Il est actuellement en train d'écrire une sequel à son roman de vampires, Redlaw, intitulée Red Eye.
Age Of Aztec est sur le point de sortir, il s'agit du quatrième tome de sa série et qui, comme son nom l'indique, s'intéressera au panthéon aztec.
Il donne également son avis sur le futur de l'édition.
So… the easy one: what’s the future of publishing? How will writers be making a living and publishing in five or ten years? What will readers be reading?
Yeah, you’d like me to say, like Private Frazer, that we’re all doomed, doooomed! But we’re not. E-publishing is definitely the coming thing and will, I imagine, account for the vast majority of book sales in future. The issue of file-sharing is a knotty one. I mean, obviously selling someone else’s work via an unlicensed website and not paying them for it is an infringement of copyright and punishable by law, but that’s not going to deter some people. However, I believe there’s a majority of honest punters out there who don’t mind paying a decent whack for their books, safe in the knowledge that money is going to the creator, because they understand that if the demand for free or ridiculously cheap rip-off stuff continues, the supply will eventually dry up and the medium will die. I also believe – and this is me speaking as someone who refuses to allow an e-reader of any kind anywhere near his house – that ye olde-fashioned paper books will continue to be a viable product and bookstores will continue to be a feature of our high streets. Books have survived everything that’s been thrown at them for hundreds of years, and they are the perfect delivery format for the “software”. So, basically, I’m pretty optimistic. Which, in my experience, is a surefire recipe for disaster.