*phew*
I kept busy…
Annual
Something Borrowed (2016 Edition)
For those unfamiliar with the PLR, here’s my annual public service announcement on the subject:
If you are a writer/editor/illustrator/etc, a resident of the UK or Ireland and you ever need a reason for donating your books to the library – on top of all the obvious ones like promoting reading and supporting this valuable and increasingly undermined public service – this is it. The PLR is a system where authors who’ve written books that are in public libraries get a little revenue each time somebody borrows their works. It’s a way to repay writers who won’t be earning a royalty from a sale in a bookstore. The hardworking folks at the PLR office pay a nominal fee based on how
borrowed you were – and in the interests of fairness, you can’t earn more than around £6000, so the big names don’t get to hog all the money.
In the current political climate, both the PLR and the libraries it springs from are under threat, so if you are a writer or a reader, please do your bit to help support both as best you can.
Here’s my Top Ten Library Loans of my novels for 2015 (with 2014’s position in brackets)
1 (-) Deadline
2 (1) Peacemaker
3 (6) The Poisoned Chalice
4 (3) Nemesis
5 (2) Fear To Tread
6 (5) Hammer & Anvil
7 (7) Synthesis
8 (10) The Flight of the Eisenstein
9 (-) Icarus Effect
10 (4) Cast No Shadow
The big shake-up in my top ten this year was the arrival of my 24 novel Deadline straight into the top slot – number one with a bullet, which seems apt for a story about Jack Bauer! That kicked back my Doctor Who Western Peacemaker to second place for the first time in years, which was closely followed by my Star Trek: The Fall novel The Poisoned Chalice. Also new in the list this year is my Deus Ex novel Icarus Effect.
As always, my thanks to everyone who supported their local libraries and borrowed my books!
2K15 Games
I got a new PC after finally admitting that my previous machine had developed the digital equivalent of senility, which meant a revamp of my Steam account and a bunch of new stuff to try out. On consoles, I doggedly held on to the last generation with my PS3 and Xbox 360 in a vain attempt to plough through my shelf of unfinished stuff… Yeah, that didn’t work out like I expected. I’m still undone on a lot of old-gen games, so I expect I’ll still be playing on my aging machines well into 2016.
Best game of the year? No question that it was Naughty Dog’s charming and honest The Last of Us: Left Behind.
Here’s the list:
The Wolf Among Us, Alien Isolation, The Last of Us: Left Behind, The Walking Dead: Season Two, Grand Theft Auto V (PS4 version), Dragon Age: Inquisition, Assassin’s Creed: Unity, 80 Days, Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons, Disney Infinity 3.0: Twilight of the Republic, Disney Infinity 3.0: Rise of the Empire, Watch Dogs, Joy Ride Turbo, Yoostar 2: In The Movies, South Park: The Stick of Truth, Homefront, Max Payne 3, Star Wars Battle Pod, Warhammer 40,000: Storm of Vengeance, Bejewelled Blitz, Volume, Strike Suit Zero, Nova-111, Space Hulk, Lumino City, Black Ice, Big Pharma, Satellite Reign, Star Trek: Wrath of Gems
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2K15 Movies
The fun never ends here at Red Flag, as I desperately try to quantify the passage of my years with lists of things; today’s vision of months past takes stock of all the feature films I absorbed, good, bad and indifferent. And there were plenty of all three, let me tell ya.
There were a lot of challengers for the bottom slot this year, it seems. Some flawed gems like Tomrrowland and Interstellar, others just plain flawed. Terminator, Pixels, Gamechangers, Jupiter Ascending, I’m looking at all of you. I’m not angry, just disappointed. But I had a lot of love for Big Hero 6, which was by turns sweet and action-packed. I had tons of nostalgic fun with the bat-shit crazy Knights of Badassdom and Plastic Galaxy. I liked Project Almanac‘s lo-fi grab for high-concept SF, and Black Sea‘s tense thrills. But as much as I loved Avengers and Ant-Man, this was the year for Star Wars. So, yeah. The Force Awakens was my movie of 2015. No surprise there, nerfherders.
Here’s the full list:
The Amazing Spider-Man 2, The Sweeney [2012], Transcendence, Planes: Fire & Rescue, The Last Days On Mars, Big Hero 6, Taken 3, Knights of Badassdom, 300: Rise of an Empire, Going Cardboard, Atari: Game Over, Olympus Has Fallen, Brick Mansions, Plastic Galaxy, Transformers: Age of Extinction, Avengers: Age of Ultron, X-Men: Days of Future Past, The Anomaly, Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa, Robot & Frank, Renaissance, The Equalizer, Spy, Lucy, Terminator: Genisys, Ant-Man, Rush, Red Dawn [2012], Godzilla [2014], A LEGO Brickumentary, Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation, Pixels, In A World…, Blackhat, Gone Girl, Interstellar, The Expendables 3, The Gamechangers, The Interview, American Sniper, Spectre, Project Almanac, Jupiter Ascending, Tomorrowland, Black Sea, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Hitman Agent 47, Fantastic Four [2015]
2K15 Books
Does anyone out there read these? I’m not sure, but be honest at this stage, I’m just doing this as a way to keep score for myself… Anyhow. Thanks to my good friend Ming’s generosity and his inexorable lust for cutting edge technology, I became the custodian of a hand-me-down last generation Kindle eReader after remarking that I didn’t read enough digital content – so this year, just over a third of all the stuff I read this year was on a screen.
I found it interesting how many of the digital titles were short (or short-ish) fiction, and I gotta wonder if that’s reflecting the fact that people eReading are buying more by name than by physical size of the work. Never mind the quality, feel the width, as they say. But I’m not denigrating the format, far from it. Without the Kindle, I’d probably never have had the great nostalgia trip that was Shannon Appelcline’s Designers & Dragons series, an exhaustive set of volumes about the history of pencil-and-paper roleplaying games. I also read a whole bunch of Star Wars tie-ins this year, largely to prime the pump for The Force Awakens, after being away from the franchise for some time. It seems I’ve missed some cool stuff over in the GFFA, so I reckon 2016 will feature them a bit too.
But the biggest swing in my reading habits for 2015 was a lead toward thrillers once more, including a couple of Bonds and some SAS roughnecks as I rediscovered my love of stuff-blowing-uppery. Best of the year is shared between David M. Ewalt’s hymn to roleplaying Of Dice And Men, and Diamond David Lee Roth’s wild stream-of-thought autobio Crazy From The Heat, which reset my rock playlists back to 80’s Hair Metal setting for the rest of 2015. The worst was the novel that taught me not to pay attention to recommendations from book bloggers who talk in ALL CAPS and haven’t read anything older than they are.
Here’s the list:
The Perfect Kill (Robert Baer), Bedlam (Christopher Brookmyre), Poseidon’s Arrow (Clive Cussler and Dirk Cussler), Malta Spitfire Pilot (Denis Barnham), Fortune’s Pawn (Rachel Bach), Destination: Moonbase Alpha (Robert E. Wood), Chasm City (Alastair Reynolds), Final Orbit (S.V. Date), Outlaw (Mark Sullivan), Red Notice (Andy McNab), Masters of War (Chris Ryan), Glasslands (Karen Traviss), Attack of the Seawolf (Michael DiMercurio), The Supercar Book For Boys (Martin Roach), Exit Wound (McNab), Dead Centre (McNab), Pirates (Ross Kemp), Blood Ransom (John Boyle), Tied In (Various), New Life And New Civilizations: Exploring Star Trek Comics (Various), Armada (Ernest Cline), Drone (Michael Maden), Game Over (Various), Of Dice And Men (David M. Ewalt), Edge of Tomorrow [All You Need Is Kill] (Hiroshi Sakurazaka), Lynx (Julian Jay Severin), Seven Brief Lessons On Physics (Carlo Rovelli), Solo (William Boyd), Trigger Mortis (Anthony Horowitz), State of Emergency (‘Sam Fisher’), Unworthy (Kirsten Beyer), Orphan X (Gregg Hurwitz), Designers & Dragons: The 1970’s (Shannon Appelcline), Designers & Dragons: The 1980’s (Appelcline), Dark Disciple (Christie Golden), Valour’s Choice (Tanya Huff), Crazy From The Heat (David Lee Roth), All Creatures Great and Small (Landry Q. Walker), High Noon On Jakku (Walker), The Crimson Corsair and the Lost Treasure of Count Dooku (Walker), The Face of Evil (Walker), The Perfect Weapon (Deliah S. Dawson), Before The Awakening (Greg Rucka), Press Start To Play (Various), Blood of Sanguinius (Mark Clapham), The Blooding (Ray Harrison), The Chalice (Chris Wraight), Honour and Wrath (David Annandale), Eternal (Dan Abnett), The Hades Factor (Robert Ludlum with Gale Lynds), Designers & Dragons: The 1990’s (Appelcline)
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Fifteen’d
Work was equally challenging and rewarding, and that was put under pressure by ongoing family illness issues, because of course the universe doesn’t seem to think I have enough stressors in my life already. I lost a friend last year – so long Andy – and a hero too – so long Mr. Nimoy – but those close to me are still here and for that I’m grateful.
I did some cool stuff, which included; hiking around a volcano in the Canary Islands and swimming in the Atlantic ocean; going from London to Tatooine for a drink in that cantina and getting to be a Rebel for a moment or two (as well as finding out that Stormtroopers have no sense of humour); visiting Spamalot, and the court of the King of All Cheese, the Lord ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic; indulging my love of things with wings at air shows and the Red Bull Air Race. And then there were the conventions, from the worlds of Warhammer and the Horus Heresy to my people in the tribes of Trekkers and Gamers. I also set foot in a new field this year, thanks to the nice folks at ITW, the International Thriller Writers group, who were very welcoming and had lots of wine.
In a writerly fashion, I got my hands on some very cool things, and found the opportunity to cross stuff off my writer/nerd bucket lists. Top of that was getting to write – finally, after decades of missing the brass ring – fiction for one of my all-time favourite universes: Star Wars.
I gotta say, doing that in 2015 of all years, with The Force Awakens bringing the Galaxy Far, Far Away back into the public consciousness, was a personal milestone for me. Putting words in Obi-Wan Kenobi’s mouth and penning an “opening crawl” was something else – and the thrill at starting a script with the words A Long Time Ago… was amazing. But I also learned that be careful what you wish for is advice that always applies.
2015 saw me release a new Star Trek: Titan novel with Sight Unseen (which just this month made the Locus Bestseller list, so thanks to everyone who bought it!), bring in some new audio stories for the Horus Heresy saga with the Nathaniel Garro box-set, and have some fun with short stories for The Scientific Secrets of Doctor Who and the Game Over anthology. The tale I wrote for the latter, “Screen Burn”, was probably the most fun I had with a keyboard all year.
Elsewhere, I’ve had the chance to put a line through a couple of other bucket list bullet points, but right now I can’t talk about the stories I’m doing for the worlds of [REDACTED] and [REDACTED] (both of which are things I’ve been a fan of for many years), not to mention the more-recent-but-equally-cool [REDACTED]; I can say that I’ve got more stories on the way in 2016 for the Horus Heresy and Star Trek fiction lines, the Deus Ex gameworld and a forthcoming audio series featuring an iconic British comicbook hero.
But beyond all of that is something big, something new, something totally original that I’ve been working on for quite a while now. Watch for Nomad in the months to come; I’ll be talking about it a lot.