Stephen Hunt (author)
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Stephen Hunt | |
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Born | 1966 (age 57–58) Canada |
Occupation | Writer, computer programmer, publisher |
Nationality | British |
Genre | Historical fantasy/Alternate history/Science Fiction/Fantasy |
Subject | Fantasy adventure set on a far-future Earth |
Literary movement | Flintlock fantasy, steampunk, space opera |
Website | |
stephenhunt |
Stephen Hunt (born 1966) is a Canadian writer known for his fantasy novels, including the Jackelian series, which contains elements of steampunk and which is set in a nation resembling Victorian England, named the Kingdom of Jackals.[1] Influences on his work include Jack Williamson,[2] Stephen Goldin, David Gemmell, Bruce Sterling, Larry Niven and Michael Moorcock.[3]
Hunt's short fiction has appeared in various magazines, mainly in the US and UK. Some of his earliest works were written in the cyberpunk style.[citation needed] One of these was the "The Hollow Duelists", a short story that was one of the winners of the 1992 ProtoStellar Prize for Best Short Fiction Story.[citation needed]
Hunt was the first client of the then newly established John Jarrold Literary Agency in 2005. His second novel, The Court of the Air, was the subject of an auction held by John Jarrold in late 2005 among the UK's main publishing houses. HarperCollins outbid their competitors to sign Hunt for a three-book deal, which later extended to a six-book contract. The Bookseller reported HarperCollins won the auction with a high six-figure sum.[citation needed]
Foreign-language and international editions of the novels of the Jackelian series have been sold to Tor Books (USA), Albin Michel (France), Verlagsgruppe Random House (Germany), Enterbrain Manga and Anime (Japan), Edições Saída de Emergência (Portugal and Brazil), Paidós (Spain), AST (Russia), and the Anhui Literature and Art Publishing House (China).
Works
[edit]His first fantasy novel, For the Crown and the Dragon, was published in 1994. Its protagonist was a young officer named Taliesin who fought for the Queen of the United Kingdom in a Napoleonic-period alternate reality, where the wars of Europe were fought with sorcery and steampunk weapons (airships, clockwork machine guns, and steam-driven trucks called kettle-blacks). The book reviewer Andrew Darlington used Hunt's novel to coin the phrase "Flintlock Fantasy" to describe the subgenre of fantasy set in a Regency or Napoleonic-era period.[4]
Sliding Void series
[edit]The Sliding Void series is a space opera series by Stephen Hunt published under the Green Nebula imprint. It follows the misadventures of the crew of a commercial tramp freighter called the Gravity Rose, captained by a female Han Solo-like commander, Lana Fiveworlds. The first novel, Void all the Way Down, was originally published as three serialized novellas, Sliding Void, Transference Station, and Red Sun Bleeding, before being combined into the novel.[citation needed]
Sliding Void's main polity is the Triple Alliance (often simply the 'Alliance' or 'TA'), a bureaucratic multi-world confederation of the three dominant species, of which humanity is one. Most of the books' events occur in The Edge, a lawless independent region of free worlds bordering the Alliance. While guest of honour at Toronto's Ad Astra convention, Hunt described how he had written the series as an homage to (and as a substitute for) his favourite TV science fiction series which had experienced cancellations: Star Trek, Stargate, Firefly, Battlestar Galactica and Farscape. The series' title alludes to both this filling of a "void" left in the genre as well as the phrase "Sliding Void", used by characters in space scifi as slang for sub-warp transit.[citation needed]
The first novel, Void all the Way Down, focuses on the inclusion of Calder, an exiled prince from a medieval-level failed colony world, into the ship's crew as they embark on running supplies to an illegal mining operation.[citation needed]
The second novel, Anomalous Thrust, finds the crew stranded on a world boycotted by civilisation for its human colonists' enslavement of the local sentient species. Here, they find they can only escape by taking part in a solar sail race to recover valuable alien garbage jettisoned by a moon-sized vessel making a periodic tour of multiple galaxies- a trope inspired by Rendezvous with Rama.[citation needed]
Far-called series
[edit]The Far-called series is a fantasy set on the world of Pellas. The first book in the series, In Dark Service, was published by Gollancz on 15 May 2014. The second novel in the series, Foul Tide's Turning, was released on 21 May 2015. The third novel in the series, The Stealers' War, was released on 16 March 2016.
After meeting George RR Martin at a party hosted by HarperCollins in the Tower of London during April 2012, Hunt was inspired to his books set in Pellas draw on the events of the U.S. Civil War, just as Game of Thrones draw on the feuding of 15th-century England's Wars of the Roses.[citation needed]
The plot of In Dark Service concerns two central families, the Carnehans and Landors, whose children are kidnapped by slavers from the town of Northhaven in the Kingdom of Weyland. The town launches a rescue expedition to free the taken from captivity, but with little chances of success given the vast scale of the world of Pellas. The first novel focuses on both the adventures of the pursuing towns-people and the slaves' struggle to survive. The geopolitical impacts of such a vast land, where inequitable access to resources causes incredible polarisation of technological progress, are explored through the narrative and descriptions of a wide range of cultures.[citation needed]
The second book in the series builds tension as the actions of the Carnehan protagonists bring the distant and ruthlessly amoral Vandian Empire into conflict with the far less technologically advanced and economically enriched kingdoms which have ostensibly thrived in a different part of the world. It also begins to reveal undercurrents of a deeper spiritual battle between good and evil.[citation needed]
The third book in the series, The Stealers' War, moves towards the trilogy's end-game as the various forces of Vandia and the two sides of Weyland's civil war plays out in a final battle.
Jackelian series
[edit]The Court of the Air (2007) is a fantasy steampunk novel set in a Victorian-esque world with the addition of magic in various forms and where steam power, rather than oil, drives the economy. The nation in which the plot is largely set (the Kingdom of Jackals) is recognisably based on Victorian Britain and the main neighbouring country (Quatérshift) is presumably inspired by the Paris Commune and various other communist states. The Court of the Air began Hunt's Jackelian fantasy series, and was the first of his works to be published by Harper Collins. A follow-up, The Kingdom Beyond the Waves (2008), is set in the same world and introduces more races and details additional in-universe backstory.[citation needed]
The Court of the Air was one of the ten books selected by the organisers of the Berlinale Film Festival/Co-Production Market for presentation to US and European film producers. HarperCollins's elevator pitch for The Court of the Air was summarised as "Charles Dickens meets Blade Runner".[5]
In November 2008, the second book in the Jackelian series, The Kingdom Beyond the Waves, was nominated for the longlist of the David Gemmell Legend Award for Fantasy. The second novel continues the misadventures of u-boat privateer Commodore Jared Black, as the commodore goes in search of the ruins of a lost ancient utopia.
The third book in the series, The Rise of the Iron Moon, published in the UK in February 2009, features the invasion of the Kingdom of Jackals from the north by a horde called the Army of Shadows. It features the reappearance of the main protagonists from The Court of the Air, including Molly Templar, Oliver Brooks, the steamman scientist Coppertracks and Commodore Jared Black. The main new character is Purity Drake, a royalist prisoner of the state.[citation needed]
The fourth book, Secrets of the Fire Sea, is a murder mystery set on the island of Jago (the "Fire Sea" of the title), and features the consulting detective Jethro Daunt and his steamman assistant Boxiron attempting to uncover the murderer of the island's arch-bishop. Commodore Black ferries the investigators from the kingdom to Jago, and acts as a reluctant foil for the pair's sleuthing. The novel was published in the UK as a hardback in 2010 and as a paperback in 2011.[citation needed]
The fifth novel in the series, Jack Cloudie, centres around an airship war between the Kingdom of Jackals and the Empire of Cassarabia in the south. The main characters are Jack Keats, a young thief pressed into service with the Jackelian airship fleet, and Jared Black. The commodore is being blackmailed into helping the high fleet by the Kingdom's secret police, the State Protection Board.[citation needed]
The title of the sixth book, published in February 2012, is From the Deep of the Dark. While appearing as guest of honour at the 2010 Forum Fantastico, Portugal's national science fiction convention, Hunt described his sixth book as primarily a spy mystery. It features Dick Tull, an officer of the State Protection Board close to retirement, the consulting detectives Jethro Daunt and Boxiron, and Commodore Jared Black. The characters are investigating the theft of the Jackelian royal sceptre and a series of strange murders and bloodless corpses in the capital, Middlesteel. Thief Charlotte Shades is asked by two mysterious men to steal King Jude's Sceptre from the Parliament vaults. Daunt and Boxiron know there is more to the two men than meets the eye and, with the rescued thief, escape in an ancient submarine captained by Commodore Jethro Black. They encounter resistance from strange underwater races, but human, steam-man, seanore, and gillneck must band together to save the kingdom from danger.
While speaking at the Forum Fantastico, Hunt noted the versatility of fantasy as a genre, and described his Jackelian series as quest novel (The Court of the Air), adventure novel (The Kingdom Beyond the Waves), invasion tale (The Rise of the Iron Moon), murder mystery (Secrets of the Fire Sea), war story (Jack Cloudie) and spy novel (From the Deep of the Dark ).[citation needed]
Bibliography
[edit]Standalone novels
[edit]- Six Against the Stars (2020)
- The Pashtun Boy's Paradise (2020)
Triple Realm
[edit]- —— (1994). For the Crown and the Dragon. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780952288503.
- —— (2020). The Fortress in the Frost.
The Agatha Witchley Mysteries series
[edit]- —— (2015). Secrets of the Moon. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 1514238411.
The Songs of Old Sol series
[edit]- —— (2018). Empty Between the Stars. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 1983183989.
Jackelian series
[edit]- —— (2007). The Court of the Air. HarperCollins. ISBN 0007232179.[a]
- —— (2008). The Kingdom Beyond the Waves. HarperCollins. ISBN 0007232209.[b]
- —— (2009). The Rise of the Iron Moon. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007232222.[c]
- —— (2010). Secrets of the Fire Sea. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007289639.
- —— (2011). Jack Cloudie. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007289646.
- —— (2012). From the Deep of the Dark. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007289714.
- —— (2015). Mission to Mightadore. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 1982997567.
Far-called series
[edit]- —— (2014). In Dark Service. Gollancz. ISBN 0575092068.
- —— (2015). Foul Tide's Turning. Gollancz. ISBN 0575092106.
- —— (2016). The Stealers' War. Gollancz. ISBN 0575092149.
Sliding Void
[edit]- —— (2014). Void All the Way Down. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781508922193.
- —— (2016). Anomalous Thrust. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781533442918.
- —— (2018). Hell Fleet. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781790741694.
Notes
[edit]- ^a Published in the US in Jun 2008, ISBN 9780765320421
- ^b Published in the US in July 2009, ISBN 9780765320438
- ^c Published in the US in Mar 2011, ISBN 9780765327666
Reviews
[edit]- The Fantasy Book Critic. "The Kingdom Beyond the Waves". The Fantasy Book Critic.
- Jeff VanderMeer. "The Court of the Air". Omnivoracious.
References
[edit]- ^ "Stephen Hunt". www.fantasticfiction.com. Archived from the original on 21 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ Duarte, José. "Interview with Stephen Hunt" (PDF). repositorio.ul.pt.
- ^ "For the Crown and the Dragon reviewed". The Guardian. London. 7 November 1994.
- ^ "NSFA Review, re-published Hologram Tales". NSFA Review. 11 April 1994. Archived from the original on 12 May 2008.
- ^ Meza, Ed (24 January 2008). "Berlin selects 10 books for market". Variety.