First of all, a great
big thank you to everyone for their congratulations to Anita and I on the birth
of Evan. We’ve been overwhelmed by the support, love and best wishes we’ve had
from friends, family and people we’ve never met. It means a lot to us, so be
sure we’re very thankful for everyone’s kind thoughts. He’s a very lucky boy to
have had such a welcome to the world. It’s been a busy two months since he
arrived, as we’ve been getting into the swing of having him in the house with
us, dictating when we can grab showers, eat our dinner and when we get to watch
tv or a movie. Evan is now almost eight weeks old and it growing like a weed,
with cute little chankles and folds in his arms. Which is a good sign, I’m
reliably informed. And though I’m biased, he’s about the cutest kid you’ll ever
see.
Evan doing his best
Fred Durst impression.
Anyway, onto the
writing stuff...
A Thousand Sons
At 1am in the wee
small hours of Wednesday morning, I typed THE END at the conclusion of the
biggest writing project I’ve ever undertaken. After having a nice long sleep, I
read and corrected the last four chapters of A Thousand Sons and then sent the
whole damn lot over to Black Library. It was a strange sensation to let it go,
as I’ve been so immersed in its creation for so long. I put in a lot of time up
front with this book to make sure the Thousand Sons weren’t just another legion
who looked, walked and talked just like any other, and that took a bit of time
to flesh out. Which meant the book looked at my planned word count and shook
it’s head with a weary ain’t gonna happen expression.
It took a lot longer
to write and covered a great deal of ground, with lots of things in there that
surprised me and which I hadn’t intended to cover, but which felt wholly
natural and necessary. I’m sure with a vicious enough carving knife, there’s
plenty of darlings that could be murdered in the manuscript without
compromising the core of the novel, but each section – whether it dealt with
the legion, Magnus or the Remembrancers – felt as though it was a necessary
adjunct to the main driver of the plot. Without the supporting cast of
characters and the events that surround them, the main plot would have been all
the poorer.
Now, is that just me
waffling to excuse the fact that I went over my word count? Under normal
circumstances, I’d maybe agree with you, but having skimmed through the
manuscript with a critical eye (as opposed to the ‘what did I write six
chapters ago?’ eye) I think that it’s a book that grew to the length it needed.
Is it the book I had
in mind when I started out? Yes and no. Yes, it hits the milestones we need to
see with the Thousand Son, but it also explores the legion in ways I hadn’t
expected, since I didn’t want them to be the same Astartes as any other legion
that just has a different colour of armour and shouts, ‘For Magnus!’ instead of
‘For Horus!’. I think I’ve done that, and I’ve expanded what we know about
Magnus and his legion in ways that are unexpected, unusual and like you might
not expect. Are they still the Thousand Sons of yore, absolutely. Are they
different from anything you’ve seen of them before? Also absolutely.
It’s a story that
stands alone, but which will be enriched when read in tandem (in, not on) with
the other half of the Magnus/Russ duology; Dan Abnett’s Prospero Burns. Dan and
I spoke often during the writing of these books, finding common ground,
unifying themes and interesting ways they could connect, intertwine or
otherwise reference each other. You’ll read one and perhaps glimpse a scene
running alongside it in the other. Elements appearing in one book will be
passed, like the baton of a relay runner, from one book to the other and back
again. There’s some very cool stuff going on between them, and I can promise there
will be some revelations that will please/infuriate people in equal measure.
But the good thing is, the interpretation is all yours. As each book is
intended to be that legion’s version of events, there are going to be scenes
that wilfully contradict one another, and that’s something we knew we wanted to
do from the very beginning. It’s not a mistake, we did talk to one another, we did compare notes, but
we wanted you to make your own mind up.
But I think you’re
going to like it. I enjoyed the writing process of this, as it’s always good to
collaborate with the Awesomeness that is Dan Abnett (the capitalisation is totally
justified). Every time I would come off the phone, I’d have pages of notes,
ideas and things to go back and change, and it doesn’t get much better than
that as far as the collaborative process goes. Inspiring just doesn’t cut it as
a descriptor, but it’ll have to do for now.
So, with A Thousand Sons put to bed, I’ve a few other tasks to get my teeth
into. I’ll be spending the rest of today getting a plan together for a short
fiction piece for White Dwarf and drawing up some more detailed plans for The
Chapter’s Due, the sixth Ultramarines novel (note I said sixth, NOT last), which
I’ll be starting next week. It’s going to be a belter, full of action and
adventure, with war on a scale I’ve not yet tackled. Watch this space. There’s
also another project I need to get my teeth into planning, which required me to
get hold of Time-Life’s ‘This Fabulous Century’ and Gangs of New York. I’ll say
no more. I’ve already said too much…
TV Gold
Been watching some new
tv shows since The Wire finished on BBC 2 recently, which was simultaneously
sad and inspiring. Sad because it’s over, inspiring because I think I learned a
lot from it in terms of pacing and characterisation. I loved how everyone on
it; from the cops, drug dealers, killers, thieves to the politicians and
ordinary folk were wonderfully fleshed out with real flaws and real virtues.
Everyone was compelling to watch and no-one was wholly bad or good. Just like
real people in fact. Aside from great drama and wonderfully realised dialogue,
it was inspiring to see that the creators were willing to take their time with
the story, not rushing towards any resolution and not being afraid to pull the
rug out from their characters at the last moment. The last montage in the
finale of season 2 was just wonderful, perfectly encapsulating what made this
show so perfect.
We’re dipping our toes
in Flash Forward, which is shaping up nicely in the void between seasons of
Lost. I’m rewatching Generation Kill, which is much easier second time around
now that I know who everyone is and don’t have to try and tell identically clad
soldiers apart from a brief long shot or snatched line of dialogue. Like The
Wire, it just chucks you into the characters and events with a ‘here you go,
deal with it’ attitude, which I love, as I get bored with the spoon feeding
attitude a lot of tv drama seems to take in underestimating its audience.
Books on the go
Reading-wise, I’m
reading a lot of my H.P. Lovecraft just now (though I did pick up a copy of Gav
Thorpe’s Shadow King at BL yesterday, so that might just nudge itself to the
top of the reading pile alongside The Corner, one of the books written by the
creators of The Wire). Sitting by the bed, like a guilty secret, is 1812, a novel
about vampires set during Napoleon’s invasion of Russia. Now I picked this up
with such high hopes, but they’ve been cruelly dashed upon the rocks. Russian
vampires. Napoleonic warfare. Should be a slam-dunk, right? I’ve never
struggled with a book so much. It should be rip-roaringly exciting, but just
keeps dragging its heels and I’m in that horrid position of thinking that I
might not bother finishing it, even though I’m about two thirds of the way
through.
Rock Baby
I’ve been listening to
a lot of Planet Rock on the radio recently, as dancing around the front room
with Evan in my arms has proved to be the best way to get him off to sleep. My
writing playlist has swollen again with lots more albums, most notably Finding
Beauty in Negative Spaces by Seether, all three albums of Shinedown (who I’m
off to see at the beginning of November at Rock City) and Sci-Fi Crimes by
Chevelle. Good stuff and right up my alley. I got the new Rammstein album
yesterday and it’s fantastic, as hard, heavy and melodic as you’d expect, with
some killer riffs.
Right, that’s enough
waffle for today. With A Thousand Sons done, I should hopefully have a bit more
time to ensure a more regular presence here (famous last words perhaps, but
I’ll try). I think I’ll try and do a Q&A with the responses on previous
posts to answer some of your questions next.
Gamesfest 4 and Thought Bubble
Oh, and before I
forget, I’ll be appearing at Gamesfest 4 at the Watford Colosseum on the 24th of October. I’ll be signing books and
chatting, and I’ll also be on a Horus Heresy discussion panel with the Towering
Presence of Jim Swallow. So if you’re around that way be sure to stop by. And
one for the diaries next month, I’ll be at Thought Bubble in Leeds on the 21st
of November.
See you soon,
Graham