Steven Brust
Steven Karl Zoltán Brust is an American fantasy and science fiction author of Hungarian descent. He is best known for his series of novels about the assassin Vlad Taltos, one of a disdained minority group of humans living on a world called Dragaera. His recent novels also include The Incrementalists and its sequel The Skill of Our Hands, with co-author Skyler White.
As a drummer and singer-songwriter, Brust has recorded one solo album and two albums as a member of Cats Laughing. Brust also co-wrote songs on two albums recorded in the mid-1990s by the band Boiled in Lead.
Writing career
The Dragaeran books
The Vlad Taltos series, written as high fantasy with a science fiction underpinning, is set on a planet called Dragaera. The events of the series take place in an Empire mostly inhabited and ruled by the Dragaerans, a genetically engineered humanoid species, having characteristics such as greatly extended lifespans and heights averaging about seven feet. Referred to as "elfs" by some humans, they refer to themselves as "human." The Dragaeran Empire controls a region that is "enclouded" by a perpetual overcast that blocks the sun from view.Vlad Taltos is one of the human minority, which exists as a lower class in the Empire. Vlad also practices the human art of witchcraft; "táltos" is Hungarian for a kind of supernatural person in folklore. Though human, he is a citizen of the Empire because his social-climbing father bought a title in one of the less reputable of the 17 Dragaeran Great Houses. The only Great House that sells memberships this way is, not coincidentally, also the one that maintains a criminal organization. Vlad proves surprisingly successful in this organization. Despite being a human and a criminal, he has a number of high-ranking Dragaeran friends, and often gets caught up in important events.
Brust has written 15 published novels in the series, which is proposed to run to nineteen novels – one named for each of the Great Houses, one named for Vlad himself, and a final novel which Brust has said will be titled The Final Contract. The first three novels resemble private-eye detective stories, perhaps the closest being Robert B. Parker's Spenser series. The later novels are more varied than the first three. Though they read like fantasy, there are science-fictional explanations for some things.
Brust has also written another series set in Dragaera, the Khaavren Romances, set centuries before Vlad's time. Since Dragaerans live for thousands of years, many characters appear in both series. It is partly an homage to Alexandre Dumas père's novels about the Three Musketeers, and is five volumes long, following the pattern of Dumas' series. The books are presented as historical novels written by Paarfi of Roundwood, a Dragaeran roughly contemporary with Vlad. Paarfi's old-fashioned, elaborate, and highly verbose writing is explicitly based on Dumas', though with a dialogue style that is, at times, based on Tom Stoppard's wordgames in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead.
The Baron of Magister Valley, an additional Paarfi novel, is modeled after Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo.
The two series are finally brought together in the thirteenth novel in the Vlad series, Tiassa, which can also be viewed as the sixth novel in the Khaavren series. Tiassa comprises what are in effect three related novellas, each told in a different style and connected by a common theme. The first section reads like the first three novels in the series, with a first-person narration by Vlad but including Khaavren's son, Piro; the second section has a different viewpoint character in each of its chapters; and the third section is narrated by Paarfi in the style of the earlier Khaavren Romances, with Khaavren as the viewpoint character and interacting with Vlad.
Short stories
Most of Brust's short stories are set in shared universes. These include Emma Bull's and Will Shetterly's Liavek, Robert Asprin's Thieves' World, Neil Gaiman's Sandman and Terri Windling's Borderland Series.Style and literary theory
Brust was a founding member of a Minnesota-based writers' group called The Scribblies, which included Emma Bull, Pamela Dean, Will Shetterly, Nate Bucklin, Kara Dalkey, and Patricia Wrede. He also was a founding member of the Pre-Joycean Fellowship.He has rejected a distinction between science fiction and fantasy, stating that no belief in such a distinction can withstand an encounter with the writing of Roger Zelazny.
Writing style
There is a certain amount of variation in the writing style amongst the Taltos novels, as well as between Brust's various series. Brust uses a different narrative approach in almost every novel in the Taltos series. Some of these approaches are more purely stylistic and have minor effects on the actual story-telling; some are profound and involve the point of view of characters whom the reader never expected to get to know so well.Further, as the writing of the Taltos novels has spanned over three decades, they have been influenced by events in Brust's own life. A fascination with the Mafia – subsequently brought into a somewhat shocking perspective by the murder of a friend – profoundly influenced his storylines, as did the breakup of his marriage. The events and arguments of his books, especially Teckla, are acknowledged by Brust to be influenced by his lifelong interest in Marxist theory and practice. Brust's parents were activists in the Workers League, the predecessor to the Socialist Equality Party, and he continues to identify as a "Trotskyist sympathizer," linking to the SEP-affiliated World Socialist Web Site on his personal website. He endorsed the SEP's presidential candidates in the 2016 US elections.
Literary theory
In contrast to contemporary academic studies in literature, Brust has put forward what he called "The Cool Stuff Theory of Literature":All literature consists of whatever the writer thinks is cool. The reader will like the book to the degree that he agrees with the writer about what's cool. And that works all the way from the external trappings to the level of metaphor, subtext, and the way one uses words. In other words, I happen not to think that full-plate armor and great big honking greatswords are cool. I don't like 'em. I like cloaks and rapiers. So I write stories with a lot of cloaks and rapiers in 'em, 'cause that's cool. Guys who like military hardware, who think advanced military hardware is cool, are not gonna jump all over my books, because they have other ideas about what's cool.
Brust elaborated, "The novel should be understood as a structure built to accommodate the greatest possible amount of cool stuff."
Motifs
The character Devera, usually a cute brown-eyed girl of about nine, appears as a motif in all of Brust's novels. In the Dragaeran books her name is Devera. She is the daughter of another character and seems to be able to appear anywhere in time and space. In Brust's non-Dragaeran books her appearances are usually brief and not always obvious.Musical recordings and performances
Brust is a singer-songwriter and drummer who has recorded a solo album, and who has played in the Minneapolis-based folk rock band Cats Laughing, and with the Albany Free Traders, and Morrigan.Brust also co-wrote two songs on the 1994 album Antler Dance by the band Boiled in Lead, as well as many of the songs on BiL's 1995 multimedia CD Songs from The Gypsy.
Cats Laughing
Cats Laughing released two albums with Brust as drummer, in 1988 and 1990. Brust also contributed as a songwriter and vocalist. The 1990 album Another Way to Travel features cover art that depicts the band members and a vehicle known as the Catmobile, the band vehicle for Cats Laughing. The car, owned by Brust, was a Cadillac ambulance, painted yellow, light blue, and dark blue, with murals.On April 3, 2015, Brust performed as part of Cats Laughing in a reunion concert at the Minicon 50 science fiction convention in Bloomington, Minnesota. In March 2016, Cats Laughing released a double CD of their 2015 reunion, A Long Time Gone, as well as a DVD by the same title with documentary concert footage.
Solo
A Rose for Iconoclastes, a folk album released in 1993, is Brust's only solo album. The title is a reference to "A Rose for Ecclesiastes", a short story by Brust's literary hero and mentor Roger Zelazny.Twelve of the fourteen songs were written or co-written by Brust. The album was produced by Adam Stemple, a fellow fantasy writer and member of Cats Laughing.
''Songs from The Gypsy'' (1995)
The 1995 enhanced CD Songs from The Gypsy, by the band Boiled in Lead, featured songs written by Brust and Adam Stemple, as well as the full text of Brust's novel The Gypsy.AllMusic reviewer Steven McDonald called Songs from The Gypsy "an example of Brust's serious songwriting working well."
Conversely, a critical review by AllMusic's Roch Parisien emphasized that "Songs from The Gypsy represents a failure of multimedia integration. As an audio CD, the disc serves up ten songs, ranging from acoustic trad to bluesy rockers, that ironically form a less cohesive whole than previous Boiled in Lead releases. The better numbers incorporate Celtic rock with Hungarian, Middle Eastern and other interesting worldbeat influences." Parisien found the album's integration with the novel unsuccessful, in that the novel's 17 chapters were presented as "scrollable text only, which also intersperse some 80 song lyric excerpts that you can play from hot buttons. Annoyingly, you must flip back to a main menu index to move from one chapter to the next." Parisien concluded, "Despite Brust's engrossingly poetic, impressionist story inspired by Hungarian folk tales and revolving around three Gypsy brothers, the project does not overcome the primary limitation of bringing literature to the computer screen, that being that the computer offers an inhospitable environment for viewing literature-length text." The review, written in 1995, predated a wave of popular e-book readers that began to emerge about ten years later.
Other performances
Brust has performed dramatically in several Shockwave Radio Theater productions, notably Closing Ceremonies and PBS Liavek.Award nominations
Brust's short story "When The Bow Breaks" was nominated for the 1999 Nebula Award, although it did not reach the final ballot.Five Hundred Years After was nominated for the 1995 Locus Poll Award. Other novels nominated for various Locus Poll Awards were Brokedown Palace, The Gypsy, Agyar, and Freedom & Necessity.
Dragon was a finalist for the 1999 Minnesota Book Awards in the Fantasy & Science Fiction category. Freedom and Necessity was a 1998 finalist for the same category, while The Phoenix Guards was a finalist in 1992.
Brust discovered in August 2006 that he had made the New York Times extended bestseller list at number 30 with Dzur. He mentioned his ambivalence on this subject online. SciFi Wire posted an interview with Brust after Dzur came out.
Trivia
Book title nicknames
Brust is known for his propensity to give his books alternate titles for his own amusement. These have cropped up in numerous interviews and online forums, starting with "Jarhead" for Jhereg. Examples include:- Jarhead
- The Rain in Spain
- Yentl
- Ripple
- Tacky
- Crosby, Stills, and Nash
- Milquetoast
- Shit Happens
- Tucson
- The Kleenex Guards
- Aw, Gee
- Urethra
- Five Hundred Beers After
- Porker
- Drag Queen
- Is Ole
- The Laughs of the Fred
- The Whore of Castle Smack
- Send in the Toad
- Stir
- Gigolo
- My Own Kind of Whedon
- Your Itch
- Three Asses/Hadassah
- Spit
- Good Goys
- Barista
Dragaera
There are two series set in the world of Dragaera, namely The Khaavren Romances and the Vlad Taltos novels. They are set in different periods in the world, but some characters are common to both series.Vlad Taltos
There are currently 15 novels in the series, with a total of 19 planned. The planned novels will be named after the remaining Dragaeran Great Houses in undetermined order, then concluding book The Final Contract.- Jhereg
- Yendi
- Teckla
- Taltos
- Phoenix
- Athyra
- Orca
- Dragon
- Issola
- Dzur
- Jhegaala
- Iorich
- Tiassa
- Hawk
- Vallista
- Jhereg, prologue
- Taltos
- Dragon, main chapters
- Yendi
- Dragon, interludes
- Tiassa, section 1
- Jhereg, main chapters
- Teckla
- Phoenix
- Jhegaala
- Athyra
- Orca
- Issola
- Dzur
- Tiassa, section 2
- Iorich
- Tiassa, section 3
- Vallista
- Hawk
- The Book of Jhereg
- The Book of Taltos
- The Book of Athyra
- Dragon & Issola
- The Book of Dragon
- The Book of Dzur
Historical romances
- The Khaavren Romances consist of three works, published as five books. The third and longest work, Paarfi's account of the Interregnum titled The Viscount of Adrilankha, was published in three volumes as individually-titled books.
- The Baron of Magister Valley – a standalone Paarfi novel
Other Dragaera novels
- Brokedown Palace
Dragaera short stories
- "A Dream of Passion" – published by the Ad Astra science fiction convention in its 1986 chapbook
- "Klava with Honey" – a prologue to Dzur, published by the Buffalo Fantasy League in EerieCon Chapbook #4
- "The Desecrator" – published online by Tor Books
The Incrementalists
Novels
- The Incrementalists – with Skyler White
- The Skill of Our Hands – with Skyler White
Short stories
- "Fireworks in the Rain" – short story, published online by Tor Books
- "Strongest Conjuration" – novelette, set directly after the events of The Incrementalists, published online by Tor Books
- "Playing God" – short story, an Incrementalists/Francis Sandow crossover, in Shadows & Reflections: A Roger Zelazny Tribute Anthology
Other novels
- To Reign in Hell
- The Sun, the Moon, and the Stars
- Cowboy Feng's Space Bar and Grille
- The Gypsy – with Megan Lindholm
- Agyar
- Freedom & Necessity – with Emma Bull
- My Own Kind of Freedom – unauthorized tie-in novel based on the TV series Firefly
- Good Guys
Other short stories
- "An Act of Contrition" in Liavek
- "An Act of Trust" in Liavek: The Players of Luck
- "An Act of Mercy" in Liavek: Wizard's Row
- "An Act of Love" in Liavek: Spells of Binding
- "Csucskári" in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: First Annual Collection
- "A Hot Night at Cheeky's" in Liavek: Festival Week
- "Looking Forward: Excerpt from Athyra" in Amazing Stories, March 1993
- "Attention Shoppers" in Xanadu
- "Abduction from the Harem" in Timewalker Issue 14
- "Drift" in Space Opera
- "Valóság and Élet" in Sandman: Book of Dreams
- "Calling Pittsburgh" in Lord of the Fantastic: Stories in Honor of Roger Zelazny
- "When the Bow Breaks" in The Essential Bordertown
- "The Man From Shemhaza" in Thieves' World: Enemies of Fortune, reprinted in Year's Best Fantasy 5
- "Chapter One" in EerieCon Chapbook #6 for the convention EerieCon
- "Bluff"
- "Mira" in Sword and Sorceress XXV
- "Playing God" in Shadows & Reflections: A Roger Zelazny Tribute Anthology
- "Smith's Point" in DreamForge Magazine
Introductions by Brust
- In 1987, Tor Books published the gamebook Dzurlord . Brust wrote the introduction for this book, which introduced readers to the world of Dragaera and its inhabitants.
- Tor also published The Three Musketeers in paperback in 1994. Brust introduced the edition, saying that this translation was his favorite.
- Brust contributed the introduction for Manna from Heaven. Wildside Press published this collection of stories from Roger Zelazny in 2003.