Blog Archives

We have a winner, may his soul rest in peace

IMG_6474

The dice have spoken and there’s a winner of the Black Quill giveaway contest I held to publicize my new novel, The Dead Hamlets. I will be dispatching the dreaded Quill and a free copy of the new book by undead courier, post-haste. I won’t speak the winner’s name here for fear of summoning various unnatural things, but rest assured that he was most instrumental in getting word of the new book out. So blame him for all the ails the book causes in the world.

I had a great deal of fun with the contest, and I’d like to thank everyone who took part. Thanks for helping promote the new novel — it certainly needs all the help it can get in these uncertain times for the publishing industry.

The Dead Hamlets is featured on The Hook

I had the distinct pleasure of kicking off The Hook, a new guest post feature on Alex Shvartsman’s site. Alex is the author of Explaining Cthulhu to Grandma, which is perhaps the best title for a book ever. And it’s only $5 and change on Kindle! Why are you still reading this and not buying the book?

Anyway, Alex just launched The Hook, which lets writers explain why they opened their books the way they did. So click the link to find out why I began The Dead Hamlets on a dark and stormy night!

Thanks, Alex!

There’s a long tradition of dark and stormy nights in the theatre — lots of blackouts and thunder sound effects. The first stage directions of Macbeth, for instance, are “Thunder and lightning.” So I was hinting at the subject matter of my book in its opening lines. Shortly after that initial scene, I have Cross stumble into a theatre full of the dead — at which point things really get dark and stormy!

Finally — some value for your dollar

100,000

Hey, I think the third Cross novel is the first of my books to break the 100,000 word mark. I’m really starting to ramble in my old age!

Sweet, sweet 16

Screen Shot 2015-02-23 at 8.35.38 PM

Hey, my new book, The Dead Hamlets, hit No. 16 on Amazon.ca’s Contemporary Fantasy list. That’s probably as high as it’s going to get. There’s no way I’m beating How (Not) to Kiss a Were-Bear. That book’s got crazy ratings! It’s free if you’re on Kindle Unlimited, too, so go and get it if you’ve ever fantasized about were-bears. Hey, I’m not judging.

 

You can still win The Dead Hamlets

IMG_6373

Hi all. Just a reminder that you can still win a free copy of The Dead Hamlets through two giveaways. The Black Quill giveaway runs until the end of February. Just mention The Dead Hamlets in a social media post and tag me, and you’ll have a chance to win a copy of the book — and the mysterious Black Quill! What is the Black Quill? Well, you’ll have to read the book to find out the answer to that dangerous question.

My Bookish Ways is also hosting a giveaway of The Dead Hamlets for U.S. citizens. Just four days left!

Good luck and good reading!

Oh, my bookish ways

Hey, I’m interviewed over at My Bookish Ways. It’s one of my favourite sites, so I was pretty happy to wind up there. I talk about how my new novel came to be, reveal how I dealt with writing about Shakespeare (turn him into a wizard, of course!), and give shoutouts to some of my favourite writers. Bonus feature: If you live in the U.S., you can win a copy of The Dead Hamlets.

I asked myself what I would do if I was immortal, and that’s how Cross became a drunken, thieving, self-loathing liar with murderous tendencies who tries to do right by his friends.

The reckoning continues!

 

cont

Hey, The Dead Hamlets continues to rock on Amazon. It just hit No. 42 on the Contemporary Fantasy bestsellers list. It’s beating out Haruki Murakami and Jim Butcher. I’m going to enjoy that while it lasts, and I expect it to last about 8 seconds.

Thanks again for reading and buying the book!

Right behind Stephen King on the bestseller list!

 

occult

Well, that’s enough to make a dead old soul like me smile. My new novel, The Dead Hamlets, made Amazon Canada’s bestseller list in Occult Fiction on its first day on sale. It was at 18th place, but by the time I got around to taking a screenshot it had dropped to 23rd. I didn’t know it was occult, but hey, I’ll take it!

The Dead Hamlets also cracked the Historical Fantasy list, reaching 26th spot, right behind big names like Felix Palma and Gail Carriger. I’m proud of that little book!

historical

The Dead Hamlets: What’s The Big Idea?

My latest novel, The Dead Hamlets, officially goes on sale today. To celebrate, it’s featured over at The Big Idea. John Scalzi’s site is one of the top communities online for sci-fi and fantasy fans, so I’m pretty excited about this. Give it a read if you want to learn the big ideas behind my Cross series of books.

If you’re reading this, you must be lost

I’m getting a lot of new readers at this blog recently thanks to the publication of my latest novel, The Dead Hamlets. So welcome and let me introduce myself. (If you’ve seen this already, scroll to the next post. I’m going to pin this to the top of the site for a few days.)

I’m Peter Roman, author of the Cross series of supernatural thrillers. I’m also Peter Darbyshire, author of the novels Please and The Warhol Gang. I’ll let you work out for yourself which one is the real me. (Spoiler: It’s a split personality kind of thing.)

If you’re new to the Cross books, here are the basics:

Cross is the poor soul who comes to life in the body Christ left behind when he shuffled off this mortal coil. Cross can use all the powers of Christ’s body, but there’s one catch: he needs heavenly grace to power the body. The only way he can get it is by killing the angels stranded on Earth and draining them of their grace. So, yes, we’re in anti-hero territory here. But Cross isn’t all bad. He’s loyal to his friends, which include the likes of gorgons and faerie, and even some literary characters such as Alice from the Alice in Wonderland tales. Needless to say, his friends get him in a lot of trouble.

Boy EatingThe series begins with The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, which follows Cross through the centuries as he tries to hunt down Judas. It turns out Judas is actually an ancient trickster god who’s made it his mission to ruin humanity — and to destroy everything Cross loves. Cross’s quest leads him into the middle of a holy war between the angels left on Earth, and that’s when things truly go to hell.

hamletsThe second book in the series, The Dead Hamlets, checks in with Cross shortly after the events of The Mona Lisa Sacrifice. Cross has managed to fall under the spell of the faerie queen, one of his ancient enemies, and she puts him to work hunting down a ghost that is killing her subjects. But all is not as it seems. The murders lead Cross into a strange and eerie mystery populated with an eccentric and deadly cast of characters, including the Witches of Macbeth, the undead demon hunter Christopher Marlowe and a very supernatural and very deadly Shakespeare. When Cross discovers a startling secret about the origins of “Hamlet” itself, he finds himself trapped in a ghost story even he may not be able to escape alive!

The Cross books are published by ChiZine and have received rave reviews. The National Post called The Mona Lisa Sacrifice “a deliriously unhinged roller coaster of a novel, blending fantasy, history, horror and humour with the aplomb of an overfull blender, but all of it smarter than it, truly, has any right — or need — to be” and Publishers Weekly said “The novel never lets the reader pause for breath . . . fans of the genre will find one of its ultimate expressions here.” Early reviews of The Dead Hamlets have called it “A Rewarding, Witty, Hot Mess of Angel-Pummeling, Action and Noir Detective Fiction” and said it “resembles something written by Neil Gaiman at times with its somewhat mystical imagery and at other times it reads as a full-blown work of bizarro fiction.” I blush.

I’m currently editing the third Cross book and outlining the fourth. I’ll have more about those on the blog in the future.

pleasesidebarI’ve also written a couple of literary fiction novels as Peter Darbyshire. My first book, Please, won Canada’s national ReLit Award for best novel. Please chronicles the life of a young man who drifts through a hallucinatory urban world filled with celebrity wannabes, addictive relationships and jobs that demand he become someone else. Booklist said “Darbyshire plumbs the murky regions of the soul in a novel of dark brilliance,” Kirkus called it a “hilarious social satire of daily life among the young and nihilistic” in a starred review, and The Globe and Mail said it was “a consummate critique of all the creeping human weaknesses, counterfeit values and trend-driven desires that steadily erode our hopes for meaning and purpose.” I just thought I was writing about my own life. Go figure.

WGPBsideMy second novel, The Warhol Gang, is a black comedy for anyone who’s ever been trapped in an office job or lost in a mall. The narrator works for a neuromarketing company that scans his brain to see how he responds to imaginary products. Trapped in an increasingly unreal world, he starts hanging out at accident scenes to experience the most real things possible. He meets a group of counterculture activists who stage accidents for insurance fraud, and falls in love with one of them. When one of their incidents turns deadly, the media turns them into a terrorist gang. That’s when things get weird. The Globe and Mail called it “a violent, darkly comic satire of our media-saturated society” while Postmedia said it was “one of the finest, and most important, Canadian novels in recent memory.” My personal favourite is the review that said it was “Denis Johnson stomping Chuck Palahniuk into William Gibson while Kurt Vonnegut cheers him on.”

I’ve also published some short stories, if that’s more your thing. Hey, I don’t judge.

I have an irregular newsletter that I send out through the TinyLetter service. You can sign up here.

I can be found at the usual social media hangouts online. The links are at the top of the page.

Thanks for reading. I hope you’ll stick around!