Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

TRUE OR FALSE... WITH ROB SANDERS


Get to know a little more about author Rob Sanders by playing 'True or False'. Below are twenty statements. Ten are true and ten are false. See if you can guess which are which. Answers are given on the link below.


1 I was banned from the Library not once but twice for not returning library books.

2 I have been writing for Black Library, in one form or another, for ten years.

3 My office is a perpetual mess, buried in books and trinkets associated with popular culture.

4 I once wrote a short story with crime author Ian Rankin, creator of Rebus.

5 I have a First Class Honours in English Literature and History.

6 I hate the plays of William Shakespeare – reading them, being assessed on them and teaching them.

7 When I was younger I had a collection of poetry published.

8 Starting as the Head of English at a local secondary school, I improved GCSE English grades by 20% in a single year.

9 My favourite film of all time is Aliens (1986) by James Cameron.

10 In my twenties, I spent six months in Nigeria on a Voluntary Service Overseas teaching placement.

11 Despite not being religious, I once won a national fiction competition by writing a fictional book of the Old Testament.

12 I prefer silence while I am writing, since I’m dreadfully easy to distract.

13 My first introduction to Fantasy and Science Fiction was through gamebooks.

14 I wasn’t a big reader of fiction in my childhood, much preferring non-fiction – books on space and dinosaurs.

15 My first published fiction came about by accident, when a friend of mine introduced me to editor Christian Dunn.

16 Among the classics, my favourite novel is ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’.

17 I have a Border Collie called ‘Gatsby’.

18 I tend to write first drafts by hand before typing them up on a laptop.

19 I did a work placement with my publisher, to experience the process of producing a novel from the editorial end of the process.

20 I have never played Warhammer 40,000, or any Games Workshop product for that matter.


See how many you got right. Check your answers HERE.


TRUE OR FALSE... WITH ROB SANDERS (ANSWERS)


Check your answers below.


1 I was banned from the Library not once but twice for not returning library books.

TRUE Once as a child and once as an adult. Both times because of my rather fluid relationship with time.


2 I have been writing for Black Library, in one form or another, for ten years.

FALSE It’s actually been thirteen years since I wrote my first short story for Black Library.


3 My office is a perpetual mess, buried in books and trinkets associated with popular culture.

FALSE My office is intentionally tiny. Unlike many authors, I tend to restrict the amount of clutter – books, models etc. (what Philip K. Dick calls ‘Kipple’). I prefer a room, a screen and my thoughts.


4 I once wrote a short story with crime author Ian Rankin, creator of Rebus.

TRUE As part of a writing competition for the BBC called ‘End of Story’, I wrote the second half of a short story that Ian Rankin had started. The competition was the biggest creative writing competition in the country, attracting over 17000 entrants, both professional authors and amateurs (like myself at the time). I reached the top 6 and was featured in the television series that followed the competition.


5 I have a First Class Honours in English Literature and History.

TRUE My dissertation title was ‘Sexual Politics in the Early Gothic Novel – a Barthesian Approach.’ I very much enjoyed literary theory while everyone else around me hated it. Flying in the face of instinct I chose to base it on a collection of novels and a period I hated so I had no fear of ripping the texts to shreds. It worked.


6 I hate the plays of William Shakespeare – reading them, being assessed on them and teaching them.

FALSE I love the plays of William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe and the Early Modern Period in general. My particular favourites are King Lear, Richard III, Anthony and Cleopatra, Much Ado About Nothing (Shakespeare), Tamburlaine and Edward II (Marlowe).


7 When I was younger I had a collection of poetry published.

FALSE I had some pieces of poetry published in national poetry magazines. I did not have a collection of poetry published. Despite some early potential, my interest in writing poetry waned when I discovered how little critical and popular attention it received – which is a shame.


8 Starting as the Head of English at a local secondary school, I improved GCSE English grades by 20% in a single year.

TRUE A tumultuous first year in which I took over, brought in a plethora of new strategies / approaches and reassembled my staff into a fantastic team that could achieve such an objective. Ultimately, a pretty thankless task as it turned out. At least the students got to walk away with their grades.


9 My favourite film of all time is Aliens (1986) by James Cameron.

TRUE I must have seen it hundreds of times. A tour de force exercise in rollercoaster film making. Love him or hate him – you do not bet against James Cameron.


10 In my twenties, I spent a year in Nigeria on a Voluntary Service Overseas teaching placement.

FALSE I’m not much of a traveller, it must be said. A friend of mine from teaching practice looked into spending a year in Nigeria as part of a VSO teaching placement. As part of the placement, the VSO put you in contact with a volunteer who has been to the place you are being sent to. We went to see her and she had a horror story to tell. She was routinely robbed by the people she was trying to help and police officers stopped her on every street corner for a bribe to let her walk by. She had to call her boyfriend to fly out to be with her, but the pair of them got dragged into an alley and robbed with a gun levelled between his eyeballs. And that was that. They jumped on a plane and came home. Needless to say, my friend never went to Nigeria.


11 Despite not being religious, I once won a national fiction competition by writing a fictional book of the Old Testament.

TRUE The competition was run by Literary Agent Peter Cox (Agent of Michelle Paver, of ‘Wolf Brother: Chronicles of Ancient Darkness’ fame – optioned to be turned into a film by Ridley Scott). Just followed my instincts on this one. I wrote a fictional, biblical account of Cain banished from the Garden of Eden after murdering his brother. The story emulated language from the Bible and even came complete with numbers and notations. It did what it was designed to do, which was catch the eye.


12 I prefer silence while I am writing, since I’m dreadfully easy to distract.

FALSE I always listen to music when I am writing – mostly film soundtracks, because they already have an emotional architecture built into them. I have collections of track organised by tone – ‘Action’, ‘Emotion’, ‘Thoughtful’ etc that I like to have on in the background while I’m writing.


13 My first introduction to Fantasy and Science Fiction was through gamebooks.

TRUE I loved gamebooks as a kid. Even then I knew that I wanted to be in control of the story. When I play console games now I tend to favour open world games that allow you control over the character, where they go and what they do.


14 I wasn’t a big reader of fiction in my childhood, much preferring non-fiction – books on space and dinosaurs.

TRUE Even as a kid, I guess I would much rather be researching my own fiction than reading someone else’s.


15 My first published fiction came about by accident, when a friend of mine introduced me to editor Christian Dunn.

FALSE No. Before writing for Black Library I didn’t know anyone there, at Games Workshop or knew anyone else who knew somebody. I came in through the slush pile. I sent my short story ‘The Cold Light of Day’ in cold and Christian Dunn picked it up out of the pile for publication in Inferno! Magazine. I then met Christian after. This was a fairly rare occurrence, I came to learn, but it should give budding authors hope. You need skill – but even with skill, you still need a little luck. You need to get the right piece of work, in front of the right person at the right time. There’s many a good writer (published and not) who has fallen foul of one of those things.


16 Among the classics, my favourite novel is ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’.

FALSE Thomas Hardy is not one of my favourites, although the “because we are too menny” scene in ‘Jude the Obscure’ gets me every time. My actual favourite from the classics, is ‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily Bronte. It is a structurally ambitions novel of such raw power, darkness and emotion, written by a sheltered young woman in her twenties. Incredible.


17 I have a Border Collie called ‘Gatsby’.

TRUE Named after F. Scott Fitzgerald’s titular character.


18 I tend to write first drafts by hand before typing them up on a laptop.

FALSE No. The laptop and my fingers – the screen and my mind - are as one. I increasingly find writing with a pen a slightly alien activity.


19 I did a work placement with my publisher, to experience the process of producing a novel from the editorial end of the process.

TRUE After producing my first pieces of published fiction I thought it best to try and understand the process of writing fiction from both ends. It was an eye-opener of a placement, in terms of how editors approach the fiction before them, the realities of the slush pile and the myriad demands of reader.


20 I have never played Warhammer 40,000, or any Games Workshop product for that matter.

FALSE It is true that I don’t tend to play very much now. My time is taken up doing the thing I love, which is writing. In my youth I did play a great deal but used to enjoy the planning part of the game more than the actual battles themselves. I also ran a Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay club in the first secondary school I worked in as an English teacher. It ran every day at lunchtime for several years. It contained girls and boys from different years groups as well as the occasional teacher. It was very successful but eventually became too big to manage.


How did you do?


Archaon Interview

This is an interview about the new Archaon release, 'Archaon: Lord of Chaos', taken from the Black Library Blog.


"Today we catch up author Rob Sanders about his new novel Archaon: Lord of Chaos. He’s answering all our questions about Warhammer’s ultimate villain Archaon and his path into damnation.






Tell us about the story of Archaon: Lord of Chaos (No spoilers, please).

Archaon: Lord of Chaos continues the dark quest of the ruinous warlord Archaon to become Everchosen of the Chaos Gods and bring about the apocalyptic End Times.

Archaon is obviously a bad guy in the Warhammer setting (THE Bad Guy). How did you make sure he still came across as a compelling protagonist?

Everyone knows Archaon to be one of the most devastating characters in the background. Archaon: Everchosen and Archaon: Lord of Chaos shows how such a deadly warlord is crafted by dark fate. Archaon is not just a Chaos warrior favoured by a dread power or risen to bloody prominence. He never chose the dubious honour or the expectations that have been thrust upon him. He despises the Chaos powers and their daemonic servants as much as hates Sigmar, the god he feels abandoned him. Archaon will be neither heretic to the people of the Empire nor puppet of the Dark Gods.

How has Archaon's character evolved since the first novel Everchosen?

Archaon has learned a lot since his adventures in Archaon: Everchosen. His story arc takes us from his fateful birth to the days of dark destiny. Archaon’s story is truly epic, stretching not only across the extended lifetime of one of the most deadly characters in the Warhammer World but also across the surface of the world itself. Archaon’s travels take him to places that readers have never seen: the squalid lands of the Old World, the eternal battlefields of the Northern Wastes, the daemon-haunted realm of the Southern Wastes and through the Chaos Gates themselves. As he travels, Archaon grows not only in physical prowess but learns what it takes to be a tyrannical warlord at the head of the largest and most monstrous Chaos army anyone has ever seen.

Archaon has plenty of enemies. What foes can we expect him to face in this story?

Archaon is beset on all sides by enemies. The armies of the Old World stand before him at sea on the decks of their ships and on land, protecting their borders from invasion. The warriors, creatures and monstrous servants of Chaos are all on their own dreadful paths, attempting to win favour and accrue power.

The daemons of Chaos fight Archaon for his very soul. Other Ruinous champions and sorcerers, who would also call themselves ‘Everchosen’, meet Archaon on the field of battle, army to army and blade to blade – hoping to strip him of his treasures and his destiny.

And of course, there is Be’lakor...

The daemon Be'lakor plays a big part in the novel: tell us about him.

Archaon is a dark and unstoppable force. The same can be said for his sworn foe Be’lakor. While the Dark Master wields great power, he has been hobbled by the Chaos gods for his boundless daemonic ambition. While both Archaon and Be’lakor are Ruinous threats to the Warhammer world, they are both victims of the Chaos gods, who have suffered immeasurably at the hands of the Dark Pantheon.

Be’lakor might view himself as puppet master and fool himself into thinking that Archaon is his puppet but the two characters are heading at full speed towards one another on the same track. It is a conflict that can only find resolution in the titanic, mountain-shaking clash of Chaos warlord and his daemon master.

Read 'Archaon: Everchosen' and ‘Archaon: Lord of Chaos’ if…

-You like your fantasy dark, gritty and epic;
-You want to know the real Archaon, who lives and breathes beyond the background in the pages of a thrilling fantasy duology;
-You are enjoying the ‘Warhammer: End Times’ series and want to see where the ‘End’ begins, in the company of the original ‘Lord of the End Times’ himself.

As well as your Archaon novels, you're also known amongst Black Library readers for your Horus Heresy fiction. But who would win in a fight between Archaon and a primarch?

Going to upset some folks either way on this one! I think it has to be Archaon. Think about it this way. All of the traitor primarchs were primarchs like their loyalist brothers before they turned to Chaos – and yet they still turned. They were the princes of the galaxy, the generals of colossal armies and the product of genetic engineering that bestowed upon them incredible gifts and abilities. Yet still about half of them turned to the Ruinous Powers. As the Everchosen of the Chaos gods, Archaon is ruin incarnate. He is chosen of all Chaos, not a single power like many of the favoured traitor primarchs.

Thanks, Rob.

Check out the harbinger of the End Times’ rise to power in Archaon: Lord of Chaos available in hardback and as an eBook. And if you want to read more of his fall from grace, read the prequel Archaon: Everchosen.

That's all for today,
Thanks for reading.

- The Black Library Team

Thought for the day:
“Mortals are free to do as they will. The gods give them no choice.” "

SFX Magazine Interview


I was fortunate enough to be interviewed for SFX magazine recently. SFX boasts an impressive readership(myself among the number) and is regarded as "the world's number one science fiction and fantasy magazine". The interview can be found on p96 and 97 of Issue 225. The issue went on sale yesterday. Click here to check out what else is in the issue. I'm particularly impressed that my name is included in the same sentence as Ray Bradbury's!

I was thrilled at the opportunity and a big thanks goes out to Guy Haley for making it possible. His site Haley's Comment can be found on the side bar and is well worth a perusal. If you have this month's SFX, then check out the interview. If you haven't - it's still waiting for you at the newsagents! In the meantime, you can check out other interviews I've done here.

Question-able



Today we are heading over to the Bloghole – a blog attached to the Black Library Bolthole forum. Months ago, dauntless reviewer Shadowhawk popped some questions over to me for an interview and because I was buried in a mountain of non-author-type -stuff, I kept him waiting a long time. Many apologies and much appreciation to him for his saintly patience. I do try to give good interview - if I can - and answer questions with the detail the questions deserve. If you would like to check about the brilliant questions and my half-coherent attempt at some answers, then follow the link below to the interview on the Black Library Bloghole.

Black Library Bloghole Interview - Rob Sanders

What New Devilry Is This?


I’m not an all out technophobe but I did come to social media party late. Facebook, Twitter and blogging were something that other people did. As an author, however, I soon came to appreciate the boon these forms of communication were and became more and more interested in the more technical aspects of their application. Now I would regard myself as more clued-up than most but there are still some quite common internet-based mediums that I have as yet to conquer. Up until very recently, I was a Skype virgin and while I watch a great deal of material on YouTube I’ve never actually uploaded anything for others to experience.

One area that has caught my imagination of late is podcasting. My first instincts regarding podcasting – when I first heard of it – were that it would struggle to generate wide appeal. Perhaps I was thinking of radio as a form, struggling to retain its audience in which most people would agree is a largely visual culture. After a little poking around the subject I came to realise that podcasting is a great deal more popular than I initially gave credit.

My first experience of the format related to a short story competition that I entered. Literary Agent Peter Cox (who famously secured a £2.8 million publishing deal for Michelle Paver’s Wolf Brother) ran a competition advertised through his ‘Litopia’ writing community. Peter records a daily podcast for Litopia, which is an excellent source of inside information on publishing and insights regarding writing and the book industry. I was fortunate enough to win the competition and as part of the prize, Peter read my short story out on his podcast and then provided a thirty minute critique of the piece. The Litopia podcast has a wide following and is a popular source of information for aspiring writers. Through Litopia I started to appreciate the advantages of the format. If you’re an aspiring writer then perhaps the Litopia Writers’ Colony is for you. You can check out their site here.


Last week I was lucky enough to be asked back to The Independent Characters – Warhammer 40K podcast. Carl Tuttle and Geoff Hummel run a tight ship over there and offer in-depth interviews, reviews and play-testing round-ups of new releases from Games Workshop. One of the most fascinating sections of their shows is their Forbidden Lore feature, in which the pair offer insights and discuss responses to new Black Library releases. Last week Carl and Geoff discussed my novel Legion of the Damned and asked me to join them to share some of my experiences in writing the book. It was great fun and both Carl and Geoff were gracious and knowledgeable hosts. I encourage you to check out the podcast, which can be found at the link below. Check out the full show to see what The Independent Characters are really about and where they are coming from in terms of Games Workshop products. If you wish to specifically check out The Legion of the Damned section of the show, then it comes in at the 02:41:15 timestamp.

The Independent Characters Warhammer 40k Podcast – Episode 53

Where The Hell Have I Been 2?


A long time ago I wrote a post called 'Where The Hell Have I Been?' which was very popular. Consider this a follow up. Well, I’m back into the swing of things. I recently uploaded a post indicating how ‘Buried’ I had been in work other than writing. Readers who check out the ‘About the Author’ section at the back of my books know that I’m an English teacher - a Head of English, in fact – and although I enjoy teaching and have enjoyed a lot of success, I’ve always wanted to be an author. Teaching is my past and writing is my future. In my present the two compete for my attention. Recent months have been a good example of this. Exam season is crazy for teachers responsible for a single class of students but when you’re the Head of English then you’re responsible for all students in a school taking all qualifications in your subject – GCSE, A Level, English, Literature and Media. This had led me many months ago to make a further commitment to my writing future by stepping down as Head of Department and continuing on as a part time teacher. This would be a difficult transition for most professionals but I am so excited about my recent creative successes and my future as an author that I simply can’t wait.

I must apologise for my recent absence from the blog. I consider it an important medium and use it to showcase my work and achievement - and regularly connect with readers on a broad range of genre-related topics. So, I’m re-affirming that commitment here and am eager to get back into it – now that the crazy exam season is not only over but, due to rearranging my commitments, will never come to dominate my time in the same way again.

I have a bunch of brilliant stuff to share and to kick us off I give you a recent interview I did with Carl Tuttle of the wonderful ‘The Independent Characters’ - a Warhammer 40k podcast. I encourage you to check out ‘The Independent Characters’ and their entertaining reviews of Games Workshop products and Black Library fiction. A link to the most recent show is supplied below and my interview occurs at the 03:17:50 time stamp.

The Independent Characters – Warhammer 40k Podcast Episode 52 – Interview

For Every Question an Answer


Last month I was fortunate enough to have been contacted by the excellent Nick Sharps who runs Goatfairy Review Blog. Nick reviews novels, films and games over at Goatfairy and kindly reviewed my latest novel Legion of the Damned - more of that later. Nick asked me if I'd like to answer a few questions on the blog and it was a pleasure. Here's the interview.

"Interview with Rob Sanders

Rob Sanders, author of Legion of the Damned and Atlas Infernal, was kind enough to take some time to answer questions I had after reading his most recent book. Here is what he had to say.

1. In one sentence, how would you explain Warhammer 40,000 to someone who has never played the game or read the books?

Warhammer 40,000 is a game and fiction setting - epic in scale - that depicts a far, grim and war-torn future in which humanity struggles to maintain a galactic empire that faces deadly alien threats from without and crippling corruption from within. (I know I cheated using such a long sentence!)

2. It seems to me that you have a noticeably different style than many of the other BL authors. If you agree, what do you think it is that separates you from the rest?

It is true that I have ambitions of being a signature author. I’d like to think that readers could pick my text out of a line-upon the basis of its style and preoccupations. This is complicated by the idea of contributing to a milieu in which you share a setting and sometimes even characters with other authors. Fortunately, there is a great deal of room for individual voices to come through at Black Library. In terms of ‘noticeable difference’, readers and reviewers often comment on structural experimentation in my narratives, an attention to detail and description that attempts to bring the fictional world to life and the unusual and imaginative directions in which I take my stories. I think that ultimately readers reward variety and appreciate versatility in the authors they read. Most will indulge a little experimentation in exchange for the possibility of discovering something that they then come to really appreciate. You see this also in television, film, music and video games. The big winners are often the big risk takers. Who dares wins, after all!

3. What would you consider to be your greatest writing influences and why?
It’s fair to say that I have a decent grounding in the classics, having taught a fair number of them. There are certain contemporary science fiction/literary authors that I particularly appreciate – for example, David Mitchell, author of Ghostwritten and Cloud Atlas and Margret Atwood, author of The Handmaid’s Tale and Oryx and Crake. I shouldn’t underestimate the influence of television and film on my writing either. I have broad tastes and they undoubtedly have an impact on my writing. I suppose I’m influenced by a little of a lot, rather than one overriding source like a single author.

4. What was the hardest part about writing from the perspective of Zachariah Kersh, the Scourge?

I suppose the hardest part is striking a balance. The Scourge’s perspective has to deliver simultaneously in a range of ways. He has to be recognisably an Adeptus Astartes – in thought, behaviour and action. He also has to reflect the distinct culture and beliefs of his particular chapter, the Excoriators. As the main character, he needs to be exemplars for both of these, while being different enough to justify following in a narrative. His recent shame and the indomitable desire to right in himself a perceived wrong is the character arc that helps to bind these myriad concerns. It also created some interesting dynamics between the Scourge and those under his command: conflict between the Adeptus Astartes that you don’t traditionally see in Space Marine fiction. That said - I don’t want to give the impression that he was actually hard to write. He came together pretty easily: he was the right character for the story I wanted to tell, and as such his rather extreme perspective was a natural extension of the extreme circumstances in which I immersed him.

5. Death Match: Zachariah Kersh vs Sarpedon of the Soul Drinkers. Who wins and why?

Sarpedon has undoubtedly got some game. Zachariah Kersh doesn’t need Sarpedon’s mind tricks and dark patronage. He is the raw, undiluted desire for victory at all costs. He is indomitable in flesh and mind. He would not allow himself to be beaten. Failure is beyond his comprehension. In terms of evidence – the Feast of Blades goes some way to advocate his martial superiority when faced with the best his brothers have to offer. His conduct during the events on Certus-Minor only supports this further. My money’s on Kersh, every time.

6. Are you currently reading anything for work or pleasure?

It’s interesting that you mention reading for work. I find research for creative projects very enjoyable. I always enjoyed reading non-fiction, even as a kid – so lots of that. As for what I’ve been thumbing through recently – I’m into The Walking Dead graphic novels, on the classics front I‘ve just started Catch-22 by Joseph Heller and before that I was reading the uncompromisingly bleak The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Like a lot of people, I also read for pleasure on the internet and you can do a lot worse than Cracked.com to learn something at the same time as laughing your ass off.

7. Can you tell us what your next novel might be about or at least give us a hint? And what are the chances of seeing Kersh and the Excoriators again?

Legion of the Damned, appropriately focuses on the phenomenon of the Legion of the Damned. I’ve been really heartened by the way readers have responded to the Excoriators and Zachariah Kersh. There was next to no background on the chapter when I started, so they have been built from the ground up and it’s really rewarding to see people want to see more of them. I would love to return to the chapter and Kersh. I think they deserve it! In terms of what I’m working on at the moment – my novella The Serpent Beneath, which is in The Primarchs (Horus Heresy), is released later this year. I’m working on more Heresy stuff at the moment and then I’m looking to jump genres and write a novel for the Warhammer Fantasy universe. Trying to keep it fresh and versatile!

8. If Legion of the Damned were an icecream flavor what would it be?

It might surprise you to learn that I’ve agonised over this question. Damn you, metaphor questions *shakes fist*! I’ve settled on Neapolitan, with its different colours, but Neapolitan the like of which you have never seen – alive with the shifting and incomprehensible colours of the warp. I’ll have mine between two wafers, thanks.

9. You’ve written about Space Marines, Imperial Guardsmen, and Inquisitors. What has been your favorite to write about and why?

I have no favourites amongst my children – and I apply a similar rule to my projects. At the time I’m writing about a particular faction, I’m totally jazzed and enthusiastic for their background and the narrative possibilities they offer. I could tell you exactly what I’m working on right now and why it is my current favourite but then I’d have to kill you - assuming my editors don’t kill me first!. Suffice to say, it wouldn’t end well for anyone.

10. Were there to be a film adaption of Legion of the Damned, name three “must have” songs for the sound track.

I extensively use soundtracks when writing and regularly make recommendations on my blog. On the jukebox under the heading Legion of the Damned, however, are a couple of tracks that are actually songs used on film trailers. Divorced from the films for which they are being used in this way, they have the right tone and atmosphere for both the characters and events detailed in Legion of the Damned. I encourage you to listen and enjoy them yourself.

Nine Inch Nails - the Day the World Went Away

E.S. Postumus – Unstoppable

And you might as well throw in the main title track from the Beowulf soundtrack.

Any final words for readers?

I’d like to say a great big thank you to everyone who has taken the time to read my books. I really appreciate it and will keep trying hard to impress. I am also a regular blogger and post on a whole range of topics connected to the science fiction genre and my work. It can be found at http://rob-sanders.blogspot.co.uk/ Finally, I’d like to say a big thank you to Nick for this opportunity and his killer questions.

From all of us here at Goatfairy Review Blog, thank you so much for your time and I look forward to your next work (and if it is Warhammer Fantasy I’ll have to finally give that a try)."

I heartily recommend that you check out the Goatfairy Review Blog and Nick's reviews of a range of cultural fare.

Q & A


There is never a shortage of views around me - mine and other people’s - and it seems no shortage of interviews, either. January is the month of the Q&A. No sooner had I finished responding to an interesting set of questions for Civilian Reader, than new blog-on-the-block Imagined Realms asked me if I’d mind answering a few more. The more the merrier, as far as I’m concerned. Check it out.


Imagined Realms Interview

Civilian Reader Interview


A new year. What better way to start it than with an in-depth interview?

The Science Fiction and Fantasy genre is growing. It has produced its fair share of classics and has always enjoyed a robust core following. It also maintains a popular presence in the imagination of gamers and cinema lovers. The internet has provided a further springboard for the genre's interests, with a myriad of blogs, forums and websites devoted to championing speculative fiction.

Among these, Civilian Reader has emerged an important voice. I have long enjoyed Stefan Fergus' perspectives and feel that he has a real love for the genre. I find him to be thoughtful both in his reviews and also about the process of reviewing. You can imagine that I was thrilled when he contacted me, asking if I'd like to do an interview for Civilian Reader.

I encourage you to check out the interview here - in which I have a good deal to say on a range of subjects. I also encourage you to regularly check in with Civilian Reader and enjoy Stefan's views and recommendations.

Interview - Phonics and Phrenology

Two further questions and answers from my aforementioned author interview.Enjoy!

6) Silly question: The cover art of your first novel, Redemption Corps, portrayed the hero as bald. Now the cover art of your second novel similarly suggests a certain deficiency in the hair department on the part of your second major heroic character. What’s going on with that?

Ha! No conspiracy. Bald men are not taking over the future. This all comes down to the way in which the artwork for novel covers is commissioned. The publisher sends a brief out to an artist for the cover of a novel. I’m asked to write a section of that brief with advice, information and extracts from the work in progress to guide the artist. They work closely with the brief but are ‘artists’ in their own right and so the execution of the cover illustration is down to them. An artist called Jon Sullivan did my cover for Redemption Corps and Stef Kopinski did Atlas Infernal. Both artists did a fantastic job. I will be working with Jon again on the cover for my third novel, Legion of the Damned and hope Stef will produce the cover for any future Czevak novels. As for the baldness, I’m responsible for Major Mortensen’s – it’s part of his character’s back story. As for Czevak, his hair (or lack of) never came up as a significant issue in the novel and therefore is not part of the brief. I think that since Czevak is such an intellectual heavyweight in the novel, perhaps Stef decided to flag this with a Professor X / Mace Windu-style dome. What can I say: it suits him.

7) For the record, how do you (each reader will no doubt have their own ideas on the matter!) pronounce Czevak? See-vak? Zee-vak? Zeh-vak? Or some other way?

You are, of course, correct: it doesn’t matter how the reader specifically pronounces the name. It will not interfere with their enjoyment of the novel. I have heard several different pronunciations – for example a ‘ch’ sound at the beginning – like Czech. The 40k galaxy is broad and wide, however, with a good deal of room for diversity and interpretation. I personally interpret the name phonetically as ‘Zeh-vak’. It has a Slavic, no-nonsense feel to it while at the same time being suggestive of someone unusual and possibly exotic with the silent ‘c’. Even the ‘z’ sound that leads the pronunciation has a rare, superlative quality: there’s only one ‘z’ tile in Scrabble and it is worth 10 points! The ‘v’ and the ‘k’ produce a harsh, angular and ultimately satisfying resonance that lingers after the name. This degree of forethought might seem unnecessary but names are important to writers because they are important to readers. Gaz is the apprentice to an electrician, whereas Sebastian lectures in the Classics at Cambridge. If the names were reversed, then Gaz the Latin lecturer or Sebastian the ‘Sparky’ might strike people as unusual enough to pause and comment on in real life. If the names were reversed in a novel then such a detail might actually threaten the reader’s wilful suspension of disbelief and therefore their enjoyment of the text. Czevak’s name is unusual and therefore attracted my attention. If he had been called, I don’t know - Rob Sanders -then I doubt I would have written about him at all!

Interview - Bronislaw Czevak and Doctor Who

This is Part 3 of my serialised interview. In this section I respond to questions regarding Czevak’s enemies in Atlas Infernal and comparisons between the Inquisitor and the Doctor.

4) Czevak’s attitude to danger, his often ingenious solutions to trying situations, his reverse aging and his cadre of followers cannot help but bring to mind a certain television time traveller. How do you feel about comparisons between Inquisitor Czevak and Doctor Who?

I have no problem with those comparisons at all. Doctor Who is immensely popular and well loved and it is not an unfair comparison to make. Inquisitor Czevak has in his possession the Atlas Infernal: an ancient tome of long forgotten construction and genius that allows him to navigate the labyrinthine expanse of the Webway – a network of interdimensional tunnels utilised for faster-than-light travel across the galaxy. The Webway was left behind by an ancient race that millions of years before the evolution of humanity, left behind gates on millions of planets across the cosmos. With the Atlas Infernal, Czevak can traverse the Webway and move between far flung worlds and across the empires of the galaxy’s dominant species. The combination of these capabilities, as well as the secrets of the Black Library of Chaos at his disposal (the location from which the inquisitor originally stole the Atlas Infernal) means that Czevak would certainly give the Doctor a run for his money. Like the Doctor, Czevak is everywhere – blasting back and forth across the galaxy, a bane to his powerful enemies and combating evil in many forms.

Although there are some similarities in terms of situation, Czevak and the Doctor are two very different characters. Czevak does not share the Time Lord’s sentimentality and has a true genius’ dispassionate outlook. Czevak does what has to be done, regardless of the cost to himself, those around him and the galaxy as a whole. Whereas the Doctor seems to have a weakness for twentieth century Brits, Inquisitor Czevak surrounds himself with witches, heretics and daemonhosts. He is not a tour guide: he invites into his retinue only those who might survive his lethal adventures – those that have the power and talents to help him defeat potent enemies and save the galaxy, one world at a time.

The comparisons are well observed, however. It think it is fair to say that if you enjoy Doctor Who then you’ll enjoy Atlas Infernal.


5) Czevak and his motley band of associates take on a diverse range of foes in Atlas Infernal – from Chaos space marines and daemons to loyal servants of the Imperium – did you have a ‘shopping list’ of baddies you wanted to include from the outset?

Inquisitor Czevak is one of the only humans to have been allowed access to an alien
repository of forbidden lore and knowledge of galactic evil called The Black Library of Chaos. Czevak is afflicted with a meme-virus - an illness resulting in a voracious hunger for knowledge and the equivalent of a photographic memory. This makes him very much like an information addict. Spending time in the Black Library with such an affliction means that he soaks up arcane lore and detail from thousands of alien and corrupt books, tracts and artefacts like a sponge. Retaining this information is both a blessing and a curse for the inquisitor. Everyone wants the information locked away in his mind: the servants of dark gods, daemonic entities, the Imperial Inquisition to which Czevak himself belongs and even the ancient alien guardians of the Black Library, that regard the knowledge in his possession as a galactic liability. A long shopping list of enemies who will all stop at nothing to acquire Czevak and these secrets. Putting his knowledge to good use, Czevak uses what he has learned to stay one step ahead of his myriad enemies and turn their ambitions to dust.

Interview – Length and Skill!

Here is the second part of the author interview serialised on the blog yesterday. The following answers deal with the important (and not mutually exclusive considerations) of length and skill.

2) How long did the book take to write? Did you plan it all down to the finest detail before you started or did you loosely sketch it and then see where the story took you?

Given a straight run, it takes me about three months to write a book. It is a little more complicated than that, however, since working in a school means that I don’t have a straight run. Projects often have to fit themselves around the demands of the school year. Every writer has a different way of approaching a book. I like to have an initial pitch to sound out my editors and make sure they feel as I do that the book has an appeal. I also like to make sure that it doesn’t conflict with anything else anyone is writing for them at that time. I then furnish a synopsis/chapter break-down with the characters and events required to tell the story. This is to ensure that the narrative has an emotional integrity, holds together and makes sense. The trick here is not to include too much detail. My editors check this also. Another experienced pair of eyes is really useful here. I read some books and watch some films and television programmes that contain nonsensical plot holes that you could drive a bus through. You don’t want to get tens of thousands of words into a project before you discover one of these, so editors’ comments at this stage are useful. Then comes the hard graft. Writing a 100,000 word novel is not easy. It takes real stamina and commitment, no matter how much you’re enjoying the process. I keep the synopsis loose and functional to enable the creative juices to flow during the actual writing of the novel. Characters, setting and the mechanics of the plot are all fleshed out here and there is an element of seeing where a scene, section of dialogue or sub-plot takes me. This, of course, takes place within the safety net of a good deal of planning already undertaken. The finished article then goes to my editors (hopefully somewhere near the deadline) for several read throughs and technical checks to ensure it still makes sense and is as free as possible from errors. Done.

3) Do you feel that your day job as an English teacher and the skills you need for that have helped you to write the novel?

Do you need to be an English teacher to write a novel? No. Does it help if you are? I certainly think so. I read a good deal. I have taught English, English Literature, Drama and Media across all age ranges and I have a First Class Honours in English and History. All of these things require the deconstruction of other people’s texts on a daily basis. It is not unreasonable to suggest that this experience has benefitted me when writing books of my own. If you pick up a Rob Sanders novel then I can guarantee you will be reading a text into which an enormous amount of imagination and skill has been invested. Atlas Infernal is only my second novel, however. I am at the beginning of this process and have much to learn as I develop as a writer. Being a teacher certainly teaches you the importance of the learning process - of reflection and continual improvement. I’m in this for the long haul and to last the distance you have to be inventive, adaptable and be prepared to learn from any mistakes you make.

Interview – Creation and Inspiration

I recently did an interview for my local newspaper The Lincolnshire Echo regarding the release of my second novel Atlas Infernal. Since the interview appeared in a local publication I thought it might be fun to serialise it here. A big thanks goes to Dan Sharp at the Echo who conducted the interview and who bravely champions science fiction in word and deed.


“1) The book is set in the universe of Warhammer 40,000 but where did the idea for Czevak and the Atlas Infernal itself come from? What inspired their creation?

Warhammer 40,000 is a shared fictional ‘universe’ in the same way as there are many different writers telling their own stories in the Doctor Who universe, those belonging to DC and Marvel, serial crime dramas, The Simpsons or even the recent James Bond novels. It is a communal sandbox where everyone gets to play in their own corner and create their own part of that universe. This can create a very rich experience for readers. They can experience a range of different voices and approaches within a common setting with which they grow increasingly familiar. The Warhammer 40,000 universe provides the setting for a highly enjoyable game based in the far future, but knowledge of the game is not required in order to enjoy the novels. Many people all over the world buy novels and read stories based in its universe without ever playing the game.

One of the most rewarding aspects of a shared universe is collaboration. This doesn’t mean writers working together on projects. It means writers leaving loose ends all over the universe, that can be picked up by other writers who see opportunities. This also appeals to readers who appreciate the interrelated nature of the material to which they have made a commitment. Inquisitor Czevak was a character of significance in the Warhammer 40,000 universe but nothing had been written specifically about him. His presence is alluded to in different situations during the fictional history of the background but next to nothing was known about him personally, what he had done and his ‘present’ whereabouts. I spotted this opportunity and immediately wanted to tell his story.

Czevak is an Imperial Inquisitor – a man charged with rooting out heresy and corruption across humanity’s stellar empire - a galactic witchfinder: purging worlds of alien cults, daemonic intrusions and mutants cursed with unnatural powers. Czevak operates within an area called The Eye of Terror, a region of space where hell and reality overlap. Using an ancient tome called the Atlas Infernal he navigates his way across daemon worlds, where evil gods and their corruptive powers hold sway and the rules of reality, let alone physics, rarely apply. One of the most direct influences on Czevak’s creation, therefore, was the epic poem The Divine Comedy and Dante’s journey through the nine circles of Hell.”