Today, Angry Robot finally made its long-awaited debut in North America with honest-to-dead-tree books available from the Great White North to the Rio Grande. The first six titles now available in these parts are:

Not so coincidentally, these books are all available as e-books today too. You can get them through most of the regular suspects, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, etc. In some cases, they’re still propagating throughout particular systems, so if you can’t quite find it where you want it, just be patient a little while longer. If you can’t manage that, head over to the screaming-new Angry Robot Store where you can pick up a DRM-free copy of any of their e-books directly from them.

I’ve already read a couple of the titles, and they are excellent, each in their own unique way. Angry Robot will publish my first two original novels — Amortals and Vegas Knights — this winter, and I’m proud to know they’ll be in such fantastic company.

 

This weekend, I’ll be reprising last year’s appearance as a guest at Geek.Kon in Madison, Wisconsin. If you’re anywhere near the area, come on out and say hi! Other guests include Chris Ayres, Bill Bodden, Jim Frenkel, John Kovalic,  Matt McElroy, Aaron Pavao, Raven Software, Eric Vale, Monica Valentinelli, and the Spoony Bards. (Check out the Guest List for all the details.)

Here’s what I’m scheduled for:

Friday, September 3

  • 6 PM: Game Creation

Saturday, September 4

  • 2 PM: Writing Panel
  • 3 PM: Group Autograph Session
  • 4:30 PM: World Building

Otherwise, I’ll be wandering around the dealers’ hall and chatting with folks. Hope to see you there!

 

Here’s something else I worked on that never made it over to the States: Inazuma-Oh! (That’s “Lightning King” in Japanese, I’m told.) It was originally a Japanese set of customizable racing cars that clipped together in three different levels. You mixed and matched layers, then rammed them into each other to see which could dish out or take the beating best.

At the request of Playmates Toys, I came up with a new set of factions and names for the various cards, along with the framework for a storyline to tie it all together. Tomy apparently put out the toys in Europe, where they failed to set the world on fire, so they never hit shelves in the US. Despite that, I had a lot of fun working on it. Here’s hoping they come back someday.

 
Guild Wars

The German version of Guild Wars: Ghosts of AscalonGuild Wars: Die Geister von Ascalon — officially hit stores yesterday in Germany. It’s published by Panini, a publisher I know best from its long relationship with Marvel Comics in Italy and through my friend Marco Lupoi. If you speak German or can fake it well enough, you can download and read the first three chapters for free.

Big thanks go out to translator Cora Hartwig, as it can’t be easy to translate a fantasy novel like this. My favorite part of the free sample is the translation of my dedication:

Von Matt: Wie immer gebührt der größte Dank meiner Frau Ann und meinen Kindern Marty, Pat, Nick, Ken und Helen. Ohne ihre Liebe, Unterstützung und ihr Verständnis kann ich gar nichts tun.

It just tickles me to see “Frau Ann” and “meinen Kindern Marty, Pat, Nick, Ken und Helen.”

 

Now that I’m done running around for the summer, my son Marty has stepped up to give me a hand with clearing out my closets and attic, which are clogged with old games, books, and more that haven’t seen enough love over the past few years. He’s putting them up on eBay for me, one at a time.

Part of the impetus for this is that a small disaster struck while I was at Gen Con. The quad boys’ bedroom sits directly over my office, and their toilet overflowed. The water rained down into my office and wrecked the ceiling and the carpet below, along with a set of paneled doors in between. It also took out a few comics and games in the closet behind those doors.

Fortunately, I had my laptop with me at Gen Con, besides which I always keep a continuous backup of all my data both onsite and off (I use BackBlaze for the latter). We’re insured, and that’s covering everything, less the deductible. The real drag is not being able to use my office much until the work is complete.

Getting forced out of my office made me want to clear out more room in the house. We’re in a good-sized place, but with seven of us it sometimes feel packed to the gills. The best fix for such clutter is to get rid of things we’re not using. To that end, we’re having a yard sale on August 28 to clear out the kids’ old toys, bikes, clothes, and so on. My extra games, comics, books, and such, though, are headed for eBay.

I set up a widget to show off what Marty’s posted there. If you have requests for certain things I might have, let me know and I’ll see if I have any to spare. And if you can, give my old games a good home.

 
IAMTW

Jonny Nexus — he of Game Night fame — recently picked up Tied-In, the first book about tie-in novels from the IAMTW. He likes it a lot so far, but then he segues into naming his favorite tie-in novel of all time: Grease by Ron De Cristoforo.

I haven’t thought about it for years, but I read lots of these when I was a kid. My favorite at the time was a Welcome Back, Kotter novel by William Johnston. How about you? What’s your favorite?

 
Guild Wars

If you speak German, be sure to look out for Guild Wars: Ghosts of Ascalon — a.k.a Die Geister von Ascalon — in deutsch next week. It hits stores in Germany on August 24. If you can’t wait that long, head on over to GamesCom this weekend, at which my co-author Jeff Grubb will be reprising his Comic-Con role as official autographer of free copies of the book.

 
Amortals

Gill Polack recently read my upcoming novel Amortals. In her review, she writes:

I keep wanting to use that old slogan “Tight, taut and terrific” about Amortals, which is accurate, but oh, so wrong. There’s not a wasted word. There’s not an idea that doesn’t make sense. I meant to start it tonight and finish other work, then finish it tomorrow, but it’s a read-at-one-sitting book so I’ve rescheduled some other things.

Thanks, Gill!

 

The fine folks at Angry Robot just posted their second podcast. This one — hosted again by the mellifluous Mur Lafferty — features Lauren Beukes and Kaaron Warren. I’ve read both of their first books, and I’m in the middle of Lauren’s Zoo City right now. They’re both excellent writers, so be sure to check them out, right after you listen to the podcast.

 
Guild Wars

My friend John McLintock is running a series of contests to celebrate the 5th anniversary of his gaming blog “Roll Dice and Kick Ass!” As part of this, I’m donating a signed copy of Guild Wars: Ghosts of Ascalon. You can also win games and books from other authors and designers like Bill King, Academy Games, Q-Workshop, Jim Swallow, and many more. Check John’s blog for all the details.

Archives

My Host

Posts by Date

August 2010
S M T W T F S
« Jul   Sep »
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
© 2003–2010 Forbeck.com Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha
  • RSS
  • Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn