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The Thousand Names by Django Wexler
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The Thousand Names by Django Wexler
Mass Market Paperback $7.99
Jul 01, 2014 | ISBN 9780451418050

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    Jul 01, 2014 | ISBN 9780451418050

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Product Details

Praise

Praise for The Thousand Names

“A fascinating world of dust and bayonets and muskets…and magic.”—S. M. Stirling, New York Times bestselling author of the Novels of the Change

“I absolutely loved it. Wexler balances the actions of his very human characters with just the right amount of imaginative ‘magic’ to keep me wanting more.”—Taylor Anderson, national bestselling author of the Destroyermen series

“The incredible world building, character development and yes, even the complexity of it all, will hook epic fantasy fans and leave them anxiously waiting for the next book in the series. ”—Bookworm Blues

“Django does an excellent job with his characters…they are great fun to ride along with…”—Speculative Book Review

“A spectacular epic fantasy debut that heralds Django Wexler as a talented author and The Shadow Campaigns series as a future flintlock fantasy classic.”—Fantasy Book Critic

“Such detail on the military life! From camp conditions to battle tactics, to the lines of grand strategy, the authenticity of the military fantasy is here in full flower.”—SF Signal

More Praise for the Shadow Campaigns Novels

“Gritty, brutal, and yet wonderfully intimate…exceptional military fantasy.”—Jason M. Hough, New York Times bestselling author of Zero World

“Succeeding volumes may end up doing for the Napoleonic Wars what George R. R. Martin did for the Wars of the Roses. Highly recommended.”—Anthony Ryan, New York Times bestselling author of the Raven’s Shadow Novels

“The Thousand Names is marvelously written, ingeniously conceived, and great fun. Without a doubt the best book of [the] year.”—Simon R. Green, New York Times bestselling author of the Secret Histories Novels 

“Wexler has written another excellently entertaining novel, filled with battles and politics and personalities….It subverts, interrogates, or outright inverts a good few tropes associated with epic fantasy.”—Tor.com

Author Q&A

Django. Cool name! What’s the story behind it?

I’m named after Django Reinhardt, a jazz guitarist who played in the 20s and 30s. I always think there should be a cooler story than there actually is—some kind of elaborate personal connection, maybe a mysterious family secret—but really my mom read the name in a biography and thought it was great. So you can credit my parents’ good taste!

You seem to know a lot about weapons––did you do a lot of research because you were writing what might be called a ’flintlock fantasy,’ or were you already a weapons buff?

More the latter, I think. The idea to write The Thousand Names—that is, a relatively realistic fantasy set in a roughly Napoleonic setting—came out of a lot of reading about the period. It wasn’t something I did deliberately for the book, it’s just the kind of thing I read for fun. I had been getting a little disappointed by fantasy authors who wanted to have giant wars in their books but either left out what the fighting was actually like or handled it in a very ahistorical way for no good reason. So I decided to try do it “right.”

After I started writing, I did get a few more books to answer some specific questions on how the weaponry and tactics worked, though. I’ve accumulated a small reference library I can poke through when I need answers.

What are the major influences behind your novel?

Well, as I said, one impetus was to try and write something that took the military stuff pretty seriously. I think George R. R. Martin was obviously a big influence in this regard, he really opened my eyes (along with those of many others) to the kind of things you could do in fantasy. The idea of writing a fantasy story drawing on real events for inspiration I got from S. M. Stirling and David Drake’s series The General, which is loosely based on the campaigns of the Byzantine general Belisarius. Janus, as a character, draws from a long traditional of slightly crazy geniuses, the two most influential of which for me were Sherlock Holmes (of course!) and Timothy Zahn’s Grand Admiral Thrawn.

Non–fiction–wise, David Chandler’s The Campaigns of Napoleon is a brilliant history of the Napoleonic wars, and more than anything else this whole project came from reading that book and thinking, “Wow, I want to write that.” Simon Schama’s Citizens, a history of the French Revolution, was also important, although that will become more relevant once the series goes on a bit.

The singularity is occurring in t–10 seconds. Which of your appliances/gadgets are you most afraid of?

Hmm. The ones that can do a lot of damage like the blender or the oven are the most obviously scary, but I’d have to go with my phone. If I didn’t know it had gained sentience, it could engage in a campaign of subtle psychological torture that would quickly drive me insane. Plus it knows everything about me.

What are you currently working on?

Well, right now, a lot of blog posts and interviews for The Thousand Names release! But my next real project is to edit the sequel, The Shadow Throne, and then get started writing book #3. I also have a middle–grade fantasy series starting next April with The Forbidden Library, so I’ll need to get some work in on those as well. Busy busy!

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