N.B.: A prequel set a millennium before The Dragonbone Chair and previously known under the working title The Shadow of Things to Come[2]
The Splintered Sun (forthcoming)
N.B.: A prequel following the adventures of Flann Alderwood and his band of misfit rebels in one of Osten Ard’s oldest and strangest cities, Crannhyr, during the pre–Dragonbone Chair history of Hernystir and Erkynland.
Similar to the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series that was initially intended to be a trilogy but became a tetralogy instead, Book 3 became so lengthy that it was not possible to be published in one volume.
Ordinary Farm series
Young adult series, written with Deborah Beale (his wife)
The Dragons of Ordinary Farm (2009)
The Secrets of Ordinary Farm (2011)
The Heirs of Ordinary Farm (work-title, forthcoming)
Rite: Short Work (2008) Subterranean Press/Far Territories. Reprint of the limited hc edition without the non-fiction pieces. The reprint only contains the short stories.
A Stark and Wormy Knight (2011) Beale-Williams Enterprise. And ebook original that contains new pieces of short fiction. Edited by Deborah Beale and sold exclusively by Amazon.com.
"A Stark and Wormy Knight" (2012) Subterranean Press
The Very Best of Tad Williams. Forthcoming career retrospective collection, featuring 16 stories and one screenplay.
Short Fiction. Williams has published many works of short fiction, beginning with “Child of an Ancient City” in Weird Tales, Fall 1988 (expanded to book length in 1992), and continuing through 2013 with “The Boy Detective of Oz: An Otherland Story” in the anthology Oz Reimagined: New Tales from The Emerald City and Beyond from editors John Joseph Adams and Douglas Cohen; “The Old Scale Game” in the anthology Unfettered from editor Shawn Speakman; and Diary Of A Dragon, a limited edition chapbook from Subterranean Press.[12] Williams’s short fiction has been collected in RITE: Short Work (2006),[13]A Stark and Wormy Knight (2012),[14] and The Very Best of Tad Williams (2014).[15] His short story “The Burning Man” was included in a graphic novel omnibus, The Wood Boy—The Burning Man, (with Raymond Feist) from the Dabel Brothers in 2005.[16]
Screenplays. Two television ideas, both unproduced, are included in RITE: Short Work: two episodes of “THE CLOAK” and “DOGS VERSUS THE WORLD.”[13] The screenplay, “BLACK SUNSHINE,” is included in A Stark and Wormy Knight.[14]
Comics
Williams’s first comic book series was Mirrorworld: Rain published in 1997. Only two were issued: Number 1 (the premier issue, February 1997) and Number 0 (April 1997), before the publisher Tekno Comix went out of business.[17] In 2006 Williams wrote The Next, a six issue miniseries for DC Comics featuring art by Dietrich Smith (Aquaman, Outsiders) and Walden Wong (Day of Vengeance).[18] In 2007, Tad wrote a one-shot issue for DC Comics’ Helmet of FateLimited series: The Helmet Of Fate: Ibis The Invincible #1 (March 2007) featuring art by Phil Winslade (The Monolith).[19] Tad continued writing for DC with issues 50 through 57 of Aquaman: Sword Of Atlantis, teamed with artists Shawn McManus (The Sandman, Shadowpact) and Walden Wong (The Creeper, The Next).[20] His proposal, Bad Guy Factory, for a series “based on the idea that all those supervillains had to get their training and equipment somewhere” is included in the collection A Stark and Wormy Knight.[14]
Maps and illustrations
Williams drew the maps included in his books, and his original illustrations are included in the first world edition of Caliban's Hour.[12][21]
In addition to writing Introductions, Appendices, Synopses, Forewords, Afterwords, and Author’s Notes for his own books and stories, Williams’s non-fiction includes introductions for other books, essays, letters, and toastmaster speeches.[12]
Otherland is in development as an MMORPG. Production is currently relocating to the northern US.[23]
On August 8, 2020, Warner Bros. purchased the film rights to the Memory, Sorrow and Thorn book trilogy and production is currently in the developmental planning stages.