The Bread Must Rise, Sworn Soldiers, and the Heartbeat of the Universe

“Granted, the plants all looked dead or dying. Granted, the windows of the house stared down like eye sockets in a row of skulls, yes, but so what? Actual rows of skulls wouldn’t affect me so strongly. I knew a collector in Paris … well, never mind the details.”

     — T. Kingfisher, What Moves the Dead (source link)

Welcome

We’re officially into spring. In this part of the world, that means a brief respite from cold drizzle, and I’m enjoying a little sunshine.

But not too much sunshine.

I’m a creature of shade and cooling rain at heart, and this month’s newsletter takes a look at some suitably umbral offerings!  

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ICYMI: The Bread Must Rise is a Nebula Finalist!

I’m thrilled to announce that The Bread Must Rise is a finalist for this year’s Nebula award for game writing.

James and I had a ton of fun writing and coding this weird comedic baking eldritch horror fantasy, and we’re both very honoured to have our work recognized like this!

There are a ton of other great stories, books, and games on the final ballot, as there are every year. I’m especially excited to be sharing space on the list with so many writing friends and acquaintances.

You can watch the official SFWA announcement video here.

Sworn Soldier Series: Historical Horror That’s a Lot of Fun

Recently, I picked up T. Kingfisher’s historical horror novella, What Moves the Dead

The book is an unapologetic retelling of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher, which was enough for me to pick it up. Although I love T. Kingfisher’s writing, so I didn’t need much convincing.

As you might guess from the cover art (pictured here) and the concept, this isn’t the kind of book where everyone lives happily ever after.

But it is fascinating—and fun! 

Set on the shores of a gloomy tarn in a fictional eastern European country in the late 1800s, the story follows Alex Easton, a very voicy narrator called to the Usher estate by a desparate letter from an old friend.

As anyone familiar with Poe might suspect, it doesn’t end well for the Ushers. But getting there is a lot of fun (for the book’s readers, at least).

One thing that added to the fun for me was how Kingfisher plays with pronouns. The language spoken by Easton’s fictional country is described as the worst in the world because it steals bits and pieces from all the other languages it encounters. 

One thing it also has in spades? Pronouns, including specific ones for rocks, God, and soldiers.

This last one is important, because Alex Easton is a sworn soldier, a person who was born female but gave up that birth identity to serve in one of the country’s many ongoing wars. Originally, all the country’s soldiers were male, but because the language has a specific set of pronouns for soldiers (kan), technically anybody can become a soldier. And during the time the book is set, there are many non-male soldiers, known collectively as “sworn soldiers” and viewed with a mix of lurid obsession and terror by the residents of many other countries.

The interplay between Easton’s soldier-identity and the people around kan is incidental at most to the plot of the book, but it adds a whole layer of fascinating subtext in kan interactions with other characters. Plus, kan is just a super-fun character to follow!

If you have gothic sensibilities, love queer retellings of classic works, are the kind of history/literature nerd who’s excited by the word Ruritania, or just want an all-around good time, I highly recommend What Moves the Dead. (As a bonus, the second book in the series, What Feasts at Night, released recently and was also a treat!)

What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher (Tor Nightfire, 2022)

What Feasts at Night by T. Kingfisher (Tor Nightfire, 2024)

Perturbator: Horror Synth

This month, I am pleased to suggest Lustful Sacraments by French artist Perturbator.

The synth-based sounds and horror-inspired backdrops of this 2021 album pair wonderfully with gothic horror.

You can listen to the album on YouTube, courtesy of the artist and publisher.

The Heartbeat of the Universe

In other publication news, my Asimov’s Readers’ Choice award winning poem “The Three Laws of Poetics” is included in The Heartbeat of the Universe, a multi-author collection of speculative poetry.

This book has a ton of great poems from the pages of Asimov’s and Analog, with work by amazing poets like Jane Yolen, D.A. Xiaolin Spires, Mary Soon Lee, and many, many more!

Sounds good, right?

You can preorder The Heartbeat of the Universe now using this link.

The publisher, Interstellar Flight Press, is throwing a virtual release party at 4pm Pacific Time on April 4th. It’s possible I will be reading from my poem “The Three Laws of Poetics,” so I hope to see you there!

Writing Update

I recently finished up the second chapter of my second Choicescript game, Gigantea: Age of Rot. Huzzah for progress!

I’m hoping to have the first three chapters finished and polished enough by June that I can share a demo during the 2024 Nebula conference, which I’ll be attending online.

Finally, I have a short story collection coming out soon!

That’s called The Butterfly Disjunct after one of my earliest published stories, and it will feature science fiction stories ranging from the hilarious to the heartfelt to the unsetling. Sometimes, individual stories are all three at once.

Watch this space for more details on both the game and the collection. :) 

Thanks for reading. See you soon!

Stewart

The Bread Must Rise is a Finalist for the 2023 Nebula Award for Best Game Writing!

SFWA has announced the Nebula finalists for work published in 2023, and James and I are thrilled and honoured to announce that The Bread Must Rise is on the ballot for the Nebula Award for Best Game Writing!

2024 Nebula Award for Best Game Writing Nominees

2024 Nebula Announcements

The Nebula Award for Best Game Writing is selected by SFWA members. Any narrative game from the previous calendar year is eligible, from wordless games all the way up to AAA epics.

The competition looks fierce this year, as it always does, and I continue to be impressed by the breadth of titles on offer. It’s always really interesting to see what SFWA members are playing!

Titles below are reproduced in the same order they appear on the official announcement, which you can watch on SFWA’s YouTube channel.

The Bread Must Rise, Stewart C Baker, James Beamon (Choice of Games)

Alan Wake II, Sam Lake, Clay Murphy, Tyler Burton Smith, Sinikka Annala (Remedy Entertainment, Epic Games Publishing)

Ninefox Gambit: Machineries of Empire Roleplaying Game, Yoon Ha Lee, Marie Brennan (Android)

Dredge, Joel Mason (Black Salt Games, Team 17)Chants of Sennaar, Julien Moya, Thomas Panuel (Rundisc, Focus Entertainment)

Baldur’s Gate 3, Adam Smith, Adrienne Law, Baudelaire Welch, Chrystal Ding, Ella McConnell, Ine Van Hamme, Jan Van Dosselaer, John Corocran, Kevin VanOrd, Lawrence Schick, Martin Docherty, Rachel Quirke, Ruairí Moore, Sarah Baylus, Stephen Rooney, Swen Vincke (Larian Studios)

It’s super exciting to be appearing on the official ballot for this year’s Nebula award for Best Game Writing, and in such fine company.

I’m especially pleased to be sharing space on the larger Nebula ballot with friends like Rachael K. Jones, Vajra Chandrasekera, and SL Huang, among others! Check out the full list of finalists on the SFWA Blog.

About The Bread Must Rise

A person in a cape looms over a crowd of bakers

The Great Godstone Bake-off has arrived!

As a hapless baker deeply in debt, you finally have the opportunity to rise to fame and fortune! Under the tutelage of such famous chefs as Gordon Ramslayer, Tira Misu, and The Baladin, you will learn the arts of baking, breadcrafting, and dare you whisper it… necromancy?

The Bread Must Rise is a 450,000 word, text-only cosmic horror / fantasy / baking / comedy extravaganza written by James Beamon and Stewart C Baker and published by Choice of Games.

Special Choice of Games Sale

To celebrate the game’s nomination, our publisher is running a special sale for a limited time!

Check out most Choice of Games titles, including those that have been nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Game Writing or other awards, at a hefty discount of up to 40% off.

The sale runs until March 21st, 2024, on all major storefronts, including Steam, the App Store, Google Play, and the Choice of Games web store.

Not sure what to try out? Here are a few favourites from their long, long list of excellent titles:

Crème de la Crème

Climb to the very top of the class at your exclusive private school for socialites! Will you study hard, find a perfect match, or embrace scandal?

Play Crème de la Crème, by Hannah Powell-Smith

Fallen Hero: Retribution

Stay one step ahead of your past and build your future as Los Diablos’ greatest villain. Can you keep up the lies, or will you risk everything trusting the people you once called friends?

Play Fallen Hero: Retribution, by Malin Rydén

The Luminous Underground

Blast spirits out of a haunted subway system! Can your team defeat rival exterminators, shoddy gear, and City Hall?

Play The Luminous Underground, by Phoebe Barton

The Martian Job

Rob the first Martian casino and find out who really rules the planet! Crack a safe, break some hearts, start a revolution, or get rich beyond the stars!

Play The Martian Job, by M. Darusha Wehm

Rent-A-Vice

What doesn’t kill you…kills someone else, and leads you down an ethical rabbit hole. Can you do what’s right in a world where vice is a virtue?

Play Crème de la Crème, by Natalia Theodoridou

The Road to Canterbury

May the best story win! Enter the medieval world of Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales,” where your journey, and the stories you tell, will change history.

Play The Road to Canterbury, by Kate Heartfield

Tale of Two Cranes

Fulfill your epic destiny in mythic ancient China! Lead armies, wield magic, and put an emperor on the throne – or become the emperor yourself!

Play Tale of Two Cranes, by Michelle Balaban and Stephanie Balaban

Teahouse of the Gods

Harness the qi energy of life itself to control body, mind, and environment! Will you use your power to save the world, or will corruption stain your soul?

Play Teahouse of the Gods, by Naca Rat