

Tamsyn Muir said things so nice about it that I most definitely did not cry a little bit and then cry a whole lot. It went on to win Best Novel at the 2020 Sir Julius Vogel Awards at Worldcon 78, and got picked up by Saga Press for a June 2022 trad pub re-launch. I self-published my debut The Dawnhounds in November 2019. At his blog The Understatesmen, Stronach discusses the changes made for the new edition, including expanding it by 30,000 words.Īfter almost a decade of writing short fiction ( some of which you can find on this very site) in secret underground full-contact tournaments, in late 2017 I sat down with an old scrapped novel draft and decided to see whether I could make something of it. The book was picked up by Saga Press and published last year. Octavia Cade said it was “Ankh-Morpork meets Ambergris… If you like spores, and you like the City Watch, you’ll like this.” It made a significant splash in a self-published edition that appeared in 2019. The Dawnhounds has a fascinating history.

Some of my Worldcon 2022 haul (minus all the paperbacks ’cause they took up too much room) Tamsyn Muir says it’s “Part police procedural, part queer fever dream, and part love letter to a city that doesn’t exist.” One of them was The Dawnhounds, an unusual (to say the least) debut novel by Sascha Stronach, a Māori-inspired fantasy about a murdered police officer brought back to life with a mysterious new power, and tasked with protecting her city from an insidious evil. I came away with a number of delightful finds (see the pic below for the bulk of my haul). But it’s still nice to walk the aisles of a major Dealers Room, like the one at Worldcon here in Chicago last fall. Cover by Bo Mooreīetween online sources like Amazon and my bi-weekly trips to Barnes & Noble in nearby Geneva, IL, my book needs are generally well met. The Dawnhounds (Saga Press, June 14, 2022).
