Realms of Darkover®, the newest Darkover anthology, will be released in May 2016. You can pre-order it at Amazon (and it will be available at other outlets soon). Here’s a contributor interview to whet your appetite!
Marion Zimmer Bradley’s beloved world of Darkover encompasses many realms, from glacier-shrouded mountains to arid wastelands, from ancient kingdoms to space-faring empires. Now this all-new anthology welcomes old friends and new fans to explore these landscapes of time and place, history and imagination.
Robin Wayne Bailey is the author of numerous novels,
including the Dragonkin trilogy and
the Frost series, as well as Shadowdance and the Fritz
Leiber-inspired Swords Against The
Shadowland. His short fiction has appeared in many magazines and
anthologies with numerous appearances in Marion Zimmer Bradley's Sword And Sorceress series and Deborah
J. Ross's Lace And Blade volumes.
Some of his stories have been collected in two volumes, Turn Left To Tomorrow and The
Fantastikon, from Yard Dog Books. He's a former two-term president of
the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and a founder of the Science
Fiction Hall of Fame. He's the co-editor, along with Bryan Thomas
Schmidt, of Little Green Men - Attack!
Deborah J. Ross: When and why did you begin writing?
Robin Wayne Bailey: It's a cliche for writer to answer this
with "When I was a child," but that's pretty much true in my case. I
remember writing a poem in third grade -- call it a Hiawatha pastiche, although
I wouldn't learn the word "pastiche" for years -- but it impressed
the teacher. She made me read it to the class, then to the principal who made
me read it before a school assembly, then at a PTA. Then my parents made me
read to to relatives. It got to be embarrassing but, on the other hand, I
realized, "Hey, an easy road to attention!" So I kept at it with
lots of stories and poems. I started my first novel in what was once
called Junior High School, writing a spy novel mostly during study halls.
About sixty pages into it, I turned my back briefly, and somebody stole my
work. In a crazy, utterly dysfunctional family of wildly talented, but
self-destructive people, writing became my way of standing out. Note, I
did not say, "staying sane."
DJR: Tell us about your introduction to Darkover. What about
the world or its inhabitants drew you in?
RWB: Toward the end of high school, already a compulsive
science fiction reader, I discovered a book called Darkover Landfall. The idea of a shipload of colonists going
off-course and becoming lost to the rest of humanity and having to create their
own culture wasn't exactly new to me, but Bradley's handling of it fascinated.
I read four or five more Darkover novels after that, but must admit that I
eventually drifted away from the series. But that early paperback edition
of Darkover Landfall, now signed by
Marion, still resides in an honored spot on my bookshelves.