Inspired by reading The Desert Spear, Osoimaru on Deviant Art created this dark and haunting portrait of one of the dama’ting. Inevera working on her alagai hora? Or perhaps lurking in the shadows and eavesdropping on conversations …
This portrait is dark and dramatic, a perfect combination for the mysterious dama’ting. Fantastic job!
There is a lot more beautiful fan art to be seen. Check out Peat’s favorites on Deviant Art for more.
Posted on May 7, 2013 at 8:00 am by megelizabeth
Filed under Desert Spear, Fan Art, Fans, Meg Comments Off on Fan Art: Dama’ting
One of the best portraits of the Warded Man we’ve ever seen. Ghost2 on Deviant Art.
The Warded Man – Old Paper
The Warded Man – Original
These portraits are incredible. Haunting, beautifully rendered and true to the character. One of my favorite aspects is how the bottom section of his body is dissipating and you can see wisps of distorted wards swirling into air.
Amazing job!
Want to see more kickass fan art? You can always browse Peat’s favorites to see more.
The bag that started it all. Chrstie designed her own version of the Keep Calm and Carry On phenomonom that has been sweeping across the Internet, posters, bags, etc. Except this one (instead of being about tea) has a Demon Cycle twist.
The response on Facebook and Twitter was unanimous: this bag is awesome. Christie got her bag signed at a U.K. signing by Peat. Then, last week, Peat received a package of awesome. Check it out.
Warded T-shirt
Kickass black hoodie
Peat channeling some hooded Warded Man action
A shirt for Cassie to wear!
Feeling inspired? Check out our latest contest: Wear Your Wards and get your warded creativity going!
If you haven’t picked up your copy of The Daylight War yet, what are you waiting for? The U.K. versions is available at Waterstones and Amazon. Americans, check out the Random House page for all the appropriate buy links. Or go out and support your local bookstore. The German version of The Daylight War is now on sale! Check out the link to buy it here.
As many of you already know, Peat contributed his short story Mudboy to Shawn Speakman’s epic fantasy anthology: Unfettered. It’s an anthology sure to please every fantasy fan with authors contributing any story they wish. Authors include Brandon Sanderson, Terry Brooks, Kevin Hearne, Naomi Novik, Peter Orullian, Mark Lawrence, Jacqueline Carey and many more. Peat’s story Mudboy feature a character in the Demon Cycle Universe.
The best part? Proceeds are going to help Shawn Speakman pay off some crippling medical bills he accrued while he was beating cancer. It’s a great cause and great content to match.
The release of Unfettered is going to be pushed back from May until June. The Signed and Numbered edition is just waiting for the signatures from all the authors, so this edition will be late as well. The good news? The books will be better and all the correct authors will have their signatures on the S&N editions.
There will, however, be a special Advanced Reader Copy coming out with a different cover. Very cool. Plus, Shawn will be at Phoenix Comicon with 250 copies of an Exclusive Preview Edition featuring a few of the authors from the final anthology.
Red Sonja: Unchained #2 is in stores now! Unlike issue #1, which dropped while I was on tour, this time I can go to local comic shops and sign. I’ve been dreaming of seeing my own work on the comic shop racks since I was in fourth grade. 3 books in I still get chills at the sight.
I’m really proud of how this issue came out on multiple levels. Cover artist Walter Geovani delivered a stellar image (exactly what I asked him for) and interior artist Jack Jadson did an amazing job. Jack and I are both still finding our feet a bit, he as a relatively new penciler (after years as an a-list inker) and me as a comic writer after years as a novelist. Each issue is better than the last, which is a great feeling.
Also worth noting, the kind folks at Dynamite printed an issue #1 correction at the end, showing the correct version of a misprinted page in the first issue.
Issue #2 is a good entry point if you haven’t read the other books, as I have worked hard to make each of my Sonja comics to work as a stand-alone story as well as a part of the ongoing series. I read all three books together yesterday, and they work really well. I can’t wait till the tale is complete.
But there’s another, more personal level to this issue. Red Sonja: Unchained #2 is an homage to Frank Thorne.
There has been a lot of hubbub lately amongst comic fans about how beloved writer Gail Simone is taking over as author of Dynamite’s flagship Red Sonja series. Many seem to think Gail is the first female writer to take those reins, but in truth, she has big shoes to fill. I loved those 80’s comics.
Anyway. Red Sonja has an even deeper history, going back to the 1970’s, when the character, a b-list Conan rival, was given her own series and breathed new life by writer/artist Frank Thorne, who popularized the chainmail bikini that would, for better or worse, go on to be Sonja’s signature look.
In the 80’s when I was reading the Wilshire/Simonson Sonja, I would also haunt comic shops and conventions, flipping systematically though countless comic longboxes in search of back issues from Frank’s run. It was like panning for gold. Every once in a while I would find one and get another 22 pages of awesome sword and sorcery. Thorne delivered a rich fantasy world, a hard-drinking, hard hitting Sonja, and as a 12 year old boy, I had zero problem with the chainmail bikini.
Frank Thorne was so obsessed with Red Sonja that he used to go to comic conventions dressed as a wizard along with another female comics pioneer, Wendy Pini (of Elfquest* fame) playing the part of Sonja for a little variety act:
Thorne’s obsession eventually grew to a point where… well, let’s just say the Comics Code Authority was not okay with the direction he was taking things. Thorne eventually left the book to create his own more *ahem “adult” warrior woman, who also happened to wear a metal bikini, Ghita of Alizarr.
I was aware of the Thorne Ghita books when I was a teenager, but they were kept carefully out of reach in the “mature readers only” section of the store. Of course this only made me want them more. I tracked them down years later in college, and found them to be basically Thorne’s Sonja comic at its best, mixed with some pretty hardcore sex. There’s nothing in those books that would shock an HBO Game of Thrones fan, but in the more conservative 1980’s, they were a scandal that would get you staked out for the corelings in Town Square.
I always wondered what would happen if Red Sonja were to cross swords with Ghita.
With Red Sonja: Unchained #2, I got to find out.
Thanks, Frank.
Posted on May 1, 2013 at 8:00 am by PeatB
Filed under Craft, Musings, Red Sonja, Sales, Writing Comments Off on Red Sonja Unchained #2, an Homage