Fan Art Tuesdays: Krimzon-1
Krimzon-1’s Durzo Blint is pretty awesome. To see more, click HERE!
Krimzon-1’s Durzo Blint is pretty awesome. To see more, click HERE!
This talented artist catches Vi Sovari deep in thought. Check out more of the artist’s gallery HERE.
Brent will be at several events, panels, and an interview at the Imaginales Festival in Epinal, France on May 28-31.
Thursday, May 28
10.00 Coup d’envoi // Kick off
17.00 Histoires violentes… et récits abominables // Violent Stories… and abominable stories!
Friday, May 29
11.00 La lutte du Bien contre le Mal // The Struggle of Good Against Evil
Saturday, May 30
10.00 Mercenaires et tueurs professionnels // Mercenaries and Professional Killers
Sunday, May 31
09.00 Petit-déjeuner avec Brent Weeks (En anglais et sur inscription) // Breakfast with Brent Weeks (In English and for subscribers)
11.00 Entretien avec Brent Weeks // Interview with Brent Weeks
17.00 La fantasy… Une lecture plaisir! // The fantasy novel… a fun read!
Go HERE to for more details!
See more of her work HERE.
The Broken Eye is now available in Bulgaria! You can go HERE to purchase the book (or just check out the other cool covers they’ve got).
Atika Zamimi has just posted an interview with Brent. Go HERE to read about whether he’d ever bring Elene back to life, which color he would choose to draft (if he could), whether he ever gets writer’s block — and more!
This month, Brent discusses the three key writing tools he picked up from Dan Brown, Dean Koontz, and George R.R. Martin. Check it out HERE.
UPDATE: We think we have identified the artist. Check out Jian Guo’s other amazing work HERE, including some amazing tributes to Tolkien and covers for other fantasy authors such as Marion Zimmer Bradley and Gene Wolfe. (Thanks to Miro below, who gave us the tip!)
Exciting news! The Black Prism publishes next month in China, thanks to the work of Chongqing Books. Look at this awesome cover:
I have the enormous privilege to see a lot of cool takes on cover art that are each influenced by their country, culture, and audience’s expectations of what a fantasy cover should look like, but few have been as striking as this. I love how it unfolds the longer you look at it. It’s a little bit Link from Legend of Zelda, a little Lord of the Rings, and a little bit the stained glass sequence from Beauty and the Beast.
I love it. (If anyone can tell me the artist’s name, I’d be more than happy to link to him or her!)
Check out this fun watercolor interpretation of The Blinding Knife cover:
See more of her work HERE.