Congratulations, ChiZine!

I’m finally managing to get some time to repopulate the bookstore, and top of my list for companies to get back in right now is ChiZine Publications. Why? Because the Prix Aurora short lists have come out, and they have four of the six nominated novels.

The Prix Aurora are Canada’s fan-voted awards, so they are roughly equivalent to the BSFAs. Naturally Robert Sawyer has a novel on the short list, and there’s a book from EDGE, and other Canadian small press. The other four books from from ChiZine, and we have them all. Very interesting books they are too. Here they are:

Enter Night by Michael Rowe
Eutopia by David Nickle
Napier’s Bones by Derryl Murphy
The Pattern Scars by Caitlin Sweet

Erik Mohr, who designs the covers for all of the ChiZine books, is a nominee in the Artist category. Also on that list is Guy Gavriel Kay’s sometime collaborator, Martin Springett, who provided the interior art for The Pattern Scars.

Shameless Pluggery

Hey, all you new people coming here to read about the Clarke Award scandal, I have a bookstore:

(And for folks on LiveJournal, which doesn’t allow use of iframe tags, that’s ad for Robots: The Recent A.I., a fabulous anthology of quality SF by top modern writers.)

Haz Bookstore

Work on the new bookstore has progressed to the point where I think I can open it to the public. There’s still a lot of work to do uploading books and learning my way around the new software, but I do need to be able to sell things. Also your feedback would be appreciated. There’s a lot different about this store. The software is a lot more customizable, which is both good and bad because you can do lots, but you have to learn how to do it before you can do anything. One of the things you can do, however, it make embeddable widgets, like this…

Coming Soon – Further Tales

Further Tales of EinarinnIt is that time when publishers get to feel all happy about a new project finally hitting the bookshelves. The first 2012 release from Wizard’s Tower will be A Few Further Tales of Einarinn, a short story collection from the fabulous Juliet E. McKenna. This is the cover. You can learn more about the book from Juliet. And it will be available for purchase next week from the 27th.

Making Progress

It has been a bit quiet here today because I have been busy working on a new website for the bookstore. I’m quite pleased with what I have thus far. I also have a deadline, because Juliet’s book is due out soon and I need to be able to sell it (and not just through Amazon). More on this in a few days.

Also I’m trying to write a review of Caitlín Kiernan’s The Drowning Girl that does not suck. The better the book, the harder it is to write a review that is neither fawning nor pretentious, so I’m up against it here.

Bookstore Update

I promised you an update on what is happening with the Wizard’s Tower Bookstore. Here it is.

When you run an ecommerce site it is inevitable that you will come under attack from hackers. That’s even more the case if you are selling digital downloads, because people want to be able to steal the content to put it on torrent sites. As a store owner, you have to rely on your hosting company to protect you from this. You have neither the skill nor the time to do it yourself.

I continue to be confident that my store was secure. I would not have been selling other people’s books if I wasn’t. Nevertheless, attacks happened and recently I discovered to my horror that this was costing me a lot of money.

You see, many hosting companies put a limit on the bandwidth your site is allowed to use. Hacking attacks, especially things like brute force attempts to guess a password, mean that the servers are being constantly pounded by bots. And of course some people launch denial of service attacks at websites just for fun. My bookstore was getting pounded in this way, and the hosting company was charging me for the excess bandwidth used. At one point on Monday the site ran up 2 GB of bandwidth usage in an hour. My monthly limit was 20 GB, and overage charges were £2/GB. Hopefully you can see why I had to put a stop to that.

The hosting company claimed that it was impossible for them to screen out all bot attacks, and it was my duty as a store owner to keep an eye on bandwidth usage and block any IP addresses that were causing problems. If necessary, they said, I should block entire countries. At the time, most of the bot attacks were coming from Japan and The Netherlands. I think you can see why I didn’t like this idea. Cybercrime is not limited to third world countries.

So eventually we came to a more or less amicable parting of the ways. They agreed to waive all outstanding charges, and I agreed to go elsewhere. It is a real shame in some ways as I liked their store software. If they had been able to outsource the actual hosting to a big server farm I’d still be there, but their charges for both disc space and bandwidth were way above industry norms, even without any excess charges.

What I’m doing now is testing some alternative store software. These folks, to be precise. You’ll note that they offer unlimited bandwidth. If anyone has experience of using them I’d be very pleased to hear from you. I’m hoping that I can get a new store at least started by the end of next week, because I have Juliet’s book to launch. Whether the store continues to sell books by other publishers or not depends on whether they wish to continue working with me, and on certain other business considerations that I am not yet at liberty to talk about. One way or the other, however, the books should be available again in a month or so.

Bookstore News

As one or two of you may have noticed, I have shut down the Wizard’s Tower bookstore. I’ll do a long post explaining why in a day or two, but I need to be able to talk to the various publishers whose books I stocked, and want to investigate other options, first. I will, however, note that this is purely a financial issue. It is nothing to do with copyright, piracy or any of the things that get people exercised over ebooks.

A New Website for Juliet

One of the things I have been busy on for the past few months is building a new website for my friend Juliet E. McKenna. It has a lot of great new material about her world of Einarinn on it. Go take a look.

(And, as ever, please report any browser weirdness. Thanks.)

New From Prime

I’ve just posted two new books from Prime to the Wizard’s Tower store.

Everything Is Broken is a novel by cyberpunk pioneer, John Shirley. This one, however, doesn’t have hackers. It has crazy Libertarians. I’m guessing that it is a book that you will love if you share Shirley’s politics and hate if you don’t. Recommended for most of my California friends.

Robots: The Recent A.I. is a themed anthology edited by Rich Horton & Sean Wallace. The topic should be obvious. If you have any doubts about this one, just click through and check out the table of contents. It has Hugo-winning stories by Elizabeth Bear and Ian McDonald. It has Cory Doctorow, Aliette De Bodard, Tobias S. Buckell, Catherynne M.Valente, Robert Reed, Mary Robinette Kowal, Ken Liu, Genevieve Valentine and more. (And did you see that gender balance?) There’s also an original story by Lavie Tidhar. Your positronic brain will overload.

Clarkesworld #66

There are some fairly unfamiliar names in this month’s Clarkesworld. However, I have great faith in Neil’s judgement, so I’m sure this will be good stuff.

The lead story is “Sunlight Society” by Margaret Ronald who last featured in the magazine back in 2008. That story is already available in audio.

In addition we have “The Bells of Subsidence” by Michael John Grist and “From Their Paws, We Shall Inherit” by Gary Kloster. Those two will be in audio later in the month.

Jeremy has two interviews up: one with Nathan Long and one with John R. Fultz.

Jason’s buy this month is an article about that Gothic favorite, the ruined building (or better, city). It is by E.C. Ambrose who sprinkles it liberally with photos of actual ruins and examples of their use in fantasy. Naturally the piece is called “The Romance of Ruins”.

Neil has a brief editorial glowing happily about the Nebula nominations and intimating that more content will be coming soon.

And finally this month’s cover is “Dead Space Girl” by Sergio Diaz from Buenos Aires.

As ever, the issue is available in the Wizard’s Tower Store.

And on that subject, we also have the new issue of Lightspeed which is also packed full of goodness. In particular I note that the ebook-only feature this month is “Cleopatra Brimstone”, a particularly creepy and wonderful novella by Liz Hand. There’s also an interview with Ian McDonald and other reprint stories from Kathleen Ann Goonan, Karen Joy Fowler and Gene Wolfe.

A New Publisher

I’m delighted to be able to announce that the Wizard’s Tower Bookstore is starting to carry publications from ElectricStory.com, a Seattle-based publisher. We won’t be getting all of their books, because some of them they don’t have world rights to, and I only sell books if I can sell them to everyone. However, what we will be getting is very exciting.

The first book we have up is The Vampire Tapestry by Suzy McKee Charnas. Suzy is a favorite writer of mine, and if I tell you that the reviewer blurbs for this book come from Stephen King and Peter S. Beagle you’ll be able to see why I’m so happy. Indeed, Beagle described the book as “The best vampire novel I have ever read.” You can find out more about the book from Suzy here, and you can buy it here.

Tomorrow I’ll have the new issues of Clarkesworld and Lightspeed for you, and on Monday there will be new books from Prime. Don’t say that I don’t look after you. 🙂

Juliet Blogs

Further to yesterday’s announcement, Juliet McKenna has posted on her LiveJournal about the book I’ll be publishing for her. To find out more about A Few Further Tales of Einarinn, click here.

Welcome, Juliet

Well, it is a bit late (UK time) to be sending out a press release, but I did promise you news today so here’s the buzz.

The first book published by Wizard’s Tower this year will be a short fiction collection by the fabulous Juliet E. McKenna. The book, A Few Further Tales of Einarinn, will feature a number of short stories that have either appeared in small press venues or are original to the book. There’s also some rather nice artwork. Initially we’ll be doing ebook only. Full details are available here.

We don’t have a publication date as yet, but we are talking weeks rather than months, and there should be some more exciting Juliet-related news coming soon.

A New Publisher

One of the things that makes me very happy to be running an ebook store (despite the fact that it still loses money) is that I’m able to promote small presses from distant parts of the world. I’m therefore very pleased today to be welcoming Peggy Bright Books from NSW, Australia. They currently have two books in the store:

In both cases the ebook editions are available for just £2.50. Peggy Bright have also adopted the Book Depository model of offering paper copies for an all-inclusive (“postage free”) price. So I’m actually selling paper books. 🙂

Stay tuned too, as there will be more Wizard’s Tower news coming later today.

Epic Badness

You all love a bad guy, right? Well in that case you should be thinking about getting the latest in the Twelve Planets series. This time our Aussie friends are bringing us a short collection of linked stories by Deborah Biancotti, and they are all about really, really bad people. As Ann VanderMeer says in her introduction:

These appetisingly wicked stories give you the perfect taste of Biancotti’s talents.

You can find Bad Power at the Wizard’s Tower bookstore.

Faster Than Lightspeed

Forget those fast-than-light neutrinos, now we have Lightspeed that is faster than light.

The February issue of Lightspeed magazine will begin to be available online on February 1st, but through the magic of time travel the Wizard’s Tower store is able to offer you the ebook edition a whole week early. Many thanks to Time Lord John Joseph Adams for making this possible.

This issue contains a new story from today’s Crawford winner, Genevieve Valentine, along with new material by Brooke Bolander, Keith Brooke and Carrie Vaughn. Reprint stories include material from Robert Silverberg, Gregory Benford and Kristine Kathryn Rusch. The novella, which as always is exclusive to the ebook edition, is by Lucius Shepard.

Anti-Rights Grab Day

I guess it is entirely typical of the Internet that today, when people are supposed to be protesting against a very dangerous proposed law, that my Twitter feed is full of people arguing over whether the protest is being carried out in the right way, or making jokes about Wikipedia. We are very easily distracted monkeys. Well, none of the sites I run have gone dark today, which doubtless makes me a villain in some quarters. Equally, I’m just about to write about SOPA, which will make me a boring killjoy in the eyes of others. Before deciding how to be outraged, however, please take some time to read the following.

Debates about proposed restrictive laws often founder on the argument of “it couldn’t happen to me”. It’s the “first they came for the X, but I was not an X” problem. The chances are that most of you won’t be directly affected. You’ll be indirectly affected because the choice of websites that you have access to, and the type of posts you can make on social media sites, will change drastically, but you are unlikely to be sued. That’s not the case for me. As far as I’m concerned, it will be only a matter of time before SOPA shuts down my publishing and book-selling business. Here’s why.

At the end of last year I wrote about a law case in the US under which HarperCollins (a division of News International) is trying to claim that it owns the ebook rights to every paper book it publishes, whether the contract mentions ebooks or not. As I predicted, this is already affecting my business. Publishers are doing their best to frighten authors off self-publishing their back catalogs in ebook form. Mostly they don’t have any intention of publishing the ebooks themselves, they just want to grab as many rights as they can, just in case.

However, if a publisher does want to stop an author selling ebook rights then currently they have to go to court, as HarperCollins are doing. Under SOPA they won’t have to. They can just state that their copyright is being infringed, and shut down any ebook publisher or bookseller that dares to deal with the titles.

Currently my author and retail contracts ask the author or publisher to attest that they have the rights to the material that they are asking me to publish or sell. Under SOPA that’s not enough. To be fully compliant I would have to undertake an expensive copyright check on every book I publish and sell. And I do mean every book. Under current laws if it turns out that something I’m selling has rights issues then I can take it down, which I’d be happy to do. Under SOPA there only has to be one, unsubstantiated, complaint and my entire website can be taken offline. And because SOPA is predicated on the idea that ordinary citizens are guilty until they can afford an expensive lawyer to prove them innocent, I’d have no chance of challenging this. Indeed, SOPA is written in such a way that the mere act of questioning whether a complaint is justified or not would expose me to the prospect of far worse penalties than simply giving up and closing my business. (See Mashable for the gory details.)

Now you may think that publishers simply wouldn’t bother with someone small like me. What’s in it for them? But that’s not the problem. The problem is that anyone who loses a SOPA case becomes liable for damages, and to pay the legal costs of the company that lodges the complaint. So the publishers don’t need to do anything. Very soon enterprising lawyers will be devoting their time to hunting around the Internet looking for potential victims, and encouraging complaints against them. If the victim shuts down, there is very little cost. If the victim fights then the lawyer has a nice piece of business that will probably cost the publisher nothing. It will be like the “sue companies for liability for accidents” business, except this time it will the companies who benefit and the little guys who get taken to the cleaners.

If you still think it won’t happen, here’s something to chew on:

To Harvey Silverglate, the author of “Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent”, this is par for the course in America’s federal justice system today. A couple of trends have combined to threaten justice and liberty. First, federal statutes are often so poorly written and so vague that they are in effect incomprehensible. This gives excessive discretion to bureaucrats and prosecutors, with their own career ambitions, who apply them haphazardly.

Second, federal law has been moving away from mens rea (“guilty mind”), a common-law tradition that suggests that a person who had no idea he was breaking a law should not be accused of doing so. With bloated federal legislation and without mens rea you can accuse most people of something or other, says Mr Silverglate. The question should be, he says, whether charges are reasonable when they run “counter to all human instinct and experience”.

That’s nothing to do with SOPA, and it isn’t some ranting lefty who is complaining. It is from an article in The Economist, and the case is about a marine biologist filming orcas.

If that sort of thing worries you, and really it should, please use some of that spare time you have from not reading Wikipedia (hah!) to lodge a protest. WordPress has helpful links for people both inside and outside the US, and an informative video.

New Books from Lethe & Prime

We have some new books in the store this morning. First up is Heiresses of Russ 2011: The Year’s Best Lesbian Speculative Fiction. This is a new anthology series from Lethe, a companion to their Wilde Stories series. It is edited by JoSelle Vanderhooft & Steve Berman, and should become a an annual purchase for anyone interested in lesbian SF&F. The 2011 edition contains fiction by Rachel Swirsky, Ellen Kushner and N. K. Jemisin amongst others. I love the cover. If you’d like to see it full size, click here.

Update: And the book is currently half price (see comment from Steve Berman below).

From Prime we have a couple of books from their back catalog recently converted to ebook format. The first is Northwest Passages by Barbara Roden. This was a World Fantasy nominee in 2010, and the lead story, “Northwest Passage”, was nominated for the World Fantasy, Stoker and International Horror Guild awards in 2005. There is an introduction by no less than Michael Dirda.

Also newly available is Phantom edited by Paul Tremblay & Sean Wallace. As the title suggests, this is a collection of ghost stories. The authors include Steve Rasnic Tem, Lavie Tidhar, F. Brett Cox, Stephen Graham Jones, Steve Berman, Nick Mamatas, Michael Cisco.

Welcome, New Lightspeed

As most of you will know, John Joseph Adams has bought the magazines he edits — Lightspeed and Fantasy — from Prime Books and is now publishing them himself. Rather than have two separate magazines coming out simultaneously, he has opted to merge them into a single magazine known as Lightspeed. The first combined issue is now available in the Wizard’s Tower store.

Pricing for individual issues of the new magazine is £2.99, which is the same as you used to pay if you bought both magazines together. (Individual issues were £1.99). The older issues are still available, both individually and via the usual “buy both” discount offer.

If you are interested in seeing what Lightspeed looks like as an ebook, JJA has put together a free sampler of material from 2011. There is lots of good material in there, including fiction by Nancy Kress, Catherynne M. Valente, Ken Liu, Sarah Monette & Genevieve Valentine. You can download it from our store (scroll down). Note that from now on the ebook editions will include an exclusive novella-length story that will not be available in the free website version, so there’s a real incentive to buy the magazine.