Amazon’s Top 5 Fantasy Books, February 20, 2011

The Wise Man’s Fear makes its first appearance in Amazon’s top 5 fantasy bestseller list this week, feeling a bit lonely as the only epic fantasy to make the cut this week.

  1. Moon Dance (Kindle) by J.R. Rainfantasy books
  2. Shadowfever (Kindle)fantasy books by Karen Marie Moning
  3. A Discovery of Witches (Hardcover) by Deborah Harkness
  4. The Wise Man’s Fear (Hardcover) by Patrick Rothfuss
  5. Vampire Moon (Kindle) by J.R. Rain
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Fantasy Blogosphere: January 14, 2011

Reviews of A Game of Thrones, Gauntlgrym and The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack this week, along with interviews of Mercedes Lackey, Cherie Priest and Mark Charan Newton. Check out the best moments from Red Dwarf, the passing of Brian Jacques, and Joe Abercrombie appearing in TIME magazine.

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Amazon’s Top 5 Fantasy Books, February 13, 2011

Jordan/Sanderson and Charlaine Harris drop off the top 5 this week to make room for A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness and a second novel by J.R. Rain: Vampire Moon.

  1. Moon Dance (Kindle) by J.R. Rainfantasy books
  2. A Discovery of Witches (Hardcover) by Deborah Harkness
  3. Shadowfever (Kindle)fantasy books by Karen Marie Moning
  4. Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Malloryfantasy books
  5. Vampire Moon (Kindle) by J.R. Rain
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Fantasy Blogosphere: January 7, 2011

The fantasy blogosphere onslaught continues this week, with reviews of books new and old alike, from The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin to A Clash of Kings by George R.R. Martin. Interviews with Brandon Sanderson and Ursula K. Le Guin crossed this week, and we see releases from top authors Tad Williams, Joe Abercrombie and more. More buildup for the Game of Thrones HBO series with a spotlight at the L.A. Times and a new “artisans” video hitting the web. Even further GRRM news with Bantam purchasing the comic book rights for A Song of Ice and Fire, and cap the week off with a trailer for the new Lord of the Rings video game!

Game of Thrones HBO Series The Artisans: Sword Training

Lord of the Rings: War in the North Trailer

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Amazon’s Top 5 Fantasy Books, February 6, 2011

A Game of Thrones drops off the top five, but Towers of Midnight in Kindle form and Charlaine Harris’ newest Sookie Stackhouse make first appearances this week.

  1. Shadowfever (Kindle)fantasy books by Karen Marie Moning
  2. Moon Dance (Kindle) by J.R. Rainfantasy books
  3. Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Malloryfantasy books
  4. Towers of Midnight (Kindle) by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sandersonfantasy books
  5. Dead Reckoning (Hardcover) by Charlaine Harrisfantasy books
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Fantasy Blogosphere: January 31, 2011

Let the fantasy onslaught begin! Everyone seems to have finally returned from their New Year’s hangover/vacation, because the fantasy blogosphere was hectic this past week, to say the least. Kick it off with reviews of the most recent novels by Joe Abercrombie, Jim Butcher and Steven Erikson, skip on over to interviews with George R.R. Martin, Joe Abercrombie and James Enge, and round out the week with news about the Dark Tower tv series, D&D appearing on tv, and Orbit acquiring three new Dresden novels.

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Amazon’s Top 5 Fantasy Books, January 30, 2011

Moon Dance and Fire Burn swap places, but the top 5 remains the same from last week. George R.R. Martin going strong!

  1. Shadowfever (Kindle) by Karen Marie Moning
  2. Moon Dance (Kindle) by J.R. Rain
  3. Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Mallory
  4. A Game of Thrones (Kindle) by George R.R. Martin
  5. Toil and Trouble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Mallory
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Top 10 eReader Features

I recently finished reading The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson on my iPod Touch, and it was a revolution in reading for me. It wasn’t the first book I’d read on the device – I’d read a few non-fiction books (Rework by 37Signals and HTML5 for Web Designers by Jeremy Keith, to be exact), but this was the first fiction novel I’ve read in electronic format. With a novel, the expectations are a bit different.

All the things I’ve come to enjoy about reading fantasy literature were contrasted with reading in digital format: the comfort of getting cozy on the couch with a paper novel, escaping to a different world, and the ease with which I can accomplish both. I decided to highlight some of the features I enjoyed while reading on my iPod Touch, and that I’ll look for in the future in any device I decide to read eBooks on.

This is the fifth in a series of Top 10 posts covering the fantasy industry. Last week, we covered the Top 10 Fantasy Video Games of All Time.

Reading Without a Light

I found that reading on my iPod Touch, which is a device with a back light, was a significant advantage over paper books. Being able to read without a light means you don’t have to sit next to a lamp, and for me, being next to a hot light in Brazil is not fun this time of year. Other eReaders like the Nook and Kindle don’t have back lights, although newer color versions of the devices do. Having a back light is a feature that I’ll consider essential when deciding on purchasing a larger eReader in the future.

Reading with One Hand

Probably the most convenient feature of reading on my iPod Touch (and I could see doing this on an iPad or a Kindle as well), is the ability to read with one hand. Its like a Rondo no-look pass in basketball. I was able to dedicate my other arm, which is usually stuck holding the other half of a paper book so it won’t close, to other essential tasks, everything from hugging my wife on the couch to snacking to adjusting the music volume on my stereo. I never thought I’d want to be doing other stuff while reading, but this really just gives me the opportunity to read when I would normally be sitting on the couch with my wife watching some Brazilian novella I have absolutely zero interest in. Bravo, iPod Touch, bravo.

Search

Searching books for keywords is something that has always taken a while with print, especially for me digging through web development reference books. With regard to fiction, being able to search is great for reviewing books here on FantasyBookNews.com – I don’t have to stop every time I encounter a quote that I want to pull for my review. I can make a mental note and then go back at the end of the chapter and search, in order to pull the exact quote. Of course, this feature is tied very closely with the next, which is…

Bookmarks

Bookmarks are like the all-star feature of digital book readers. I can’t count how many times I’ve, in the past, stopped reading, found my notepad, picked up a pencil and jotted down a page number. No more! The bookmark feature in iBooks is fantastic, you can simply touch the bookmark icon in the upper right hand corner and iBooks will remember every page you tag. This is a revolution for me with regard to reviewing fantasy novels. Marge, I think I just tripled my production time.

Pages Remaining

I occasionally flip forward while reading paper books to see how many pages I have remaining in each chapter. With iBooks, you’re able to toggle whether the pages remaining appear on screen or not, letting the reader decide whether this is information they want to see, or whether they consider it a distraction and want to hide it. I played around with toggling this on and off the entire time I read The Way of Kings, if for nothing more than the fun of toggling. Toggle, toggle. No, seriously, this is a really nice feature that I’ll definitely look for in future eReader purchases.

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Fantasy Blogosphere: January 24, 2011

This week kicks off with the first review I’ve seen yet of the unreleased The Wise Man’s Fear by Patrick Rothfuss, and follows it up with reviews of two other kings in the genre, namely Neil Gaiman and Brandon Sanderson. Peter S. Beagle celebrates 40 years of The Last Unicorn, we get more than the usual dose of fantasy comic reviews, and even a fantasy magazine review to boot. Its all capped with Sean Bean talking about what its like to portray Eddard Stark in the Game of Thrones HBO series, a new Game of Thrones trailer, and a new Game of Thrones video on the battle tactics used in the series. Sweet.

New Game of Thrones Trailer

New Game of Thrones Artisans Video

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Amazon’s Top 5 Fantasy Books, January 23, 2011

Shadowfever jumps into first place with its Kindle edition, and A Game of Thrones holds strong leading into the launch of the HBO series in a few months.

  1. Shadowfever (Kindle) by Karen Marie Moning
  2. Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Mallory
  3. Moon Dance (Kindle) by J.R. Rain
  4. A Game of Thrones (Kindle) by George R.R. Martin
  5. Toil and Trouble, a Paranormal Romance (Kindle) by H.P. Mallory
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