The Top 50 Black Gate Posts in October
With his very first article for Black Gate, Richard C. White shot right to the top of the charts with the most popular article for the month, “World Building 101: The Village.” Here’s a sample:
Just because you have water doesn’t mean you can put any number of people in an area. The Cahokia Mounds in Illinois were believed to have held up to 40,000 people which would have made it the biggest city in North America until the 18th century. However, archeologists now believe the reason that Cahokia was abandoned was not due to warfare but because they had so many people that the water became too polluted to support the population. Even pioneers in the 19th century soon learned you can only dig a well so deep before it doesn’t provide enough water. An overabundance of people/livestock/ irrigation can cause a drought as easily as Mother Nature. So, when planning your village for your story, think about how do your people get their water and how they deal with waste water.
Coming in second was Fletcher Vredenburgh’s look back at one of the most popular fantasy novels of the 20th Century, “You Can’t Go Home Again: The Annotated Sword of Shannara: 35th Anniversary Edition by Terry Brooks.” The third most popular article last month was Derek Kunsken’s interview with Christopher Golden, Co-Author of Joe Golem, Occult Detective.
Rounding out the Top Five for the month were Goth Chick, with her look at Sony Pictures’ Freaks of Nature, and M Harold Page’s catalog of tips for those trying to write a novel this month, “NaNoWriMo is coming!”
The complete list of Top Articles for September follows. Below that, I’ve also broken out the most popular overall articles and blog categories for the month.
The Top 50 Black Gate posts in October were:
- World Building 101: The Village
- You Can’t Go Home Again: The Annotated Sword of Shannara: 35th Anniversary Edition by Terry Brooks
- Talking Over the Drowning City: An Interview with Christopher Golden, Co-Author of Joe Golem, Occult Detective
- Goth Chick News: Sony Dumps Freaks of Nature All Over Us Next Week
- NaNoWriMo is coming!
- Why Novellas? Tor.com‘s Stellar New Fantasy & SF Releases
- Discovering Robert E. Howard: Morgan Holmes on Armies of the Hyborian Age: The Cimmerians
- Try the First Chapter of Swords Versus Tanks 1: “Armored Heroes Clash Across the Centuries!”
- Mindjammer Returns
- The Search for Perry Rhodan 50
- Future Treasures: The Complete Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak, Volumes 1-3
- Take a Peek at The Art of Horror: An Illustrated History
- Vintage Treasures: The Great White Space by Basil Copper
- Armored Rampage!
- The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes: After the King
- Sam Spade and the Pursuit of Empty Dreams
- Win a Copy of Carter & Lovecraft by Jonathan L. Howard
- Things Your Writing Teacher Never Told You: Pro-Tips From Alyssa Wong
- A Gentle Introduction to Unspeakable Horrors: A Picnic at the Mountains of Madness
- How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition
- Future Treasures: She Walks in Shadows, edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Paula R. Stiles
- Quick and Dirty Outlining for NaNoWriMo
- Time Flies: Reflections on Reading Fantasy
- Hey! Let’s Not Get TOO Cozy
- Dr. Strange, Part I: Establishing the Mythos: Master of the Mystic Arts in The Lee-Ditko Era
- Scrolls of Legendry #1 is Your Source for Old-School Fantasy Reviews
- The October Fantasy Magazine Rack
- Vintage Treasures: The Cú Chulainn Novels of Gregory Frost
- Needling at Society’s Wounds: Horror in Pop Culture, From the 1950s to True Detective
- Springald! The Medieval Eighty-Eight
- The Morbidly Beautiful Art of Chris Mars
- Victorian Horror: Rippers Resurrected
- Celebrating the Arrival of Matthew David Surridge’s Reading Strange Matters: Collected Reviews, Vol I
- Comedy in Fantasy: The Ebenezum Trilogy by Craig Shaw Gardner
- Hearing Gulf: A Conversation With Allyson Johnson
- Blogging Sax Rohmer’s The Wrath of Fu Manchu, Part One
- The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes: Tying in the BBC Sherlock Special
- Things Your Writing Teacher Never Told You: Choosing Your Narrative Point of View, Part 2: Who is Your Point of View Character?
- Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1952: A Retro-Review
- Vintage Treasures: The Ballantine Paperbacks of Vincent King
- Cover Reveal: Dark Run by Mike Brooks
- Vintage Treasures: Pamela Sargent’s Women of Wonder
- The Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaklava, October 25, 1854, Part I of II
- Call For Submissions: Mysterion
- New Treasures: The Silent End by Samuel Sattin
- Blogging Sax Rohmer… In the Beginning, Part Six
- Things Your Writing Teacher Never Told You: A Closer Look at Some POV Styles Commonly Used in Fantasy
- October/November 2015 Asimov’s Science Fiction Now on Sale
- New Treasures: The Incorruptibles and Foreign Devils by John Hornor Jacobs
- Halloween Reads: The Best Spooky Short Fiction
There were plenty of older articles popular lat month as well. The dozen most popular blog posts written before October were:
- The 2015 Hugo Shortlist, Short Fiction: A Review by Rich Horton
- AD&D Figurines: Youth In a Box? by Mark Rigney
- The Exploding World of Castles and Crusades by John O’Neill
- Death Knight Love Story: WMA meets WTF by M Harold Page
- Goth Chick News: Getting A-head at Airport Security by Sue Granquist
- A Proposal: An Award for SF Storytelling by Jay Maynard
- Come Into Callahan’s, Said the Spider by Violette Malan
- Out With the Old, In With the New: New Versus Vintage Treasures by John O’Neill
- Conan is My Spirit Guide by M Harold Page
- Art of the Genre: Top 10 Fantasy Artists of the Past 100 Years by Scott Taylor
- My Inspiration: Black Canaan by Elwin Cotman
- Heroic Fantasy with the Sharp Edge of Reality: A Review of The Sacred Band by Janet Morris and Chris Morris by Joe Bonadonna
The top categories last month were:
- Books
- Blog Entry
- Art of the Genre
- Art
- Magazines
- BG Staff
- Comics
- Black Gate Goes to Summer Movies
- Vintage Treasures
- Conan
- Convention Report
- Contest
- Pulp
- Editor’s Blog
- Essays
- Reviews
- Future Treasures
- New Treasures
- Game Reviews
- Discovering Robert E. Howard
The Top 5o Black Gate blog posts in September are here, and you can see all 149 posts we made in the month of October here.
I’ve met a few younger readers who continue to devour the Shannara books. I’m curious what his standing among fans, as opposed to critics, is these days. Do his new books still top the bestseller lists?
I understand his new books do very well, yes. He’s written 23 New York Times bestsellers. His most recent series is the The Defenders of Shannara trilogy:
The High Druid’s Blade (July 8, 2014)
The Darkling Child (June 9, 2015)
The Sorcerer’s Daughter (July 2016)
No idea how they are selling, but I presume they are selling as well as the rest.