The Beauty of Our Weapons

So last week Crises and Conflicts, an anthology celebrating the first 10 years of the superb NewCon Press, was released, along with its companion anthology Now We Are Ten. The last story in Crises and Conflicts is by yours truly and is called the Beauty of Our Weapons (with apologies to Leonard Cohen) and I have to say I’m very pleased with the story. It is set in the same world of the Age of Scorpio trilogy, and contains a number of cameos from a few familiar faces. It tells the story of a technological immortal who is present at a number of turning points in military history connected to weapons development (with the normal: it’s fiction caveat). I was lucky enough that Ian Whates, the owner and editor-in-chief for NewCon, chose BoW as inspiration for the cover art. There is however a problem with the story, it is inspired by a facet of my personality that I am not entirely comfortable with: my fascination with weapons.
Jul 18, 2016 | Categories: Blog | Tags: A Quantum Mythology, Age of Scorpio, Anthology, Beauty of Destruction, Classical Conditioning, Confirmation Bias, Crisis & Conflicts, Echo Chamber, First Person Shooter, Gun Control, Hard Science Fiction, Military Science Fiction, Military SF, Newcon Press, Now We Are Ten, Science Fiction, Short Story, Social Cost, Space Opera, Technological Immortality | Comments Off on The Beauty of Our Weapons
Theme Tunes

Music that inspired the Age of Scorpio trilogy.
Mar 25, 2015 | Categories: Blog | Tags: A Quantum Mythology, Age of Scorpio, Blackwater Park, Celts, Clash, Cult of Luna, Debussy, Fantasy, Gavin G. Smith, Grunge, Historical Fiction, Industrial Music, Isis, Myth, New Model Army, Old Man Gloom, Opeth, Peter Tosh, Progressive Metal, Science Fiction, Space Opera, Temple of the Dog, TesseracT | Leave A Comment »
Getting Your Iron Age On

Reccomendations for Iron Age fiction.
Mar 21, 2015 | Categories: Blog | Tags: 2000AD, A Quantum Mythology, Age of Iron, Age of Scorpio, Angus Watson, Bernard Cornwell, Celtic Mythology, Celts, Centurion, Fantasy, Gavin G. Smith, Gavin Smith, Historical Fiction, Myth, Neil Marshall, Pat Mills, Science Fiction, Slaine, Space Opera | Leave A Comment »