Four days, boy and girls.
That's the only thing standing, metaphorically speaking of course, between you and the new Markhat book, The Broken Bell. The release date for all e-book formats is December 27; you can of course pre-order right now, if you so desire, and the book will be delivered with ruthless internet efficiency directly to your reading device of choice the moment it is released.
Here are some links you might follow, based on your preference of format:
Amazon, for your Kindle, Kindle Fire, or Kindle reading app:
The Broken Bell
Barnes&Noble, for your Nook or Nook reading app:
The Broken Bell
Samhain Publishing, for any format, any reader:
The Broken Bell
Hey, is this a series? If so, where do I start?
Frank's FAQ page!
As you can see, we aim to please, no matter what device you use for your reading. Anyone who prefers printed books may have to wait a bit longer, but as soon as I have a print release date I'll pass that information along to you right here in the blog.
If you're new around here, you may well be asking yourself two questions -- first, why did this guy's blog pop up instead of Fark, and second, who is this Markhat character, and why should I care?
My blog popped up because I pay a hacker who calls himself N3XOS to create random redirects. Markhat is my wise-cracking fantasy detective. And that's three questions, not two, but you should care because I need the measly five bucks The Broken Bell will set you back.
The thumbnail sketch?
Markhat lives and works in Rannit, the largest city of the old Kingdom to survive the War more or less intact. You've heard the term 'mean streets' used so often in the detective genre it's become cliche. Well, Rannit's best streets are not just mean, but downright psychopathic, even the ones sporting new sidewalks and cheery freshly-painted mansions.
Oh, there are laws in Rannit, and on paper they apply to rich and poor with equal weight. In reality, though, justice is available only to those who can afford it.
For everyone else, there is Markhat the finder.
For a modest fee, Markhat will find missing daughters, vanished sons, errant husbands, or straying wives. Markhat makes his living rooting out the sad truth behind the most well-meaning of lies.
Most of what Markhat finds, of course, is trouble.
There are now six books in the Markhat series. The Broken Bell brings the whole crew back together, for a single moment that will change them all forever.
For fans of the series, I'll throw out this tidbit. Mama Hog winds up face-to-snaggletoothed-face with a furious sorcerer bent on her messy demise. This annoys Mama. Angers her, even.
I had a lot of fun writing that scene. I think you'll have a lot of fun reading it.
So scroll back up to the links above and grab a copy of your own. Or, if you're new to the series, head on over to my webpage and click books and visit Rannit for a bit. I suggest either Dead Man's Rain or The Cadaver Client. Both are short enough and cheap enough to give you a feel for the series, and if it's not your cup of arsenic-laced tea then you're not out a fortune.
I hope you enjoy the books!
That's the only thing standing, metaphorically speaking of course, between you and the new Markhat book, The Broken Bell. The release date for all e-book formats is December 27; you can of course pre-order right now, if you so desire, and the book will be delivered with ruthless internet efficiency directly to your reading device of choice the moment it is released.
Here are some links you might follow, based on your preference of format:
Amazon, for your Kindle, Kindle Fire, or Kindle reading app:
The Broken Bell
Barnes&Noble, for your Nook or Nook reading app:
The Broken Bell
Samhain Publishing, for any format, any reader:
The Broken Bell
Hey, is this a series? If so, where do I start?
Frank's FAQ page!
As you can see, we aim to please, no matter what device you use for your reading. Anyone who prefers printed books may have to wait a bit longer, but as soon as I have a print release date I'll pass that information along to you right here in the blog.
If you're new around here, you may well be asking yourself two questions -- first, why did this guy's blog pop up instead of Fark, and second, who is this Markhat character, and why should I care?
My blog popped up because I pay a hacker who calls himself N3XOS to create random redirects. Markhat is my wise-cracking fantasy detective. And that's three questions, not two, but you should care because I need the measly five bucks The Broken Bell will set you back.
The thumbnail sketch?
Markhat lives and works in Rannit, the largest city of the old Kingdom to survive the War more or less intact. You've heard the term 'mean streets' used so often in the detective genre it's become cliche. Well, Rannit's best streets are not just mean, but downright psychopathic, even the ones sporting new sidewalks and cheery freshly-painted mansions.
Oh, there are laws in Rannit, and on paper they apply to rich and poor with equal weight. In reality, though, justice is available only to those who can afford it.
For everyone else, there is Markhat the finder.
For a modest fee, Markhat will find missing daughters, vanished sons, errant husbands, or straying wives. Markhat makes his living rooting out the sad truth behind the most well-meaning of lies.
Most of what Markhat finds, of course, is trouble.
There are now six books in the Markhat series. The Broken Bell brings the whole crew back together, for a single moment that will change them all forever.
For fans of the series, I'll throw out this tidbit. Mama Hog winds up face-to-snaggletoothed-face with a furious sorcerer bent on her messy demise. This annoys Mama. Angers her, even.
I had a lot of fun writing that scene. I think you'll have a lot of fun reading it.
So scroll back up to the links above and grab a copy of your own. Or, if you're new to the series, head on over to my webpage and click books and visit Rannit for a bit. I suggest either Dead Man's Rain or The Cadaver Client. Both are short enough and cheap enough to give you a feel for the series, and if it's not your cup of arsenic-laced tea then you're not out a fortune.
I hope you enjoy the books!