E-Reads™ is
...a trail-blazing reprinter of out-of-print genre and general fiction and nonfiction by leading authors. Our books are available in all e-book formats and paperback. Read the latest publishing news and provocative blogs by top commentators in the traditional and digital publishing fields.
Empress of Light
James C. Glass
In this sequel to SHANJI, Kati has used the light of creation to win a war bringing her to the throne as Empress of her planet, and she has forged new alliances with former enemies. Her daughter Yesui is born w...
Hôtel Transylvania
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Since 1978, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro has produced about two dozen novels and numerous short stories detailing the life of a character first introduced to the reading world as Le Comte de Saint-Germain. We first mee...
Mother's Choice
Elizabeth Mansfield
It's a Mother's Duty To Protect Her Daughter Cassandra Beringer would never allow her daughter Cicely to repeat her mistake and marry a man twenty years her senior--even if he is the handsome Viscount Inge...
Pock's World
Dave Duncan
In this thrilling story of adventure and suspense by master storyteller Dave Duncan, five flawed individuals must decide the fate of an entire world. On the outskirts of the Ayne Sector sits Pock’s Worl...
Time Slave
John Norman
Dr. Brenda Hamilton--a Ph.D. mathematician from Cal Tech--is beautiful, though she does not know her true beauty. She is a woman, though she does not know her true womanhood. Deep within herself she is sensu...
Sunday in Hell: Pearl Harbor Minute by Minute
Bill McWilliams
Using long established historical records and contemporary journals as well as recently-released war-time documents, Bill McWilliams has created a brand-new minute-by-minute narrative of the Day that Will ...
Lord of the Fire Lands
Dave Duncan
Raider and Wasp have spent five years at Ironhall studying to become Blades, expert swordsmen whose talents stand unmatched. Magic both enhances the Blades' fighting skills and binds them in lifelong duty....
Miscalculations
Elizabeth Mansfield
His Woman Of Affairs Jane Douglas had a sharp wit, a brilliant mind, and an extraordinary knack for numbers. As financial advisor to Lady Martha Kettering, she was able to provide for herself, her sister ...
The Girl With the Persian Shawl
Elizabeth Mansfield
An Arrogant Spinster, a Dashing Rake, and an Unsigned Painting The Girl With Persian Shawl was a strangely bewitching masterpiece that had hung in the Rendell household for generations. Kate Rendell graci...
A Thousand Deaths
George Alec Effinger
While George Alec Effinger’s Budayeen novel WHEN GRAVITY FAILS is perhaps his most famous work, his lesser known novel THE WOLVES OF MEMORY remained his favorite. In it, he introduced readers to Sandor Couran...
FEATURED TITLES
Aspen Gold
Janet Dailey
Kit Masters, born and brought up on an Aspen ranch, left to pursue an acting career in Hollywood but she is a woman with a strong sense of family, loyalty, and integrity and had deep ties to the land where ...
Southern Rapture
Jennifer Blake
Lettie Mason vowed to bring the man who killed her brother during the American Civil War to justice. Now the war is over and she finally can. Yet, she falls into her brother's murderer's embrace and her emoti...
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream
Harlan Ellison
First published in 1967 and re-issued in 1983, I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream contains seven stories with copyrights ranging from 1958 through 1967. This edition contains the original introduction by Th...
Damiano
R.A. MacAvoy
Set against the turbulent backdrop of the Italian Renaissance this alternate history takes place in a world where real faith-based magic exists. Our hero is Damiano Dalstrego. He is a wizard's son, an alchem...
The Chieftain
John Norman
A science fiction series filled with interplanetary adventure, rebellion and mortal combat by the author the The Gorean Saga. First in the series, The Chieftain. This is the age of the Telnarians. Their vas...
Seize the Fire
Laura Kinsale
Olympia St. Leger is a princess in desperate need of a knight in shining armor. Sheridan Drake, amused by Olympia's innocence and magnificent beauty, but also intrigued by her considerable wealth, accepts th...
Live Girls
Ray Garton
Davey's on the down and out when he loses his girl, his job and practically his sanity. While some men drown themselves in a forgiving bottle, Davey believes it's much more profitable to sink into Times Square...
Walker's Widow
Heidi Betts
Between Heaven and Hell lies Purgatory, Texas--a town with too few saints ... and too many sinners.

TO CATCH A THIEF

Clayton Walker had been sent to Purgatory…but it felt more like hell. Assign...
Guardian Angel
Linda Winstead Jones
Defying her father's wishes that she find a suitor and marry, Melanie Barnett is well equipped to sharp shoot anyone who gets in her way in Paradise, Texas. She isn't out to play the love game, but when a mask...
The Face in the Frost
John Bellairs
THE FACE IN THE FROST is a fantasy classic, defying categorization with its richly imaginative story of two separate kingdoms of wizards, stymied by a power that is beyond their control. A tall, skinny misf...
Died Blonde
Nancy J. Cohen
There's no love lost between Marla and Carolyn Sutton. Carolyn has never forgiven Marla for leaving Hairstyle Heaven to open her own place, especially since Marla's clientele grew as Carolyn's faded away. Ca...
The Magicians
James Gunn
Unseen by an apathetic society, a stupendous battle is being waged between good and evil. In the center of an unassuming town, gathered in a nondescript hotel, are the most powerful forces of time eternal: t...
Fellowship of Fear
Aaron Elkins
When anthropology professor Gideon Oliver is offered a teaching fellowship at U.S. military bases in Germany, Sicily, Spain, and Holland, he wastes no time accepting. Stimulating courses to teach, a decen...
Child of the Dawn
Clare Coleman
From Jean M. Auel's THE CLAN OF THE CAVE BEAR to Linda Lay Shuler's SHE WHO REMEMBERS, novels set among pre-historic cultures have shown a very strong appeal to readers of all types from fans of genre fantas...
Live Girls
Ray Garton
Davey's on the down and out when he loses his girl, his job and practically his sanity. While some men drown themselves in a forgiving bottle, Davey believes it's much more profitable to sink into Times Square...

Posts Tagged ‘Damien Broderick’

Damien Broderick’s Quipu Now in Paperback

We’re happy to announce that Damien Broderick’s Quipu is available in paperback.

In Quipu Caroline is about to go psychotic – and with her family, no surprise. Joseph can’t talk to women even if he is a certified high IQ clever dick trying to take snapshots of the end of the universe. Ray and Marj have their own hassles with in-laws, but student terrorists get in the way. Meanwhile Brian, misogynist and wit, appalls everyone in the quipu world. Quipus? They’re the scandalous fanzines that hikes traded before blogs were invented. Hikes? High IQ clever dicks, of course.

In Quipu (appearing for the first time as an E-Reads publication), Australian writer Damien Broderick reimagines his prize-winning 1984 novel Transmitters as the surprising saga of a “family” of genius-level one-of-a-kind individuals.

Damien Broderick is Australia’s dean of science fiction, with a body of extraordinary work reaching back to the early 1960′s. Like the late George Turner, he captures the distinctive flavor of his native country while reaching out to American and European readers. The White Abacus won two year’s best awards. His stories and novels, like those of his younger peer Greg Egan, are drenched with bleeding-edge ideas. Distinctively, he blends ideas and poetry like nobody since Roger Zelazny, and a wild silly humor is always ready to bubble out, as in the cosmic comedy Striped Holes. His award-winning novel The Dreaming Dragons is featured in David Pringle’s SF: The 100 Best Novels, and was chosen as year’s best by Kingsley Amis. It has been revised and updated as The Dreaming. In 1982, his early cyberpunk novel The Judas Mandala coined the term ‘virtual reality.’ His most recent novels are Godplayers and K-Machines.

With David G. Hartwell, he edited Centaurus: The Best of Australian SF for Tor in 1999.

Like one of his heroes, Sir Arthur C. Clarke, he is also a master of writing about radical new technologies, and The Spike and The Last Mortal Generation have been Australian popular-science best sellers–both books strongly recommended in Clarke’s millennial revision of his famous Profiles of the Future.

“Schrödinger’s Dog” was chosen for Gardner Dozois’s SF: Year’s Best 14.

His homepage is The Spike, and you can read a great interview with him in Missions Unknown.

Quipu is also available in all popular e-book formats.

Incidentally, E-Reads publishes another book of Broderick, this one in collaboration with Rory Barnes: The Hunger of Time. Check it out!


Beware of Hikes Trading Quipus: A New Release by Damien Broderick

In Damien Broderick’s Quipu Caroline is about to go psychotic – and with her family, no surprise. Joseph can’t talk to women even if he is a certified high IQ clever dick trying to take snapshots of the end of the universe. Ray and Marj have their own hassles with in-laws, but student terrorists get in the way. Meanwhile Brian, misogynist and wit, appalls everyone in the quipu world. Quipus? They’re the scandalous fanzines that hikes traded before blogs were invented. Hikes? High IQ clever dicks, of course.

In Quipu (appearing for the first time as an E-Reads publication), Australian writer Damien Broderick reimagines his prize-winning 1984 novel Transmitters as the surprising saga of a “family” of genius-level one-of-a-kind individuals.

Damien Broderick is Australia’s dean of science fiction, with a body of extraordinary work reaching back to the early 1960′s. Like the late George Turner, he captures the distinctive flavor of his native country while reaching out to American and European readers. The White Abacus won two year’s best awards. His stories and novels, like those of his younger peer Greg Egan, are drenched with bleeding-edge ideas. Distinctively, he blends ideas and poetry like nobody since Roger Zelazny, and a wild silly humor is always ready to bubble out, as in the cosmic comedy Striped Holes. His award-winning novel The Dreaming Dragons is featured in David Pringle’s SF: The 100 Best Novels, and was chosen as year’s best by Kingsley Amis. It has been revised and updated as The Dreaming. In 1982, his early cyberpunk novel The Judas Mandala coined the term ‘virtual reality.’ His most recent novels are Godplayers and K-Machines.

With David G. Hartwell, he edited Centaurus: The Best of Australian SF for Tor in 1999.

Like one of his heroes, Sir Arthur C. Clarke, he is also a master of writing about radical new technologies, and The Spike and The Last Mortal Generation have been Australian popular-science best sellers–both books strongly recommended in Clarke’s millennial revision of his famous Profiles of the Future.

“Schrödinger’s Dog” was chosen for Gardner Dozois’s SF: Year’s Best 14.

His homepage is The Spike, and you can read a great interview with him in Missions Unknown.

You can download Quipu now, but if you want to hold a print edition in your hand, watch these pages for updates; the paperback is in the works!

Incidentally, E-Reads publishes another book of Broderick, this one in collaboration with Rory Barnes: The Hunger of Time. Check it out!


Flee to the End of Time and Space, and Bring the Dog With You

As I’ve said before, E-Reads is very selective about publishing original fiction, but we were thrilled when Damien Broderick, the award-winning Australian writer, and co-author Rory Barnes offered us The Hunger of Time. Broderick appears in so many “Best of” anthologies that he should consider changing his middle name to “Best of.” His bio states that he coined the term “virtual reality” in a 1982 novel, when the only reality was the kind that skins your knees when you fall on the sidewalk. I haven’t researched the claim but that’s good enough for me.

In The Hunger of Time Broderick and Barnes have created a mad scientist who seems to have read too much H. G. Wells, and, like Wells’s Time Traveler, protagonist Hugh’s time machine works – sort of. That is, it’s accurate to the power of two, or maybe three, or maybe ten. I suppose that when you’re one step ahead of a pandemic and the Pox Cops, you can’t get too fine about these leaps into the Singularity.

Broderick and Barnes can add another “Best of” to their credits. The Hunger of Time is one of the best originals E-Reads has ever published.

– Richard Curtis


Damien Broderick and Rory Barnes Interview

E-Reads interviewed Damien and Rory about their novel The Hunger of Time in March, 2004.

E-Reads: What was the inspiration for The Hunger of Time?

Damien and Rory: It’s no accident that the book is dedicated to the great SF writer Poul Anderson, who sadly died several years ago but not before he’d read our early draft and told us he liked what we’d done. That was very gratifying, because we’d chosen to design the novel using a method Poul pioneered in his classic novel Tau Zero, in which the engines of a starship fueled by hydrogen in space get jammed on, so the ship accelerates faster and ever faster until it carries its crew to the end of the cosmos.

In Poul’s version, the big bang at the start of space time is mirrored by a big crunch at the end, with all the galaxies collapsing back into a gigantic `atom’. His starship rather magically manages to orbit this cosmic egg through its expansion into a new universe, where the crew finally slow and find a new home planet. Since then, though, science has learned that the universe is actually expanding ever faster, not slowing, so the end of space and time seems fated to be eternal cold and emptiness. A grim prospect. How could you tell an engaging, warm, human story against such a bleak background? Well, we took a leaf from Poul’s book. His method was to use what a mathematician might call logarithmic progression from one chapter to the next: each step is exponentially greater than the one before. It’s a very interesting way to match ordinary human time against the vast expanses of cosmic duration.

In each segment of the story, our characters plunge farther and then immensely farther into the future. It’s as if the first time you woke up, it was the next day (as usual); the next time, it was 10 days later; the next, 100 days later; the next, 1000 days had passed; then 10,000 days, 100,000 days… You get the picture. It doesn’t take many days before you’d be far into the deep future. Something like that happens to our family, Hugh, Grace, Suzanna and Natalie. The world gets insanely strange, fast, then stranger still. This way of telling the story is a sort of metaphor for what might really happen to the human species much sooner than that. Damien has discussed an event some scientists expect to erupt around the middle of this century, which some call the Singularity and we’ve called the Spike (because that’s shorter and easier to picture). At the Spike, many kinds of new technology converge and accelerate each other’s progress. In short and shorter periods of time, more and more jumps in scientific and technical knowledge will be attained, if this picture of the near future is true. Change ends by running straight up the graph of progress, like a spike. In The Hunger of Time, a sort of botched Spike occurs in the near future, following a terrible global plague, the kind of medical emergency that the SARS outbreak threatened to become. Our four characters manage to avoid that plague, by leaping forward in time, but they find they can’t return home. They are doomed to travel ever onward into weirdness (an idea foreshadowed in another brilliant Poul Anderson tale, `Flight to Forever’).

But we wanted our story to be about people, recognizable humans you can identify with. So we came up with a family somewhat in crisis, and then put pressure on them. We hope what we’ve created is funny and disturbing and heart warming by turns. Although the D’Anzsos are not based on the real-life families of either of us, Rory does have two sons of about the same age as Natalie and Zanna, the young women in the novel, and Damien has a step-daughter aged about midway between them. Their dog Ferdy is, of course, the ideal doggy companion everyone wants, and both of us have had wonderful dogs in our lives. (Damien and his wife Barbara’s dog, Rufus, who lives in Damien’s second home in San Antonio, even shows up transformed into a character in his forthcoming children’s book Jack and the Skyhook.)

Damien, have your thoughts about “singularity” been updated since The Spike was published a couple of years ago?

The prospect only seems more likely with each year that passes. True, we’re in the middle of global economic downturn, and that might slow the rush of development in some of these technologies. The bursting of the dot-com tech bubble didn’t help either, because although most of it was vapor, it’s frightened away some skittish venture capital from genuinely exciting possibilities. But new work keeps bursting out of the labs: discoveries in genomics, medicine, nanotechnology. And above all, Moore’s Law is still tracking the speed of computer power available per dollar. Today you can buy a far faster, superior desktop computer at a cheaper price than you could when The Spike came out. And big research establishments are building computers that will match the capacity of a human brain. It still seems quite plausible that a technological singularity will take place before the middle of this century.

Damien and Rory, you’ve done a few projects together now. How does The Hunger Of Time relate to the previous work you’ve done with each other? What’s it like working together in collaboration?

The surprising thing is that the co-operative process varies wildly from book to book. To be candid, our first joint novel, Valencies, was written with no co-operation at all. Rory wrote the base text as a mainstream novel, without any help from Damien. Damien then moved the story to a different planet and jumped it forward in time by a couple of millennia–all without any help from Rory. But a very different process emerged with short works such as Zones and Stuck in Fast Forward (which eventually grew up to becomeThe Hunger of Time). With both, we spent some time at Rory’s place in Adelaide working on the one computer. If one author got restless and abandoned the keyboard in mid sentence, the other might sit down and keep going, having first edited the existing text on the screen. And, of course, with our later novels we’ve been able to bat stuff back and forward between Adelaide and Melbourne or San Antonio by email as often as we like. The real trick to joint authorship is to accept that the final version will be something completely different from the novel you’d have written alone. Control freaks need not apply. The rewards of working together are easily stated: you get twice the inventiveness when it comes to twists and turns in the plot and you have characters who are the products of two different minds. In some ways, the interaction between characters in a jointly written novel mirrors the interaction between the authors. And it’s fun working with somebody else.

What other projects are you both working on?

Rory: I’m trying to finish three books at once. And will be very glad when I’ve done so. I’m also thinking of turning the text of an absolutely ripsnortering Young Adult novel I recently wrote but couldn’t place with publishers (too dark, too aggressive, these guys don’t go to Harrison High) into a fully paid up Adult novel.

Damien: I’ve just completed a book about recent sf, called x, y, z, t: Dimensions of Science Fiction, to be published shortly, and am hard at work on a new sf novel, Yggdrasil Station.

Damien, asking you as a leading literary figure for Australian SF and critical theory, does SF still have a unique perspective in Australia or are those qualities harder to pinpoint than before?

More than any other genre of fiction, in many respects science fiction transcends national boundaries, even language boundaries–but under the surface, there are surely distinctive tones that set Aussie voices apart. Our fiction shares a kind of relaxed, mocking tone toward authority—what Australians call a `larrikin’ attitude. Even when we’re writing about the end of the world, we remain a bit facetious, a bit ironic, a bit playful. Luckily, it’s an approach that appeals to readers. Transcension, Damien’s last novel, drew on input from Rory and Barbara, and it won this year’s Aurealis award for the best Aussie sf novel of 2002. We hold high hopes for this one, too.

Useful Links:

http://users.bigpond.net.au/rory.barnes
www.thespike.us





 
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