Never in my career have I been involved in so many writing projects – not only my own, but collaborative ones with brilliant writers scheming to take over the world!
I can’t reveal too much yet, but expect some very cool announcements over the coming months. Here’s just a taste of what’s on my plate:
- A soon-to-be announced sci-fi novel with my good friend and fellow novelist, Kristi Charish (a proper scientist, thankfully!)
- The sequel to the unexpectedly successful Malevolent Seven. I sold the sequel largely on the promise of including a vampire kangaroo.
- A mind-blowing space opera created with some fantastic sci-fi writers who have written in some of the biggest media universes ever.
- A very cool book about swords in which I was honoured to write the introduction.
- A wild sci-fi adventure co-written with my friend W.G. Arndt (how did I suddenly end up involved in three different sci-fi projects when I failed high school physics?)
- Periodically consulting on the pitches and scripts for the Greatcoats TV series and Spellslinger TV series. Don’t get too excited yet, folks: these things take a long time to come together and most don’t make it past the pitch stage. Still . . . it would be awfully cool to have two different TV series on the air!
So, lots on the go and even more on the horizon. Now, back to the grindstone . . .








Les vieux maîtres de sort aiment raconter que la magie a un goût. Les sorts de braise ressemblent à une épice qui vous brûle le bout de la langue. La magie du souf e est subtile, presque rafraîchissante, un peu comme si vous teniez une feuille de menthe entre vos lèvres. Le sable, la soie, le sang, le fer… cha- cune de ces magies a son parfum. Un véritable adepte, autre- ment dit un mage capable de jeter un sort même à l’extérieur d’une oasis, les connaît tous.
'I totally saw this coming,’ Reichis growled, leaping onto my shoulder as lightning scorched the sand barely ten feet from us. The squirrel cat’s claws pierced my sweat-soaked shirt and dug into my skin.
The way of the Argosi is the way of water. Water never seeks to block another’s path, nor does it permit impediments to its own. It moves freely, slipping past those who would capture it, taking nothing that belongs to others. To forget this is to stray from the path, for despite the rumours one sometimes hears, an Argosi never, ever steals.