Need a break from watching news and reading paper! Please, Mr. Cook, bestir yourself! Doc Dempster -----Original Message----- From: Marc Rikmenspoel <marcrik@gmail.com> To: Glen Cook: Science Fiction/Fantasy Author <glencook-fans@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Thu, Sep 1, 2016 2:58 pm Subject: Re: [Glencook-fans] Black Company Re-Read & Any News? I don't have any updates. I was hoping news would emerge after Glen was a guest of honor at the Con in Saratoga a year ago. I've been reading the Kris Longknife books by Mike Shepherd. His real name is Mike Moscoe, and his earlier works came out under that name. His publisher asked him to take on a pen name and write about a girl joining the space navy. Weber's Honor Harrington series made that genre popular, so Moscoe became Shepherd, and invented the great granddaughter of his earlier characters. The books became popular, and the 14th comes out this fall. I'm on the 5th, and quite enjoy them. Like Garrett, they are light hearted, with serious moments and themes. They also revolve around a cast of recurring characters, so as with Garrett, part of the fun is seeing what these old friends will do next, and seeing new characters join the mix. The books aren't really like Garrett books, but they are enjoyable for some of the same reasons. On Sep 1, 2016 12:40 PM, "Lawrence Jenab" <larryjenab@gmail.com> wrote: Things are so quiet out there that I'm going to spam you all with my current project. In the absence of any new books from Glen, I'm rereading the Black Company and Garrett books. I think it's my fifth time through BC and third through Garrett. It's interesting that every time I do this, I reshuffle what I think are the best books and what the best parts of them are. For example, this time around I find myself thinking that The Silver Spike, which I have tended to think of as a mere add-on, is in fact one of the best plotted and constructed books in the BC series. And it's finally getting drummed into my head just how small a fraction of the series the Books of the North really are. Viewed as a whole, the series is much more about the journey back to Khatovar then it is about the three "European" chronicles. But for some reason, I have always thought of those three books as the "real" series. Another difference is that I usually tend to bog down in Glittering Stone, but this time I enjoyed both Murgen books a lot. I'm about to start Water Sleeps, and I'm interested to see this time through if I change my opinion of it as the slowest and least interesting book in the series. For reasons I can't pinpoint, that honor seems to be going to Dreams of Steel this time. Another twist is that, for the first time, I'm reading the books with my 17-year-old son. Which, I have to say, is an awesome experience. He loves them and is now hooked on Glen's books. So far, his favorite it is Swordbearer, but hey, he's just getting the hang of things. I envy him having Tower of Fear, Darkwar, etc., ahead of him. One thing that hasn't changed is my general preference for the BC books over the Garrett books. I enjoy the latter series, as well, but as good as those early books are (I'm through Dread Brass Shadows), they see much more derivative, formulaic, and repetitive than the BC books, especially read one after the other. And I consistently prefer these early ones to the later Garrett books. Okay, enough about my reread. Has anybody heard anything – even a rumor – about the forthcoming BC books or anything else from Glen? It seems like he is dropped off the face of here since Working Gods' Mischief. Cheers, Larry _______________________________________________ glencook-fans mailing list glencook-fans@mailman.xmission.com https://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/glencook-fans _______________________________________________ glencook-fans mailing list glencook-fans@mailman.xmission.com https://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/glencook-fans