Category Archives: Uncategorized

The Different Faces of Gunpowder Fantasy

Like every genre, Gunpowder Fantasy is a category with a lot of variation. From the level of technology, to the existence and power of the magic, every author will have his or her own take on Gunpowder Fantasy.

But like other sub-genre’s, Gunpowder Fantasy can be divided into a few simple groups: Flintlock Fantasy, Muskets and Magic, and Rifles and Railroads. As with anything, there will be some variation, but for the most part I think that these three categories can be based primarily on the level of technology used and secondarily on the amount of magic involved.

 

Flintlock Fantasy

Flintlock Fantasy covers worlds created with early gunpowder era technology: flintlock rifles, no steam power or telegraphs. These stories will also tend to use less magic or no magic at all.

Muskets and Magic

While not necessarily jumping far ahead of Flintlock Fantasy in their use of technology, worlds built of Muskets and Magic will tend to have a greater focus on the magical aspects of their worlds.

Rifles and Railroads

Rifles and Railroad novels fall on the higher end of the technology tree. Railroads are common, steam ships may be introduced and rifles are the primary weapon of choice. In some cases, repeating or revolving weapons will be used.

Obviously these sub-categories are only my interpretation of how Gunpowder Fantasy has developed, but I think it’s definitely a start to classifying this increasingly popular new area of fiction.

A Pledge Match Challenge!

In response to my previous post about the big things happening for The Cerberus Rebellion, a reader has, offered to match all pledges dollar for dollar (up to $250) made to The Cerberus Rebellion Kickstart Campaign!

You can get your piece of the Griffins and Gunpowder here!

Moving Right Along

So a couple of big things happening this week with The Cerberus Rebellion!

First off, I found a possible narrator for the audiobook production. He’s working on the first chapter audition right now and is expecting to have it finished after this weekend so I’ll get a chance to have a listen hopefully by Monday.

Second, I crossed my 2,000 Views mark early this week. It’s a big milestone for me to reach in under a year. I’d like to thank all of my readers and all of my fellow bloggers who have helped with links and cross-posting.

And last, from my posts earlier this week, I’ve started a Kickstarter Campaign to get The Cerberus Rebellion into print. I’ve already got 6% of my modest goal of $500 pledged, so hopefully we’ll get that finished so I can expand the distribution of the novel.

So if you can spare a few dollars, swing by the Kickstarter page and pledge! There’s some awesome backer rewards including free copies of my other works, physical copies of The Cerberus Rebellion and even special edition printed maps!

Kickstart The Cerberus Rebellion Into Print!

I’ve just launched a Kickstarter campaign with the goal of getting The Cerberus Rebellion into print!

Take a look! I’ve got some cool rewards up for backer levels up to $250!

Guest Post: Frank and James Hofer

As part of my effort to increase the awareness of other Gunpowder Fantasy authors, today I’m featuring a post from Frank and Jim Hofer, authors of the unconventionally named “Duck Blood Soup”. I’ve just started reading their novel, and already there are aspects of the novel that I’m very impressed at.

Their post today will discuss engineering and magic. So without further ado:

 

Engineering Magic – Frank Hofer of The Brothers Hofer with edits helpfully provided by James

When my brother Jim suggested that we write a fantasy novel, I agreed to work with him under the condition that we didn’t write “sword and sorcery.” I wanted a society with a late 18th or early 19th century level of technology with a blending of science, engineering, and magic.

As we started building the world for our story, we took time to define the rules; the physical laws by which our world would operate.

Jim has a BS in Electrical Engineering and an MS in Food Engineering. Contrary to what you might think, Food Engineering has nothing to do with creating recipes. Rather, it is the engineering involved in designing industrial machines for food processing.

I have a BS in Computer Science and spent a dozen years in satellite operations where I had to apply knowledge learned in past engineering courses. I think it’s safe to say that we both have a pretty strong technical background, and as such wanted the physics of our world to be internally consistent and well thought-out. And above all else, no Deus Ex Machina; all problem resolutions must be resolved using the laws of physics set in place elsewhere in the book.

A central plot point of Duck Blood Soup is the introduction of a new, magical, non-polluting power source based upon scarce resources. The applications that immediately came to mind were military and commerce – power and greed. We spent a considerable amount of time researching basic designs for airship kept aloft and controlled by this new, magical substance, as well as steam powered locomotives which leveraged this new pollution free power source.

As the story developed we considered how the new substance would affect the lives of the people in our world. Who could afford the new inventions and who would be stuck using technology that was invented before its discovery?

Firearms, specifically muskets and early rifles played a key role in Duck Blood Soup. We needed to find out about conditions in arms factories of the time period as well as the manufacturing processes used at the time. We spent time researching how muskets work as well as early pitfalls in musket and rifle design. The research into early firearms provided a sense of reality to our manufacturing process, weapons availability, and usage in battle.

A real concern we had was applying what we had learned about the laws of physics to the world we were creating. Obviously magic violates all sorts of rules, giants would be crushed by their own weight in our world, human sized creatures might glide but never fly on an earth-like planet, and so on.

We knew all of that going in, but there were some rules we would not break: we would not violate the laws of thermodynamics. If a wizard used magic, it took energy. Use a lot of magic and the wizard would become exhausted and risk death. A fat wizard? Not possible if you assume that casting a spell burns calories. A spell that lasted forever? If you moved something by magic it would stay where you put it but any other spell would gradually fade away.

Likewise, a well-educated wizard would understand both the laws of magic and the laws of physics and could use this knowledge to his advantage. There is one battle scene where an army wizard uses some basics knowledge of physics to provide a magical solution to a physical problem.

By applying what we learned in engineering classes, I think we created a world that is consistent with most laws of the universe, and provides limits and rules to physical laws we break to add concepts such as magic.

 

Duck Blood Soup is available on Kindle through amazon.com. We expect to expand to other e-readers by the end of March.

You can buy Duck Blood Soup at http://www.amazon.com/Duck-Blood-Soup-Caldarium-ebook/dp/B00AGOISEU/

You can read more about Duck Blood Soup at the blog http://duckblood.com/ and on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DuckBloodSoup

 

About the Authors

James Hofer lives in St. Louis, Missouri with his amazing wife that he still can’t believe he tricked into marrying him, three wonderful children who regularly argue about who the favorite is, and their various pets. He is a graduate of the University of Missouri, Columbia with a BS in Electrical Engineering and an MS in Food Engineering. James has very nearly been to lots of wonderful and exciting places, including Australia, Japan, China, Russia, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and the Middle East, but for one reason or another never seems to leave North America. James has written a number of technical documents that no one should ever be forced to read as well as countless blog posts that no one ever has. Duck Blood Soup is his first attempt to write something that relatively normal people may enjoy consuming.

Frank Hofer lives in Silicon Valley with his wonderful wife, three dogs, and three cats. He used his BS in Computer Science to land a job flying over a dozen one-of-a-kind science satellites. Career highlights over the past ten years include a failed attempt to get the call sign “Gilligan” assigned to his ops team for the joint U.S./Soviet satellite mission known as “Skipper”, and labeling spacecraft anomaly data “The Big Battery Bake-off”, which oddly enough was not well received. Despite his antics, Frank has managed to survive in an industry known for volatile staffing levels. His current job is testing spacecraft flight software. Frank is considered an amateur Iron Chef and enjoys trying new cuisine. He spends his vacations visiting National Parks and lately has taken an interest in archaeological sites in the American southwest, especially those with Native American petroglyphs.

 

Free Book! Duck Blood Soup

Today, Duck Blood Soup, a Gunpowder Fantasy that I recently discovered, is Free! Head on over to Amazon and pick it up here!

Found Another One!

So, I’ve made it kind of a habit to Google “Gunpowder Fantasy” “Muskets and Magic” and “Flintlock Fantasy” every once in a while to see if there’s anyone else out there writing in this subgenre, or if there’s anyone out there looking for works of this nature.

The other day, I came across “Duckblood Soup” written by co-authors Frank and James Hofer. I reached out to them about the possibility of some cross-promotion and we’ll be seeing a guest post from Frank soon.

You can check out their site on the link above, their Facebook page here and their novel here

Facebook Page!

So, I finally got around to finishing the setup for my official author Facebook page. Hop over and “Like” it Here

 

Release Thread – The Witch’s Eye

Today, I’m giving fellow Guild of Dreams author Steve Montano a chance to announce his new book, The Witch’s Eye.

 

Now Available!

05 The Witch's EyeTHE WITCH’S EYE(Blood Skies, Book 5)

The war continues, and a new evil is born.

The Ebon Cities have created a deadly new breed of undead called the Witchborn, whose very existence spells doom for the entire continent.

To make matters worse, a nihilist cult called the Black Circle has learned of the Witch’s Eye, the source of the Witchborn virus and an item capable of opening a portal to The Black.

Eric Cross’s scattered and war-weary team must find the Eye before it’s too late.  With the aid of some unlikely allies, the mercenaries will fight their way across the wastelands and challenge the horrors at the edge of oblivion.

And before the battle is won Cross and his team will make the ultimate sacrifice, and face one of their own…

Return to the world After The Black in Book 5 of the BLOOD SKIES saga!

Grab a copy at Amazon or Smashwords, and be sure to check out the page at Goodreads!

****

Steven Montano can’t believe he’s written five full-length novels in this series. Writing four more will likely be the death of him. At least it was fun while it lasted.

 He lives in Washington State with his wife, two children, a dog of below-average intelligence, and a ridiculous number of books and bottles of wine.

 Visit Steven’s official website and get caught up with the Blood Skies series at bloodskies.com

 

 

The Gunpowder Fantasy Review

In an effort to help raise awareness of other Gunpowder Fantasy/Muskets and Magic/Flintlock Fantasy authors, I’ll be reviewing their works and posting them here.

To facilitate the process, I’ll be using the following definition:

Gunpowder Fantasy: an alternate world story set in a world that uses gunpowder firearms (up to and including revolvers, but excluding magazine fed small arms or belt fed weapons), steam power (limited to rail transport and limited sea-going vessels) while also maintaining essential elements including some of the following elements: a fully-alternate world setting,  magic, a feudal or semi-feudal setting, alternate races (including, but not limited to elves, dwarves, orc and other “traditional” fantasy races), and/or a broad-scale conflict.

Alternate History stories may be considered if they are of a sufficiently “alternate” nature and will be considered on a case by case basis.

Steampunk will not be considered for review.

I’m currently working up a list of stories to be featured, so if you have any suggestions please hit up the Contact link.