Calling All Writers!

Here is your chance to get into an anthology and help a person!! Ms. Karen DeLabar is a writer and a young woman who was recently stricken with Toxic Shock Syndrome. To help offset her medical expenses, friends are putting together a short story anthology called The Orange Karen Tribute Anthology. If your piece is selected, you don’t get paid, but the karma points are precious. I have already submitted a piece for consideration:) How’s about you?

MGP


Literary News

I finally got to press my sequel to my urban metaphysical novel Coffee with Thunderbolts. I wrote A Star Rose in Cerami during the 2011 NaNoWriMo. The characters from my first book are back and off to the wilds of Sicily to fix a “tiny” metaphysical problem that occurred after their experience of the Mayan Doomsday of 12/21/12. You can find all of my books on my Author Spotlight on Lulu.

I did write another novel for the 2012 NaNoWriMo. It is a young adult book, and it is a “disguised” science fiction tale. I will give updates and details as I get closer to a publication date.

Over the summer, I participated in the LitChat Salon, and I had my very short fantasy story, A Feather for the Devil, critiqued. I had so much fun doing this that I hope to take the character in that story and work up a novel at some point in time.

For those of you aspiring (and perspiring) writers out there, I recommend #litchat on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 4 pm to 5 pm EST on Twitter. On Monday nights from 9 pm to 10 pm EST there is also #writersroad. For all of us who travel the indie path, on Tuesday evenings at 9 pm EST there is #indiechat. For SF in particular, check out #scifichat on Fridays from 2 pm to 4 pm EST. You will not only have fun, but you will learn a great deal on the subject of writing and publishing.

MGP


Halloween Scary Story from Neil Gaiman

In the spirit of Halloween, author Neil Gaiman has recorded a reading of a short story which you can download for free at audible.com.  It’s called “Click-Clack the Rattle Bag”, and you can only download it until October 31st.  For each download from the site, audible.com will make a donation to donorschoose.org or booktrust.

You can go to Neil Gaiman’s journal (journal.neilgaiman.com) for more information.  The complete link to his post about the story is http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2012/10/something-really-cool-is-about-to-happen.html.

Cover image for Click-Clack the Rattle Bag

Neil asks that you wait to listen to it until after dark

 


The Course of Empire

This month on Fast-Forward TV, I reviewed The Crucible of Empire by Eric Flint and K. D. Wentworth, a wonderful military science fiction work with elements of first contact and adventure.  What you might not know is this is the second book of the Jao Empire Series from Baen Books.  The first book, The Course of Empire, is equally good and can be enjoyed even if you have read The Crucible of Empire already.  This is advice I took myself, as that is the order in which I read the books: it is like visiting friends and learning their past.

The book opens twenty years after the Jao have conquered Earth, turning the human population into servants at best.  This was not an easy conquest, with the destruction of Chicago and New Orleans being some of the cost.  The biggest difficulty the Jao have is trying to deal with how humans think.  A great example is that most the Jao do not see any need for sports, art, gambling or other recreations that “produced nothing beneficial, nor taught or honed any useful military skill”.  This caused a major incident when the Jao forbid an expedition to Mount Everest and when the humans went ahead anyway: the Jao destroyed them and the entire mountain.  Nor are humans any better at understanding their conquerors, as the Jao language is very depended on body positions, including some that use their flexible ears, which is not only difficult for humans to interpret, but impossible for them to replicate.  None of this is made better by the very hostile attitude the Jao Governor, Oppuk krinnu ava Narvo, has toward this planet and all its inhabitants.

Into this very tense environment a new element is added: the arrival of Allie krinnu ava Plutharak as the new commander of ground forces is making waves through the Jao hierarchy.  For one, he is a member of a different kochan, or clan, than the leaders of the conquest, and these two kochan have not worked well together in the past.  That he is sent to bring change is a given, but even Allie is not sure how or for what purpose.  He finds many surprises in front of him, not only from the alien humans, but from his own people, some of whom have gone native enough to even begin enjoying music and other human recreations.  To try and understand the native race, Allie decides to add some humans to his personal service, basically making them his aides, but closer to a feudal lord and vassal relationship.  One such human, Gabe Tully, is less than pleased as he is actually a member of the human resistance forces.  He becomes much more like a prisoner after his first attempt to escape, and Yaut, who is Allie’s fraghta or senior advisor, starts using Wren-Fa or body learning on Tully.  The Jao believe Wren-Fa puts lessons “in the brain too deep for conscious understanding”; from Tully’s viewpoint, it causes a lot of bruises and pain. This is soft training, however, compared to what Caitlin Stockwell has received over the years.  Daughter of the reluctant human President of North America, she is a hostage to his good behavior and since the age of three, has had a Jao bodyguard who seems to spend more time looking for reasons to discipline her than protect her.  Caitlin is also one of the few humans who understands the Jao body language, making her a pawn for the increasing insane Oppuk, but to what end?

As in the latter book, there are too many characters for me to describe in this review, but none are window dressing.  This is a complex work that deals with many issues, including human-alien communication and understanding, all amidst a swirling political situation that will lead to someone dying.  Oh, and did I mention that Terra was conquered because the Jao believe their enemy the Ekhat will be visiting soon?  If you have read the later work, you will know what a terror this is, but for the humans in this volume, most think it is a fairy tale excuse used to take over the planet.

I can give plenty of reasons for reading this book, including a great story, wonderful characters and some intriguing human-alien interactions.  Another good reason is if you have an ereader, you can download the book from the Baen Free Library for … free!  Whether you read this book first or have already sampled the second work, you will find The Course of Empire a terrific book.


Farpoint

I will be traveling this coming week to Farpoint in Timonium, Maryland. This Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Super Hero and Media convention has been around since 1993. It offers a wide variety of programming and fun. It runs from 2/17/2012 to 2/19/2012.

As I will be an author guest at this convention (Hey, I did write a 2012 book, Coffee with Thunderbolts), this will be a new experience for me. I will be on 4 panels:

1.What to Do with a Finished Novel . I keep hearing the tune What Do You Do with a Drunken Sailor. Anyone who has done NaNoWriMo knows that the 50,000 word first draft of one’s novel is a drunken creature that needs to be sobered up into something “respectable”.

2. Self-Publishing. Or as I would say: How I Got This Grey Hair!

3. Thunder, Thunder, ThunderCats Ho! Otherwise known as: Marianne Plays the Devil’s Advocate (I am more negative than positive toward the new series. Question is: Do I survive stoning?)

4. NaNoWriMo — National Novel Writing Month. For myself, I would howl: Been There! Done That! Lost Mind (Again)!

Come on out for a great weekend in the wilds of Maryland. And if you see a puzzled, rookie self-published author wandering the corridors looking for her next panel, please don’t point her toward the exit.

MGP


What I Just Read – Mike Z

I just finished Zoo City by Lauren Beukes who is from South Africa. A fascinating book. It was a kind of an alternate history, hard-boiled detective, magical, strange combination of a book.


It seems that when you do something really bad (being the cause of someone’s death will do it), you get an animal familiar that stays with you, you are animalled. In fact if your animal gets too far away you go through debilitating anxiety. If it dies, then you die a nasty death where shadows come together and tear you apart. Zizi, the main character, has a sloth.
Oh yeah, when you get animalled, you get some kind of psychic power. Zizs’s is that she can find things that are lost. She sees everyone with threads tying them to whatever they feel they have lost.
This new version of our world (it takes place in an alternate version of today), particularly Johannesburg, is a very good bit of worldbuilding as the social repercussions are explored in the book.

Due to complicated circumstances involving Zizi’s debt to a drug dealer that she is paying off by her involvement in ’419′ scams, Zizi takes on a missing persons case involving a pop twin singing duo. This, in classic hard-boiled tradition, leads her into many more privileged parts of Jo-burg society.
It’s a really cool book (it won the 2011 World Fantasy Award among others) and hit a number of my hot buttons for the kinds of things I like to read. I’ve already gotten her first novel, Moxyland, on my Nook.


National Novel Writing Month 2011

It is almost that time for National Novel Writing Month, which begins on November 1, 2011. We all have at least one novel in us, so give it a try. It is a lot of fun, and a transforming experience.

Last year for NaNoWriMo 2010, I wrote the novel Coffee with Thunderbolts, and published it. The novel is in the genre of urban metaphysical, or paranormal, depending on your point of view, and tackles the infamous Mayan calendar rollover date of December 21, 2012. It is a crazy ride. The book is available from Lulu, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other fine on-line booksellers. Click on the title link above, and you can read a two chapter preview to see if it is your cup of Mayan coffee.

For this year’s NaNoWriMo, I will be doing a sequel to this book. :) You can follow my daily progress on my blog The Star the Tiger Follows.

So, come and join in the November madness of NaNoWriMo 2011! Get ready to sharpen your pencils and write!!

MGP


All About Emily, by Connie Willis

I just read “All About Emily”, this year’s Christmas story by Connie Willis. It is in the December 2011 issue of Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine.Cover of December 2011 Asimov's Science Fiction magazine

It’s been a couple of years since Connie has had a Christmas story published, so I was looking forward to it, and wasn’t disappointed.  It’s just what I have come to expect from her Christmas tales – light and humorous, with lots of classic movie and theatre references – and little notes about what humanity can be at its best (and worst) tucked in for good measure.

The story is told from the point of view of Claire Havilland, an aging, somewhat cynical Broadway star.  Claire is, unbeknownst to her, embarking on a little voyage of self-discovery, courtesy of the media campaign surrounding some new technological gadgetry.  To find out more than that, you need to read the story…

While there isn’t much science fictional heavy lifting happening in this story, it is entertaining and fun.  So, if you’re in the mood for some robots, Broadway, and Holiday atmosphere, you should give “All About Emily” a try.