Sneak Peek: Cover art for Hang Wire by Adam Christopher

We’re big fans of Adam Christopher here at Sword and Laser and he’s buttering us up some more (as if he needs to) by giving us a sneak peek at the cover for his next book, Hang Wire (Coming January 28th from Angry Robot Books).

He mentioned the book took place in San Francisco the last time we talked. Here are some more details. Poor Ted Hall’s Chinatown birthday dinner ends in an explosion. It gets worse. Ted finds fortune cookies from the exploded restaurant with personalized messages scattered around his apartment. There’s also a Celtic circus, some immortals searching for an ancient power, and your basic primal evil lurking beneath the San Andreas fault which might destroy the world. Sounds like good fun.

Will Staehle (Empire State, Kavalier & Clay) did the cover and it’s stellar. Christopher said Staehle surprised him with something “entirely unlike anything I had imagined, for any of my books.”

For his part Staehle said the cover was “a tough one” with all the disparate elements in the book. He played with several styles including Chinese brush illustrations, victorian circus signage and ended up with, “a graphic circus ringleader puppet hung up by strings.”

So take a look for yourself. You can see the different approaches in the gallery below. It starts with the main black book cover, then the limited edition in red and a few book posters showing the circus images and the Chinese brush strokes. 

 Just click the image to flip through the different examples.

 Enjoy!

 


Tech History Today – August 6, 2013

In 1943 – Jon Postel was born in Altadena, California. He created the Internet’s address system, and administered it for 30 years as director of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).

In 1963 – Skilled hacker, future government prisoner, and eventual famous security expert Kevin Mitnick was born in Van Nuys, California.

In 1991 – Tim Berners-Lee posted a short summary of his WorldWideWeb Project to alt.hypertext and pointed to a simple browser and a Web page describing the project. Thus the WWW became a publicly available service on the Internet.

In 1997 – At MacWorld in Boston, Microsoft announced it would invest $150 million in Apple, and continue to make Microsoft Office for Mac for at least five years. The two companies also ended their lawsuit.

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Tech News Today 810: Your Car’s Other Firewall

Hosts: Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Iyaz Akhtar and Chad Johnson

President vetoes Samsung’s patent win, LinkedIn lets you apply for jobs from its app, Feedly starts charging to search RSS, and more!

Guests: Chris Ziegler.

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Running time:: 0:51:15

Tech History Today – August 5, 2013

In 1858 – The west end of the first transatlantic cable was completed when the ship Niagra anchored at the Newfoundland coast having laid 1,016 miles of telegraph cable.

In 1914 – The American Traffic Signal Co. installed their first electric traffic light at East 105th street and Euclid Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio.

In 1921 – The first radio broadcast of a baseball game happened on KDKA from Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field. Harold W. Arlin announced the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies.

In 2012 – The Mars Science Laboratory, known as the Curiosity Rover successfully landed on the surface of Mars in one of the most complicated automated landings ever, involving a sky crane.

Like Tech History? Purchase Tom Merritt’s Chronology of Tech History at Merritt’s Books site.

Tech History Today – August 4, 2013

In 1921 – The first facsimile was transmitted by radio across the Atlantic Ocean using the Belinograph invented by Edouard Belin. A message written by C. V. Van Anda, managing editor of The New York Times and addressed to the Matin in Paris, was sent in seven minutes.

In 1988 – A computer halted an engine test in preparation for the launch of the space shuttle Discovery. The flight would be the first since the Challenger explosion in 1986.

In 2007 – NASA’s Phoenix spaceship launched on its mission to survey the Martian Arctic in search of water, geological discoveries, and evidence of conditions for biological life.

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Tech History Today – August 3, 2013

In 1811 – Elisha
Otis
was born. He invented a safety brake that prevented
elevators from falling if the hoisting cable broke. Thank him every
time you get in an elevator. In 1958 – The nuclear submarine USS
Nautilus
became the first watercraft to reach the
geographic North Pole. Commanding Officer, Commander William R.
Anderson, announced to his crew, “For the world, our country, and
the Navy – the North Pole.” In 1977 – Tandy Corp of Texas held a
New York press conference to announce that it will manufacture the
TRS-80.

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History at Merritt’s Books
site
.