Your Eyes Ignite Like Cold Blue Fire
June 30th, 2010
Print This Post
The Author
Mark Chadbourn is the author of The Kingdom of the Serpent - Jack of Ravens and The Burning Man - as well as the mytho-fantasy trilogies The Age of Misrule and The Dark Age.
A full-time novelist and screen-writer, Mark lives in Leicestershire, UK.

The Silver Skull, part one of the Sword of Albion series as published November 2009 by Pyr Books in the US.
Buy paperback from Amazon.com

The Sword of Albion, part one of the Sword of Albion series as published May 2010 by Bantam Press in the UK.
Buy paperback from Amazon.co.uk

Destroyer of Worlds, part three of the Kingdom of the Serpent series, published in hardback and trade paperback in July 2009 by Gollancz in the UK.
Read an extract from the book at www.markchadbourn.net
Buy hardback from Amazon.co.uk
Buy paperback from Amazon.co.uk

Lord of Silence, a stand-alone novel, published as a mass-market paperback in July 2009 by Solaris Books in the UK.
Read an extract from the book at www.markchadbourn.net
Buy paperback from Amazon.co.uk

The Burning Man, part two of the Kingdom of the Serpent series, is now available in mass-market paperback from Gollancz in the UK.
Read an extract from the book at www.markchadbourn.net
Buy hardback from Amazon.co.uk
Buy paperback from Amazon.co.uk
Jack of Ravens, part one of the Kingdom of the Serpent series, is now available in mass-market paperback from Gollancz in the UK.
Read an extract from the book at www.markchadbourn.net
Buy hardback from Amazon.co.uk
Buy paperback from Amazon.co.uk
Jack of Ravens is powered by
WordPress :: Entries (RSS) :: Comments (RSS)
All content Copyright Mark Chadbourn, 2006-2008. All Rights Reserved. Template Design & Website Management by DTL
‘But we know don’t we’…ah, when he sings that line, it’s like the sun passing from behind a cloud. I have these Scott albums mostly on vinyl and it’s always an event for me when I bung one on the turntable. It’s astonishing that a man with such a voice, such a talent for writing and such an ear for the best of other writers’ material should actually combine the lot and produce that succession of beautiful albums. It’s a pity about ‘Tilt’ ‘Climate of hunter’ et al though. I’ve never been able to penetrate them and as a result I never play them now. But I’d never get rid of them.
I”d also like to say how perfectly John Walker’s harmonies went with Scott’s lead vocals with the Walker Brothers.
I agree on every front, Clive.