Novels, short fiction, comics, audios and a whole load of translated editions gave me a full publishing schedule for 2022; there’ll be more to come in 2023!
Annual
2K21 Movies
And finally, the last of my annual year-end review blogs looks at the movies I watched in 2021…
I set a target for last year for a minimum of one film a week and I managed to keep to it. Despite lockdown-a-rama, I got out to the cinema a few times and kept healthy. Among my personal movie trends for 2021 was a binge-watch of old school giant robot anime and a number of movies about angry, well-armed women – a few of which seemed to follow in the footsteps of Nikita with the name-as-title conceit.
My top movie picks for 2021 were Korean junk-sci-fi Space Sweepers, murder mystery Knives Out and the dramatic 007 outing No Time to Die.
Here’s the full list:
Bad Boys For Life, Downhill, Alita: Battle Angel, The Hunt, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, Space Sweepers, Long Shot, Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn, Operation Odessa, Maria, The Great Hack, Mercury 13, Sniper: Assassin’s End, Skyfire, SAS: Red Notice, Mute, Knives Out, Into The Inferno, Rogue, Angel Has Fallen, Love and Monsters, Without Remorse, The Mitchells vs the Machines, Assassins (2020), Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage, Rambo: Last Blood, Polar, DeLorean: Back from the Future, Helios, Sentinelle, Mobile Suit Gundam I, Kitty Love: A Homage to Cats, The Dish, Fast & Furious 9, Bill & Ted Face The Music, Black Widow, Furie, Mobile Suit Gundam II: Soldiers of Sorrow, Mobile Suit Gundam III: Encounters in Space, Mobile Suit Gundam: Char’s Counterattack, Den of Thieves, Anna, Shang-Chi & the Legend of the Ten Rings, Wonder Woman 1984, Gunpowder Milkshake, Kate, No Time to Die, Free Guy, Red Notice, Eternals, 21 Bridges, Spider-Man: No Way Home and Close.
2K21 Games
My next year-end blog looks over what I played in 2021…
I played a little more than the previous year but my choices as to genre et al remain largely unchanged – although I did get to play some stuff outside my usual picks by dint of being on a BAFTA award committee jury. I didn’t get any good board gaming in, however, which I aim to correct in 2022…
While I enjoyed going back to older titles in 2022 – especially Ghost Recon Wildlands and Ghost Recon Breakpoint (with it’s new content) I really enjoyed the atmosphere and adventure of Ghost of Tsushima, so that gets my Game of the Year vote.
Here’s the full list:
Kentucky Route Zero TV Edition, Spiritfarer, Ghost of Tsushima, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, Final Fantasy VII Remake, The Last of Us Part II, Before I Forget, If Found…, Drone Racing League Simulator, Marvel’s Avengers, Destiny 2: Shadowkeep, Destiny 2: Beyond Light, Call of Duty Black Ops 4, Watch Dogs Legion: Bloodline, Sniper Ghost Warrior Contracts 2, Predator: Hunting Grounds, Battlefield 2042, Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy, Alba: A Wildlife Adventure, Rider’s Republic, Call of Duty Vanguard, Hot Wheels Unleashed, Golf Club Wasteland and Far Cry 6.
2K21 Books
The next of my regular year-ending blogs is my list of what I reading throughout 2021; despite actually getting a holiday last on which I could lounge around and read, I didn’t add much to my total from 2020!
I kept a pretty even spread between thrillers and science fiction, and my top picks for the year were Gustaf Skördeman’s Geiger, Layover in Dubai by Dan Fesperman and Weird Field World by Rob Turpin.
Here’s the full list:
Die Hard: The Utlimate Visual History (James Mottram & David S. Cohen), Cutting Edge (Ward Larsen), Vulcan: Hidden Universe Travel Guide (Dayton Ward), Weird Field World (Rob Turpin), Artcade (Tim Nicholls), Capture or Kill (Tom Marcus), Arkhangel (James Brabazon), Geiger (Gustaf Skördeman), Scorpion (Christian Cantrell), Mission: Impossible (Peter Barsocchini), McMafia (Misha Glenny), Moments Asunder (Ward), Hollywood vs. The Author (Stephen Jay Schwartz [ed.]), Blue Gemini (Mike Jenne), Boss Fight Books: Metal Gear Solid (Ashly Burch & Anthony Burch), Qualityland (Marc-Uwe Kling) More Sex, Better Zen, Faster Bullets: The Encyclopaedia of Hong Kong Film (Stefan Hammond & Mike Wilkins) Red Wolves (Adam Hamdy), One False Step (Richard Tongue), Salud Mi Familia: The Ultimate Fan’s Guide to the Fast and Furious Movie Franchise (Jacob Hollabaugh), Oblivion’s Gate (David Mack), Ancillary Sword (Anne Leckie), Falling (T.J. Newman), Toast on Toast (Stephen Toast), The Treadstone Exile (Joshua Hood), The Eagle Has Landed: 50 Years of Lunar Science Fiction (Neil Clarke [ed.]), Hostage (Claire Mackintosh), Hearts on Fire (Kc Weyland), Space: 1999 – Volume 1 (Andrew Smith & Roland Moore), Russians Among Us (Gordon Corera), Layover in Dubai (Dan Fesperman), The Toy Collector (James Gunn), Victory’s Price (Alexander Freed), Dredge Runners (Alec Worley), Augur of Despair (Chris Dows), The Stuff of Life (Mike Tucker), Amongst Our Weapons (Ben Aaronovitch), Foreign Hostage (Aiden L. Bailey), Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga (Ian Christie), The Trouble with Telstar (John Berryman), Cold Justice (Ant Middleton), Spooked: The Secret Rise of Private Spies (Barry Meier), Vendetta (Dreda Say Mitchell), Die-Cast Aircraft (Paul Brent Adams), Bond Vehicle Collectables (Brent Adams), Film and Television Star Cars (Brent Adams), The Lost Adventures of James Bond (Mark Edlitz), Recruited (Thomas Parrott), Game Wizards (Jon Peterson), An Unofficial History of NASA Mission Patches ( Dr. Roger D. Launius), Britain’s Toy Car Wars (Giles Chapman)
Twenty-One’d
A wise man once said, it ain’t over ‘til it’s over. And certainly 2021 felt like it might be over, except it wasn’t over. And it kept on not being over all year long.
At the end of 2020, I made the mistake of saying “nor are we out of it” and it seems that the fates were listening. COVID, lockdown and everything else in this maddening cocktail of intersecting problems around us didn’t slacken its grip throughout 2021, and I found myself pretty much repeating my mantra for the previous year over again – concentrating on taking it day by day, being careful and keeping focus on the thought of better times ahead.
I’m glad to say that while some of my family and friends did get sick over the past year, they’re all still here and they’ve all come through relatively intact, which makes me grateful and appreciative – so thanks NHS, thanks smart and conscientious people, thanks science. Let’s keep that going.
Of course, another year in semi-lockdown looks a lot like business as usual for writers like me, and in that mode I carried on working on a bunch of projects over those twelve months.
Outlaw, the sixth book in the series of my bestselling Marc Dane action thrillers arrived in hardcover right in the middle of the doldrums of this year, but despite that it ticked over just fine and the response to the book was very strong. Outlaw was a real labour of love for me, as it brings together a lot of the story arcs I started laying down with Nomad, the first Marc Dane novel, and pays off some hanging threads with dramatic effect. My previous novels in the series – Ghost and Shadow – also came out in new editions for my North American and Czech readers.
A few people have asked me if Outlaw is the final Marc Dane novel and I’ll reiterate – I have no intention to end Marc’s adventures here!
But that said, he does deserve a holiday, so Marc, Lucy and the Rubicon team will be taking a break – and in their place you’ll be seeing an all new, original stand-alone crime thriller novel from me – more of which I will reveal in the coming months. There’s also something else bubbling away with regard to Marc’s future adventures, but right now I can’t say more…
Star Trek was also a key component of my new releases in 2021, with The Dark Veil, a tie-in novel to the Star Trek: Picard TV series arriving at the start of the year and The Ashes of Tomorrow, the middle book of the epic, universe-shattering Coda trilogy, coming a few months later. I also got to pen a short story for the Enterprise era Trek in the new Star Trek Explorer magazine, which I hope to write for again in 2022.
Elsewhere, the videogames Fracked and Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy hit stores – both of which I did a little story work on, just keeping my hand in the games game over the past few months. Guardians also won a major award for its narrative, which I’m proud I could contribute to.
Into 2022, more cool stuff is coming – I can’t wait for fans of the Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell franchise to see Firewall, my new original novel featuring the iconic Sam Fisher in a brand new adventure – and there’s my aforementioned stand-alone thriller in the offing too.
So looking ahead, I’ll wrap up with I said last year – because it’s still valid advice now – stay safe, stay well, and stay positive.
What I Did In 2021…
Another busy year! Thank you to everyone who supported my work throughout 2021 – more neat stuff is coming for 2022!