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July 2008

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Hadley Rille Books Signings and Anthology updates

[info]saycestsay will sign copies of Desolate Places and possibly have some copies of Visual Journeys on hand at 2pm, Saturday, May 3rd at Bookfellows/Mystery and Imagination bookstore in Glendale, California. So if you're in the LA area....


Broad Universe will have copies of Desolate Places on hand at their table at Wiscon and [info]mount_oregano will be there to sign copies.


[info]mckitterick signed copies of Visual Journeys at the Nebula Awards last weekend (and shame on me for not posting before the event). I am checking to see if Book People in Austin will carry some copies.


Ruins Metropolis is off to the printer this week and I expect to be sending out contributor copies in May as well as release the book then. (And if I get copies in time, will have some for Broad Universe at WisCon.)


Currently working on preliminary formatting and copyediting Barren Worlds. Will be working with [info]elenuial and expect to have proofs out to authors in May.


Preliminary editing work beginning on Global Warming Aftermaths. Expecting to publish early July 2008, in time for the Campbell Conference and for Denvention3/Worldcon66 in August.


Receiving stories for the Return to Luna contest, jointly run by Hadley Rille Books and the National Space Society. [info]robdarnell has been slush reading and doing great at keeping up with the load. We expect the volume to increase over the next month and a half as the June 15th deadline nears. The stories that he sends on will be forwarded to the jurors starting mid-June. If we can swing it, we will announce winners at Worldcon. Expect to publish the book around October 2008.


And lastly, Hadley Rille Books will begin publishing a new series of short novels on archaeological subjects later this year, authored by professionals in the field. More on that soon....

Comments

Yay! I can't wait to see how Ruins turns out!
The proof looks really good.
I can't wait to see my copy of "Ruins Metropolis" and to read the contributions of my fellow authors. This is very exciting!

Eric, I am curious--where did you (or will you) find the archaeologist/novelists to write for your short novel line? And, if you ever decide to do the same with lawyer/historian/novelists, please let me know! :-) Frank
You know, I think that the most interesting archaeological themed books are those that show the common life of the times. Those are the types of references I'd love to see as a writer; particualrily how such might have changed over the centuries from outside influences.

That could be such a real reference for a historical author.
Yeah, that's one thing we're doing in some of them. A story about a [fictitious] common person who lives in an extraordinary archaeological time.
I've published those authors before and know they work in the field. But I'll be announcing that once we finalize some things.

Hm, lawyer / historian. Could be either or both. Hadn't thought of that. And law in itself would be like a specific branch of history. Pardon me for stating the obvious, but I just now thought of it that way.
Novels? Novels? Who knew you were interested in doing novels?

We should talk. :)
Novels? Me?
Short novels with an archaeology basis? I'll have to keep a lookout for those. I would be interested in purchasing/reading them. My graduate training is in anthropology/archaeology, so everytime I see it mentioned, I geekout.