Lee Arthur Chane

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Magebane shortlisted for $2,000 Regina Book Award

by admin on February 16th, 2012 at 10:06 pm
Posted In: Books

Magebane has been shortlisted for the $2,000 Regina Book Award in this year’s Saskatchewan Book Awards.

The Regina Book Award is described this way: “In recognition of the vitality of the literary community in Regina, this award is presented to a Regina author (or pair of authors) for the best book, judged on the quality of writing.”

Other shortlisted in the same category: Mark Cronlund Anderson & Carmen L. Robertson, for Seeing Red: A History of Natives in Canadian Newspapers (University of Manitoba Press); Wilfred Burton and Anne Patton for Call of the Fiddle (Gabriel Dumont Institute; illustrated by Sherry Farrell Racette and translated by Norman Fleury), Britt Holmström for Leaving Berlin (Thistledown Press), and Alison Lohans for Picturing Alyssa (Dundurn Press Ltd.).

The awards will be announced and presented at a gala dinner at the Conexus Arts Centre on April 28.

This is the fifth time I’ve been shortlisted for a Saskatchewan Book Award, although this is the first time Lee Arthur Chane has been shortlisted: all the other books were under the byline “Edward Willett.” Spirit Singer won the Regina Book Award in 2002 (that’s when the photo is from). Soulworm was shortlisted for best first novel in 1997 and The Dark Unicorn for best children’s book in 1998. J.R.R. Tolkien: Master of Imaginary Worlds was shortlisted for (if I remember right) best children’s book in…2005, maybe?

It’s nice to be nominated. It’s even nicer to win, since it comes with a substantial sum!

UPDATE: It clearly pays to attend the news conference. I was featured on the CBC-TV spot about the announcement, talking about how important the recognition is to Saskatchewan writers, and I also managed to get myself featured in the Global TV and Regina Leader Post stories…although there are others nominated in multiple categories, and I’m only shortlisted in the one. So, win or not, I sure got good publicity out of it!

└ Tags: awards, Magebane, Regina, Regina Book Awards, Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Book Awards
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Nominations open for Aurora Awards for best Canadian SF & F: Magebane eligible!

by admin on January 17th, 2012 at 5:22 pm
Posted In: Books

Nominations are now open for the Prix Aurora Awards, presented annually by the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association (CSFFA) for the best in, you guessed it, Canadian science fiction and fantasy. Under my other name, Edward Willett, I was fortunate enough to win an Aurora in Montreal in 2009 for Marseguro (that’s me holding the award, flanked by Betsy Wollheim, left, and Sheila Gilbert, right, publishers and editors of DAW Books), and my subsequent Edward Willett book, Terra Insegura, was a finalist in 2010. This year, Magebane is eligible. If you liked it, I’d be honored if you’d nominate it (and vote for it, too, of course, if ti comes to that!) But whether you want to nominate Magebane or not, I urge you to join the CSFFA* (it’s only a $10 fee, and it’s good for the whole calendar year) and nominate/vote for your favorites, as a way of showing your support for home-grown SF and fantasy.And here’s the link to do so!

*Yes, that’s a rule change: in the past, anyone could nominate but only members could vote. This year, you must be a member to nominate, as well.

 

└ Tags: Aurora Awards, awards, Betsy Wollheim, DAW Books, fantasy, fantasy awards, Magebane, Marseguro, Prix Aurora Awards, science fiction, science fiction awards, Sheila Gilbert, Terra Insegura
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Magebane picked up by Science Fiction Book Club

by admin on January 16th, 2012 at 3:36 pm
Posted In: Books

Wonderful to see that Magebane has been picked up by the Science Fiction Book Club. Not only will that mean more readers will discover it, it means there’ll be a hardcover version, too!

Their description is nice, too:

Magebane by Lee Arthur Chane is that rare breed of novel—a brisk-paced, twist-filled stand-alone adventure of science vs magic!

Four centuries ago, a devastating revolution swept the world, and the arrogant MageLords, who had long ruled by spell power, were driven to a distant land, protected by a magical Barrier.

With magic banished from the rest of the world, the MageLords devolved into legend, and people turned to science to improve their lives. Meanwhile, behind the Barrier, the magic-wielders’ brutal rule has continued unabated.

But there are those who, for far different reasons, would change all that. And a young scientist’s apprentice who breaches the Barrier in a newfangled air-ship may be just the pawn they need….

└ Tags: bragging, fantasy, fantasy novels, hardcovers, Magebane, publishing news, Science Fiction Book Club
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Read My Book: Magebane

by admin on January 5th, 2012 at 9:25 pm
Posted In: Books

QC  and Bridges, weekly free-circulation entertainment/lifestyle magazines put out by the Regina Leader Post and the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, respectively, have both just run what I wrote for their popular “Read My Book” feature focusing on local authors’ works. Here’s what I had to say about Magebane (the online version here at the Star-Phoenix’s website is slightly truncated):

First things first: yes, Lee Arthur Chane, c’est moi, Edward Willett. The pseudonym (a marketing decision by my publisher, DAW Books in New York, because this book marks my move into fantasy from science fiction) is actually the middle names of my two older brothers and myself.

If you’re not familiar with the term “fantasy novel,” well, The Lord of the Rings would be the classic example. Or you might have seen A Game of Thrones on HBO, based on George R.R. Martin’s epic series. Essentially, fantasy novels take place in mythical lands, and typically involve magical or supernatural elements.

In Magebane, the mythical land is the Kingdom of Evrenfels, ruled by a powerful nobility known as the MageLords, because they can use magic. They rule with an iron fist over the Commoners, who have no magic.

But the MageLords haven’t always lived in Evrenfels. Eight centuries ago they were chased out of their old kingdom by a Commoner revolt, led by something or someone called the Magebane that rendered their magic useless. They fled to the far side of the world, dragging some Commoners with them, and hid themselves away behind an impenetrable magical barrier. But now various MageLords would like to remove that barrier, each for his or her own reason, a new Magebane has arisen…and there are, bubbling up from the increasingly technological advanced Commoners the MageLords oppress, new rumors of rebellion.

What no one in Evrenfels realizes is that the Commoners outside the kingdom, for whom the MageLords are nothing but myth, have explored the world right up to the Great Barrier itself, which they see as a baffling scientific anomaly. Their technology has advanced even further than that of the Commoners in Evrenfels: so far, in fact, that one day a young man crash-lands in the kingdom aboard an experimental airship that has just flown over the Barrier…and throws everyone’s schemes into turmoil.

Though a land of magic and MageLords may seem far removed from mundane Saskatchewan, local readers will actually find themselves very much at home in Evrenfels, a land cold in winter and hot in summer, largely prairie in the south, with lakes and forests in the north. They may find themselves even more at home in the capital city of New Coroba, where the King rules from a white stone palace (complete with equestrian statue in the formal gardens out front) set in a park on the southern shore of a man-made lake: albeit it a lake and park and palace protected from winter’s wrath by a magical dome that makes it always spring. (OK, yes, that was pure wish-fulfillment on my part.)

Magebane came out in early October, and reviewers have been kind: in fact, Publishers Weekly calls it “spectacular,” and says, “Double and triple crosses, fast-paced action, and powerful moral conviction will have readers hanging on every word.”

└ Tags: bragging, essays, fantasy, Leader Post, Magebane, newspapers, QC, Regina, Saskatoon
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A teen reviewer likes Magebane…

by admin on December 22nd, 2011 at 12:58 am
Posted In: Books

…even though “some of the book was a little inappropriate.” To which I suppose I must plead guilty, but, hey, I didn’t write it for the YA market!

Glad to see younger readers are enjoying it too, though. The reviewer at Flamingnet (a site where pre-teens and teens review YA books), a 14-year-old from Hunting Valley, OH, writes:

“This author is a very good author. He makes you feel like you are standing right next to the characters. Some of the book was a little inapropriate, but it was a very good book…I would recommend this book to others.”

Read the whole thing!

└ Tags: bragging, fantasy, Flamingnet, Magebane, reviews, YA, young adult
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  • Magebane shortlisted for $2,000 Regina Book Award
  • Nominations open for Aurora Awards for best Canadian SF & F: Magebane eligible!
  • Magebane picked up by Science Fiction Book Club
  • Read My Book: Magebane
  • A teen reviewer likes Magebane…

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