the last tsar’s dragons
There Is a T
Tachyon tidbits featuring Jane Yolen, Adam Stemple, Nancy Kress, Bruce Sterling, and Jaymee Goh
Rick Klaw blog adam stemple, bruce sterling, curious fictions, excerpt, green man review, interview, jacob weisman, Jane Yolen, jaymee goh, Nancy Kress, paul semel, review, rich horton, sea change, short story, the doll in the museum, the last tsar's dragons 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Adam Stemple & Jane Yolen Nancy Kress
Photo by Liza TrombiBruce Sterling Jaymee Goh
Photo by Francesca Myman
GREEN MAN REVIEW runs the first several chapters of THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS by Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple.
Your revolution is a lie.
There were no heroes, no great causes. Just slaughter, suffering, death.
And dragons.
Oh, you thought those a myth? Tales your grandfather told you?
No, the dragons were real. Bolvan, the dragons are why you won! The only reason there aren’t dragons today is that Uncle Joe slaughtered the reds during the Great Purge, and in ’23 a pack of larcenous Chinese eunuchs blew up the dragon barns in the Forbidden Citywhile trying to destroy evidence of their embezzlement.
I see you smiling, you indoctrinated young fool. You see a man who has turned against the revolution that employed him for nearly thirty years. A man convicted of corruption and treason and worse, and you think I would say anything to avoid the firing squad. But in truth, I am old and weary and no longer afraid to die. I just want someone to know the truth.
So it falls on you, young man, to hear the true tale of the revolution, dragons and all.
Design by Elizabeth Story
Paul Semel, on his eponymous site, interviews Nancy Kress about her new book SEA CHANGE.
To begin, what is Sea Change about and when and where is it set?
Sea Change spans a few decades beginning in 2005 and ending in 2033. Most of it takes place in Seattle. It’s about a lot of things, but the primary concern is genetically-modified crops. This is, I know, a spectacularly controversial subject. And, I believe, a necessary one. Usually people come down hard on one side or the other, without nuance. “Frankenfoods!” “Luddite!” I wanted to depict a near future that takes into account the genuine complexity of GMOs.
Sea Change is also “about” ocean algae blooms, government control, and chess. But since all stories are primarily about the characters who inhabit them, this is a story about Renata and Jake. In fact, if I were titling my novella now, I would call it Sea Change: A Love Story. Unfortunately, I didn’t think of this in time and Tachyon would not be happy to change the title at this late date.
In celebration of Bruce Sterling’s birthday, Rich Horton offers a collection of his Sterling short fiction reviews, many of which will be included in the forthcoming collection ROBOT ARTISTS AND BLACK SWANS.
Locus, June 2009
The March-April Interzone features a Bruce Sterling story – not that he was ever gone, but Sterling seems “back” this year, with a new novel and now “Black Swan”, gritty and savvy, with a journalist lured across multiple timelines, chasing wild tech not to mention a revolutionary version of Nicolas Sarkozy.
Locus, September 2009
And Bruce Sterling offers a clever fantasy about an Italian auto executive encountering the devil – or something like him – in “Esoteric City” (F&SF, August-September). The story is fun, original – certainly worth reading, but at some level it struck me as insubstantial.
Review of Subterranean 2: Tales of Dark Fantasy (Locus, May 2011)
Another story I particularly enjoyed comes from Bruce Sterling. “The Parthenopean Scalpel” concerns an assassin who has to flee the Papal States after the too clumsy success of one of his assignments. In exile he falls in love – but a certain Transylvanian intervenes. The story rides on the well-maintained voice of the main character, and the backstory of Europe in the turbulent middle of the 19th Century.
CURIOUS FICTIONS published Tachyon editor Jaymee Goh’s new story “The Doll in the Museum.”
Little doll, buried under dust and sand,
Little doll, what do you have in your hands?
“It’s obviously a sacred figurine,” my date said. “And you can tell it was from a matriarchy, given how many female shapes there are.”
“Uh-huh,” I said, non-committedly.
“It was obviously a fertility cult, too, you see how big the hips are.”
I stifled a yawn. In my head I could see the hands, my hands, folded across my belly. I tried not to think about it; I hate my stomach. It bulges too much.
This museum display made me feel comfortable, though. There was just one in this case, with a sign next to her full of words about who had found her, where, and what she possibly represented. She pressed her hands on her belly, too. It was found somewhere in Mesopotamia, one of the earliest ever figurines. Clay.
My date was trying to hustle me on. He majored in History, although I was unclear how that mattered when he’d never taken a class on the ancients. Still, he seemed so sure that I found myself nodding along. As he droned on, I pressed my palm against the glass, staring at the figurine.
Something in my hand—a piece of cloth, with scribblings on it. I knew what those marks were. I felt the insides of my cheeks pressed against my teeth in a smile, the crinkling of my eyes in pleasure, the deep breath containing the surge of triumph.
Jane Yolen is a freaking treasure
Rick Klaw blog asiana circus, charleston county public library, here there be books, Jane Yolen, silver button books, the emerald circus, the last tsar's dragons 0
ASIANA CIRCUS includes THE EMERALD CIRCUS as one of the 26 Best Carnival & Circus Books From Around The World.
Jane Yolen re-imagined a number of good old classics and gave them a really entertaining and contemporary spin. The Emerald Circus will serve as a great piece to help understand some current issues.
This collection of short stories based on some of the most remarkable classics is a great read for young adults.
CHARLESTON COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY celebrates Women’s History Month with THE EMERALD CIRCUS.
Wednesdays, March 25
Adult Storytime: “The Emerald Circus” by Jane Yolen
Main Library from 2-3 p.m.
Join us for the March edition of Adult Storytime with a reading of whimsical short stories from “The Emerald Circus” by Jane Yolen
Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
HERE THERE BE BOOKS is happy to get THE EMERALD CIRCUS from their local library.
A short story collection featuring famous and beloved fictional characters and fictionalized authors. I’ve enjoyed her children’s books before, and this one has an AMAZING cover, so I grabbed it.
SILVER BUTTON BOOKS is very excited about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS.
Finally, I couldn’t resist Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS because Jane Yolen is a freaking treasure.
Happy birthday to the iconic grandmaster Jane Yolen
Rick Klaw blog birthday, how to fracture a fairy tale, Jane Yolen, the emerald circus, the last tsar's dragons 0
Hailed as both the Hans Christian Andersen of America and the Aesop of the twentieth century, Jane Yolen, with her first publication, the non-fiction book about women pirates Pirates In Petticoats (1963), embarked on amazing career of over three hundred and seventy books (and counting). Her impressive and acclaimed output includes children’s fiction, poetry, short stories, graphic novels, nonfiction, fantasy, and science fiction.
Among her many honors are the Christopher Medal (The Seeing Stick [1977], How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight? [2000]), Nebula (“Sister Emily’s Lightship” [1998], Lost Girls [1999]), World Fantasy (Favorite Folktales From Around The World [1987], THE EMERALD CIRCUS [2018]), Mythopoeic (Cards Of Grief [1985], Briar Rose [1993], The Young Merlin Trilogy [1998, Passager, Hobby, and Merlin]), Golden Kite (The Girl Who Cried Flowers & Other Tales [1974]), and National Jewish Book Award (The Devil’s Arithmetic [1989]). Yolen received the World Fantasy Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award, the Rhysling Science Fiction Poetry Grand Master Award, the Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award, and Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover by Elizabeth Story
Many of Yolen’s shorter works have been collected in numerous works including The Girl Who Cried Flowers and Other Tales (1974), The Hundredth Dove and Other Tales (1977), Dream Weaver (1979), The Whitethorn Wood and Other Magicks (1984), Storyteller (1992), Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast (1997), Sister Emily’s Lightship and Other Stories (2000), Once Upon A Time (She Said) (2005), The Last Selchie Child (2012), THE EMERALD CIRCUS (2017), HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE (2018), and the forthcoming MIDNIGHT CIRCUS. Several volumes of her poetry exist including The Three Bears Rhyme Book (1987), The Originals: Animals that Time Forgot (1998), Least Things: Poems about Small Natures (2003), Before the Vote After (2017), On Gull Beach (2018), Fly with Me: A Celebration of Birds Through Pictures, Poems, and Stories (2018, with Heidi E.Y. Stemple, Adam Stemple, and Jason Stemple).
Her editorial endeavors include the anthologies Zoo 2000 (1973), Favorite Folktales from Around the World (1986), Werewolves: A Collection of Original Stories (1988 with Martin H. Greenberg), 2041: Twelve Short Stories About the Future by Top Science Fiction Writers (1991), Xanadu (1993), The Haunted House: A Collection of Original Stories (1995 with Martin H. Greenberg), Fearless Girls, Wise Women, and Beloved Sisters: Heroines in Folktales from Around The World (1998 with Kathleen Ragan), Gray Heroes: Elder Tales from Around the World (1999), and Mightier Than the Sword: World Folktales for Strong Boys (2003).
The prolific Yolen continues to produce acclaimed, award winning work at a prodigious pace. In 2019 alone she published 7 books: Eek, You Reek!: Poems about Animals That Stink, Stank, Stunk, A Kite for Moon, THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS (with Adam Stemple), Merbaby’s Baby, the first book in the six book School of Fish series, and What to Do with a String. Her first books for 2020, Emily Writes and Miriam at the River, came out on February 4. Her newest collection of short stories, MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, comes out in the fall.
Because she apparently never sleeps, Yolen is also a teacher of writing and a book reviewer. She lives in Western Massachusetts and St. Andrew, Scotland.
All of us at Tachyon, wish the incredible Jane a happy birthday. May your mythic journeys never end.
Meet the iconic Jane Yolen
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized amherst, anabelle gerardy, elizabeth story, how to fracture a fairy tale, Jane Yolen, jones library, massachusetts, massachusetts book awards hoilday dozen, the emerald circus, the last tsar's dragons
Grandmaster Jane Yolen will be appearing at Massachusetts Book Awards Holiday Dozen – Valley Edition.
Photo: Jason Stemple
Representatives Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais, and, Lindsay Sabadosa,
working with Massachusetts Center for the Book, Jones Library, and
Amherst Books, invite you to kick off this holiday season in literary style. Join twelve Valley writers, all recently honored by
the Massachusetts Book Awards, for an afternoon book party at the
Jones Library in Amherst on December 7, from 2 to 4 pm.
The event begins
with lightning talks by each writer, followed by an opportunity to
mix and mingle, buy books from local bookseller Amherst Books, and
have them signed by the authors.
Participating authors: Heather Abel, Lisa Brooks, George Howe Colt,
Anne Fadiman, Noy Holland, Natasha Lowe, Richard Michelson, Sabina
Murray, Ilan Stavans, Ellen Doré Watson, Dara Weir, and Jane Yolen.
Massachusetts Book Awards Holiday Dozen – Valley Edition
Saturday, December 7
2-4 PM
Jones Library
Amherst, MA
For more info on THE EMERALD CIRCUS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
For more info on HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS proves everything’s better with dragons including Russian history
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized adam stemple, anabelle gerardy, Elitist Book Reviews, elizabeth story, emily schneider, jane funk, Jane Yolen, jewish book council, marie brennan, new york journal of books, the last tsar's dragons
For the ELITIST BOOK REVIEWS, Jane Funk declares Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS is a well-written, clever novella that’s worth your time.
Emily Schneider at JEWISH BOOK COUNCIL highly recommends the book for young adult readers as well as for adults.
In the NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS, Marie Brennan provides an insightful review of the story.
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
History buffs and dragon fans will enjoy the mix of reality and fantasy in Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized adam stemple, anabelle gerardy, elizabeth story, Jane Yolen, Publishers Weekly, queerly different, review, the book canaries, the last tsar's dragons
The recently published THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS by Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple continues to receives praise.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY likes the book.
However, the familiar events are still made more intense by their fantastic underpinnings. The weight of the historical events is eased by the anyman bureaucrat, a masterful encapsulation of the court into an individual. History buffs and dragon fans will enjoy this mix of reality and fantasy.
QUEERLY DIFFERENT enjoys the tale.
I have to say that the title is what drew me to this strange but enjoyable little novella. How on earth, I thought, can one make dragons relevant to the Russian Revolution?
Somehow, mother and son team Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple weave together myth and history into a compelling tale of the last days of the Tsar Nicholas II and his family, their relentless hatred of both the Jews and the peasants, and their eventual fall from power.
<snip>
All in all, I found THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS to be an intriguing tale, and it was rather refreshing to see a story told successfully in the form of the novella. At the same time, however, I for one am left hungering for more, precisely because the central conceit begs so many questions. Where did the dragons come from? Were there other places that used them other than Russia? If not, why not?
Perhaps the authors will one day pursue these questions, but in the meantime, we can savour what they have provided us, a glimpse into how the real world of history might have been impacted had the mythical played a larger part in it.
The cover drew in THE BOOK CANARIES.
This week, I’m hijacking the blurb features with this pretty, pretty cover. Even if I wasn’t already a sucker for fantasy set in Russia, this would have absolutely caught my eye. I am intrigued. I am excited. Bring on the Ruski Dragons!
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
This Friday to Sunday, meet grandmaster Jane Yolen, award winning Jo Walton, and the acclaimed Adam D. Stemple at Minicon 54
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized adam stemple, anabelle gerardy, elizabeth story, Jane Yolen, jo walton, minicon, minnepolis, minnesota, saint louis park, starlings, the last tsar's dragons
Jane Yolen, Jo Walton, and Adam D. Stemple will all be attending Minicon 54, April 19-21, in Minneapolis, MN.
Jo Walton (photo: Eric Jentile) and Adam Stemple & Jane Yolen
Minicon is Minneapolis’s longest running science fiction convention! We hope you’ll join us this year. You’ll be in the company of about 700 other fans of not only science fiction, but fantasy, horror, anime, gaming, music, and many other pursuits.
Minicon features panel discussions, readings, signings, costuming, films, gaming, an art show, a dealers’ room, kids’ programming, a teen lounge and teen programming, a science room, music, a consuite and bar, room parties, and various other special events. For all that, most people say they don’t come for what we have scheduled, but because they want to hang out with others like them in a place that feels like home.
Guests of Honor
- Naomi Kritzer
- Dave DeVries
- Tom Fleming (featured artist)
Several of Minicon’s many panels and events feature Jane Yolen, Jo Walton, and Adam D. Stemple.
Saturday
2:30PM
Jane Yolen and Adam
Stemple Reading
3:30PM
10PM
Adam Stemple first
played music in Minnesota in 1987 at Minicon 22. He was the music
Guest of Honor at Minicon 50. In between, he played in a lot of
bands, won some awards, and lost all his hair.
Sunday
1:30PM
Kaffeklatch with Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple
(seating is limited to 10 people)
Minicon 54
April 19-21
DoubleTree Park Place
Minneapolis, MN
For more info on STARLINGS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
Reviewers, booksellers, and librarians get Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized adam stemple, anabelle gerardy, edelweiss, elizabeth story, Jane Yolen, netgalley, the last tsar's dragons
Review copies of THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS are now available via NETGALLEY and EDELWEISS.
These copies are only for reviewers and librarians. For more details, visit NETGALLEY and EDELWEISS.
And while you are there, check out other Tachyon titles for review on NETGALLEY.
“Vivid, gripping and actually riveting, as the Red Danger takes a whole new meaning here. Loved it.” —The Book Smugglers
It is the waning days of the Russian monarchy. A reckless man rules the land and his dragons rule the sky. Though the Tsar aims his dragons at his enemies—Jews and Bolsheviks—his entire country is catching fire. Conspiracies suffuse the royal court: bureaucrats jostle one another for power, the mad monk Rasputin schemes for the Tsar’s ear, and the desperate queen takes drastic measures to protect her family.
Revolution is in the air—and the Red Army is hatching its own weapons.
Discover Russia’s October Revolution reimagined in flight, brought to life by the acclaimed mother-and-son writing team of the Locus Award-winning novel, Pay the Piper, and the Seelie Wars series.
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
Happy 80th birthday to the iconic grandmaster Jane Yolen
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized anabelle gerardy, birthday, elizabeth story, how to fracture a fairy tale, Jane Yolen, the emerald circus, the last tsar's dragons
Photo: Jason Stemple
Hailed as both the Hans Christian Andersen of America and the Aesop of
the twentieth century, Jane Yolen, with her first publication, the
non-fiction book about women pirates Pirates In Petticoats
(1963), embarked on amazing career of over three hundred and seventy
books (and counting). Her impressive and acclaimed output includes
children’s fiction, poetry, short stories, graphic novels,
nonfiction, fantasy, and science fiction.
Among her many
honors are the Caldecott Medal (Owl Moon [1988]), Christopher
Medal (The Seeing Stick [1977], How Do Dinosaurs Say
Goodnight? [2000]), Nebula (“Sister Emily’s Lightship”
[1998], Lost Girls [1999]), World Fantasy (Favorite Folktales From
Around The World [1987], THE EMERALD CIRCUS [2018]), Mythopoeic
(Cards Of Grief [1985], Briar Rose [1993], The Young
Merlin Trilogy [1998, Passager, Hobby, and
Merlin]), Golden Kite (The Girl Who Cried Flowers &
Other Tales [1974]), and National Jewish Book Award (The
Devil’s Arithmetic [1989]). Yolen received the World Fantasy
Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award, the Rhysling Science
Fiction Poetry Grand Master Award, the Damon Knight Memorial Grand
Master Award, and Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
Many of Yolen’s
shorter works have been collected in numerous works including The
Girl Who Cried Flowers and Other Tales
(1974), The
Hundredth Dove and Other Tales
(1977), Dream
Weaver (1979),
The Whitethorn Wood and Other Magicks
(1984), Storyteller
(1992), Twelve
Impossible Things Before Breakfast
(1997), Sister
Emily’s Lightship and Other Stories (2000),
Once Upon A Time (She Said) (2005),
The Last Selchie Child
(2012), THE EMERALD
CIRCUS (2017), and HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE (2018). Several volumes of her poetry exist
including The Three Bears Rhyme Book (1987), The
Originals: Animals that Time Forgot (1998), Least Things:
Poems about Small Natures (2003), Before the Vote After
(2017), On Gull Beach (2018), Fly with Me: A Celebration of
Birds Through Pictures, Poems, and Stories
(2018,
with Heidi E.Y. Stemple, Adam Stemple, and Jason Stemple).
Her editorial
endeavors include the anthologies Zoo 2000
(1973), Favorite
Folktales from Around the World
(1986), Werewolves:
A Collection of Original Stories (1988
with Martin H. Greenberg), 2041: Twelve Short Stories About
the Future by Top Science Fiction Writers
(1991), Xanadu
(1993), The Haunted House: A Collection of
Original Stories (1995 with Martin H. Greenberg), Fearless
Girls, Wise Women, and Beloved Sisters: Heroines in
Folktales from Around The World (1998 with Kathleen
Ragan), Gray Heroes: Elder Tales from Around
the World (1999),
and Mightier Than the Sword: World Folktales for
Strong Boys (2003).
The prolific Yolen
continues to produce acclaimed, award winning work at a prodigious
pace. In 2018 alone she published 10 books: Crow Not Crow,
Finding Baba Yaga, Fly With Me, Mapping the Bones,
Meet Me at the Well: the Girls and Women of the Bible
(with Barbara Diamond Goldin), A Mixtie-Maxtie Motley Squad,
Monster Academy (with Heidi E. Y. Stemple), On Gull Beach,
Sanctuary (with Adam Stemple), and HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY
TALE. Her first book for 2019, THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS (with Adam
Stemple) comes your way in June.
Because she
apparently never sleeps, Yolen is also a teacher of writing and a
book reviewer. She lives in Western Massachusetts and St. Andrew,
Scotland.
All of us at
Tachyon, wish the incredible Jane a happy birthday. May your mythic
journeys never end.
For more info on THE EMERALD CIRCUS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
For more info on HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
For more info about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story