Author and Scriptwriter

'Among the most important writers of contemporary British horror.' -Ramsey Campbell

Wednesday, 12 November 2025

Interview: Stewart Hotston talks Project Hanuman!

Stewart Hotston, in his own words: "I’m a short and long fiction writer repped by John Baker at Bell Lomax Moreton. I am also one of the co-owners of Flow State Games which runs (among other games) Curious Pastimes, one of the UK’s biggest fest larps with c.1500 players at our main events. I spend a lot of time writing for that and it’s one of my joys in life – I believe that anyone who’s played video games or D&D would love LARP.

My stories are about odd situations that are bigger than the people in them. They’re typically Sci Fi, Fantasy and often quite weird. They’re about changing the world and realising that we can all have a part in that. My non-fiction tends to be about these very same subjects.

Stewart's very kindly agreed to talk to me about his new novel, Project Hanuman, which was released yesterday by Angry Robot. Read on...

1) So, what’s new from you?

Project Hanuman! It’s a new space opera but also a retelling of how Hanuman lost his powers. It’s set within a utopian civilisation called the Arcology who span much of the galaxy but live mostly online. It’s not too much of a spoiler (welcome to chapter 1) to say they get destroyed at the beginning and the rest of the story is about a group of survivors trying to wrestle with what’s happened.

 2) How did it come about?

I’ve been wanting to write a space opera for a long time but I’ve never quite figured out the story. Part of the reason for that is I wanted to bring the experience of a far off galactic civilisation up to date – using the most cutting edge physics. Thing is, there’s a lot of physics out there that most people haven’t ever heard of and much of it is so counter-intuitive that writing about it could feel entirely alienating in a bad way.

After my BFS and Subjective Chaos nominated novella, The Entropy of Loss from NewCon Press, seemed to find a great audience I started to think I had a way forward – which was to concentrate on just how strange the idea of information is within mathematics and modern physics.

3) Tell us about the process of how you created it.

The thing about hard science is that it’s hard. Popular science books have to flatten and simplify it – if for no other reason than the language of these things is mathematics and if you can’t speak that much of what modern physics has to say about the universe is beyond reasonable reach.

You obviously can’t write that on the page and expect anyone to be interested or for it to make for a thrilling story. I can imagine people thinking, oh, this is ‘hard science’ and switching off immediately as it not being for them. That’s the furthest thing from what I want to achieve.

Fortunately for me I’ve been long enthralled by the story of Hanuman, spiritual child of Vayu the wind god. There are many stories about how Hanuman lost his powers but they all centre on someone needing to learn how to control their power – not in the sense of flying better but in the sense of power without control is dangerous to everyone around us.

This was my way in – a fantastic story about a powerful being reduced to nothing and having to learn about responsibility from the ground up.

4) What was your favourite part of the process?

Figuring out the main characters. Prab and Kercher (together with Hanuman). Prab was my everybody, the ordinary person thrust into astonishing events. Kercher’s my reject, the one who is torn about the system they’re supposed to save.  

As always, a great story has to be driven by the characters not the setting.

5) What was the toughest part of it?

Navigating that line between the madness of how modern science describes the universe and creating a story in which everything feels interesting and familiar enough to have you turning the page.

6) Is there a theme running through it?

When big events dwarf us how do we find meaning, how do we make a difference when it feels like we have no power. To be honest, that feels pretty important to me right now.

7) What are you working on now?

I have a bunch of stuff coming! Next year I have a Cold War SF novel and following swiftly on its heels the first of an Epic Fantasy duology set for 2027. Alongside those will also be a light-hearted portal fantasy series also due to launch in 2027.



I'm exhausted just reading that list! Thanks so much for talking to me, Stewart, and here's hoping Project Hanuman is the first of many huge successes!   

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