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The Ogre’s Pride

"TCS""The Ogre’s Pride" was published in Spectra Pulse, the e-newsletter for Random House’s Spectra imprint.

Credits: Sole author

Notes: This story was written as a tie-in to my novel The Conqueror’s Shadow. However, you needn’t have read one to enjoy the other.

The story is no longer available from the Pulse website–it is, after all, a monthly e-zine, and April is over–but I’ve made the story available here. (The link takes you directly to the PDF.) Although it says "Continued from Spectra Pulse" in the document, don’t worry; what’s in the document is the entirety of the story.

Thief’s Covenant: A Widdershins Adventure

"hiefs Credits: Sole author.

Cover art by Jason Chan.

Notes: The first book of the Widdershins series. Formerly known as Household Gods.

Set in a more Renaissance-style setting, rather than the more traditional Medieval fantasy, Thief’s Covenant is also my first foray into Young Adult fiction. That said, I think all my adult readers will find it just as appealing as my others works.

Read the prologue free at Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist, or

Keep up with Widdershins on Facebook.

Availability:
• Amazon.com""
• Barnes & Noble.com
• Indiebound.org
• Powells.com
• Books-A-Million.com

And now available as a full-fledged audio play/performance: GraphicAudio

Or talk about it on Goodreads.

Once she was Adrienne Satti. An orphan of Davillon, she had somehow escaped destitution and climbed to the ranks of the city’s aristocracy in a rags-to-riches story straight from an ancient fairy tale. Until one horrid night, when a conspiracy of forces—human and other—stole it all away in a flurry of blood and murder.

Today she is Widdershins, a thief making her way through Davillon’s underbelly with a sharp blade, a sharper wit, and the mystical aid of Olgun, a foreign god with no other worshippers but Widdershins herself. It’s not a great life, certainly nothing compared to the one she once had, but it’s hers.

But now, in the midst of Davillon’s political turmoil, an array of hands are once again rising up against her, prepared to tear down all that she’s built. The City Guard wants her in prison. Members of her own Guild want her dead. And something horrid, something dark, something ancient is reaching out for her, a past that refuses to let her go. Widdershins and Olgun are going to find answers, and justice, for what happened to her—but only if those who almost destroyed her in those years gone by don’t finish the job first.

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Since this is my first foray into YA, I thought I’d post a few links to reviewers whose opinions on YA materials carry more weight than mine do. Also, I’m showing off. 😉

Word for Teens

What’s Your Story?

Blogcritics

Name of the King Contest

And the contest is over!

I want to offer everyone who participated my heartfelt gratitude. I received well over a hundred suggestions, and a great many of them were fantastic. In fact, I’d love to use some of them in other books (and of course, if I do so, I’ll contact the individual in question to make sure they get their proper acknowledgment as and when it happens).

Ultimately, my choice came down to picking not just a name I really liked–as I said, there were quite a few of those–but also one that just really felt like it fit nicely with the mood, the theme, and the style of the writing for The Goblin Corps. It needed to feel like a name that the people in the book would come up with, and that slotted in as smoothly as though it had been my choice from the get-go.

So, with no further ado, congratulations to Richard, whose suggestion of "The Charnel King" just felt absolutely spot-on to me and Morthûl both. Richard will be seeing his name in print in The Goblin Corps, and will be receiving said book free once it’s released next year.

Again, thank you so much to everyone. I had a lot of fun doing this, and I may well do so again; I hope, if I do, you’ll all be willing to give it another go-round. 🙂

——————————

Okay, folks, here’s the skinny.

In my upcoming novel, The Goblin Corps (to be published by Pyr Books) one of the important secondary characters is Morthûl, the undead king of the vile nation of Kirol Syrreth. It is he whom our protagonists, a squad of goblins, serve. An extremely powerful sorcerer, he’s described in the book roughly as follows:

Garments once of the greatest royal quality, now worn and tattered beyond hope of repair, shrouded a body unimaginable by any rational mind. Mummified flesh creaked like hardened leather with every move the Dark Lord made. The left side of his face was covered in that not-skin, frozen in a perpetual rictus grin; the right was nothing more than naked bone. The hideous, sickly yellow glow was most conspicuous in the eyes—but it leaked as well from the nasal cavity and between King Morthûl’s teeth. Worms and maggots, beetles and roaches and less savory creatures all crawled about and amongst the Ghost King’s clothes and patches of long-dead flesh, wandering between exposed bone and protruding ribs, every so often dropping from the empty eye-sockets like some twisted parody of tears. A full head of raven tresses completed the horrific image, trailing from beneath a tarnished silver crown.

So here’s my problem. In the earliest drafts of this novel, Morthûl’s primary title was "the Lich King." He had other, more generic sobriquets–Dark Lord, Master of the Iron Keep, and so forth–but "Lich King" was the primary.

Of course, as many of you know, that’s a title now heavily associated with World of Warcraft. So I need a new one. Right now, I’m going with "Ghost King," and that’s my fallback, but I don’t think it’s quite as strong. I’m considering "Witch King," but I’m not sure that’s quite right, either.

So I’ve decided to make it a contest, and throw the issue open to the audience. 🙂 Here’s how it works:

What I Need

Your job is to send me suggestions for a new title for Morthûl. It can be almost anything, though it needs to be more interesting than "Dark Lord" or anything that generic. It doesn’t have to suggest his undead nature (the way "Lich King" or "Ghost King" do), but if it doesn’t, it must at least suggest his nature as an evil and magical power. It doesn’t have to include "King," though it must somehow convey the fact that he is a ruler of some sort.

What You Must Know Before Entering

You are giving me permission to use your entry, and full rights to it, merely by submitting it, even if you don’t win. (See below for ways that might happen.) If you’re not comfortable with that, don’t enter.

People to whom I am related, or who I know personally (that is, offline) are not eligible.

How to Enter

Go to my contact page and fill out the e-mail form. The subject line must be changed to read "Name of the King Contest". Entries with any other subject, or entries that do not come via the web site, will not be considered.

You may include as many suggestions as you like. Please make sure that you’re using an e-mail address that you check regularly, and expect to have for some time, because I’ll need it to contact you if you win.

I’ll be accepting entries up through March 3rd.

What You Can Win

If you win the contest–that is, if I select your suggestion–you’ll win the following.

1) Your name will appear in the acknowledgments of The Goblin Corps.

2) I will send you a free, signed copy of either The Goblin Corps (though you’ll have to wait a year and a half, until it comes out) or The Conqueror’s Shadow (which I can send you as soon as the contest ends). Entirely your choice.

What if Multiple People Submit the Winning Idea?

If I select a title that multiple people submitted, the winner will be the person who first suggested it.

What if Nobody Wins?

It’s possible that nobody will send in a title that grabs me, and I’ll wind up sticking with one of the ones I’ve come up with (or something else I come up with in the future). But it sucks to have a contest that nobody wins, right? So if I don’t select anybody’s submission, nobody wins a mention in The Goblin Corps acknowledgments, but someone will still get a free, signed book. In that case, I’ll select the winner randomly from everyone who entered.

What if I Have Further Questions?

You’re welcome to e-mail me through the contact page.

I’m looking forward to seeing what you folks come up with. 🙂

Freeport Companion (4E)

"XRP_FreeportThe Freeport Companion, published by Expeditious Retreat Press for Dungeons & Dragons 4E.

Credits: I actually only sort of worked on this book, in as much as they used/adapted some of my material from the Advanced Player’s Guide. But I’m a huge fan of the Freeport setting, and my name’s in it, so I’m happy to add it to my list. 😉

Notes: This book includes the 4E-compatible mechanics and material to support Green Ronin’s system-free Pirate’s Guide to Freeport.