Monday, June 14, 2010

Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter Collaborate for Two Books

I usually don't post strait up promotional materials or press announcemements - especially since a lot of blogs do a lot of it. But I got this interesting (and exciting) press release from Transworld earlier today that I want to post anyway.

Transworld Publishers are delighted to announce an exciting new collaboration between Sir Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter.

Sir Terry Pratchett first developed his vision of a chain of parallel worlds,
The Long Earth, in an unfinished novel and two short stories in 1986, after writing Equal Rites, the third novel in what would turn into the hugely successful Discworld series. Now, at last, this long-gestating concept is to see the light of day in two as-yet-untitled books written in collaboration with Stephen Baxter, author of Flood, Ark and the Time’s Tapestry and Destiny’s Children series.

‘Our Earth is but one of a chain of parallel worlds, each differing from its neighbours by a little (or a lot) in an infinite landscape of infinite possibilities. And you can just step from one world to the next…’

The deal was brokered through Colin Smythe and Ralph Vicinanza and the first Long Earth novel is due to be published by Doubleday in spring 2012.

Additionally, Sir Terry Pratchett has recently completed
I Shall Wear Midnight, the fourth in the Tiffany Aching books, to be published in September, and is already at work on his next Discworld novel for publication in autumn 2011. Number 37 in the series, Unseen Academicals, has just come out in Corgi paperback.


4 comments:

Mad Hatter Review said...

Very odd news, but not unwelcomed. Given Pratchett current health state it is good to see he is planning to get as much done in the time he has left. Judging by the short blurb it reminds me of Baxter's Manifold series, which was about the same characters, but in slightly different realities.

Fence said...

I'm all for as much Pratchett as he can share with us :)

Anonymous said...

Yay! Go Terry!

Ondrej from Hunger Games Summary said...

Pratchett's illness is one of the most unfair things I know about, he has such a fantastic mind.

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