Matthew Hughes's Blog: barbarians of the beyond - Posts Tagged "black-brillion"

SF Signal plug for Archonate series

Jeff Patterson, one of the “Three Hoarsemen” talking about sf on the latest SF Signal podcast, gave a major plug to my Archonate stories after getting into Black Brillion while doing laundry at his local laundromat: “I will probably be spending the next couple of weeks looking for other books in the series… I am now a Matthew Hughes fan.”

The segent begins at 45:34.
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Published on July 29, 2013 03:08 Tags: archonate, black-brillion, jeff-patterson, matthew-hughes, podcast, sf-signal

Black Brillion and Guth Bandar

Science fiction aficionado and fellow Canadian James D. Nicoll has done something no one else has done: he’s reviewed the novel Black Brillion and the Guth Bandar collection as one story in two volumes. He puts the story and the characters in their proper perspective.

I owe a debt to James. Back when Black Brillion was in the publishing pipeline, he was screening books for the Science Fiction Book Club. He read the novel and recommended it to SFBC editor Andy Wheeler, which started the process that led to its being picked up as one of the club’s featured alternate selections.
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Published on February 25, 2015 04:09 Tags: archonate, black-brillion, guth-bandar, matthew-hughes, sfbc

New Imbry novel turned in

I've turned in "Epiphanies," a new Luff Imbry novella (24,000 words), to PS Publishing. It will go into an omnibus of the previous three novellas to be published in two limited editions sometime this year.

Imbry started out as a supporting character in Black Brillion (Tor, 2004), where he was a high-stakes forger and confidence man forcibly inducted into the Archonate Bureau of Scrutiny and assigned to work with Baro Harkless, a strange but brilliant young scroot. I actually killed him off in the first draft, but my editor, David G. Hartwell, counseled me against it.

Later on, when PS editor Nick Gevers asked me for a story, I decided to revive Luff and produced "The Farouche Assemblage. " More stories followed, in Interzone and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, and then the three PS limited edition novellas.

"Epiphanies" brings Imbry's career to the point at which he encounters Baro Harkless in Black Brillion.
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Review of THE COMMONS



 

Here’s a review of my Guth Bandar novel, The Commons, which was published by Robert J. Sawyer’s imprint with Fitzhenry & Whiteside back in 2007. The reviewer is Gareth D. Jones and he is writing in the most recent edition of SF Crowsnest, which is a nice place to be seen if you’re selling sf in the UK.

He says: Matthew Hughes’ writing is highly enjoyable, full of wonderfully-described characters who use rarefied vocabulary that had me turning to the dictionary on a regular basis. The dialogue between characters is always entertaining, as is the selection of facial expressions and extravagant gestures that they like to use.

The Commons was a “fix-up novel,” the industry term for a book-length work of fiction stitched together out of short stories, usually after the stories have appeared in mass-market magazines. It’s a way of getting paid twice for the same writing, which authors appreciate, since the pennies-per-word rates and book advances offered these days are pretty skimpy.

All of its component stories originally appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, which has been very good to me over the past dozen years. The last two chapters of The Commons comprise “The Helper and His Hero,” a two-parter novella that was shortlisted for a Nebula Award. The entire sequence of stories follows the travails of Guth Bandar, a would be-scholar at the Institute for Historical Inquiry on a far-future Old Earth. The Institute has long since mapped and studied humanity’s collective unconscious – the Commons – and nothing new has been learned about it for millennia.

Until Guth comes along and begins to suspect that the collective unconscious, our species’s dreamtime, is becoming conscious. And it has a job for him to do.

I wrote the Bandar stories to fill in the gaps in Black Brillion, my 2004 Tor novel in which Guth was a key character. I had expected BB to run about 95,000 words or more, but Tor told me to hold it to under 80k and said 75k would be even better. So I was left with a lot of the background on the waking of the collective unconscious that never made it into the story and decided to write the stories as companion pieces to Black Brillion. I am grateful to Rob Sawyer for bringing them out as a fix-up.

Copies of The Commons might be hard to find these days. You can read the whole Bandar saga in The Compleat Guth Bandar , the original stories as they appeared in F&SF before I “fixed” them “up.”

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I'm moving ahead with the Patreon project, building a landing page and coming up with interesting rewards for patrons who are kind enough to pledge me a dollar or two a month. This week I'm going to shoot a pitch video and send it to a friend in Holland with whom I worked on putting together YouTube videos promoting Jack Vance's Spatterlight Press. He'll give it some production-value pizzazz.
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