Close
post-featured-image

Ancient Magic in Modern Cities

Modern cities can hold ancient magic, some more literally than others. Check out our favorite cities turn magical epicenters below!


when among crows by veronica rothChicago in When Among Crows by Veronica Roth

Pain is Dymitr’s calling. His family is one in a long line of hunters who sacrifice their souls to slay monsters. Now he’s tasked with a deadly mission: find the legendary witch Baba Jaga. To reach her, Dymitr must ally with the ones he’s sworn to kill. Pain is Ala’s inheritance. A fear-eating zmora with little left to lose, Ala awaits death from the curse she carries. When Dymitr offers her a cure in exchange for her help, she has no choice but to agree. Together they must fight against time and the wrath of the Chicago underworld. But Dymitr’s secrets—and his true motives—may be the thing that actually destroys them.

DarkerShadeMagic 9781250891211 CVRrev1.inddLondon in the Shades of Magic series by V. E. Schwab

Kell is one of the last Antari—magicians with a rare, coveted ability to travel between parallel Londons; Red, Grey, White, and, once upon a time, Black. After an exchange goes awry, Kell escapes to Grey London and runs into Delilah Bard, a cut-purse with lofty aspirations. Now perilous magic is afoot, and treachery lurks at every turn. To save all of the worlds, they’ll first need to stay alive.

one for my enemy by olivie blakeManhattan in One for My Enemy by Olivie Blake

In modern-day Manhattan where we lay our scene, two rival witch families fight to maintain control of their respective criminal empires. On one side of the conflict are the Antonova sisters — each one beautiful, cunning, and ruthless — and their mother, the elusive supplier of premium intoxicants, known only as Baba Yaga. On the other side, the influential Fedorov brothers serve their father, the crime boss known as Koschei the Deathless, whose ventures dominate the shadows of magical Manhattan. After twelve years of tenuous co-existence, one family member brutally crosses the line. Bad blood reignites old grudges; at the same time, fate intervenes with a chance encounter between enemies. In the wake of love and vengeance, everyone must choose a side. As each of the siblings struggles to stake their claim, bloodshed in inevitable. The question is: Whose?

blood jadewTokyo in Blood Jade by Julia Vee and Ken Bebelle

Emiko Soong, newly minted Sentinel of San Francisco, just can’t catch a break. Just after she becomes the guardian for a sentient city, a murder strikes close to home. Called by the city and one of the most powerful clans to investigate, she traces the killer whose scent signature bears a haunting similarity to her mother’s talent. The trail will lead her back to Tokyo where the thread she pulls threatens to unravel her whole world and bring dark family secrets to light. Meanwhile, the General rises in the East and Emiko must fight the hidden enemies of his growing army who are amped up on Blood Jade, while keeping her promises to her brother Tatsuya as he prepares for his tourney. Her duties as Sentinel and her loyalties collide when she must choose between hiding her deepest shame or stopping the General’s relentless march.

the library of the dead by t l huchuEdinburgh in the Edinburgh Nights series by T. L. Huchu

The Library of the Dead introduces readers to Ropa, a precocious and cynical teen who can talk to ghosts. She explores the shadowy magical underside of modern Edinburgh searching for clues to uncover what’s behind the evil bewitching all the children, leaving them shells of themselves. Along the way she encounters an occult library, a magical mentor, and some unexpected allies. This atmospheric, paranormal fantasy series continues with Our Lady of Mysterious Ailments.

post-featured-image

The Official In the Lives of Puppets Playlist from TJ Klune

Poster Placeholder of amazon- 74 Image Place holder  of bn- 8 Place holder  of booksamillion- 37 ibooks2 54 Placeholder of bookshop -83

in the lives of puppets by tj kluneLast year, TJ Klune provided us with a fantastic official playlist and write-up for his new novel, In the Lives of Puppets. Now that Puppets is releasing in paperback, we’re bringing his tunes and commentary back 😎


As of the day I’m writing this—April 12, 2023—I have over five hundred songs in my In the Lives of Puppets playlist. Below, I’ve selected fifteen songs from that list to tell the musical story of the novel. These songs are in narrative order to take you on the journey with Vic, Hap, Nurse Ratched and Rambo to save one of their own. There’s a mix of jazz, contemporary and some different versions of songs you’ll recognize.

Each of the major characters—from Vic to Giovanni—are based upon a particular type of music and/or musical performance. For example, the Coachman is partially based on Gerard Way’s performance as part of My Chemical Romance for Welcome to the Black Parade. The Blue Fairy is pure Annie Lennox in Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This).

Enjoy the playlist for In the Lives of Puppets!

TJ Klune


video player


A Puppets Vibe

The Irrepressibles — “In This Shirt”

There’s a thorn in my side
It’s the shame, it’s the pride
Of you and me
Ever changing


PART 1

Weather report volcano for hire vinilo epoca

Weather Report — “Volcano for Hire”

Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald — “Cheek to Cheek”

Heaven, I’m in heaven
And my heart beats so that I can hardly speak
And I seem to find the happiness I seek
When we’re out together dancing cheek to cheek

Rihanna — “Disturbia”

It’s a thief in the night to come and grab you
It can creep up inside you and consume you
A disease of the mind, it can control you
I feel like a monster

Ethan Bortnick — “engravings”

All the pain is underneath, I’m listenin’
To everything, please tell me everything
I’ll put my hand up on your chest
So you forget your engravings

BT — “Simply Being Loved (Electronic Opus Mix)”

Some little joy some little joy,  it’s complicated
Some little time some little time, my heart’s been faded
Some little hope some little hope, and I pray again for love

(original substituted for remix on the linked Spotify playlist)


PART II

screencap of kouyou's youtube remix of come along by cosmodrake

Cosmo Sheldrake — “Come Along” (Reverb Edition by Kouyou)

Run along now don’t be glum
Get you gone now have some fun
Don’t be long for the end is nigh

(original substituted for remix on the linked Spotify playlist)

My Chemical Romance — “Welcome to the Black Parade”

We’ll carry on, we’ll carry on
And though you’re dead and gone, believe me
Your memory will carry on
 

Loveless — “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)”

You don’t wanna hurt me
But see how deep the bullet lies
Unaware I’m tearing you asunder
Oh, there is thunder in our hearts


PART III

Eurythmics: Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) (Music Video 1983) - IMDb

New Beat Order & Arc North & Aaron Richards — “Numb”

I’ve become so numb, I can’t feel you there
I’ve become so tired, so much more aware
I’m becoming this
All I want to do is be more like me
And be less like you

TALK — “Run Away To Mars”

I can’t tell which way is home
I’ve been gone for so long
It’s an empty world pp here
I skip stones and wonder
How long ’til I’m discovered?
It’s a quiet life up here

The Eurythmics & Annie Lennox & Dave Stewart — “Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)”

Some of them want to use you
Some of them want to get used by you
Some of them want to abuse you
Some of them want to be abused

Phlotilla & Andrea Wasse & Topher Mohr — “Going Down Fighting”

If the city’s on fire
I’ll stand in the ashes
There’s no turning back
It’s ready or not

This Mortal Coil — “Song to the Siren”

Long afloat on shipless oceans
I did all my best to smile
‘Til your singing eyes and fingers
Drew me loving to your isle
And you sang
Sail to me
Sail to me, let me enfold you
Here I am, here I am
Waiting to hold you


PART IV

Listen to The Irrepressibles - In This Shirt (True Identity Remix) by True Identity in My dear ones playlist online for free on SoundCloud

The Irrepressibles — “In This Shirt”

In the night to hear the engines purr
There’s a pain
It does ripple
Through my frame, makes me lame
There’s a thorn in my side
It’s the shame, it’s the pride
Of you and me


Order In the Lives of Puppets in Paperback Here!

Image Placeholder of amazon- 5 Placeholder of bn -45 Poster Placeholder of booksamillion- 34 ibooks2 17 Place holder  of bookshop- 76

post-featured-image

8 Books to Read After You Watch Dune: Part Two

Yeah, we’re into DuneDune lots of reading 📚😎

The spice must flow, and so will our sci-fi book recommendations! But what’s that you say? You’re not just looking for any space opera, you’re looking for the particular space opera that’s going to satisfy the exact reason why you’re already planning to see Dune: Part Two again? Fear not! Our recommendations are sorted by what got you excited for Dune!

By Julia Bergen


If you’re excited to see Dune because:

dune: the heir of caladan by brian herbert & kevin j. andersonDune seems really cool:

You should read: Dune: The Heir of Caladan by Brian Herbert & Kevin J. Anderson

When you need Dune, you need Dune! Dune: The Heir of Caladan is the conclusion of a prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert, Frank Herbert’s son, and science fiction legend Kevin J. Anderson. This saga began with Dune: The Duke of Caladan, continued with Dune: The Lady of Caladan, and tells the story of the Atreides family’s rise to power, and this particular volume details how Paul becomes the leader he needs to be before the events of Dune

princess of dune by brian herbert & kevin j. andersonNo, really. Dune is the coolest and you’ll throw yourself into the maw of a sandworm if you don’t get more immediately:

You should read: Princess of Dune by Brian Herbert & Kevin J. Anderson

When you need Dune, you need Dune! Set a few years before the events of Dune, this story explores the lives of Paul’s love Chani and his wife, the Princess Irulan. Both women will impact the trajectory of the whole galaxy as Paul Atreides brings it hurdling to its destiny. 

to sleep in a sea of stars by christopher paoliniYou love crazy space monsters:

You should read: To Sleep in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini

The sandworms in Dune are definitely some of the creepiest monsters in SF, and their connection to the spice is shrouded in mystery. While you wait to see sandworms on the screen, you can dive into the mystery of the creature discovered by a xenobiologist during what was supposed to be a routine survey mission on an uncolonized planet. And make sure to check out Fractal Noise for more tales in the same universe!

Poster Placeholder of - 72You love dudes fighting in suits in space:

You should read: Red Rising by Pierce Brown

If you’re most looking forward to seeing how Villeneuve envisions the stillsuits necessary to survive on the desert planet Arrakis, and to see some sweet suit fight scenes, calm you suited bloodthirst with a book about genetically perfected superhumans wearing futuristic body armor battling it out in a Hunger Games-esque competition for the solar system’s best job opportunities.

You Sexy Thing by Cat RamboYou love PEW PEW PEW space battles:

You should read: You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo

Perfect reading if you want to be able to practically hear that “PEW PEW PEW” noise, and maybe even a Wilhelm scream or two while you’re reading. A group of retired space soldiers gets dragged back into war when they’re forced onto a sentient ship that’s convinced it’s being stolen, and in addition must survive the machinations of a sadistic pirate king.

The Genesis of Misery by Neon YangYou love space politics:

You should read: The Genesis of Misery by Neon Yang

If you can’t resist competing galactic empires and political machinations in space, dive into The Genesis of Misery. A nobody from a nowhere mining planet becomes the center of a power struggle between dangerous players and royal families because of their forbidden powers. Plus, like Dune it’s full of prophecy and space magic. 

Place holder  of - 32No, seriously, you LIVE FOR space politics:

You should read: A Desolation Called Peace Arkady Martine

Oh, so you’re one of those, huh? No judgment, just book recommendations here, my friend. And you definitely need to feast your eyes on A Desolation Called Peace, which should give you all the space politics you could possibly want. An ambassador from a backwater planet must untangle the webs of subterfuge at the center of the Teixcalaanli Empire.

winter's orbit by everina maxwellYou love space politics, but not as much as you love love.

You should read: Winter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell

If you can’t wait for Dune’s space politic glory, but you’re also looking forward to scenes between Paul and Chani, then as soon as it’s on sale you need to get your hands on this romantic space opera. Two neuromodified psychics, a flirty socialite and a duty-bound soldier, find themselves at the center of a decades-old power struggle and a dangerous treasure-hunt. If they sync their minds, they might avoid life under military control, but they’d be giving up their free will. And what are these FEELINGS they’re having for each other?

Which one are you reading? Let us know in the comments!

post-featured-image

Queer Books Coming in 2024! 🏳️‍🌈

We’re gearing up for 2024 and it’s going to be a big year to be queer AND a big year for books! Check out some of the queer books we have publishing in 2024 😎🏳️‍🌈


the atlas complex by olivie blake-1The Atlas Complex by Olivie Blake

An explosive return to the library leaves the six Alexandrians vulnerable to the lethal terms of their recruitment. Old alliances quickly fracture as the initiates take opposing strategies as to how to deal with the deadly bargain they have so far failed to uphold. Those who remain with the archives wrestle with the ethics of their astronomical abilities, while elsewhere, an unlikely pair from the Society cohort partner to influence politics on a global stage. And still the outside world mobilizes to destroy them, while the Caretaker himself, Atlas Blakely, may yet succeed with a plan foreseen to have world-ending stakes. It’s a race to survive as the six Society recruits are faced with the question of what they’re willing to betray for limitless power—and who will be destroyed along the way.

heartsong by tj kluneHeartsong by TJ Klune

All Robbie Fontaine ever wanted was a place to belong. After the death of his mother, he bounces around from pack to pack, forming temporary bonds to keep from turning feral. It’s enough—until he receives a summons from the wolf stronghold in Caswell, Maine. Life as the trusted second to Michelle Hughes—the Alpha of all—and the cherished friend of a gentle old witch teaches Robbie what it means to be pack, to have a home. But when a mission from Michelle sends Robbie into the field, he finds himself questioning where he belongs and everything he’s been told.

necrobane-img-1

Necrobane by Daniel M. Ford

Aelis de Lenti, Lone Pine’s newly assigned Warden, is in deep trouble. She has just opened the crypts of Mahlgren, releasing an army of the undead into the unprotected backwoods of Ystain. To protect her village, she must unearth a source of immense Necromantic power at the heart of Mahlgren. The journey will wind through waves of undead, untamed wilderness, and curses far older than anything Aelis has ever encountered. But as strong as Aelis is, this is one quest she cannot face alone. Along with the brilliant mercenary she’s fallen for, her half-orc friend, and a dwarven merchant, Aelis must race the clock to unravel mysteries, slay dread creatures, and stop what she has set in motion before the flames of a bloody war are re-ignited.

brothersong by TJ Klune

Brothersong by TJ Klune

In the ruins of Caswell, Maine, Carter Bennett learned the truth of what had been right in front of him the entire time. And then it—he—was gone. Desperate for answers, Carter takes to the road, leaving family and the safety of his pack behind, all in the name of a man he only knows as a feral wolf. But therein lies the danger: wolves are pack animals, and the longer Carter is on his own, the more his mind slips toward the endless void of Omega insanity. But he pushes on, following the trail left by Gavin.

somewhere beyond the sea-1

Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune

Arthur Parnassus lives a good life built on the ashes of a bad one. He’s the headmaster of a strange orphanage on a distant and peculiar island, and he hopes to soon be the adoptive father to the six dangerous and magical children who live there. Arthur works hard and loves with his whole heart so none of the children ever feel the neglect and pain that he once felt as an orphan on that very same island so long ago. He is not alone: joining him is the love of his life, Linus Baker, a former caseworker in the Department in Charge of Magical Youth. And there’s the island’s sprite, Zoe Chapelwhite, and her girlfriend, Mayor Helen Webb. Together, they will do anything to protect the children. But when Arthur is summoned to make a public statement about his dark past, he finds himself at the helm of a fight for the future that his family, and all magical people, deserve.

witch queen1

Witch Queen of Redwinter by Ed McDonald

Witch Queen of Redwinter is the third book in Ed McDonald’s Redwinter Chronicles, full of shady politics, militant monks, ancient powers… and a young woman navigating a world in which no one is quite what they seem.

post-featured-image

A Year of Bramble

Monique Patterson
Monique Patterson

By Monique Patterson

I can hardly believe it’s already been a year since we announced the launch of Tor Publishing Group’s newest imprint, Bramble.

Let me take you back…way back in time. Ok, I’m exaggerating for dramatic effect.

In 2022, my friend and long time colleague, Devi Pillai, whom you all know as the Dark Lord and Emperor of the Tor Publishing Group approached me with the idea for a romance imprint. Tor has made itself the home for every other genrefrom horror to SFF to mystery and women’s fiction—and she felt it was high time for Tor to add romance to its stellar line up. 

I had spent 25 years publishing romance novels (and snatching SFF ARCs—with permission!—whenever I could), so this seemed like a perfect challenge. We pulled everything together behind the scenes and announced Bramble on Valentine’s Day 2023.

Since then, what’s happened?

I’m far from the only editor at Tor in love with romance, and Ali Fisher’s New York Times bestselling author, Jennifer Armentrout, has been writing romantasy before romantasy was a thing. We announced Bramble with Fall of Ruin and Wrath. Fall of Ruin and Wrath, an Indie Next Pick, is full of breathtaking suspense, scorching romance, and twisty court politics, perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas… and to our extreme delight, but not surprise, it became a New York Times, USA TODAY, Wall Street Journal and Publishers Weekly bestseller (Run, don’t walk to get this book).

Then the immensely talented Constance Fay joined the Bramble line up. Constance writes space opera romances that read like Becky Chambers with the heat turned up, and all the riotous adventure of Firefly. She’s just sent us book 3 in her Uncharted Hearts series and I’m blown away by how every book is more amazing than the last. Constance describes Calamity,—another Indie Next Pick!—the first Uncharted Hearts book, as “sex, love, and hijinks.”

Then, right on time for Christmas, there was Carissa Broadbent and The Serpent & the Wings of Night which reads like a Court of Thorns and Roses with vampires. New fans clamored on board the Carissa Broadbent train and Serpent was an instant New York Times, USA Today and Publishers Weekly bestseller. Carissa is an author to watch, and we’re publishing the next chapter of Oraya and Raihn’s story in The Ashes & the Star-Cursed King in June 2024.

And I’m sure many of you have heard about this intriguing author and her simply iconic novel (with those deep purple edges!), because RuNyx is like no one else, and Gothikana is like nothing else. Even though it’s ceaselessly modern, don’t think this dark academia romance is anything less than the real, original Gothic-with-a-big-G deal. RuNyx absolutely knows her chops, and you will be utterly immersed in the dark romance between Corvina and Vad and the mysterious world of Verenmore University riddled with secrets and danger. At Bramble, we’ve been obsessed with Gothikana since last May, but it only published three weeks ago, to become an instant New York Times, USA Today and Publishers Weekly bestseller. One early reviewer said this book “changed [her] brain chemistry.” Join the cult.

Melissa Marr’s delightful lesbian witch romance is publishing next week (only six days!!!) and it was top of mind throughout last spring, because Melissa and I were in the thick of editing Remedial Magic. The incomparable Melissa first made her mark in 2007 with the iconic Wicked Lovely and has been publishing lovely contemporary fantasy ever since. I knew from the start that Remedial Magic would be perfect for Bramble, not the least because of Tor’s famously lesbian-rich catalog. Remedial Magic has the charming magic school dynamics of The Magicians and the magical lesbian romance of One Last Stop. The Terry Pratchett fans in the audience will adore Prospero, who reads as a sort of hot young Granny Weatherwax—the same talent for “headology,” the same resistance to change, the same terrifying determination to do what’s right, no matter what the cost.

New York Times bestseller, Lora Leigh is literally blazing back onto the scene with hard-bodied, steely eyed Navy SEALs with Play Dirty. I’ve been working with Lora Leigh since Dangerous Games and it’s been a wild ride ever since. With Play Dirty you get everything that your dark romance heart desires. A four on the heat scale!

Similarly, last summer we co-acquired Rebecca Thorne’s charming Tomes and Tea quartet with Tor UK. Rebecca is a delight, with an amazing TikTok presence, who writes coffee shop AUs of fantasy tropes, and of course, they’re all lesbians (see, I told you!). Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea and its sequel A Pirate’s Life for Tea follow Kianthe and Reyna as they nope out of the violence and politics of high court life to run away and open a bookstore (!) that sells tea (!!), where readers of Legends & Lattes (!!!) will feel right at home. Because these were initially self-published, they’re available as ebooks now, though we’re releasing trade paperback editions with gorgeous stained edges and a bonus short story in May (for Treason) and August (for Pirates). Check them out—you won’t regret it.

All you cozy fantasy romance fans will continue to rejoice with Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst, also coming this summer, about a librarian and her assistant, Caz the sentient spider plant, as Kiela navigates the low stakes market of illegal spellmaking and the high risk business of starting over both in life and love. For this one, we wanted you to feel like you had entered this special world the moment you looked at the cover. Those lavender sprayed edges are the bonus!

The business of starting a new imprint is always a whirlwind and there are constantly consequential decisions to make that will hopefully lead to the book and the author’s success. One of the many things that is key to a book knocking it out of the park is for the cover to be just as stunning as the story itself. Our art department, working with highly talented artists, has produced one amazing cover after another, but I want to call out The Friend Zone Experiment by Zen Cho, because it came out perfect, pretty much on the first try. We knew from day one that the artist needed to be Bo Feng Lin, and he absolutely hit it out of the park. The Friend Zone Experiment is the product of author Zen Cho’s covid k-drama obsession, combined with her other job as a high-powered London lawyer. It combines the ritzy family politics of Crazy Rich Asians with a charming second-chance love story, Zen’s amazing prose, and an energetic, snappy plot about misbehavior amongst the most powerful businessmen in Malaysia.

The other was Curvy Girl Summer by Danielle Allen, a sexy, fantastically funny novel about the perils of online dating (who doesn’t have a story or two that they can tell?). It’s also a story where Danielle Allen explores the dating scene for a big, beautiful Black woman and everything that brings. I absolutely adore the cover by Keo Majoy who knocked it out of the park. 

But that’s not all, we also signed The Coven and The Cursed by Harper L. Woods. These were originally indie published and took TikTok by storm with their combination of unspeakably spicy romance, dark academia, magic schools, and demonic lover to seal the deal. These are getting the kind of stenciled edges the readers have been begging for. Brace yourself for The Coven. It’s so steamy we had trouble even finding an excerpt for the back cover that didn’t set off the fire alarm.

There are icons, and then there’s J.T. Geissinger. J.T. writes the sort of deep, dark romance with a twist that will leave you breathless, stunned…and wanting more. And it just gets wilder and steamier from there, with the standalone Pen Pal, reading like It Ends With Us meets Momento. No spoilers…but whatever you’re expecting, you’re going to be fabulously wrong and left asking “what just happened?” in the best way possible. Soon after in a back-to-back extravaganza J. T. kicks off her Queens and Monsters series –no holds barred mafia romance–with Ruthless Creatures, where a woman realizes the debt this mysterious stranger has come to collect…is her. And yes, you’ll want to collect all four books in the series with their amazing packaging and beautiful sprayed edges.

The nature of publishing timelines means that we’re working on several years worth of books on any given day. Today, I was looking at the paperback edition of a book that was published last year while planning the announcements of incredibly exciting new projects and authors. Don’t worry. These delicious secrets will be revealed soon!

So, what’s a year of Bramble been? We started with a name and a vision and now we have a star-studded, BookTok buzzy list of superstars and potential superstars. More importantly, we have authors we hope will give you all the feels and keep you wide awake into the small hours of the morning as you joyfully turn the pages, falling in love every step of the way. We hope your list of Bramble book boyfriends and book girlfriends is long by the end of 2024. 

Sometimes I feel like I’ve stumbled into fairyland and a century passed in the blink of an eye. Sometimes I feel like I’m still dreaming—certainly, it’s not possible that all three hardcover books we’ve published hit the Times? Certainly, the cover and edges for The Stars are Dying by USA Today bestseller Chloe C. Peñaranda, aren’t that beautiful? Certainly The Nightmare Before Kissmas by YA rockstar, Sara Raasch, isn’t the cutest thing I’ve ever read? We definitely don’t have my favorite Australian (well, not named Hemsworth), Freya Marske writing, Swordcrossed, the most perfect fencing love story for us?

No one wake me up.

Monique Patterson is vice president and editorial director of Bramble. The quote “All great literature is one of two stories; a man goes on a journey or a stranger comes to town,” by Leo Tolstoy is one of her favorites, because it immediately sets to mind all the possibilities of a fantastic story. Finding books and authors that reach across the breadth of our experiences as humans is important to her. Publishing a wide array of romance, commercial women’s fiction, and a select amount of nonfiction allows Monique to explore all of those experiences. Some of her upcoming titles are The Ashes & the Star-Cursed Kingby Carissa Broadbent, Remedial Magicby Melissa Marr, Pen Pal by J.T. Geissinger, and The Coven and The Cursed by Harper L. Woods.

post-featured-image

It’s Trivia Time with BRAMBLE ROMANCE!!!

Who’s ready for some trivia?! To celebrate one year of Bramble and everything *romance*, we’re giving YOU a fun trivia game to play with the loved ones in your life this Valentine’s Day. Enjoy, and let us know if you play!


Bramble Trivia
Bramble Trivia

Round 1: Film & TV

  1. Nicholas Galitzine, who stars as Prince Henry in Red, White, and Royal Blue, is also starring in another gay romcom–which one is it (extra points if you can name his character)?
  2. In Miss Congeniality, what does Miss Rhode Island consider “the perfect date?”
  3. What song does Patrick sing to Kat on the bleachers in 10 Things I Hate About You?
  4. Which of William Shakespeare’s plays was the 2006 classic, She’s The Man, based on?
  5. Which bad boy vampire heartthrob hit TV screens in 2009?
  6. Why does Sandra Bullock’s character want to marry Ryan Reynolds in The Proposal?
  7. In the film Bridget Jones’ Diary, what color is the eponymous diary?
  8. In what movie does leading lady Amanda describe herself as “loner loser, complicated wreck?”
  9. Towards the end of the movie Crazy Rich Asians, Rachel plays (and beats) Nick’s mother in what game?
  10. In the Breakfast Club, Molly Ringwald’s character Claire Standish has a unique party trick. What is it?

Round 2: Books

  1. In Fall of Ruin and Wrath by Jennnifer L. Armentrout, what is Callista’s magical power?
  2. In Carissa Broadbent’s paranormal romance Crowns of Nyaxia series, what is the vampire death tournament called?
  3. Adelaide Forrest is the author of many spicy contemporary mafia series. But she ALSO writes dark romantasy novels under a different name. What is that name, and bonus points if you can also name the books?
  4. Bramble author Lora Leigh is writing about one of romancelandia’s favorite kind of leading men in her upcoming novel Play Dirty. What is the profession (technically former profession, but who cares) of this hero?
  5. What is the name of the girl who will live forever but is cursed to always be forgotten?
  6. In The Hating Game, the main character Lucy wears a particular shade of lipstick. What’s it called?
  7. How did the Bridgerton family lose their father?
  8. Name the author who created the grumpy Scottish blacksmith known as #swordbae. Extra points if you can name the book in which #swordbae first appears?
  9. In what iconic romantasy series is the phrase “love as thou wilt” a religious directive? Double points for author & series or book name.
  10. Melissa Marr is an upcoming Bramble romance author but she is also the author of a popular YA series about fae. What is that series called?
  11. Gilded age romance author Joanna Shupe just “came out” as the author of the popular mafia romance “Kings of Italy” series. What is the name of her mafia-romance author alias?

Round 3: Tropes & Miscellany

  1. What fanfiction archive was nominated for a Hugo Award?
  2. Bestselling author Kit Rocha is actually two people (gasp!). What are their names?
  3. Which trope combines weather patterns with one of the Seven Dwarves?
  4. Which Bramble author was first discovered because of their male/male original fic called The Course of Honor? Bonus points if you can name both the author and the name of the book this was turned into.
  5. Fated Mates is an (excellent) romance podcast co-hosted by romance critic Jen Prokop and which bestselling romance author?
  6. Whomst is Taylor Swift dating and what team does he play for, and what sportsball does he do?
  7. What delightful romance blog has the tagline “all of the romance, none of the bullshit?”

 

 

Answers

Round 1: Film & TV

  1. [Bottoms/Jeff]
  2. [April 25th]
  3. [“Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You” by Frankie Valli]
  4. [Twelfth Night]
  5. [Damon Salvatore]
  6. [She doesn’t want to get deported]
  7. [Red]
  8. [The Holiday]
  9. [Mahjong]
  10. [Applying lipstick using her cleavage]

 

Round 2: Books

  1. [Intuition/predict the future]
  2. [Kejari]
  3. [Harper L. Woods/The Cursed, The Coven]
  4. [Navy SEAL]
  5. [Addie LaRue]
  6. [Flamethrower red]
  7. [A bee sting]
  8. [Alyssa Cole, A Duke by Default]
  9. [Jacqueline Carey & the Kushiel’s Legacy series]
  10. [The Wicked Lovely series]
  11. [Mila Fineli]

 

Round 3: Tropes & Miscellany

  1. [AO3]
  2. [Donna Herren and Bree Bridges]
  3. [Grumpy/Sunshine]
  4. [Everina Maxwell/Winter’s Orbit]
  5. [Sarah MacLean]
  6. [Travis Kelcee, Kansas City Chiefs, football]
  7. [Smart Bittches, Trashy Books]

post-featured-image

Six Books About Being A Cog in the Dystopian Machine

the lost cause by cory doctorowIf the word “dystopia” broken down into its Greek roots literally means a “bad” “place,” what could be a worse place than the soul-sucking bureaucracy of a totalitarian state? Well, the cold truth that dystopia’s in the modern age aren’t as fictional as the books we like to read. But here’s good news: fiction can help us understand the hard edges and complexities of our world, including the thornier emotional truths that underlay everything else. 

Cory Doctorow’s work often speaks truth to power, combining his extensive technological and sociological insight with a skill for teaching, and translating esoteric technologia into entertaining narrative. Enter The Lost Cause, his new near-future novel that grapples with the twin dangers of climate change and a movement of people who cling to a gilded and distorted view of the past that never really existed as they recall, and definitely never will in an increasingly unstable future.

Here are six more books about dystopian bureaucracies and the characters who make them work, and sometimes end up bringing them down.

By Yvonne Ye


Falling lineart sparrow and cover text for When the Sparrow Falls by Neil SharpsonWhen the Sparrow Falls by Neil Sharpson

Neil Sharpson’s debut novel (now available in trade paperback!) opens with StaSec (“State Security”) agent and cog-in-the-totalitarian-machine Nikolai South eking out a miserable existence in the Caspian Republic, where atrocities are mundane and fear the general state of being. The Caspian Republic remains the last bastion of “true” humanity in a world that has succumbed to the siren song of uploaded consciousness. Both Party ideology and South’s beliefs will be challenged when he is assigned to escort the lovely Lily Xirau, a recent widow of a virulently anti-AI journalist, for the duration of her visit to the Caspian Republic.

The first catch: both Lily Xirau and her husband are actually AI. 

The second catch: Lily Xirau bears an uncanny resemblance to South’s own wife, who drowned twenty years ago. 

As state secrets and South’s past begin to unravel with Lily Xirau’s arrival, South is forced to grapple with his beliefs and his grief as he helps Lily search for the truth behind her husband’s death. When the Sparrow Falls examines the question of what it means to be human through the lenses of AI, transhumanism, grief, and totalitarian dystopia, all buttoned up sharply in the suit of a Cold War-era spy thriller reminiscent of le Carré and Orwell.

Place holder  of - 62Autonomous by Annalee Newitz

Autonomous explores another world where humanity is threatened by the acceleration of the various systems that govern it, though the forces in Autonomous are pharmaceutical and capitalistic rather than organic supremacist and dictatorial. The residents of Newitz’s world are trapped by a late-capitalistic regime where Big Pharma owns everything, from patents to people. The novel follows three primary characters: Jack, an anti-patent drug pirate on the run; Eliasz, a desperately fanatical and deeply damaged military agent hunting her down; and Paladin, a robot who is navigating his own profoundly human journey of self-discovery.

Both Nikolai South in When the Sparrow Falls and Eliasz in Autonomous struggle with their own humanity while working for profoundly tyrannical regimes that attempt to stomp the soul out of them. Trapped by the drudgery of work and the necessities of survival, South and Eliasz must grapple with their complicity in oppressive systems and the cost it takes to do the right thing.

Image Placeholder of - 63The Quantum Thief by Hannu Rajaniemi

The Oubliette could be a Martian paradise, if you only have the time. The currency of Rajaniemi’s world is measured not in dollars, but in seconds—and time can be stolen. In order to expose the hidden conspiracy of cryptarch governors in the panoptical society of the Oubliette, the mysterious Mieli calls upon gentleman thief Jean Le Flambeur. After all, who better to perform an impossible heist than a legendary thief?

While Rajaniemi’s world of constant surveillance in the Oubliette relies on high-technology to manipulate the fabric of human society, the Caspian Republic in When the Sparrow Falls uses good old-fashioned methods from the Cold War—bugs and brainwashing. South continually hears the voice of “the Good Brother,” an insidious mouthpiece of paranoia and party propaganda urging him to report his neighbors and deny the humanity of Lily, the AI he has been tasked to protect. Both Rajaniemi and Sharpson fabricate fantastically fanatical societies in visions of our alternate presents and alternate futures.

Image Place holder  of - 99Altered Carbon by Richard K. Morgan

In Morgan’s cyberpunk future, human consciousness can survive indefinitely by being “re-sleeved” in new flesh bodies. Takeshi Kovacs, an ex-elite soldier turned criminal turned private eye, is hired to investigate the death of Laurens Bancroft, a wealthy man whose trail leads to a virus that has the potential to contaminate the cortical stacks that store human consciousness and cause permanent death.

Humanity in Morgan’s world happily re-sleeves itself in new bodies whenever death comes knocking, but the populace of the Caspian Republic has not yet attained the same blasé attitude about human existence. Both Lily Xirau and Nikolai South in When the Sparrow Falls grapple with the question of what makes someone human, and come to find that the answer has nothing at all to do with the body one wears, and everything to do with the heart one follows.

Poster Placeholder of - 7Infomocracy by Malka Older

Malka Older’s groundbreaking cyberpunk political thriller series begins with Infomocracy, set in a world where results of the upcoming election are poised to change everything. A powerful search engine called Information shapes every aspect of human life, from social interaction to research to political campaigning. While traveling around the world as a campaign agent for the idealistic Policy1st party, Ken meets and hooks up with Mishima, an operative of Information. Mishima fights—literally—to keep the search engine as accurate and non-partisan as possible. Meanwhile, the mysterious dissident Domaine pursues his own anti-campaign against the whole system of microdemocracy.

Nikolai South shares struggles with Ken and Mishima as agents of and players within a machine that is both personal and political. Whether the system will remain standing is an open question throughout both books—and whether these characters are the key to bringing the system down is another.

Placeholder of  -90The Laundry Files series by Charles Stross

When IT tech worker Bob Howard accidentally stumbles across mathematical equations that can summon Lovecraftian monsters from alternate dimensions, he is forcibly drafted into the Laundry, a British government agency that specializes in dealing with occult threats. Between combating dimension-hopping terrorists, protecting lovely logic professors performing reality-bending research, learning the secret history of the world, and—worst of all—attending committee meetings, Bob Howard has his hands full with the fieldwork and paperwork required to defend the world from ancient, eldritch powers.

Spy thriller? Check. Science fiction? Check. Bureaucratic humor? Check. Nikolai South’s dry humor could give Bob Howard’s a run for its money, and the two of them could certainly share a drink (or five) over the dreary horrors of bureaucracy.

post-featured-image

Top 12 Books to Use as Bludgeoning Weapons in a Pinch

We’ve all been there: sometimes you’re peacefully reading your newest novel, only to see a cockroach scuttle by in front of your cozy armchair. Or you’ve got something that needs some light percussive recalibration to fix. Or your cousin has insulted your reading taste at Thanksgiving dinner, and all you have is the book you brought to the gathering to avoid talking to anyone. We’ve all had to use our books as bludgeoning weapons before, so here’s a list of SF/F doorstoppers that you can pitch in a pinch, now updated to include The First Binding by R. R. Virdi—on sale in paperback now!

By Yvonne Ye


The First Binding by R. R. Virdi#1: The First Binding by R. R. Virdi

Volume one of R. R. Virdi’s new Tales of Tremaine series, The First Binding, is a fresh face on the “books large enough to qualify as a two-hand weapon” scene. With 832 pages of epic fantasy contained within, The First Binding is professionally rated to block everything from sword-strikes to gamma lasers, and is guaranteed to OHKO any mortal-class adversary. Use this book to win your next grudge match, and then dive into this exciting and expansive new series with all the time you’ve saved by making it your go-to armament for close combat. Find the paperback in stores now!

Poster Placeholder of - 71#2: Rhythm of War by Brandon Sanderson

Weighing in at a hefty 1232 pages, this latest installment in the Stormlight Archive will be sure to beat up your feelings while bludgeoning your enemies. Follow the Knights Radiant to war as tactical subterfuge, political maneuvering, and scientific innovation collide to change the very shape of Roshar’s future. For conducting guerilla warfare and internal sabotage in an occupied tower, the hardcover will be sure to deal maximum damage. For a stealth invasion of said tower, we suggest utilizing the paperback for its dexterity and flexibility. Find the paperback in stores now!

Image Place holder  of - 55#3: Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson

Book three of the Stormlight Archive actually outweighs book 4, coming in at an impressive 1248 pages. Add some psychic damage to your bludgeoning attack by shouting “YOU CANNOT HAVE MY PAIN” at your foes in time-honored Kholin tradition while hurling this brick.

Image Placeholder of - 99#4: Words of Radiance by Brandon Sanderson

Fervent collectors of Stormlight hardcover editions noticed that Words of Radiance, despite only having 1088 pages, is actually quite a bit chunkier than Oathbringer. This is because the paper weight dropped from a 45# stock to a 35# stock between printings (we could go on about book production and paper weight, but we’ll spare you for now). At any rate, this book lives up to its working title, The Book of Endless Pages, and comes pre-equipped with the best one-liner in the series (so far): “Honor is dead, but I’ll see what I can do.”

Placeholder of  -80#5: To Sleep in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini 

You thought we were going to go all the way with Stormlight titles, didn’t you? We thought about it, but decided to branch out to Christopher Paolini’s debut adult novel, To Sleep in a Sea of Stars. This galaxy-spanning odyssey of first contact and apocalypse earns its hefty page-count with its complexity and scope, and yes, if you were wondering, it outweighs each of the Eragon books at 880 pages. Bonus: you can also get it in paperback to realize your dual-wielding potential!

exordia by seth dickinson#6: Exordia by Seth Dickinson

Clocking in at a chonkin’ 544 pages, Exordia by Seth Dickinson is a double-edged threat as a bludgeoning weapon. Not only will it physically clobber you with it’s rounds-up-to-quadruple-digits page count, but this book will also emotionally destroy you. This book will wreck you body and soul, and for that reason demands to be read.

Place holder  of - 63#7: Lord of Chaos by Robert Jordan

The longest book in the Wheel of Time series, we think this book could also be a strong contender for any therapeutic smashin’ you might need (goodness knows Rand could use some therapeutic smashin’ throughout this book). But if you’re new to the Wheel of Time series, we recommend starting with the first book, The Eye of the World. We know that media tie-in covers can be somewhat divisive, but with the new edition of The Eye of the World coming in at 784 pages, it is an undisputed tome and thus highly suitable for a spot of bludgeoning when necessary.

the ruin of kings by jenn lyons#8: The Ruin of Kings by Jenn Lyons

Come see the book that Lev Grossman called “rich, cruel, gorgeous, brilliant, enthralling and deeply, deeply satisfying” — much like how you will both look and feel if you come to a book fight prepared with Jenn Lyons. With all five of the Chorus of Dragons series on hand, you’ll be well-stocked for either hurling or bludgeoning, or just curling up in a corner and reading all 2,784 pages (cumulative!) while the melee rages about you.

#9: Death’s End by Cixin Liu, translated by Ken Liu

Clocking in at only 608 pages, this series-ender makes up for its lower page count with its absolutely badass title. We recommend this book for the aura of awe it will generate in your foes, along with its special Area-of-Effect abilities of inducing existential dread in your opponents and cautious hope in your allies.

#10: Harrow the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir

At a respectable 512 pages, Harrow is well-suited to fighters of smaller statures, delicate wrists, and a deeply murderous streak. Seriously, look me in the eyes and tell me that you wouldn’t bring a necromancer to a fight.

#11: Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw

“But wait,” you say. “This is a novella, with only a measly 128 pages!” you scoff. “How can this be a good bludgeoning weapon?” you laugh.

Just as there is a time and a place for every door-stopping saga, one must never underestimate the lethal capabilities of a well-crafted novella, and Cassandra Khaw’s latest is an exquisite weapon for the task. Lyrical, unflinching, dreadful, and vicious, Nothing But Blackened Teeth is a haunted-house novella perfectly-matched for those who are both courageous and deadly. A few well-placed bonks with this novella at high speed might just win your fight, and that book jacket alone may be enough to terrify most opponents into submission.

#12: Dawnshard by Brandon Sanderson

We’re not done with Sanderson yet! With Dawnshard’s upcoming release for the first time in hardcover, it felt right to finish this list where we began — with the Stormlight Archive. At a petite 4.25” x 6.7” (and a healthy… 304 pages), Dawnshard may be small but it packs a punch. Its size makes it the perfect handbag bludgeoning weapon, featuring finely-tapered print-over-board corners and some truly earth-shattering Cosmere reveals. And come on — wouldn’t you want the Lopen by your side in a fight?

Disclaimer: Tor does not actually encourage you to use your books as bludgeoning weapons. Please consider deploying your house slipper instead, as we cannot issue replacements should your copy become tragically stained by cockroach innards.

post-featured-image

We Asked R. R. Virdi, Is a Snake a Dragon? 

Cover for The First Binding by R. R. VirdiThe First Binding by R.R. Virdi is the hugely epic opener to the Tales of Tremaine series, and now it’s available in paperback! A while back, Virdi wrote a thoughtful article on whether snakes are dragons as a feature for Dragon Week 4: Dragons 4Ever, and we’re bringing that back, because this is hard-hitting, important fantasy fiction analysis.


By R.R. Virdi

Are snakes dragons?

It sounds like an easy question. A rather straightforward yes or no. Snakes are snakes. Dragons are dragons.

Right?

Well…

About that.

Let’s look at what makes a dragon, well, a dragon? If you take a look at the most famous common kind, the European dragon, they’ve got pretty similar appearances throughout western mythos. And it makes sense. They’re a culmination of things humanity feared long ago all morphed into one creature.

They have the necks and facial appearances of giant serpents, armored scales, horizontally slit pupils with molten gold eyes the color of greed and avarice. Sharp teeth, and they breathe fire, something we’ve long been fascinated with, and is also terrifyingly destructive. The wings of a bat, and claws as sharp and curved as lions’. They’re the ultimate monster, most of the time. And maybe that’s where we should take our look of dragons.

What makes a monster? What are their roles in stories?

Historically speaking, they’re obstacles. They’re the big the hero has to face off and defeat to accomplish some goal, be it rescuing the princess, or in some myths, freeing a much needed river from a serpent blocking it.

Many serpents in mythology have been likened to dragons, and certainly so when we head eastwards to the Asiatic dragons. One such serpent, dragon, or obstacle, if you will, is Vritra—the headed dragon-serpent of Vedic mythology. This serpent demon held the waters of the world held hostage and blocked by its body and greed until Indra, the Vedic god of storms, sky, lightning, and rains, battled the three-headed serpent. In the end, Indra was victorious and killed the demon-snake with a club imbued with the properties of a thunderbolt. There’s another similar battle between a great worldly serpent in the waters being bested by another storm god using a weapon holding all the powers of thunder in its head.

But for this deed, Indra was gifted a new name. A name that meant two things: Slayer of Vritra, and slayer of First Born Dragons.

Vritra, the three-headed serpent, was accounted a dragon then and there. When you go back far enough in mythology, the oldest of dragons in many cultures were closer to serpents than the winged beasts we often think of. And many fictional story worlds follow this convention too. In the world of Middle Earth, Glaurung, was the father of dragons.

But this beast was closer to a worm or serpent with legs than what his later descendants would come to be. Creatures such as Ancalagon the Black, the greatest and largest of all dragons to ever be birthed in Middle Earth. A winged monster so great he dwarfed mountains.

Regardless of their shape, though, all dragons/snakes served similar purposes in mythology: obstacles.

So I guess the question of whether snakes/serpents are dragons really does come down to, do they act as dragons? Do they serve the same purpose in the story?

In the Epic of Beowulf, the “dragon” is often also described as a serpent, or a worm. And while some instances mention the fire breathing aspects, some also mention the venomous bite. All throughout stories, serpents have been often interchangeable with dragons, which might be evidence in and of itself that they are the same things. Or, at least, that dragons comes from serpents, if that weren’t already obvious in their appearance.

A dragon in a story historically is the antagonist. Is that always true, especially today? No. But for their history, they were something to be defeated. Not for the sake of doing so, but they were already in a place of opposition to the needs of innocent people. They were hoarding needed wealth, demanding human sacrifices, or keeping natural resources from the populace.

In the FromSoftware game, Sekiro, a dragon comes to their land from off far away and throws off the natural process of life and death, allowing for something close to immortality and rebirth for a select few…

All at the cost of perverting the balance of things and spreading a disease known as dragonrot. The world is festering with it and people suffer. This dragon resembles the Asiatic design of dragons, closer to serpents than the European counterparts. But before you ever get to fight this great beast, you must navigate a frozen valley guarded by a monstrous white serpent closer to a giant viper than a dragon. But it may as well be a dragon, because at this point in the story, it is most certainly an obstacle.

One you’re not equipped to defeat. Only to survive.

But until that point in the game, you are only to evade this monstrous serpent that blocks your path, and do your best to come back at a later time to claim its heart. But if you dig into the lore of this creature, you’ll realize it serves another similar role to dragons. This serpent claimed sacrifices. There is a little tent in where offerings of people were left for the beast to claim. There are hidden stories you can piece together letting you know people offered members of their clans or villages up to these giant white serpents.

Sounds very similar to dragons.

Maybe, like many things throughout history, dragons have just changed shape, and their names. Nothing more.

As time’s gone on, and more media continues to birth new stories, we’ve come to classify all kinds of dragons with new names: wyrms, wyverns, drakes, amphitheres, lindworms, and so on. But the truth remains: they were serpents first, and I suppose, they’re serpents still.

So long as they exist to be something standing in the way of your protagonists, they’re all dragons, and when we have existing series where dragon can even be a mantle, or a title, that any old vanilla mortal can claim, well, I guess dragons really as mutable as the fires they breathe.

Perhaps the real dragons are the snakes…we met along the way?

Is that giant three-hundred foot long serpent blocking your mountain pass? Well, that’s a dragon. That fire breathing wingless, legless, snake that’s burning your favorite kebab place down? That, my friends, is a dragon.

That jerkwad who cut you off in his dinged up 1990’s Toyota Previa (that should have long fallen apart due to the tolls of time, never mind his accidents) with his peeling Whitesnake decals all over his doors?

Yeah, I suppose that’s a dragon too.

I guess the takeaway is: all obstacles can be dragons, but not all snakes are dragons? But some snakes are dragons, so long as they’re obstacles. But not all obstacles are snakes.

See, it’s easy!

So, are snakes dragons? I guess…it depends.

But they can be, and that’s the pretty nifty thing about fantasy. Anything can be a dragon if you work hard enough to make it so.

Note for all the danger noodle owners in the world: yes, your sweet little reptiles can also be dragons – the bestest of dragons.


R.R. Virdi is a two-time Dragon Award finalist, Nebula Award finalist, and USA Today Bestselling author. He is the author of two urban fantasy series, The Grave Report and The Books of Winter, as well as the epic fantasy novel The First Binding. His love of classic cars drove him to work in the automotive industry for many years before he realized he’d do a better job of maintaining his passion if he stayed away from customers.

He was born and raised in Northern Virginia and is a first generation Indian-American with all the baggage that comes with. He’s offended a long list of incalculable ancestors by choosing to drop out of college and not pursue one of three pre-destined careers: a lawyer, doctor, engineer. Instead, he decided to chase his dream of being an author. His family is still coping with this decision a decade later. He expects them to come around in another fifteen to twenty years.

Order The First Binding in Paperback Here

Image Place holder  of amazon- 93 Image Place holder  of bn- 76 Poster Placeholder of booksamillion- 8 ibooks2 70 Image Place holder  of bookshop- 95

post-featured-image

Map-i-matical Considerations from R.R. Virdi

Is it really a Big Epic Fantasy Book if there’s no map to be seen? R.R. Virdi, author of The First Binding—Now available in paperback!—says NO WAY! Check out his thoughts on maps in fantasy books, PLUS an exclusive first look at the map you’ll find inside of The First Binding, right here.


Poster Placeholder of - 51

By R.R. Virdi

Fantasy reader, or writer, you’ve probably formed an opinion on maps in novels at one point or another. You expect them as normal, especially if you’re a reader from the 90’s. You’ve opened up the Wheel of Time books and have the image of Two Rivers burned into your mind. Maybe you’ve memorized all of Randland. Maybe you’re a collector who has a book full of folding maps of Westeros and all the other lands in A Song of Fire and Ice.

I know I do.

You can’t have an epic traveling fantasy (especially a Silk Road inspired one) without a map that lives up to all of that. The lands, the fantastical, and of course, the epic part. We lovers of fantasy want to see mountain ranges and vasty plains inhabited by strange and wonderful things. We want the sense of wonder that comes with seeing rolling seas in storms and maybe monsters in their depths. I always have, and growing up as a child of two worlds (South Asian heritage, and American birth), I’ve been fascinated by travel and the layout of the world.

Of worlds. Real or otherwise.

So of course I leapt at the chance to have my own map represented and brought to life by the amazing Priscilla Spencer (who’s done work for the talented line up: Seanan Mcguire, Jim Butcher, and more). It’s a childhood dream, and more than that, this is a traveling fantasy series. One full of secrets, including some hidden in places you might not think to look. Or, maybe you would.

Like a map.

Priscilla and I got to talking over the crudely shaped map I’d first made to roughly place the lands I needed where they would be. We dove into the geography, cultures, and trade routes I’d established for my Golden Road, and then slowly, it all began to come to life. Her attention to detail and understanding just how many layers and secrets exist in this series and world shone through in the development.

People who’ve already read the ARCs might find pleasant little secrets hidden within this map, if they have the eye and patience to give it that look. But some of the things I can share?

Priscilla dove into the history of existing maps/records from travelers along the Silk Road of old. Design styles, and storytelling techniques used in maps (and yes, maps are stories of a sort as well. The stories of where we’ve been, would like to go, and what we imagine a place to be).  They all bled into the final creation. Every detail in this map speaks to something – nothing is fruitless or wasteful design.

This is a map that shows the roads all manner of people travel, and along those roads, heroes, monsters, and the ones between. Stories, legends, lies, and truths. And sometimes they are all one and the same.

Her creation lives up to all the depth this world and story offers, and all the size and scope of the plot, and Ari’s travels, as well as his legends.

Or lies.

She gave the Mutri Empire the nod to India I wanted, and made it the heart of my world, as well as the map. There are images and nods to things all hidden throughout the first book, and all the ones to come. Something that will make this map rewarding to look at as you continue to read and hopefully, if you so choose, decide to reference this throughout your travels along the Golden Road.

Remember.

A map isn’t just a map. It’s a key, a guide, and a story.

And all of those are secrets, show the way to secrets, and in fact, open secrets.

R.R. Virdi is a two-time Dragon Award finalist and a Nebula Award finalist. He is the author of two urban fantasy series, The Grave Report, and The Books of Winter. He was born and raised in Northern Virginia and is a first generation Indian-American with all the baggage that comes with. Should the writing gig not work out, he aims to follow his backup plan and become a dancing shark for a Katy Perry music video. 

Order The First Binding in Paperback Here:

The First Binding by R. R. Virdi

Placeholder of amazon -29 Placeholder of bn -15 Poster Placeholder of booksamillion- 41 ibooks2 22 Poster Placeholder of bookshop- 80

The owner of this website has made a commitment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.