I have a working title of Peacemaker for the cowpunk, named after the 1873 Peacemaker pistol – the gun that won the west. My two main characters are named (Virgin Jackson and Nate Sixkiller), the premise is in place and I’ve written several pages. It’s a go-go!

There’s something equally exhilarating and terrifying about starting a new novel. Strange thoughts run through your head. Can I do this?What will it be like? Countered by the sense of  liberation at creating something from scratch. Freefall into the page. For the first time since I began writing full time, I’m thinking of writing about the novel journey. Join me if you like. It could be slow and painful or not?

This is the brain child of some good friends and colleagues I urge you to check it out and consider supporting!

WHAT IS IT? The Periodic Table of Awesome is the bizarre lovechild of Entertainment Tonight and Big Bang Theory with a side-order of The Daily Show and The IT Crowd. It is a lifestyle show for Geeks, made by Geeks, bringing you the best of Geek from week to week. It is a web-TV series because we love to watch shows from / on the internet instead of on regular TV.

CONCEPT: Zombies (Z). He-Man (He). Sour Gummi (Sg). If you combined them, what would happen?

Would a compound of Pirates (Px) and Lion-o (Li) result in an awesome X-Box game or a smoking hole in the ground? Find out on The Periodic Table of Awesome.

The Periodic Table of Awesome is a light-hearted look at the wonderful universe of geekdom based on its component elements. We all know that in the world of science, the more common the element, the higher it is on the periodic table. In this case, the more awesome it is, the higher it is… So, is number one on the list Batman, Ninjas, or Jetpacks? Or, God forbid, LOLcats? What about Pocky? What makes Pocky so irresistible to geeks, and how is it different from other weird imported Japanese snacks? Your hosts strive to uncover the truth.

The geeks have inherited the earth: the time has passed when we were to be pitied and bullied. Nowadays, you can’t get a darn thing done without geek-power… how’s that smartphone working out for you? And Email? And Cable?

Webcast live from within the internet, with a backdrop of the week’s leading meme (Double Rainbow; Foxes on Trampolines; Old Spice Guy), Quinny, Dion and friends bring you the greatest of geek from week to week. With a selection of fun segments comprising weekly ‘regulars’ and one-off specials with the occasional celebrity interview thrown in, ‘The Periodic Table of Awesome’ is FTW, pwning ‘teh awesome’ for n00bs and l33t ro><orz alike.

I WANNA JOIN IN! Your donations will help us to fund the pilot episode, featuring exclusive interviews and segments shot at New York Comic Con, and some vox pop & in-studio goodness brought to you from Australia. If the pilot gets picked up, we’ll make an ongoing Web-TV series with brand new content every week. Shot live within the Internet itself, the show features not only celebrity interviews, news, reviews, and a bunch of awesome lifestyle items… but also the pure elements of awesome!

WHAT YOU GET WHEN YOU LOVE YOUR GEEKS: Check out our rewards structure (at right) for the awesome geeky gifts you can get when you support our project, including comic books and trade paperbacks autographed by Mark Waid, gift vouchers for the MADMAN Entertainment online DVD store, original convention sketches from illustrators Nicola Scott, Stuart Immonen, and George Perez,passes to The 2011 Supanova Expo (in Australia), and – for the high rollers – award-winning author Marianne Delacourt will name a character after you in her newTara Sharp novel series, AND you’ll receive a signed original page of cover art by John Cassaday. Yes, that’s right, the actual original artwork. Get in quick, because the awesome item availability is LIMITED!

AUDIENCE DEMOGRAPHIC: Geekdom is for people of all ages and creeds; awesomeness doesn’t discriminate. Especially if you know what >_< Awesome 1 ! 1 ! w00t! XD means, this is a show for you.

WHO’S BEHIND THIS? You might remember the team members from Australia’s Supanova Expo, or from the award-winning podcast series (Cool) Shite on the Tube.We are four ‘emerging’ creative professionals who are citizens of Australia but live on Earth. Mostly.

Read about my thrilling award at Marianne Delacourt.

Val McDermid and MDP

Val McDermid and MDP

Aside from AussieCon I’ll be doing two signings at bookstores. Both on Thursday 2nd September. The first is at Angus and Robertson in Victoria Gardens between 11am -1pm.

The other is the Borders South Wharf signing and panel with Kate Elliot, Trent Jamieson and Karen Miller. We’ll be talking about why SFF is so popular and why we love it. 5.30pm onwards …

Maybe it is inevitable that I became a fantasy writer.

As the daughter of an adult immigrant (my mother) and the great-grandchild of immigrants on my fathers side, I grew up with an awareness of living between worlds.

While I very much lived within mainstream rural America (such as rural America is mainstream, but it was moreso then than now), at home we had special foods, a second language, ways of going about things and expectations of how one ought to act that were subtly or sometimes quite overtly different from the general culture around us.

Also, for the year I was five, my father was teaching on a Fulbright Teaching Fellowship in Denmark (my mothers birthplace and my fathers ancestral home), so I was additionally dislocated for a year at a young and formative age.  First I didnt want to speak Danish;  later, I didnt want to speak English.  (I was a stubborn and opinionated child.)

So even though I was entirely at home growing up in rural Oregon, playing outdoors, climbing trees, swimming in the river, and making up adventures, there was a part of me that always felt at one remove.  Like maybe I wasnt quite in the place I was supposed to be.  Like if I just found the hidden gate, I could step through into that other world.

Which world, precisely, was that other world?  My true home?  No, for I never felt that I was a changeling or a secret orphan.

Maybe by that other world I meant a place where I felt I fully belonged.  I cant be sure;  Im speculating;  Im certainly comfortable in this world, even if at times I feel a yearning in my heart for something I cant quite describe or put my finger on.  But from an early age I found myself drawing maps and writing snippets of scene and story about those other places.  These landscapes changed as I changed and grew, but the fundamental process of seeking did not change.

Eventually, of course, I wrote a couple of not very good novels, and with practice, I got better, and eventually began publishing what I sincerely hope are much better novels than those early attempts.  I am still writing novels set in other worlds.  If there is one constant in all those plots, it is one of characters who are seeking to find their place, maybe by crossing from one land into another or else by uncovering the hidden landscapes of the world they live in.

My latest novel, Cold Magic, fits seamlessly into this personal tradition, about a girl who, quite unexpectedly, is forced into a journey in which she uncovers secrets about her own past and about the world she lives in.  The character of Cat Barahal is not based on me, nor is she meant to be in any way a secret second persona for myself.  But her story is definitely the kind of story I have been exploring for a long time, and one that I really truly love to write.

Bio:

“Kate Elliott” published her first novel with DAW Books in 1992.

She is currently working on the Crossroads series (Spirit Gate and Shadow Gate, with Traitors’ Gate ), published by Tor Books (USA) and Orbit Books (UK). It’s an “HBO-style” fantasy with a focus on character and landscape, and an epic plot.

Earlier, she wrote the seven volume epic fantasy series, Crown of Stars, set in an alternate European landscape where magic has been (literally) woven through the land. The first volume,King’s Dragon, was a Nebula Award finalist in 1998.  Crown of Stars is published by DAW Books (USA) and Orbit Books (UK) and has been translated into German, Russian, Polish, and Spanish.

Her Novels of the Jaran, set in a speculative future, follow the nomadic people known as the jaran after their first contact with the technologically more advanced society of Earth. The author has described Jaran, the first in the series, as “Jane Austen meets Genghis Khan” in a science fiction setting.  The series is published by DAW Books.

With Melanie Rawn and Jennifer Roberson, she co-wrote the bestselling fantasy novel The Golden Key, a 1997 World Fantasy Award finalist (published by DAW Books in the USA and Pan Books in the UK).

She has also published short fiction in various anthologies.

In a previous literary life, she published four novels under her real name, Alis A. Rasmussen.

I’m looking for information on lawman Sam Sixkiller and this is all I’ve been able to find so far:

– One of the most outstanding members of the Longhorse Police in Indian Territory , Sixkiller was born in the Going Snake District (now Adair County) of the Cherokee Nation in 1842.  At the age of 19, he joined a Union Indian artillery company, commanded by his father, 1st Lt. Redbird Sixkiller, during the Civil War. In 1875, Sixkiller was appointed high sheriff of theCherokee Nation and warden of the National Penitentiary.

Sam SixkillerFive years later, in February, 1880, Sixkiller became the first captain of the United States Indian Police headquartered at Muskogee, Indian Territory . He also held a U.S. Deputy Marshal’scommission that allowed him to pursue these outlaws out of Indian Territory into Texas , Kansas,Missouri and Arkansas, as well as being a special agent for the Missouri-Pacific Railroad, which gave him access to any railroad property in pursuit of any bandit. With forty men under his command, tasked with policing Muskogee, one of the most dangerous towns in the Wild West, Sixkiller and his men dealt with bootleggers, cattle rustlers, murderers, train robbers, and all manner of lawless characters (smurched from http://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-lawmenlist-s.html).

If anyone can point me in the right direction, I’d be most grateful.

My mate and bestselling author Jenny Fallon is gradually getting her writers’ centre underway. Visit the website and investigate her online mentorships.

From Jenny’s website: Built in 1915, the historic Reynox House – located in the centre of NZ’s arts hub, Oxford – has been a guest house, a shop, a gallery and the location for a TV makeover show.

In the 21st century it has a new, exciting purpose, as a centre of inspiration for writers the world over.

Now owned by author Jennifer Fallon and her family, Reynox House will host residential writers’ retreats each year, catering for up to 10 writers.

Each 7 day retreat comprises daily lectures by international bestselling authors, time to write in the most glorious and inspirational surroundings, a chance to solicialise with other authors, both published and yet-to-be-published, and, if your manuscript is ready for submission, maybe even a chance to pitch your work to industry professionals.

The Writers Centre will also be undertaking a series of online seminars and casual workshops and Master Classes in conjunction with Supanova in Australia

Please email us at admin@reynoxwritersretreat.com if you are interested in attending or just wish to be kept updated about the online seminar details.

I’m delighted to say I’ll be a guest at Conquest 2010 in Brisbane in early October. I’ll be there with other local guests Trent Jamieson, Andrew Warrilow, Rowena Cory Daniells and T. Danger Julius and international guest Richard Arnold. Check out their website for all the details.

The bad news is that I have had to cancel my appearance at the Logan Library SF mega panel due to some other work commitments. Many apologies to anyone coming to say hello, but know you’ll be well entertained with the fantastic authors who will be there on the day; Trent Jamieson, Rowena Cory Daniells, Lou Cusack and the pocket rocket, Kylie Chan.

The good news is that I’ve ordered two weird westerns on amazon:

“How the West Was Weird: 9 Tales from the Weird, Wild West”
Russ Anderson Jr
“The Big Book of the Weird Wild West: How the West was Really Won! (Factoid Books)”
John Whalen

Has anyone read them or heard of them? The Joe Lansdale books looked interesting too, and I wanted to get Cowboys and Aliens but it was soooo expensive.

Dear Platinum Studios, please send poor writer a complimentary copy.

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