the thing in my bio about the fish. I really should write a horror story involving fish one of these days; gods know I’ve had at least one terrifying dream involving the damn things.

Anyway, I’ve got just one event left and then Book Week is over for me. It’s exhausting work, but in a good way. At this last event I get to be at the school’s costume parade, and I’ve decided to dress up myself. You’re never too old for dressups!

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Another Ending

This afternoon, at about 2:18pm, I finished writing book fourteen, which is currently titled The Final War. It clocked in at 201 pages and 116,777 words. In spite of a couple of hiatuses I managed to finish it in less than the standard two months – I began it at the end of June, and it is now mid-August.

Now I can take a break – conveniently, Book Week starts next week so I’ll be busy visiting schools – and start preparing for one final work. Book fifteen, The Darkest Hour, is almost ready to begin.

As for The Final War, I must say that it’s the most Game of Thrones book I’ve written in a series that already had a few GoT-esque elements to it. I never actually set out to write something similar to Game of Thrones – when I said G.R.R.Martin inspired me, what I meant by that was that his work showed me that fantasy doesn’t have to be about quests and orphans and magic stones – it can be whatever the hell you want it to be, and it doesn’t have to have overblown villains, or indeed any villains at all. In fact, a book without a clear villain or hero is often far more interesting.

In any case, Final War features multiple viewpoints – more of them than in any previous book. I don’t even know how many there are, but at a rough estimate there are at least seven major characters, spread out in different locations through the world (which has, let me tell you, expanded considerably since the first two trilogies). There are multiple conflicts, multiple political situations, and many different cultures portrayed. It was a challenge, but a fun one. Since this is the final trilogy, I wanted it to be bigger and grander than anything that has come before it in the series. I am not a person with any talent for half-measures, so perhaps it would be harder for me to write something subtle and restrained. But I don’t care. I may be trying to write unconventional fantasy, but it is still epic fantasy, and epic means big.

~KJT, about to go off and have some damn lunch at last.

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Did You Know…?

The word “gibberish” is derived from an alchemist by the name of Geber, who wrote all his findings down in a nonsense language only he understood. That language was subsequently named “Geberish”.

I love trivia.

Meanwhile the third trilogy of the griffin series, which is titled The Southern Star, will be going to acquisitions sometime during this month. “Going to acquisitions” is a publishing term meaning “the editor will go to an acquisitions meeting and try to persuade the higher-ups to publish the next lot of books”. By September we should know whether The Southern Star will be published, so keep your fingers crossed!

~KJT, bored of winter and busy sewing an oversized fur rug.

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Shadowed Throne, USA Style

I’m pleased to announce that the US edition of The Shadowed Throne is now available for pre-order at Barnes and Noble. And you can see the cover as well!

 

These covers just keep getting better if you ask me.

These covers just keep getting better if you ask me.

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I, Cyborg

Did I ever mention that my father is a journalist? Well, he is. He has his own radio program, on which he has interviewed some very prestigious guests, and he writes a regular newspaper column. He also, at the moment, is busy organising a discussion panel for Science Week. He’s a science enthusiast, and puts a lot of his time and energy into promoting science in general. On one occasion he even asked me to go to an awards ceremony for a smartphone apps design contest, and interview the contestants in his place, which I did despite never having interviewed anyone before, or even owning a smartphone of any kind. It was a lot of fun.

Anyway, now my dad has made it into the newspapers – this time as an interviewee – and since it’s an online article, you can see it for yourself! If you’re in the area, please do come to the panel. I’m going myself, and not just to support my father.

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Penguin House

No, I will not make a joke about Penguin being in the house, because this is not the nineties any more and that phrase was never funny to begin with.

Ahem. Before I move onto the main point of this post, I’d like to take a moment to recommend a book called The Gargoyle by Canadian author Andrew Davidson. It’s more or less a romance, but it’s a lot of other things as well: funny, epic, intricately plotted, and full of fascinating stories-within-a-story. I love that kind of book, where little bits and pieces of other stories are woven in like a tapestry. It’s not something I do myself – I’m not sure I could, though admittedly I’ve never tried it – and I always love it when someone else does it.

In any case, The Gargoyle is well worth your while. It’s the sort of book I read and re-read simply because there’s so much pleasure to be had from it. The descriptions alone are pure pleasure to take in. I’ve always envied that ability in other authors; describing things generally bores me when I have to do it.

 

Anyway, onto the main event: in the small hours of this morning (I was up late writing, which I still do very occasionally), I received an email from my US publisher informing me that Penguin and Random House have undergone a corporate merger and are now a single publishing house called Penguin Random House. Fortunately the various imprints of the two houses, which include Ace – the imprint that publishes me in the States – will remain independent, so not a lot is going to change from my end. I can only hope that the merging of these two industry giants will create a new, even more impressive publisher – with more money to spend on publicity for me.

Hey, I have debts to pay.

~KJT, anticipating the installation of her kitchen with great excitement.

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