So, for the first time, I’m giving away my novella “Scream in Blue” for free on Amazon for the next five days.
Which means it is about as cheap as it’s ever gonna be.
So if you like morally-grey heroes, gothic-cyberpunk and alien drugs (who doesn’t?), you can get it for….pretty much nothing!
The novella is set in the same world as the Common Saga (Stormblood, etc), but can be read as a standalone. So it’s a good entry point if you’re looking for a gateway drug.
2024 wasn’t the worst of years. Nor was it the best of years.
As many of you know, in late 2023 I impaled myself with a nailgun in my left hand, missing the bone by less than a millimeter. If it had connected, I’d have shattered the digit. It did not connect.
But that didn’t mean I got away scot free. Oh, no. The incident gave me complex pain regional syndrome, nerve damage and ulnar nerve damage, which led to a slew of pain management therapies, new medications, weekly doctor visits, constant appointments, required exercises, and dealing with the red tape of it all, which triggered further mental health issues and gave rise to other health issues that were simmering away beneath the surface.
I don’t like to talk about this much, because I live it every week, and I really don’t want to be one of those Professional Pain Sufferers, as my GP calls them, who can only talk about their own agonies. But it’s safe to say that 2024 was a very stop-start year for me, and no one wants to spend the last year of their 20s dealing with a critical hand injury, not knowing how much longer it’ll continue on for.
I’ve made no secret of the fact that I’ve been going through some rough patches, mentally, due to the stresses of publishing, and how the writing has suffered as a consequence. As you can imagine, the injury has not helped. I wasn’t able to publish Wolfskin in 2024 like I wanted, and so sometimes it’s felt like publishing has been moving on without me, like I’ve fallen overboard on a ship and I’m stuck floating in the water, watching the ship move further away from me, leaving me behind until it’s an inscrutable speck on the horizon.
To watch authors who debuted after you get proofs and cover art and special edition deals for their next series while you’re still stuck on the one feels extremely disheartening, especially when compounded with a whirlwind of other doubts and stresses (is anyone even reading my stuff? Does anyone care? What’s the point of this?). Doubly so when all of your peers keep talking about how much fun writing is and how another day at the keyboard is another day doing the best job ever, and you feel like setting your computer and your face on fire. There’s been times when I’ve seriously considered leaving publishing for good, unable to take the anxiety and pressure (and anger) that stems from the meatgrinder of the publishing industry and how it feels like it poisons the passion you have for your creative work.
This isn’t a “woe is me” post. But I do believe in honesty, both on a professional and personal level, and this is the narrative I’m telling.
But I won’t be quitting of course. Because I’m a writer. And this is what I do. And there isn’t a single person on earth or heaven that’ll stop me. (Where do you think Vakov gets his stubborn streak from?)
While those feelings have not always disappeared, 2024 has seen them become far less intense and overwhelming, especially towards the latter months. Things have been better. Much better. Sometimes, all you need to do is to take a step back, stay in the shade, reframe your thinking, and then step forward again. Attitude and positivity matters. A lot. Fighting off the Raging Demon Voices isn’t always easy, but the less space I give them, the smaller they get.
And because of all that, I’ve had a very, very productive year. Which brings us to….
Publishing
The only project I published in 2024 was independently publishing Broken Stars in Nov 2024. All these stories were previously published except two, but I still consider the entire collection to be an original publication. It’s picked up some really solid reviews, and has been stocked in a few local bookstores and libraries, which always makes me happy.
Interestingly, releasing a new book means that your previous titles get a fresh wave of attention. I’ve had a few people say that they wanted to check out my traditionally published books because of Broken Stars being released. I mainly put Broken Stars out so I could keep my name in the spotlight between major releases, and to dust off some of my older works and give them a bit of new life, so I’m pleased to see that it’s all going to plan.
The majority of my year has seen me work on a new project. I don’t want to say too much about it, only that it’s science-fantasy and is set some 20,000 years in the future. It’s somewhat similar to my other books, but it’s also . . . not. It’s more epic. More poetic, grandiose. But fear not, it’s still very much me, and I’m hoping that it’ll be the next thing that I publish. I’ve got about 140,000 words down, not including material that I’ve already cut or reworked. I hoped to have it finished, by the end of this year, but Wolfskin edits have derailed those plans.
And because I don’t have enough on my plate, I’m working on another project. A secondary world fantasy with a female protagonist and some very nonhuman characters, on an epic quest. I won’t say more than that.
As for Wolfskin, I’m doing another pass on it as we speak, with the goal of delivering it to my editor in January. It’s been interesting to see how I’ve evolved as a writer since I discovered this character and his voice all the way back in 2026, when I was only 22 years old. It’s been tempting to sometimes rewrite the odd paragraph or sentence to the way I would have written them now, but I’m making sure to hold true to my former self and to Vakov by keeping the voice consistent.
On this read, my goal is to fall in love with the book, to read it as a cohesive whole narrative. And so far, I’ve been really, really enjoying it. If you’ll allow me to flex a little bit: the narrative beats are working, the character dynamics are solid, the emotional moments feel earned and hit like a sledgehammer, and the action scenes crackle off the page. Why, it’s like someone wrote a book just for me!
Sure, it’s my own damn book I’m banging on about. But after being stuck in a cycle of disliking my own work, seeing the worst of it in the worst light, I’d rather build up what I know to be my novel’s strengths. It’s my baby, after all. And what a damn fine baby it’s turning out to be!
Travelling:
I went overseas three times this year. I went to Japan twice, a place that is easily my favourite in the world, and I have plans to go again sometime next year.
I also went to Europe for Glasgow Worldcon, which was a fantastic and inspiring event. It was my first time in Europe with my books published, and I was able to do a lot of signings and events, and meet a lot of readers, including one reader who brought his copy of Stormblood all the way from Brazil for me to sign.
People are best part of any Worldcon and I was really fortunate enough to hang out with a bunch of friends I haven’t seen in years, people that I’ve only met online and completely new writers. It really felt like I was part of the publishing community, a professional author who was respected by his peers and that is always lovely feeling because this gig involves a lot of time spent locked away in a small room, hunched over a keyboard, and it’s only when someone tells you in person how much they loved your book, does it actually feel real. I also got to see copies of my book in bookstores in both Scotland and Denmark, which was incredibly cool.
I don’t know when my next Worldcon will be. But I will certainly be endeavouring to attend one, or at least another major publishing convention, in the near future.
Reading:
The amount of books I read went down considerably in 2024. Both on account of the injury and the fact that I was learning Japanese. Spoiler alert, it’s an incredibly crushingly difficult language to learn. Relative to English, the grammar and sentence structures are both backwards and let’s not even get started on the polite versus impolite forms, or three different alphabets (I loathe Kanji with the fury of a thousand suns). But being able to speak Japanese is also incredibly rewarding, especially when you go to Japan and you’re actually able to communicate with people and order food in a restaurant and understand a good percentage of what you hear. I am by no means fluent, but I’m slowly getting there. Hopefully.
But the books that I did read this year I really enjoyed. Here’s the best of them:
The Will of the Many, by James Islington
The Devils by Joe Abercrombie
Empire of the Vampire by Jay Kristoff
Demon in White by Christopher Ruocchio
Shards of Earth, by Adrian Tchaikovsky.
My goals is to read more in 2025. The size of my TBR is threatening to crush me, so I’m hoping to put a solid dent in it.
***
I want to close off my last post of the year by saying: thank you, dear reader.
For reading my books, for supporting me, and for letting me tell these wild, crazy stories. This is not an easy job, and there have been some very, very rough patches along the way. But I’m on the upswing and I do aim to be doing a lot of writing in the upcoming year and to be putting many, many books on the shelves in the coming few years.
The good people over at Shepherd’s – a fantastic book blog dedicated to building up authors and supplying readers with good material to read – got in touch and asked me to do a little book post for them. More specifically, a post listing five of my favourite books, all connected by a linking topic or theme.
Anyone who knows me and my books knows that themes of brotherhood and platonic relationships between male characters are things I am passionate about. They’re the driving force of my stories. The core around which everything else is built. I couldn’t *not* write about it.
So I did.
I’ve got five books listed here that have spoken to me one way or another about this very subject of male friendships, and why they’re so damn important to me. It was a fun post to make, and I hope you get to discover a new read that way!
Science Fiction World, the magazine that has published and translated four of my stories into Chinese, has invited me to WorldCon in Chengdu, China. They paid for my flight, my accommodation, my expenses. I am ecstatic to be here, to be their guest.
I step through the massive glass doors of a deluxe museum. It is massive. Colossal. With its gleaming silver walls and subtle blue lights and minimalist chrome design, it feels like I’m in the belly of a hi-tech spaceship. Which is exactly the intention. I’m in the Science Fiction Museum of Chengdu, a building assembled and designed to host the World Science-Fiction convention in Chengdu, China. Its very existence pays tribute to the works and trappings of science-fiction. I am an invited guest of Science Fiction World, the magazine that has published and translated four of my stories into Chinese. They paid for my flight, my accommodation, my expenses. I am ecstatic to be here, to be their guest.
I’m led through a whirlwind of events, ceremonies, meetings, interviews and conversations. I’m thrust in front of cameras, wired up with microphones, offered seats and stools. I greet friends, both new and familiar to me. My editors and handlers keep close correspondence with me, telling me where I need to be, and at what time, and how I should be dressed. I’ve done WorldCons before. I know this gig. But something here feels different. There’s a buzz, a feverishness, in the air.
I know one reason why this is different. This Worldcon is diverse. Internationally diverse. I am signing books and t-shirts next to Korean writers, sharing beers with Japanese authors and mangakas, talking to Chinese artists, Colombian editors, Iranian booksellers, Egyptian producers. At my lunch table at the Sheraton, I’m eating with Mexican con organisers, Singaporean editors, fans from Saudi Arabia and New Zealand, Marvel studio animators from America, and literary legends from Scotland and Nigeria. I am rubbing shoulders with continents and dining with entire ecosystems.
And it’s nice. Never before have I felt so welcome. Never before have I truly felt at home, as a member of the science-fiction community. Diversity here isn’t spoken off. It’s acted upon. Where other conventions may attempt to gesture at diversity, as an abstract, here it is exacted. It’s presented, on an international scale. And it’s wonderful. We don’t all speak the same language. Because we share something else, something grander: a love of science-fiction and fandom.
*
But that’s not all.
Here, I am not simply just another writer who is attending the convention. I am a guest. I am driven from hotel to hotel, from site to site. I am recognized. Convention staff are waiting on me, to guide me to my designated seat, or usher me into a certain room. Things are expected off me. I am told where I need to be, and when, and for how long. This isn’t daunting. This confirms for me what I now know: I am a writer. I know my worth. I know my talent. And I know I am welcome here. Am I a little egoistical for thinking all this? Perhaps. But as someone who has been crippled by self-doubt, plagued by insecurities, and troubled by my own lack of relevance, if someone tells me that I am worth their invitation to their city, and that I am a good enough writer to be given a spot at their table, who the hell am I to tell them that they’re wrong?
*
But that’s not all. This WorldCon isn’t constrained only to books and literature. No. The entire plethora of fandom and science-fiction is on display here. Video-games. Films. TV series. Comics. Manga. Anime. Enthusiasts of robots and holographics and spaceships are present. This WorldCon has branched out, both in terms of funding and genre, extending its wings to encompass as many genres and subcultures of fandom as possible. All are welcome here, and all have a significant contribution to make to the world of science-fiction.
*
But that’s not all. Before too long, I notice the types of attendees here at WorldCon. School-children, on excursion, swarm the hallways and atriums. College-aged teenagers and young adults jostle excitedly when they meet new authors. Film-makers in their late twenties and early thirties buzz around, desperate to share their passions with their peers. And I realis how young everyone here is. How many children and teenagers are present, hungry for books, hungry for sci-fi. This doesn’t happen. In WorldCons I’ve attended, the populace seems to gravitate towards the older fans. Largely American, and almost exclusively English-speaking, these fans have been attending WorldCons for decades. They’ve helped to build Worldcon to what it is, and they’ll always have their place here. But sometimes, when they make up the majority of attendees, the genre in fandom can feel sterile and dry and classical. It’s a blast of fresh air to see so many young, fresh faces at this convention. And it is heart-warming to welcome so many of these young Chinese fans into the family of fandom, to tell them that they have their place here.
*
But that’s not all.
See, SF is revered in China. It’s not like in the West or the Anglosphere, where SF is seen as something either to make money at Comic Cons and through Marvel films, or a hobby for children. In China, it is something to be held on a podium. It’s seen as a vehicle for grand pursuits and as a discourse for various subjects. Engineering, science, architecture, languages. Aliens, spaceships, colonies on other planets, interstellar travel, gravity, and the impact these things will have on society and human behavior. It’s important. And in China, the convention organisers have secured enough funding to put their money where their mouth is. Science-fiction isn’t a just a hobby in China. It’s firmly within the public consciousness, respected and admired as a means of earning a career and furthering one’s education. And as I walk through this museum, this monument to the genre I love, the genre I want to devote my career and time to, the awe and emotion I feel is inexpressible. I feel like I’ve come home.
*
But that’s not all.
As a writer, it’s a struggle to even get noticed. At times it feels like you’re shouting into a void. An indifferent, uncaring void. In China, it’s the opposite. On numerous occasions, I am asked to sign something for someone. A magazine, a notebook, a copy of the Three Body Problem or a Cyberpunk 2077 comic (yes, really). I sign it. More fans come along. Some even recognize my name and get me to sign an issue of SF-World where one of my stories is published. Delighted by this, I sign that too. Between one blink and the next, I’m being swarmed. Fans are coming at me from all angles, books thrust out, desperate for me to sign it. Most of them ask to get their picture taken with me. Some even ask for me to sign my signature for their friends. I do, because the look of joy on their faces is so precious. They’re so excited, so overcome with emotion, to have met a real life sci-fi writer, that they’re practically glowing. They’re desperate to talk to me. About my work. About the genre. About anything. They’re practically shoving other people out of the way to get to me. They’re weary desert travelers, and I’m the fountain from which crystal clear water gushes out. It’s a very surreal, very nice feeling. More signings. Someone gets me to sign his t-shirt. Then someone else does. A young boy wants me to sign his copy of the Three Body Problem, which has already been signed by Cixin Liu. A mother pushes her young boy towards me, she’s so desperate for him to get a photo with me. It’s starting to be overwhelming. But when will I get this experience again? These people came to see me. I want to make their day. I want them to remember this moment fondly. I’m lucky compared to Cixin, who can barely even step foot outside the elevator before getting pounced. An hour or two later, I tell my handler I’ve had enough. She bellows for everyone to clear the way. She and two others escort me back to the Green Room. As they do, a young man runs up with his book, having missed my signing. I say that this’ll be the last one. And I sign his book as “Last one”. He’s grinning from ear to ear. At the end of the day, I must have signed five-hundred, perhaps six-hundred pages. Maybe more. Probably more. I’m tired. My wrist aches. My jaw is numb. But I’ve got to get back to my hotel room and be up in seven hours to do it all again. But I regret nothing. Because, for a moment, I got to make some people happy.
*
It’s the night of the Hugos ceremony. Usually, this would not bother me much. But tonight, I’m accepting for Adrian Tchaikovsky. He’s up for Best Series and Best Novella. Should he win, it’ll be me who has to go up on stage in front of god-knows-how-many thousands of people, accept the trophy for him, and not try and screw it up. No pressure. There are some great wins at the Hugo awards. Some as predicted, some not. I have too many horses in this race to pass judgements, at least publicly. But I will say that I am delighted to see a Polish comic writer pick up the award for Cyberpunk in the Best Graphic novel category. I’m also happy to see The Expanse and Everything Everywhere All At Once nab awards (although Andor would have also been a fantastic pick). It’s marvellous to hear the Chinese audience reacting to their favourite titles on screen. With a record number of attendees, and a record number of non-English attendees, it feels like we’re having a little more World in Worldcon tonight. Then comes Adrian’s category. My heart’s in my throat as the books unfurl across the screen. My legs are numb. And then comes the moment of truth. He wins for the Best Series. Everything’s a blur as I walk down the aisle and up the steps to accept the award for Adrian. Is this happening? This can’t be happening. It’s all so surreal. I take the award in my hands, shake the presenter’s hand, pose for the photos. I look out at the audience, but the lights are blinding. Before I read out Adrian’s speech, I tell a little joke about Adrian owing me a beer, because I bet that he’d win. The audience ripples with laughter. Feeling microscopically more confident, I read Adrian’s speech. I’m surprisingly steady. The worst has passed. Then it’s over and I sit back down. The rest of the night passes in a blur. There’s photos. Lots of photos. Then I’m dragged away to the Hugos After Party. It’s fabulous. I’ll let the photos speak for themselves.
It was a fantastic night, and I loved every moment of it. But, of course, all credit and accolades here should go to Adrian for his fantastic Children of Time series, and you should all go read them if you have not already.
*
China has hosted the greatest WorldCon of all time. This did not feel like a fan-run con. This was a maniac, primal mix of the BAFTAs, Comic-con lite, and WorldCon, all rolled into one, shot through with a unique flavour that makes it stand tall and proud on its own. By securing funding that allowed them to invite and cover the expenses of so many guests, Chengdu has shown us what WorldCon is capable of. How far we could reach, how incredible we could make our genre. It is no exaggeration when I say that WorldCon China has set the bar for what Worldcons can and should be. They have kicked down the door and ushered in an international, diverse fandom, the likes of which I’ve never seen before. It’s my sincere belief that future cons will need to take some serious, serious notes on how to run a convention. Was it all perfect? No. Communication, while inevitable, given the language barrier, made things tricky at times. And the fact that the convention organisers at SF-World were not allowed to attend the Hugo ceremony or the Hugo after party is an absolute disgrace, and I’m furious on their behalf that this happened. But these are small blemishes on what proved to be a fantastic, phenomenal convention. I’d like to thank the entire team at Science-Fiction World, including Sara Chen, Lily, Yunxin, Xiangxi Kong, Jane, and Myra, for carrying mountains on their shoulders. Also in the view for thanks are Since, my handler, and her friends Yuhao and Yucheng, along with all the drivers, handlers, managers and staff members I came into contact with. Thank you. Thank you for everything. There may not be another convention like the 81st Worldcon held in Chengdu, China. Perhaps we’ll see more cons like it, in and out of China. Perhaps not. But I know that I’m going to look back in three, five, ten years time with fondness. I was there, I’m going to think. I was a small part of that incredible convention. I did WorldCon Chengdu.
Lots of writers work to music. The chances are, your favourite epic fantasy or SF or crime thriller was written to the tunes of a soundtrack, especially if those moments are epic or emotional in nature.
While I can’t do lyrics while writing, since it distracts me, plugging into a few tunes really does help me get into the zone and into the mood. Some of the best scenes from Stormblood and Blindspace were written while listening to Sigur Ros or Explosions in the Sky. The titular chapter “Stormblood” was written to the melancholy and mournful strings of “Never Forget” from the Halo 3 soundtrack. If you’ve read the chapter, you’ll know why.
And, of course, many chapters were written to “Samskeyti” by Sigur Ros and “Ashes in the Snow” by Mono. Even if you’re not a post-rock aficionado, they’re well worth listening to.
In the future, I’d like to do a few more posts, fleshing out the songs and soundtracks that helped with the creation of certain characters, and how they helped me find the emotional foundation for those sections of the books.
The excellent folk over at Phantasia Press – a recently revived small press publisher of special deluxe hardback editions – have acquired the rights for Stormblood!
This means that there’s going to be two hardback editions of Stormblood – one lettered, one numbered. There’ll be 350 numbered editions. The books will include a slipcase, interior artwork, a dust jacket, a cover. And, of course, all copies of the books will be signed (or narcissistically defaced, if you prefer), by yours truly.
I don’t know any dates or have any idea of when any of this is going to happen, or what it’s going to cost. But I know a lot of people are avid collectors of special hardbacks, and with the Goldsboro hardback edition of Stormblood selling out within a week, I imagine there will be one or two people who will be very eager to check out what Phantasia Press does with Stormblood.
And if sales are good, there’s no reason why they cannot give the whole trilogy the deluxe edition treatment.
Alex Berman at Phantasia Press has acquired limited edition hardback rights in STORMBLOOD, the brilliant SF debut by Jeremy Szal. The deal was concluded with Alice Cottrell, Rights Manager at Orion/Gollancz. Gollancz published STORMBLOOD in 2020, and the sequel, BLINDSPACE, in 2021. The third book in the sequence, WOLFSKIN, is being written.
If you want to make sure you hear about the release dates/pre-orders as soon as possible, you’d do well to subscribe to my Book Club, since I’ll be posting the news and links there first.
Yesterday, Blindspace, Book 2 in the Common series, was published in paperback format! This is the mass-market paperback version – the leaner, smaller, cheaper version of the book that’s more readily accessible for bookstores and readers alike. It should already be on the shelves in the UK/Ireland, and will be releasing in a few days time in Australia/New Zealand, with Canada to follow shortly.
If you good good people actually *have* purchased the book already, leaving a review on Amazon and Goodreads and Audible or on your channel/blog page, etc, would be extremely helpful. Algorithms are spiteful, fickle bastards, but feeding a healthy amount of reviews through their greedy maws is hugely beneficial for us authors, as well as readers and publishers.
Failing that, asking your local library to stock my books is also extremely helpful. It allows people who might be financially unable to get a hold of reading material, and is a way to give back to libraries.
I do have some news about Book 3, aka, WOLFSKIN, including tentative chapter titles and some details about where the story is heading, and what it’s shaping up to be. For now, I’m keeping those details exclusively for newsletter subscribers. So if you want the juicy details, you can sign up here.