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Posts Tagged ‘Robert Charles Wilson’

New Releases: 2/28/2012

February 28, 2012 1 comment

New Releases: 12/06/2011

December 6, 2011 2 comments

New Releases: 07/05/2011

July 5, 2011 Leave a comment

Spin eBook now available for $2.99

June 27, 2011 1 comment

Spin e-book by Robert Charles Wilson is currently on sale for only $2.99!*

About Spin: One night in October when he was ten years old, Tyler Dupree stood in his back yard and watched the stars go out. They all flared into brilliance at once, then disappeared, replaced by a flat, empty black barrier. He and his best friends, Jason and Diane Lawton, had seen what became known as the Big Blackout. It would shape their lives.

The effect is worldwide. The sun is now a featureless disk–a heat source, rather than an astronomical object. The moon is gone, but tides remain. Not only have the world’s artificial satellites fallen out of orbit, their recovered remains are pitted and aged, as though they’d been in space far longer than their known lifespans. As Tyler, Jason, and Diane grow up, space probe reveals a bizarre truth: The barrier is artificial, generated by huge alien artifacts. Time is passing faster outside the barrier than inside–more than a hundred million years per day on Earth. At this rate, the death throes of the sun are only about forty years in our future.

Jason, now a promising young scientist, devotes his life to working against this slow-moving apocalypse. Diane throws herself into hedonism, marrying a sinister cult leader who’s forged a new religion out of the fears of the masses.

Earth sends terraforming machines to Mars to let the onrush of time do its work, turning the planet green. Next they send humans…and immediately get back an emissary with thousands of years of stories to tell about the settling of Mars. Then Earth’s probes reveal that an identical barrier has appeared around Mars. Jason, desperate, seeds near space with self-replicating machines that will scatter copies of themselves outward from the sun–and report back on what they find.

Life on Earth is about to get much, much stranger.

*on sale for a limited time only

Look for the new novel by Robert Charles Wilson, Vortex, releasing on July 5th, 2011.

Categories: News Tags: , , ,

New Releases: 3/1

March 1, 2011 Leave a comment

See what titles are releasing over the next 3 months.

Sweepstakes: 25 Science Fiction Books from Tor

November 2, 2010 34 comments

Sign up for the Tor/Forge Newsletter for a chance to win this prize pack of 25 science fiction novels from Tor Books!

Crystal Rain Tobias Buckell The Domino Pattern by Timothy Zahn Dream Park by Larry Niven and Edward Lerner Empress of Eternity by L.E. Modesitt Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card The Empress of Mars by Kage Baker Flashforward by Robert J. Sawyer Hominids by Robert J. Sawyer Hylozoic by Rudy Rucker Juggler of Worlds by Larry Niven and Edward Lerner Makers by Cory Doctorow Mind Over Ship by David Marusek The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein Off Armageddon Reef by David Weber Old Man's War by John Scalzi Orphans of Chaos by John C. Wright Out of the Dark by David Weber The Outback Stars by Sandra McDonald Pebble in the Sky by Isaac Asimov The Silver Ship and The Sea by Brenda Cooper Spin by Robert Charles Wilson Sun of Suns by Karl Schroeder The Unincorporated Man by Dani and Eytan Kollin Watermind by M.M. Buckner The Winds of Dune by Kevin J. Anderson and Brian Herbert

Every issue of Tor’s monthly email newsletter features original writing by, and interviews with, Tor authors and editors about upcoming new titles from all Tor and Forge imprints. In addition, we occasionally send out “special edition” newsletters to highlight particularly exciting new projects, programs, or events.

If you’re already a newsletter subscriber, you can enter too. We do not automatically enter subscribers into giveaways. We promise we won’t send you duplicate copies of the newsletter if you sign up more than once.

Sign up for your chance to win today!

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. You must be 18 or older and a legal resident of the 50 United States or D.C. to enter. Promotion begins October 25, 2010 at 12 a.m. ET. and ends November 22, 2010, 11:59 p.m. ET. Void in Puerto Rico and wherever prohibited by law. For Official Rules and to enter, go to www.tor-forge.com/tor/promo/sfprizepack. Sponsor: Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

New Releases: 8/31

August 31, 2010 Leave a comment

See what titles are releasing over the next 3 months.

Julian Comstock reviewed in the Washington Post

August 12, 2009 Leave a comment

Continuing its epic run of marvelous mainstream, genre, print and online review coverage, Robert Charles Wilson’s JULIAN COMSTOCK receives a splendid review in the Washington Post (daily circ: 724,242) in one of the prestigious newspaper’s rare Science Fiction feature. Full review below, followed by a rundown of the amazing coverage this book continues to elicit!

The past reemerges in the future in “Julian Comstock” (Tor, $25.95), Robert Charles Wilson’s charming (if occasionally silly) post-apocalyptic western. In the late 22nd century — years after the Efflorescence of Oil, the Fall of the Cities, the Plague of Infertility, the False Tribulation and the Pious Presidents — America has reverted to a neo-Victorian society of superstition and totalitarian religiosity.

Narrator Adam Hazzard is a naif, the childhood friend of the title figure, although Adam is of the feudal “leasing class” while Julian is an “Aristo” and nephew to the crazed American president, Deklan Comstock. Fleeing conscription in what was once the Canadian West, the two end up joining the army in a memorable if ill-fated battle against Dutch forces in Labrador. Julian emerges a national hero, in no small part due to Adam’s exaggerated published narratives of their activities. They are lauded in New York City, now the seat of the nation, where Julian’s political fortunes rise at the same time that he pursues his dream of filmmaking. But on the night he premieres his long-planned Charles Darwin biopic (a silent film, since the talkie technology has yet to be reclaimed), the capital falls to a Dominion-backed army coup.

Additional coverage for JULIAN COMSTOCK:

http://www.locusmag.com/Reviews/2009/06/gary-k-wolfe-reviews-robert-charles.html

http://io9.com/5302253/robert-charles-wilson-talks-about-movies-and-limits-to-the-singularity

http://io9.com/5273064/22nd-century-darwinians-challenge-the-church-in-julian-comstock

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/06/24/julian-comstock-robe.html

“JULIAN COMSTOCK is a rich and rewarding story—I’ve barely scratched the surface of its themes here. Expect to see it on next year’s Hugo shortlist; it certainly deserves to be there.”
—SFGospel.com

Read Robert Charles Wilson’s 3-part interview with Brian Francis Slattery on Tor.com:
Part 1 — “It’s like Guernica repainted by Norman Rockwell. And I thought it would be a great way to tell a story about a post-collapse 22nd-century America.”
Part 2 — “How bizarre would contemporary headlines look to Herman Melville or Harriet Beecher Stowe? Air war over Afghanistan, a black Democratic president, gay marriage: this stuff would never have been considered “plausible” prediction, back in the day. And yet here we are.”
Part 3 — “A writer doesn’t have to master every moral dilemma in order to find drama in it. You just have to be sensitive to it.”

From *PW:
“Hugo-winner Wilson (Axis) perpetrates a kind of skewed steampunk novel set in a postcollapse, imperial United States returned to 19th-century technology and mores…Written with the eloquence and elegance of a Victorian novel, this thoughtful tale combines complex characters, rousing military adventure and a beautifully realized, unnerving future.”

From *Kirkus Reviews:
“Post-apocalyptic power struggle from Hugo Award winner Wilson…expertly handled prognostication with more than a touch of somber magnificence.”

Eccentric Orbits
Unseeing in the ‘City’
In the Union-Tribune on Page E4

Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd-Century America
Robert Charles Wilson
Tor, 416 pages, $25.95

Jumping closer geopolitically to home, young Adam Hazzard narrates the tale of how Julian Comstock, and Julian’s guardian-mentor Sam Godwin, leave the little Athabaskan town of Williams Ford, just ahead of the military draft and wind up at war anyway.

Besides the draft, there’s a good reason for Julian to bug out. He’s the nephew of the hereditary president of the United States, and his father, the military hero of the invasion of Panama, was hanged for treason. After a while, incognito in the Wild West, Julian and Sam have good reason to worry about what would happen if President Deklan Comstock got wind of Julian’s whereabouts.

Adam only gradually learns this; he’s a backwoods boy, 17 as the story starts, and pretty much as innocent as the Dominion, which regulates the religion in the country, would like him to remain. He has the narrative voice that you could imagine a young Teddy Roosevelt delighting in, flatly observing the ordinariness of his upbringing and the novelty of going out into the world.

America in the 22nd century is a pretty good fit for the sort of bully adventures TR enjoyed, too, what with a lot of our present-day technology decayed into plastic mulch and bits of corroded metal. Travel is by foot, horse and steam train; the Age of the Efflorescence of Oil is long gone, and the political and economic picture changed radically during what is called the False Tribulation. The Dominion oversees the accepted churches – which seem mostly Protestant – and is a strong part of the government. Don’t know how much Teddy would’ve liked that, nor what he’d think of the system of owners, leaseholders and, essentially, serfs, but damn, the boys have Adventures!

Between the Lines: Make room on the bookshelf
By Allen Pierleoni
THE SACRAMENTO BEE

“Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd Century America” by Robert Charles Wilson (Tor, $25.95, 416 pages; on sale June 23): Yes, it’s sci-fi, but it crosses genre boundaries to mix adventure with Western, religion with politics. America is in turmoil, re-emerging as a world power, when a legend named Julian Comstock makes his mark on the international scene. Turns out the president of the United States is chagrined to learn Julian is his nephew – and a threat to his power. Wilson won a Hugo Award for “Spin.”

Robert Charles Wilson interview on io9, Julian Comstock review In Locus

June 25, 2009 Leave a comment

The full print review of Julian Comstock in Locus (on top of their cover feature of Robert Charles Wilson) went live online and it’s another rave.  Here’s an excerpt:

Robert Charles Wilson’s Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd-Century America is beautifully written, populated with engaging and sympathetic, if conflicted, characters, and unlike anything else he’s done to date…Wilson trusts his characters to develop along their own lines, and as a result he earns our trust as well, in one of the more affecting post-apocalyptic, reverse-frontier tales of its type since Leigh Brackett’s The Long Tomorrow or John Wyndham’s The Chrysalids. [Full review on Locus Online]

Also today, io9 editor Annalee Newitz interviews Wilson (in addition to their earlier review).

And yesterday, Cory Doctorow’s anticipated Boing Boing review of Julian Comstock went live.

More Julian Comstock coverage.

Robert Charles Wilson’s Julian Comstock featured in San Diego Union-Tribune, Sacramento Bee

June 22, 2009 1 comment

Jim Hopper features Julian Comstock (on-sale tomorrow) as one of three SF/F summer reads in his “Eccentric Orbits” column in the San Diego Union-Tribune (follow the link to the full column, full text below the quotes.

JULIAN was also featured last week in the Sacramento Bee by book editor Allen Pierleoni in his summer reading preview (follow the link, full text below).

…………………………….

“An engaging cross between post-apocalyptic series Jericho and Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, it may be the best science fiction novel of the year so far.” —io9

“Politically astute, romantic, philosophical, compassionate and often uproariously funny, JULIAN COMSTOCK may be Wilson’s best book yet—and that’s saying a lot of a man who has already collected a shelf full of awards for books like Spin.”—Boing Boing

“JULIAN COMSTOCK is a rich and rewarding story—I’ve barely scratched the surface of its themes here. Expect to see it on next year’s Hugo shortlist; it certainly deserves to be there.”—SFGospel.com

Read Robert Charles Wilson’s 3-part interview with Brian Francis Slattery on Tor.com:

Part 1 — “It’s like Guernica repainted by Norman Rockwell. And I thought it would be a great way to tell a story about a post-collapse 22nd-century America.”

Part 2 — “How bizarre would contemporary headlines look to Herman Melville or Harriet Beecher Stowe? Air war over Afghanistan, a black Democratic president, gay marriage: this stuff would never have been considered “plausible” prediction, back in the day. And yet here we are.”

Part 3 — “A writer doesn’t have to master every moral dilemma in order to find drama in it. You just have to be sensitive to it.”

Starred review From PW:
“Hugo-winner Wilson (Axis) perpetrates a kind of skewed steampunk novel set in a postcollapse, imperial United States returned to 19th-century technology and mores…Written with the eloquence and elegance of a Victorian novel, this thoughtful tale combines complex characters, rousing military adventure and a beautifully realized, unnerving future.”

Starred review From Kirkus Reviews:
“Post-apocalyptic power struggle from Hugo Award winner Wilson…expertly handled prognostication with more than a touch of somber magnificence.”

…………………………….

Eccentric Orbits
Unseeing in the ‘City’
In the Union-Tribune on Page E4

Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd-Century America
Robert Charles Wilson
Tor, 416 pages, $25.95

Jumping closer geopolitically to home, young Adam Hazzard narrates the tale of how Julian Comstock, and Julian’s guardian-mentor Sam Godwin, leave the little Athabaskan town of Williams Ford, just ahead of the military draft and wind up at war anyway.

Besides the draft, there’s a good reason for Julian to bug out. He’s the nephew of the hereditary president of the United States, and his father, the military hero of the invasion of Panama, was hanged for treason. After a while, incognito in the Wild West, Julian and Sam have good reason to worry about what would happen if President Deklan Comstock got wind of Julian’s whereabouts.

Adam only gradually learns this; he’s a backwoods boy, 17 as the story starts, and pretty much as innocent as the Dominion, which regulates the religion in the country, would like him to remain. He has the narrative voice that you could imagine a young Teddy Roosevelt delighting in, flatly observing the ordinariness of his upbringing and the novelty of going out into the world.

America in the 22nd century is a pretty good fit for the sort of bully adventures TR enjoyed, too, what with a lot of our present-day technology decayed into plastic mulch and bits of corroded metal. Travel is by foot, horse and steam train; the Age of the Efflorescence of Oil is long gone, and the political and economic picture changed radically during what is called the False Tribulation. The Dominion oversees the accepted churches – which seem mostly Protestant – and is a strong part of the government. Don’t know how much Teddy would’ve liked that, nor what he’d think of the system of owners, leaseholders and, essentially, serfs, but damn, the boys have Adventures!

…………………………….

Between the Lines: Make room on the bookshelf
By Allen Pierleoni
THE SACRAMENTO BEE

“Julian Comstock: A Story of 22nd Century America” by Robert Charles Wilson (Tor, $25.95, 416 pages; on sale June 23): Yes, it’s sci-fi, but it crosses genre boundaries to mix adventure with Western, religion with politics. America is in turmoil, re-emerging as a world power, when a legend named Julian Comstock makes his mark on the international scene. Turns out the president of the United States is chagrined to learn Julian is his nephew – and a threat to his power. Wilson won a Hugo Award for “Spin.”

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