
Sadly, it simply isn’t possible to read all the books that come my way, but as fantasy is a genre I hardly ever feature, it’s my pleasure to share a New Rock, New Role publication day guest post from Richard Sparks. My thanks to Gaby Jerrard for putting us in touch with one another.
Published today, 12th December 2023, by CAEZIK SF & F New Rock, New Role is available for purchase here.
New Rock, New Role

The perfect blend of the gaming world and epic fantasy.
With millions watching on live stream, Daxx and his teammates Qrysta and Grell win the role-playing Games (RPG) Grand Championship. But winning the game was was a piece of cake compared with what comes next.
Daxx wakes up to find he’s turned into his own avatar and is in the middle of a wilderness he doesn’t recognize. Armed with a crappy sword he has no idea how to use and dressed in beginner-level gear he must figure out how to survive quickly because he can already hear the blood-thirsty howls of wild animals from the jungle that surrounds him.
Thus starts a fantastic epic fantasy adventure. Once the three friends finally find each other they need to puzzle out their new world, gain skills, combat enemies, and make alliances with all kinds of characters and creatures from the different territories of this new world in order to survive.
The heart stopping action is interspersed with humor making it a ridiculously fun and addictive read. Ready Player One meets Lord of the Rings in Disc World.
Grab Your Gaming Groove
A Guest Post by Richard Sparks
Linda has asked me for “a light-hearted explanation why a 62-year-old woman such as herself is missing out by not gaming.”
Here’s what my 78-year-old test reader Barbara Strasen, a painter and multi-media artist, wrote:
I got swept away into the strange, new—but strangely familiar—world of these stories along with its hero. I know nothing about gaming, but I didn’t need to. These books are adventure after escapade, full of twists and turns and surprises, and filled with great visuals. There is plenty of light-hearted fun amid the dangers. The quests and combat-scenes are exciting without being gore-fests. I enjoyed exploring a quasi-historical, mythological time through the eyes of contemporary characters. I loved losing myself in all the magic, mystery and mayhem. I was never bored for one moment.
New Rock New Role grew out of my love of MMORPG’s (Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games), but it’s not about a game. It’s more about my other loves—adventure, fantasy and comedy. One evening, while getting up to mischief with my group in an online RPG, I wondered what it would actually be like to be that guy. My heroic, young battlemage avatar, in that wonderful, magical world that its designers had created for us to explore and experience.
There was only one way to find out.
Write it.
The idea hit me like an anvil falling out of the sky onto the head of Wile E. Coyote. I started writing one summer morning and haven’t stopped since. I’ve now written four books in the New Rock series, which my publisher will be releasing at yearly intervals. I’m currently writing the fifth. I just can’t wait to see what my characters get up to next—where they go, the dangers and problems facing them, the mysteries they uncover, the history and geography and cosmology and mythology and stories, stories, stories of this strange new world that they have found themselves in.
Games are as old as the human race. How do children learn? Through play. How do military strategists plan ahead? By staging elaborate war games. All work and no play? Life never is. We watch and participate in sports, board games and puzzles—both of the indoor kind and outdoor, such as orienteering. Play stimulates the mind, opens up its neglected corners and enriches our lives.
Humdrum those lives of ours can be, IRL (In Real Life). Not online, in an RPG. There, life is far richer and more exciting—and there, in-game, you can be whoever, and whatever you want to be, of any race or gender or species you choose, human or inhuman, Orc or vampire or werewolf. And everyone accepts you just as you are, no questions asked. Unlike passively watching a movie, you’re the hero of your own story, free to explore it as you wish.
Combat is always an option, but you can easily avoid it. You can just wander around fantastical landscapes, or spacescapes, or dreamscapes, off to the edge of the galaxy or back to the dawn of time. You can build a house, or an underground lair, or a mountaintop castle, and invite all your guildies over for a party.
I realized that gamers aren’t all young when one of my Guildmasters, in chat, posted that she was turning eighty-five next week, and wanted to retire—and would anyone want to take over running the guild?
There has been a huge growth in the number of older gamers in recent years. If you still have the yearning for adventure, but perhaps no longer the knees for it: give RPG’s a try. Log on. Build yourself an avatar. Go where your wanderings take you.
T.S. Eliot said “Humankind cannot bear very much reality.” But fantasy—that we can never get enough of. It’s out there in so many great titles, that have communities, and fanbases, and forums. You’ll meet all sorts, some of them annoying trolls, others people you love to hang out with. Take a look at youtube: there are thousands of clips of dozens of games, set in all sorts of worlds. Steampunk Victorian London; mafia and yakuza underworlds; ancient civilisations and interplanetary travel in the distant future. My favourites are the sword-and-sorcery, quasi-medieval worlds, with their monsters and magic, untouched wildernesses and walled cities, castles, towns, taverns, sea ports, deserts—and, of course, delves. Down and down into the darkness, the caves, the dungeons, abandoned mines and buried temples, in search of hidden treasure, or magic artefacts of great power, or lost secrets.
All of which are invariably protected by magic barriers, or guarded by hostile creatures. You might succeed in defeating them, and looting their corpses—or not. In which case, you resurrect back in safety, lick your wounds, gain XP (Experience Points), get better, equip yourself with better gear, and go back and try again.
Give it a go. You never know, you might love it as much as I do.
Or rather, did. Now that I’m deep into writing the New Rock series, I rarely have time to log on to any game.
I’m too busy having my own adventures, with my characters.
You’re welcome to join us. As Barbara says, you don’t need to know anything about gaming. All you need is a taste for adventure, and fun, and fantasy.
Magic is everywhere in this universe of ours, both IRL and in the stories we create for each other. Remember that the first great work in the English language, Beowulf, is an epic fantasy tale. A dragon, a treasure hoard, a monster preying on villagers, a hero who dives to the bottom of a lake to fight its mother to the death…
The sagas; the eddas; the Arabian Nights; the Ramayana; the myths and legends of Greek and Norse gods and heroes, and those of Asia, Africa, the Americas. Fantasy holds up a mirror to reality. When we lose ourselves in it, our imaginations show us far more than our eyes can ever see in the cold light of our everyday existence.
Come on in.
The water’s fine.
Just be sure to keep an eye out for the kraken.
****
Many thanks Richard. Might be time to give the fantasy genre and gaming itself a bit more of a go I think!
Richard also told me ‘If you’re gaming-curious, but don’t know where to start, here are some sites to explore’:
For MMORPG’s in general: https://www.mmorpg.com/
Also Games Radar: https://www.gamesradar.com/best-mmorpg/
For World of Warcraft, one of the biggest and oldest:
https://www.wowhead.com/guide/wowhead-beginner-guides-how-to-play-world-of-warcraft-5331
For Dungeons and Dragons online:
https://ddowiki.com/page/Newbie_guide
To sit back and watch, try Skyrim Granny. Shirley has over 1.2 million subscribers, and has posted over a hundred vlogs of herself (and her avatars) in action:
https://www.youtube.com/@ShirleyCurryTheOlderGamer
Happy gaming!
About Richard Sparks

In 1978 Richard Sparks wrote the Schoolmaster Sketch and gave it to Rowan Atkinson, who premiered it in Having a Ball at Hampstead Theatre. A few months later Rowan performed the sketch in The Secret Policeman’s Ball.
Prior to that, Richard had written four revues at the Edinburgh Fringe: two Oxford Revues (which starred Mel Smith), and two later ones by invitation from veteran Scottish arts impresario Richard Demarco. Later Richard was a writer on Not the Nine O’Clock News and worked on an array of UK TV shows including creating silent comedy The Optimist in 1981 (the first comedy series commissioned for the then-new Channel Four), which ran for two seasons.
After that, Richard’s work became more LA-based and more focused on opera and song writing (lyrics) working closely with composer Lee Holdridge – together they have written several original operas for the Los Angeles Opera.
Richard has also directed Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale, starring Jack Black as the Soldier.
For further information, visit Richard’s website https://richardsparks.com or find him on Instagram and Facebook.