Marko Kloos's Blog, page 20
March 17, 2019
Where to find “Shape-Shifters” and “Lucky 13”
I’ve had more than a few people asking where they can read the two stories of mine that were used for the (amazingly done) episodes in Tim Miller and David Fincher’s “Love Death + Robots” on Netflix.
Episode 10 of Love Death + Robots, “Shape-shifters”, is based on my short story “On the Use of Shape-Shifters in Warfare”, which you can find here on Amazon in DRM-free Kindle format.
Episode 13 of Love, Death & Robots, “Lucky 13”, is based on my short story “Lucky Thirteen”, a story in the Frontlines universe. You can find it here on Amazon, in Kindle and Audible formats.
Lucky Thirteen has been out since the early days of Frontlines, and many readers have downloaded and read Halley’s rookie pilot story already.
“On the Use of Shape-Shifters in Warfare” has never been published anywhere before today, but a lot of people have asked for an opportunity to get their hands on it, so I decided to make it available the same way I offered up Lucky Thirteen a few years back, via Kindle Direct. (The Kindle version is DRM-free and has lending enabled.)
March 15, 2019
Love, Death & Robots
The first season of Love, Death & Robots, the new animated anthology put together by Tim Miller and David Fincher, kicked off on Netflix today.
https://www.wired.com/story/love-death-and-robots-review/
Two of the episodic shorts in that project are based on stories I wrote. The first is an adaptation of the Frontlines short story “Lucky Thirteen”. It stars Samira Wiley (of “Orange Is The New Black” fame) as the lead character. The second is called “Shape-Shifters”, and it’s based on “On The Use Of Shape-Shifters In Warfare”, my Lycanthrope Soldiers In Afghanistan short story.
I’m super pleased with the way both of those turned out, but the other stories are also clean hits out of the park. Several are adaptations of stories by Alastair Reynolds and John Scalzi, so I am in pretty good company. And hey–maybe I get an IMDB entry now.
If you want to check it out, here’s the official Netflix page.
(“Shape-Shifters” is episode 10; “Lucky 13” is episode 13. And fair content warning for “Shape-Shifters”…it’s rather a lot more gory than Lucky 13. And the whole series is decidedly NSFW and adult-oriented, so don’t watch it with the Sesame Street demographic.)
March 5, 2019
Howling at the moon
March 4, 2019
Do you feel lucky?
February 11, 2019
Knaves Over Queens review at Locus
Paula Guran at Locus Magazine reviewed KNAVES OVER QUEENS, our first UK-centered Wild Cards mosaic novel, and had some nice things to say about it.
KNAVES OVER QUEENS came out in the UK last year already, and it will be available in the US in August of this year. (That’s due to some release date shuffling and release precedence by the publisher.) If you want to get your US-based hands on it earlier than August, I hear that Amazon UK will gladly ship books to the US.
I have a novella in that volume, called PROBATIONARY. It tells the story of the first mission of newly minted British ace and Silver Helix member, Sub-Lieutenant Rory Campbell, who gets to assist the British armed forces in their mission to reclaim the Falkland Islands from Argentina in 1982. He has a very utilitarian and not-so-flashy talent–he can control directed EMP blasts. That makes him useful as a military asset, even if it won’t get him on the cover of SEXY ACES magazine.
Other novellas in the book were written by Emma Newman, Charlie Stross, Kevin Andrew Murphy, Caroline Spector, Paul Cornell, Peadar Ó Guilín, Mark Lawrence, Peter Newman, and Melinda Snodgrass. (The volume was edited by George R.R. Martin and Melinda Snodgrass.)
It’s a fun book that’s a little off the beaten path for Wild Cards because it’s not US-centric. (On a related note, I had to take out one instance of a character saying “lock and load” because the editor at Harper Collins UK said it was an Americanism. I’ve done some research since then, and it turns out that the phrase originated with the British Army in the days of the flintlock rifle, so I WAS RIGHT AFTER ALL.)
Anyway, PROBATIONARY is a war story, and I tend to be pretty okay at writing those, so I think it turned out quite well. If you’re interested, pick up a copy of KNAVES OVER QUEENS from a UK bookseller online, or pre-order the US edition.
February 7, 2019
News from Poland
I got word that CHAINS OF COMMAND is nominated for the 2018 Best Book Award in Poland. From what I know, that’s the Polish equivalent of the Goodreads Awards and the largest book award in Poland, so that’s pretty cool.
I’m feeling very warmly about Poland. My Polish publisher was the first foreign house to buy the rights to all six Frontlines books, and the Fabryka Słow covers are the best-looking of all the editions. And my favorite video game of all time, The Witcher 3, was made by a Polish software developer, CD Projekt. That’s a lot of positive associations they’ve managed to rack up in my book.
(Also, in a strange twist of fate, both my and the wife’s paternal grandmothers came from the same town in Poland, now called Elblag. When they lived there in the early 20th century, it was East Prussia, so they weren’t Polish, but they both had Polish last names.)
Thanks, Polish readers, for liking the Frontlines series so much! And if there’s ever a Polish equivalent of ComicCon, I’d love to come over for a visit.
January 31, 2019
One year with the Tactical Off-Road Banana
One year ago, the minivan went to the Great Junkyard in the Sky with less than 40k on the odometer due to circumstances that shall remain vague. I had to source a replacement very quickly because we are most definitely a two-car household by necessity. We had a good experience with the wife’s Jeep Cherokee, so I opted for another Jeep and picked up a 2015 Jeep Renegade Trailhawk with only 8k miles on it.
Fast forward to January 2019, and the Renegade now has a little under 20k miles on it. It has been a trouble-free car so far. The only things that needed fixing were the front sway bar links, which had started to make popping sounds about six months in, and they replaced those under warranty. Other than that, no problems or annoyances to report.
It’s a surprisingly roomy car on the inside thanks to the box shape of the cabin. There’s almost no front or rear overhang, and the car is very nimble, which means that I can squeeze into parking spots few other cars can claim, like the ones where the spots on either side are taken up by giant tugboat SUVs parked right on the line or slightly beyond. The turning radius is ludicrously small. The seating position is high, and the windows are large, so visibility is great. And the Jeep 4WD system works as well or better in the snow than my old Subaru’s AWD.
I like this little car. It’s agile, fun to drive, and easy in bad weather. Sometimes I miss the space of the minivan (usually when trying to transport something bulky), but most of the time I drive around in the Jeep by myself or with just the kids, and the Renegade is plenty big enough for that. It’s a small car that feels bigger than it is. I wouldn’t want to do a multi-day trip with the whole family in it, but it’s pretty much ideal as a daily runabout in a rural setting in the snow belt. And it has some credible off-road chops as well–the Trailhawk trim means it has a slight lift for higher ground clearance, a rock-crawling 4WD mode, skid plates to shield the oil pan and undercarriage, and external tow hooks front and back.
Oh, and the color has really grown on me. It’s super visible in bad weather, and it’s very easy to spot in a parking lot. Turns out that yellow is the least common color for vehicles. (I wanted to get a vanity plate that said WASP-A, but the wife said people would think it stands for White Anglo-Saxon Protestant, so I ended up getting a regular plate instead of a vanity one.)
January 26, 2019
Interview with me over at The Verge
Andrew Liptak at The Verge interviewed me about my new series, The Palladium Wars. I go a little bit into the world-building for the new story, and how my week at the Launch Pad astronomy workshop in 2017 helped to make the new series more scientifically grounded.
With the publication of the interview, the cover for AFTERSHOCKS, the first book in the series (out on July 1), is now public, so here it is in all its glory. It’s very different from any of the Frontlines covers in art style, which is intentional. Frontlines is a first-person story that’s limited to the scope of one point of view. Palladium Wars is a multi-POV narrative with a much bigger scope, and the cover is supposed to reflect that.
AFTERSHOCKS will be available in paperback, Kindle, and HARDCOVER. This is my first book to get the hardcover treatment. There will of course be an Audible version as well, and I am happy to report that it will be narrated by the awesomely talented Luke Daniels, who has been the voice for all the Frontlines novels so far.
January 15, 2019
CAUTION: Contains gratuitous self-promotion.
All right. Fine. After some feedback from fans and colleagues, I have reconsidered my stance on award posts. Even though it makes me feel a little uncomfortable, here’s my own award eligibility post.
In 2018, I had two published works that are eligible.
First, POINTS OF IMPACT, book 6 in the Frontlines series, came out in January and is therefore eligible in the Best Novel category for both the Hugo and Nebula awards.
Second, my Wild Cards novelette STRIPES was published in our mosaic novel LOW CHICAGO in July and is therefore eligible in the Best Novelette category.
And lastly, the FRONTLINES series as a whole is eligible in the Best Series category for the Hugo Award (not the Nebula because there’s no Best Series category there.)
You have to be a member of Dublin Worldcon 2019 or San Jose Worldcon 2018 to nominate works for the 2019 Hugos; only members of Dublin 2019 get to vote on the final ballot. And you have to be an active or associate member of SFWA to nominate works for the 2019 Nebulas or vote on the final ballot.
If you find that any of my mentioned works merit nomination, feel free to put them forward for the shortlist when you make your choices this year. BUT YOU DON’T GOTTA. That is all.
January 10, 2019
This post brought to you by the Superhero Writers Union.
I love writing for Wild Cards. It’s an amazingly detailed world that has been expanded by thirty-plus writers over thirty years, and it’s a ton of fun to be a part of that. I mean, I get to make up my own super-powered characters and then let them loose in a playground that has been constantly expanded and improved for three decades. And the Wild Cards consortium is just stacked with super-nice and super-talented people.
That said, there’s one thing that annoys me about being a Wild Cards writer, and that’s entitled Game of Thrones fans.
Every time GRRM posts something on social media about Wild Cards, it takes about five seconds before someone responds with a dismissive one-liner that totally shits on whatever it is he’s trying to promote or announce. And it’s always a variation of the same boring, unoriginal garbage. Finish Winds of Winter. Nobody cares about Wild Cards. WHERE’S THE BOOK, GEORGE? NOT BUYING ANYTHING FROM YOU UNTIL YOU FINISH WINDS OF WINTER. Etcetera, etcetera. Yawn.
GRRM is the editor of Wild Cards (along with Melinda Snodgrass). He edits the books, he doesn’t write them. They are written by the members of the Wild Cards consortium. It’s a total dick move to dismiss out of hand the talents and work of the writers just because you think that the editor of the book ought to be spending all his time on that other book, the one you think you’re entitled to receive. (Never mind that “nobody cares about Wild Cards” is flat-out wrong. Our signings and panels are always busy, and the longest signing line I’ve ever sat for was a Wild Cards signing. The series has picked up a lot of fans in thirty years, and I highly suspect that it wouldn’t be thirty years old–or getting developed into a TV series AS I TYPE THIS–if nobody cared about it.)
I’m pretty proud of my Wild Cards contributions. I think they are some of the best stories I’ve written so far. And it makes me cranky whenever we try to do Wild Cards promo, and some whining garage dweller comes along and dismisses the whole thing with prejudice because OMG GRRM SPENT HIS TIME ON SOMETHING OTHER THAN WINDS OF WINTER. It annoys me, and when I am annoyed, I start adding names to my Go Fuck Yourself list.