Home to author Sean McLachlan and the House Divided series of Civil War horror novels. A Fine Likeness, the first in the series, is available now. This blog is dedicated to the Trans-Mississippi Civil War and historical fiction, and occasionally veers off into adventure travel when I go somewhere interesting.
Looking for more from Sean McLachlan? He also hangs out on the Midlist Writer blog, where he talks about writing, adventure travel, caving, and everything else he gets up to. He also reproduces all the posts from Civil War Horror, so drop on by!
Showing posts with label alternative history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alternative history. Show all posts
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Get my ebooks for 50% off!
Over at Smashwords I'm participating in their great summer/winter sale. Whether you're sweltering in the summer of the Northern Hemisphere, or chilling out somewhere south of the Equator, it's always a good time to read an ebook. Through July 31, all my ebooks at Smashwords are 50% off. You can see an entire list on my Smashwords page.
The books include my Trench Raiders World War One action series, each now $1.50; older works such as the short story collection The Night the Nazis came to Dinner and the historical fantasy The Quintessence of Absence, both $1.50; and my Civil War horror novels A Fine Likeness and The River of Desperation.
Use the coupon code SSW50 at checkout to save 50%!
Labels:
A Fine Likeness,
alternative history,
Civil War,
First World War,
historical fantasy,
historical fiction,
history,
horror,
The River of Desperation,
Trench Raiders,
world war one,
WWI
Saturday, July 20, 2013
A new country, a new blog, and a guest post about castles
Hello from Oxford! Wait, wasn't I in Valencia? Why yes I was. Hard to keep up with me, isn't it? My family and I are enjoying our usual summer working vacation here in Oxford, where I'll be researching some magazine articles and writing fiction, and my wife will be working at the astronomy department. My son will be at a great daycamp he's been going to since he was three.
If you look at my blog roll, you'll see a new addition. Roads to the Great War is an excellent new blog about World War One run by the same folks that gave you the World War One website. With the centennial coming up next year they've decide to do a blog! If you like military history, check them out.
Speaking of blogs, I have another guest post up on the Black Gate blog, this one about Spanish Castles reused during the Spanish Civil War. I have two more posts in the pipeline for them, this time about an Italian castle.
Oh, and don't forget you can still get my fantasy novella The Quintessence of Absence free on Smashwords. Please blog, tweet, and share!
If you look at my blog roll, you'll see a new addition. Roads to the Great War is an excellent new blog about World War One run by the same folks that gave you the World War One website. With the centennial coming up next year they've decide to do a blog! If you like military history, check them out.
Speaking of blogs, I have another guest post up on the Black Gate blog, this one about Spanish Castles reused during the Spanish Civil War. I have two more posts in the pipeline for them, this time about an Italian castle.
Oh, and don't forget you can still get my fantasy novella The Quintessence of Absence free on Smashwords. Please blog, tweet, and share!
Labels:
alternative history,
dark fantasy,
ebook,
ebooks,
fantasy,
free ebooks,
Guest Post,
historical fantasy,
historical fiction,
history,
medieval history,
Sean McLachlan,
Spain,
travel
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Offering my fantasy novella for free
I have decided to offer my fantasy novella The Quintessence of Absence as a free ebook. It's now available on Smashwords in all formats. Since I'm not in the Kindle Select program, I can't make it free on Amazon unless someone reports a lower price to them (hint, hint).
I've never done a free promotion before so I want to ask my fellow indie publishers--what's worked for you? I've already done the usual FB and Twitter announcements. What else can I do besides plea for a bit of your blog and Twitter time? Of course, I'm assembling the next Reader News post, so if you have anything you'd like to share, I'd be happy to reciprocate.
This dark alternative history novella was originally published in Black Gate magazine. I'm hoping this free promotion will boost sales on my other fiction. By the way, if you were one of the kind folks who bought a copy before it went free, drop me a line at the email address you see on the sidebar and I'll send you another, as-yet-unpublished story as a thank you.
A blurb is below:
Can a drug-addicted sorcerer sober up long enough to save a kidnapped girl and his own Duchy?
In an alternate 18th century Germany where magic is real and paganism never died, Lothar is in the bonds of nepenthe, a powerful drug that gives him ecstatic visions. It has also taken his job, his friends, and his self-respect. Now his old employer has rehired Lothar to find the man's daughter, who is in the grip of her own addiction to nepenthe.
As Lothar digs deeper into the girl's disappearance, he uncovers a plot that threatens the entire Duchy of Anhalt, and finds the only way to stop it is to face his own weakness.
I've never done a free promotion before so I want to ask my fellow indie publishers--what's worked for you? I've already done the usual FB and Twitter announcements. What else can I do besides plea for a bit of your blog and Twitter time? Of course, I'm assembling the next Reader News post, so if you have anything you'd like to share, I'd be happy to reciprocate.
This dark alternative history novella was originally published in Black Gate magazine. I'm hoping this free promotion will boost sales on my other fiction. By the way, if you were one of the kind folks who bought a copy before it went free, drop me a line at the email address you see on the sidebar and I'll send you another, as-yet-unpublished story as a thank you.
A blurb is below:
Can a drug-addicted sorcerer sober up long enough to save a kidnapped girl and his own Duchy?
In an alternate 18th century Germany where magic is real and paganism never died, Lothar is in the bonds of nepenthe, a powerful drug that gives him ecstatic visions. It has also taken his job, his friends, and his self-respect. Now his old employer has rehired Lothar to find the man's daughter, who is in the grip of her own addiction to nepenthe.
As Lothar digs deeper into the girl's disappearance, he uncovers a plot that threatens the entire Duchy of Anhalt, and finds the only way to stop it is to face his own weakness.
Labels:
alternative history,
dark fantasy,
ebook,
ebooks,
fantasy,
fiction,
free ebooks,
historical fantasy,
historical fiction,
history,
Renaissance
Monday, May 27, 2013
Guest Post: Researching a Shared World Alternate History
Today we have an interesting guest post from an old writing buddy of mine from my Tucson days. I first met David Lee Summers at Tuscon, a great local f/sf/h con. I was immediately struck by his boundless enthusiasm and dedication to the fan community. He's such a nice guy I even forgave him when he rejected one of my short stories for his magazine!
He's come out with several books over the years and is here to talk about his latest.
Last year, Robert E. Vardeman asked me to write a novella in a steampunk shared world he created called Empires of Steam and Rust. As a steampunk author who has read and admired Bob's work since before my career began, I leapt at the opportunity.
The concept of the world is that it's an alternate 1915. Queen Victoria is still on the throne and getting younger. The Russian Revolution failed and the Czar is still on the throne. The Meiji Restoration never happened and there are still Samurai in Japan. Teddy Roosevelt is still president of the United States and has ambitions of creating an American Empire. In the meantime, holes are opening up in the fabric of reality. Strange substances leak out of these holes, such as gasses that defy description. In some cases, the holes serve as portals to another alternate world. My first challenge was to decide what story to tell in this alternate world.
A few days later, I happened upon a T-shirt my wife brought me from Palomas, Mexico with a photo of Pancho Villa dressed jauntily in a pith helmet and cravat, very similar to the public domain photo shown here. This was virtually a steampunk vision of Pancho Villa. I realized I could tell the story of Pancho Villa in this world.
This project essentially required three stages of research. The first stage of research involved getting to know the Pancho Villa of history. I watched some documentaries, looked up some history on the web and at my local library. Villa clearly was a larger-than-life figure. He was a man who loved beautiful women and liked to overwhelm his opponents with the speed of cavalry charges. I did my best to understand the motivations of the men who surrounded Pancho Villa such as Álvaro Obregón, Rodolfo Fierro, and John J. Pershing.
The second stage of research involved getting to know the alternate world Bob Vardeman had developed. Bob, with input from several of the Empires of Steam and Rust authors, including Steve Sullivan assembled a "bible" explaining what was going on in different parts of the world. The bible mentioned two things of interest to my story. The United States had invaded Mexico and no one had yet invented airplanes. Only airships had been developed. I knew that Pancho Villa would seize any opportunity he could to create a "cavalry of the air" to go after invading American airships. Of course, I also read Bob Vardmeman's novella Gateway to Rust and Ruin and Stephen D. Sullivan's novella Heart of Steam and Rust, both set in this alternate world to understand the world better.
Finally, I decided to set a large portion of the conflict on the U.S./Mexican border at the towns of Douglas, Arizona and Agua Prieta, Mexico, a place Pancho Villa was known to have been. One of the landmarks of Douglas is the Hotel Gadsden. It was a classic old hotel used by ranchers in the area at the time of Pancho Villa. I was fortunate enough to be invited down for a book signing in Douglas at the hotel, which allowed me to do the third stage of research, which was a visit to the location of the story.
Inside the lobby of the Hotel Gadsden is a beautiful marble staircase. There are two chips in the marble halfway up the first flight. In the photo, you see my daughters posing with the chips in question. A sign in the lobby claims the chips were made when Pancho Villa rode his horse up the staircase. Later research has since cast some doubt on whether this really happened, particularly since the Hotel Gadsden suffered a bad fire after Pancho Villa died. The hotel owners claim the staircase survived the fire. Whatever the truth, it was too good a story not to use in my novella, especially since I had a scene that would allow Pancho Villa to ride up the staircase, guns blazing!
For me, part of the fun of writing alternate history is to gain new insights into the people and places of history by imagining them in circumstances that weren't the same as the ones we're familiar with. Even though the events are different than those of history, it still means getting to know the characters involved well enough that you can imagine how they would react in new circumstances.
My novella of Pancho Villa in an alternate 1915 is Revolution of Air and Rust. I'd love to hear what you think of this alternate Pancho Villa and his comrades. The novella is available at Amazon and Smashwords.
He's come out with several books over the years and is here to talk about his latest.
Last year, Robert E. Vardeman asked me to write a novella in a steampunk shared world he created called Empires of Steam and Rust. As a steampunk author who has read and admired Bob's work since before my career began, I leapt at the opportunity.
The concept of the world is that it's an alternate 1915. Queen Victoria is still on the throne and getting younger. The Russian Revolution failed and the Czar is still on the throne. The Meiji Restoration never happened and there are still Samurai in Japan. Teddy Roosevelt is still president of the United States and has ambitions of creating an American Empire. In the meantime, holes are opening up in the fabric of reality. Strange substances leak out of these holes, such as gasses that defy description. In some cases, the holes serve as portals to another alternate world. My first challenge was to decide what story to tell in this alternate world.
A few days later, I happened upon a T-shirt my wife brought me from Palomas, Mexico with a photo of Pancho Villa dressed jauntily in a pith helmet and cravat, very similar to the public domain photo shown here. This was virtually a steampunk vision of Pancho Villa. I realized I could tell the story of Pancho Villa in this world.
This project essentially required three stages of research. The first stage of research involved getting to know the Pancho Villa of history. I watched some documentaries, looked up some history on the web and at my local library. Villa clearly was a larger-than-life figure. He was a man who loved beautiful women and liked to overwhelm his opponents with the speed of cavalry charges. I did my best to understand the motivations of the men who surrounded Pancho Villa such as Álvaro Obregón, Rodolfo Fierro, and John J. Pershing.
The second stage of research involved getting to know the alternate world Bob Vardeman had developed. Bob, with input from several of the Empires of Steam and Rust authors, including Steve Sullivan assembled a "bible" explaining what was going on in different parts of the world. The bible mentioned two things of interest to my story. The United States had invaded Mexico and no one had yet invented airplanes. Only airships had been developed. I knew that Pancho Villa would seize any opportunity he could to create a "cavalry of the air" to go after invading American airships. Of course, I also read Bob Vardmeman's novella Gateway to Rust and Ruin and Stephen D. Sullivan's novella Heart of Steam and Rust, both set in this alternate world to understand the world better.
Finally, I decided to set a large portion of the conflict on the U.S./Mexican border at the towns of Douglas, Arizona and Agua Prieta, Mexico, a place Pancho Villa was known to have been. One of the landmarks of Douglas is the Hotel Gadsden. It was a classic old hotel used by ranchers in the area at the time of Pancho Villa. I was fortunate enough to be invited down for a book signing in Douglas at the hotel, which allowed me to do the third stage of research, which was a visit to the location of the story.
Inside the lobby of the Hotel Gadsden is a beautiful marble staircase. There are two chips in the marble halfway up the first flight. In the photo, you see my daughters posing with the chips in question. A sign in the lobby claims the chips were made when Pancho Villa rode his horse up the staircase. Later research has since cast some doubt on whether this really happened, particularly since the Hotel Gadsden suffered a bad fire after Pancho Villa died. The hotel owners claim the staircase survived the fire. Whatever the truth, it was too good a story not to use in my novella, especially since I had a scene that would allow Pancho Villa to ride up the staircase, guns blazing!
For me, part of the fun of writing alternate history is to gain new insights into the people and places of history by imagining them in circumstances that weren't the same as the ones we're familiar with. Even though the events are different than those of history, it still means getting to know the characters involved well enough that you can imagine how they would react in new circumstances.
My novella of Pancho Villa in an alternate 1915 is Revolution of Air and Rust. I'd love to hear what you think of this alternate Pancho Villa and his comrades. The novella is available at Amazon and Smashwords.
Labels:
alternative history,
Arizona,
Guest Post,
historical fiction,
history,
Kindle,
Mexico,
New Mexico,
novella,
Old West,
research,
Wild West,
writing,
writing advice,
writing tips
Saturday, May 11, 2013
My latest fantasy novella is out now!
I'm proud to announce that my latest fantasy novella, The Quintessence of Absence, is out now on Amazon, Smashwords, and will soon be at other outlets as well. This 25,000 word story originally appeared in Black Gate magazine. A blurb is below:
Can a drug-addicted sorcerer sober up long enough to save a kidnapped girl and his own Duchy?
In an alternate 18th century Germany where magic is real and paganism never died, Lothar is in the bonds of nepenthe, a powerful drug that gives him ecstatic visions. It has also taken his job, his friends, and his self-respect. Now his old employer has rehired Lothar to find the man's daughter, who is in the grip of her own addiction to nepenthe.
As Lothar digs deeper into the girl's disappearance, he uncovers a plot that threatens the entire Duchy of Anhalt, and finds the only way to stop it is to face his own weakness.
The cover is by fellow indie writer Jack Badelaire, author of the awesome Commando series. He saw my struggles with designing a cover and sent me this one to me out of the blue. Now that's the indie spirit! You can read his take on the indie life in an interview here.
I'd love to have some help getting the word out. Please tweet, share, and blog about this release. But if you're considering buying it, please jump the cut.
Can a drug-addicted sorcerer sober up long enough to save a kidnapped girl and his own Duchy?
In an alternate 18th century Germany where magic is real and paganism never died, Lothar is in the bonds of nepenthe, a powerful drug that gives him ecstatic visions. It has also taken his job, his friends, and his self-respect. Now his old employer has rehired Lothar to find the man's daughter, who is in the grip of her own addiction to nepenthe.
As Lothar digs deeper into the girl's disappearance, he uncovers a plot that threatens the entire Duchy of Anhalt, and finds the only way to stop it is to face his own weakness.
The cover is by fellow indie writer Jack Badelaire, author of the awesome Commando series. He saw my struggles with designing a cover and sent me this one to me out of the blue. Now that's the indie spirit! You can read his take on the indie life in an interview here.
I'd love to have some help getting the word out. Please tweet, share, and blog about this release. But if you're considering buying it, please jump the cut.
Labels:
alternative history,
ebook,
ebooks,
fantasy,
historical fantasy,
Kindle,
Kindle Direct Publishing,
novella,
science fiction,
Sean McLachlan,
Smashwords
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Reader News for February 3, 2013
Two interesting books are the subject of today's reader news. Sharon Bayliss has just published her first novel The Charge, an alternative history set in the Texas Empire. I'm curious as to how Texas became an empire. Did it never join the U.S.? Went its own way after the Civil War? I might have to check this one out.
Yesterday I finished doing a beta read on COMMANDO: Operation Bedlam, the sequel to COMMANDO: Operation Arrowhead, which I reviewed here. It's not coming out until later this year, so I won't steal any of Jack's thunder by going into detail. I'll just say that it was as much of a kickass action adventure as his last World War Two novel. British Commandos fighting Nazis? I'm there.
Do you have any news to share? Drop me a line at the email address on the left-hand column of this blog.
Yesterday I finished doing a beta read on COMMANDO: Operation Bedlam, the sequel to COMMANDO: Operation Arrowhead, which I reviewed here. It's not coming out until later this year, so I won't steal any of Jack's thunder by going into detail. I'll just say that it was as much of a kickass action adventure as his last World War Two novel. British Commandos fighting Nazis? I'm there.
Do you have any news to share? Drop me a line at the email address on the left-hand column of this blog.
Labels:
alternative history,
Createspace,
ebook,
ebooks,
Kindle Direct Publishing,
military history,
publishing,
reader news,
Texas,
war,
writing
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