S.F. Winser – The Science of Magic

Title: The Science of Magic: Principia Mathemagica

Author: S.F. Winser

ISBN: 9781445730189

Page count: 286

Genre: Comic fantasy/Crime

Price:

US$17.99, AU$22-

Author Bio:

“S.F. Winser has just the right sort of mind for fantasy – at right angles to reality.”

- Kerry Greenwood (author of the Phryne Fisher mysteries)

S.F. Winser is an independent writer from Australia. He grew up in a small town just north of Sydney, where he did almost every job that involved being attacked by other people’s dogs. He currently works in a library and writes the occasional book review for the respected review site Booksquawk (www.booksquawk.com). He spends his spare time reading.

He very much needs a life.

Tell us about your book:

Colws is a Halfling. Retraive is an elf. Neither of them know how they got to 21st century Earth. But that’s the least of their worries.

Someone’s decapitated a Hydra and left his body in a Sydney alleyway. It’s their job to find out whodunnit. And, just as importantly: whydunnit. And, while it’s not as important it would also be kinda nice to know howdunnit.

Colws and Retraive have to do this while avoiding run-ins with the Minotaur Mafia, vampiric fairies, werewolf hit-bitches and Detective Inspector Willis of the NSW Police Force.

Willis is scary.

Colws would also like to get back with his girlfriend. Retraive would like to learn how to cast a spell without setting himself on fire.

And they both need to find the corpse before it destroys the city.

How long did it take to write the book?

About two years – young children and study do not mix well with a full time job and writing.

What inspired you to write the book?

I’m a massive fan of comic sci-fi and fantasy. I’m a Pratchett and Douglas Adams fanboy with a soft spot for Jasper Fforde. I wanted to write something fun that wasn’t just a ride – nerdjokes and thoughtfulness and taking a look at things from a different angle are as important in comic fantasy as fart jokes. So I wrote something that has a little bit of subtext, a bit of idea exploration. And plenty of fart jokes.

Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?

Writing happens when it happens. I tend to be disciplined for a few weeks, get thrown by the simple fact that everything in my life, including my job, is unschedualable. Then I stop… get stressed… and start up again. I am nobody’s poster-child when it comes to discipline.

Research, though… I have so many books on mythology, magic and the occult that one friend has called my research shelves ‘The Buffy the Vampire-Slayer Memorial Library’. Research is both fundamental and something I don’t think about. If I want to know something, I look it up. If I’m looking for inspiration, I wander through pages of books until it turns up. Writing wouldn’t happen without research… but… it’s the kind of stuff I’d be doing even if I wasn’t writing. I write what interests me and what I love. If I didn’t write, it would still interest me. I’d still read lots of weird crap and look into stuff that was intriguing.

There’s no ‘book research!’ earnestness, even though sometimes the curiosity that drives me to a book or the internet is triggered by something I happen to be writing. If I need to know something for a book, then I simply NEED to know it, book or not.

What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

A deep and abiding love for me as a person, a realisation that all my opinions should be their opinions and the overwhelming urge to send me buckets of money.

Otherwise, simply a fun time. I write to make it as deep as you want it to be. You want a stupid book about elves solving crimes and fairies kicking vampire’s butts while making juvenile dick jokes? Done.

You want a book with some exploration of big ideas, hidden layers of reference, parody, political satire, literary gags and playing around with crime genre conventions? Also done.

But one should not get in the way of the other. Fun comes first. I will sell my artistic pretensions for any gag that feels like fun to play with.

Where can we go to buy your book?

Amazon or the Book Depository for online.

(Book Depository does free shipping for most parts of the world!)

Any bookstore can order it in, too, if you prefer to do that.

Or you can even get a Large Print version through Lulu.

Any other links or info you’d like to share?

My website

Booksquawk for good book reviews by writers

Excerpt from book:

The first policeman on the scene noticed many strange things about the body.

For one, it oozed green. Bodies rarely do that; at least, not bodies this fresh. For another, there didn’t seem to be a head involved. And while there were legs and arms – or at least arm-ish and leg-like appendages – he counted ten, not the more usual four.

As more police swarmed the scene, taping off and photographing and putting random objects in little bags, they noticed more unusual facts: The dead Hydra – for a Hydra it had been – wore a tailored suit. It had to be tailored because it’s hard to buy off the rack suits for a human-sized squid, especially one with a long, dinosaur-like neck. They found a Registered Mage card in a pocket. They assumed the card was his but he was hard to identify from the photo of his face with his entire cranium missing. The neck was a dead ringer, though. The unchewed bits. And this was the first Hydra anyone had ever seen wearing anything. Or carrying anything beyond bits of waylaid victims. Or who had not survived decapitation by growing two more, very annoyed heads.

The moment Inspector Willis arrived on the scene, she swore.   She’d received a phone call earlier that morning from her bosses. They feared for the safety of a missing Defence Department official. A very unusual official who happened to be a Hydra. It only took a glance to confirm that fearing for his safety had become a waste of time.

She knew what she was going to have to do.

And she didn’t want to.

This job needed expert consultants. Willis knew of only one firm in Sydney with murder investigation experience, magical theory and any sort of security clearance to practise on a case like this.

She sighed.

I’m getting used to them, Willis told herself.

I will need help. There isn’t anyone more qualified or experienced.

The attempt at rationalisation didn’t help. Willis knew, deep down, that the pair of them were going to annoy her like hyperactive children with noisy toys and an unlimited supply of batteries.

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