Category: Blog Series Page 92 of 220

BOOK SPOTLIGHT: Malibu Burns by Mark Richardson

I’m very pleased today to welcome and help kick-off The Write Reads Blog Tour for Mark Richardson’s Malibu Burns. I couldn’t fit it into my reading schedule, but if you take a look at the feed for https://twitter.com/WriteReadsTours over the next few days, you’ll see a lot of bloggers who did find the time to write interesting things about it. Still, I wanted to spread the word a bit.

Malibu Buns Tour Banner

Book Details:

Genre: Dystopian Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Next Chapter
Release date: September 29, 2022
Format: Hardcover/Paperback/Ebook
Length: 288 pages
Malibu Burns

About the Book:

Near-future San Francisco is a dark world where reality is changeable and different dimensions overlap.

Teen Malibu Makimura discovers she can feel people’s emotions, and senses an ominous voice growing inside her. She lands a job at a women’s nightclub drawing surrealist caricatures. One night while drawing a portrait, she feels a sinister emotion projected by a woman named Luciana, who invites Malibu to her Presidio Heights mansion.

There, she makes a peculiar request – and Malibu agrees. With each following act the evil inside her grows, and Malibu begins to wonder if she will ever be in control again… or if she even wants to be.

Book Links:

Amazon ~ Goodreads

About the Author:

Mark RichardsonMark Richardson is the author of the novels Malibu BurnsThe Sun Casts No Shadow, and Hunt for the Troll.

His short stories have appeared in numerous crime and literary publications, including HobartFugueSegueCrime FactorySwitchback, and Nth Position.

Born in the Chicago area, he graduated from the University of Iowa, and promptly escaped the midwestern winters for sunny California, first living in Los Angeles and then San Francisco. He spent thirty years working as a writer and marketer for tech companies in Silicon Valley.

Mark now lives in the East Bay with his wife, two children, and the world’s cutest dog. He spends his time writing fiction, obsessing about the Chicago Cubs, attending his daughter’s softball games, and reading stacks of books. He loves genre-bending fiction, especially speculative writing with a noir flavor. In 2019, he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, and supports the Michael J. Fox Foundation.

Author Links:

Website ~ Instagram ~ LinkedIn ~ Goodreads


My thanks to The Write Reads for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

Saturday Miscellany—12/24/22

Several of you are dealing with frigid temperatures, some are dealing with power/heating issues, but hopefully even more of you are in getting an extra day or two off from work and maybe even getting to enjoy some time with friends and family. (Please, please, let the verb be “enjoy” and not something less pleasant.) Anyway, I hope you’re having a good one and are able to stay warm enough for whatever you’ve got going on this weekend.

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet We’re drowning in old books. But getting rid of them is heartbreaking.
bullet Lit Hub has collected the Biggest Literary Stories of the Year: 50 to 31, 30 to 11, and the Biggest 10
bullet How a Great Audiobook Narrator Finds Her Voices
bullet Shop Talk: The Year in Review—I’ve really enjoyed seeing behind-the-scenes with Eli Cranor’s series this year. Here, he looks back on the last year of Shop Talk.
bullet Six Classic Books That Live Up to Their Reputation
bullet We’ve got some great Best of ’22 lists to embiggen your TBR Stacks (I’m taking notes off of these and am starting to worry about the number):
bullet CrimeReads posted 9 different lists this week (so I’m not going to provide individual links), and all of them have some great stuff.
bullet LitReactor has enough staff that it took two posts to get theirs up. The Best Books of 2022 – Part I and The Best Books of 2022 – Part II
bullet These are favorite book characters in 2022, read and published in 2022.—favorite characters might be a better idea than favorite/best books.
bullet Top Five Most Dramatic Twists I Read In 2022—not only a great idea for a list, but the way Stephen writes about them without giving anything away is pretty impressive. Ditto for his Top Five Most Dramatic Twists I Read In 2022.
bullet Favourite Reads of the Year – Stand-alone Edition!—another clever approach
bullet Top 12 Reads of 2022
bullet Weird, wonderful, and under-the-radar books that Jane Alice NEEDS you to read—Not necessarily reads from this year, but some great recommendations from a local bookseller
bullet I Read 365 Books This Year And Here Are My Recommendations For Your Highly Specific Needs—I didn’t want this to get lost in the rest of the list, because…wow.
bullet How Do You Measure a Year in Reading?—Unsurprisingly, this post by Molly Templeton has a lot of wisdom and food for thought.
bullet Let’s Talk About Reviewing—the 1000th post on Queen’s Book Asylum has some good thoughts on reviewing
bullet 10 Fun Ways To Choose Your Next Read—I’ve tried several of these already but looking to use some more of them.
bullet PSA: How To Read 100+ Books A Year—for those who aren’t introspective misanthropes like the Bookstooge, he has some handy tips.
bullet What Challenges are you setting yourself for the New Year?

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Elias, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.

The Friday 56 for 12/23/22: Pet by Akwaeke Emezi

The Friday 56This is a weekly bloghop hosted by Freda’s Voice.

RULES:
The Friday 56 Grab a book, any book.
The Friday 56 Turn to Page 56 or 56% on your ereader. If you have to improvise, that is okay.
The Friday 56 Find a snippet, short and sweet.
The Friday 56 Post it.

from Page 56 (and 57) of:
Pet

Pet by Akwaeke Emezi

He was threaded with nothing but gentleness. Even when he fought, Redemption fought for the beauty of what his body could do, for the frailty of being human, the power and vulnerability tangled up in being flesh. It wasn’t personal; it wasn’t about his ego. It was about being alive. She remembered when he’d explained this to her, when she’d asked him why he loved something so violent.

“I don’t hold violence in my hands,” he’d answered, holding them up in front of his face…She watched as he rotated his wrists to look at his palms and then the backs of his hands, a few nicked scars marking his knuckles.

You fight, she’d said. Of course you hold violence in your hands, she meant.

Redemption heard what she hadn’t said out loud, and shook his head. “Here,” he said, tapping his chest. “Here is where I hold it, and I look at it and I fold it into something aise. Even when I fight, it’s not about letting it out. Especially when I fight.”

WWW Wednesday, December 21, 2022

It’s time for the penultimate WWW Wednesday of 2022!

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading the very charming Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett and am continuing my revisit of InCryptid by listening to Midnight Blue-Light Special by Seanan McGuire, Emily Bauer (Narrator) on audiobook.

Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of FaeriesBlank SpaceMidnight Blue-Light Special

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Akwaeke Emezi’s Pet, which was…odd and powerful. My most recent audiobook was Secrets Typed in Blood by Stephen Spotswood, Kirsten Potter (Narrator) on audio.

PetBlank SpaceSecrets Typed in Blood

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Yes, Chef: A Memoir by Marcus Samuelsson and Veronica Chambers. Assuming I get my post about All These Worlds finished in time, my next audiobook should be Heaven’s River by Dennis E. Taylor, Ray Porter (Narrator) (otherwise, I’m not sure).

Yes, ChefBlank SpaceHeaven's River

What about you?

LITERARY LOCALS: A Q&A About Writing (and Drawing) in Idaho with Jeremy Billups

Literary Locals logo
I’ve got a chat with Children’s Book Writer/Illustrator Jeremy Billups today. I love Jeremy’s stuff—some of his artwork has popped up here over the last year. I have enjoyed and blogged about his three books and am eager to see what’s next from him. But for now, am excited to share this with you. Hope you enjoy!


Before we get into things, why don’t you give the reader a brief introduction to you and your work.
Ok, sure. Let’s see. I’m Jeremy. I live in Boise, Idaho with my family. I’ve written three children’s books so far, Bearded, Bearded Too, and Sea This and Sea That. I’m currently working on two new children’s books that I hope will be out at some point in 2023. I’m also working away on some comics that I’m super excited about. Should I share the titles of the new stuff? Or should I keep them a mystery?

If anyone is interested in buying my books right now, I’ve made it super tricky. I decided to stop selling on Amazon. I took down my personal website and am in the middle of building a new website that will serve as the exclusive home to all my stuff. I’m hoping to launch the new site soon. So, really the only way to buy my books is directly from me, and I’m a terrible salesperson. Haha.

For the announcement of the new site you can follow me on Twitter at @jeremybillups.

You should share the upcoming titles. I won’t publish them if you don’t want me to, but you should share 🙂
Okay! I’m having a hard time keeping it all secret, anyway. I’ve decided to add a third book to the Bearded series. Bearded Tree should be out this upcoming Summer. And, I’ve been trying to finish a Christmas book that I’m currently calling, Caroline, Caroling. I would love for that to be out next October. The comics I’m working on are Tales of the Incredible and Squirrel E. Jones. They’re very different from each other, but both are a lot of fun.

Are you a native Idahoan? What is it about Idaho that keeps you here?
Yep. Born and raised. I grew up in the small town of Weippe in North Central Idaho. Very small town when I lived there and even smaller now. My parents still live there so I still get to visit at least a couple of times a year.

And, I love Idaho and the Treasure Valley. With family and friends here, it’s hard to imagine living anywhere else.

Just to be on the safe side, you want to tell non-Idaho readers how to pronounce Weippe? Am sure growing up that you heard all the jokes… (but probably didn’t make any of them yourself)
Good call! Weippe is pronounced like “We Hype”. I have definitely heard all of the jokes and still do. I’m guilty of making some of my own jokes too. 🙂

Are you tied into some sort of local author/bookish group/culture? If so, tell us about it and how it helps you as an author. If you’re not, is there a reason for it?
Yes and no. I was meeting with one of my friends from college once a month to talk about current projects, critique each other’s work, and motivate each other to keep pushing to get better. That was going really well, until we both had kids. Haha. Now we email back and forth when we can.

I was also in SCBWI (Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators) for a while and participated in a couple of events, but that was hard because at the time I was a member they lumped Southern Idaho in with Salt Lake City and all the really exciting events were down in Utah. Considering the event fees, hotel, gas and travel time – it was hard to get down there. I’m not sure if they’re still lumped together. I should probably check because SCBWI is a great organization.

I guess this is a good time for me to share some news along those lines. With my new website, I’m also launching a Discord server. I’m hoping that it turns into a small online community where people can share, critique, learn, have fun, and ultimately grow creatively. If anyone is interested, the server is already open. Here’s the link: https://discord.gg/9DYb8GWFVr

What kind of events in the area do you attend—either to sell/promote your books or to network with authors? Are there any outside of this area that you hit regularly and wish we had something like it here?
I absolutely love the Boise Comic Arts Festival! It’s always so much fun and such a positive energy. I always walk away from that event recharged and excited to make new stuff. Plus, that’s where we met! I wasn’t able to attend this year because of my day job but I’ll definitely be there next year.

I also enjoy selling at small Holiday Bazaar events at local schools. And, I’ve done a couple local school/library visits. They’ve been good options for children’s books.

I haven’t been to one yet, but there are some great children’s book festivals around the country. I would also love to see a children’s book festival here in the Treasure Valley. Oh man, now you have me pondering whether or not it would be a good idea to start a festival like that here. Should I do that?!

The Boise Comics Art Festival was interesting this year—having it in the Zoo added a nice bit of flair (but the downside was that you had to wander around a lot to see everything, and we were never sure if we had). Are there some sure-fire Bazaar events that authors/readers should check out, or does it vary from event to event, year to year?
I saw some pictures online of this year’s Festival. I’m very bummed I missed the Zoo. I did wonder about the “artist alley” experience. Definitely not the typical approach. I wonder if they’ll have it at the Zoo again next year.

Other than the Boise Comic Arts Festival, it tends to vary from year to year for me. Gem State Comic Con is one that I’ll be checking out in April. If it’s not too late, I should probably look into getting a table there.

I’ll also mention The Cabin (thecabinidaho.org). They have excellent events, activities, and workshops all throughout the year. I think they’re a tremendous local resource for both readers and writers.

Back to your idea of starting a children’s book festival, personally, I’m game for any book festivals I can get to 🙂
Good to know! I’m definitely putting it on my list of things to ponder. I imagine it would be a lot of work to put on, but I think it would be something that could be a lot of fun for years to come!
(you might want to see what Devi Walls said about that last week)

What’s the breakdown of your audience—do you have a strong local base, or are your readers from other parts of the world?
Through the power of Amazon, I definitely have more readers across the nation and world than I do locally. I was pretty intimidated, still am, with selling face-to-face so I thought selling on Amazon would be the best place for me to start. I have no complaints with starting there, but I did finally come to realize the power of local, not just for selling, but for meeting people and growing relationships. I finally started participating in local events a few years ago. I’m so glad I did.

Do you have solid plans (as much as anything can be solidly planned) for expanding locally, or are you more at a “throw it at the wall and see what sticks” point?
My big focus at the moment is to get my website squared away. Once that’s done, I’ll take a fresh look at expanding locally. There are a lot of farmer’s markets here in the valley that I’ve been looking into. I think they could be a really good next step toward growing my local audience.
I think that could work pretty well.

Do you think there are particular challenges or advantages to being a writer in the Treasure Valley? (possibly both)
Compared to where I grew up, there are definitely advantages. Events, activities, resources, and communities of like-minded people with similar aspirations are easy to find here.
Nothing against Weippe, but I bet!

Do you bring Idaho (or some sort of Idaho-sensibility, assuming one exists) to your work? Whether or not anyone else sees it, can you look at some aspect of your writing and think “That’s Idaho” or “I would do ____ differently if I was a Kentuckian or from Illinois?”
So far I’ve been deliberate about leaving Idaho out of my work. But now I’m wondering if that’s the best approach. Have you ever watched a cartoon by the name of Bluey? It’s an amazing show about a family of dogs that live in Australia. The show is made in Australia and is VERY Australian. Watching the show from an outsider’s perspective, I’ve come to really enjoy the little peeks into Australian life and slang. By the way, did you know that Australian slang for toilet is “dunny”? Haha.
That could work really well—assuming there’s a local slang.
Definitely going to explore this. I think it could be a lot of fun.

Is there a book (or two…or 18, if you get really carried away), that embodies Idaho/the Idaho spirit to you?
Growing up here in Idaho, I was introduced pretty early on to the Idaho and Ernest Hemingway connection. That connection led me to reading A Farewell to Arms which was followed up with me reading anything and everything written by Hemingway that I could find. There was something about the unadorned style, subject matter, and time period of his writings that really resonated with me. In a lot of ways, it’s like reading about the romanticized version of Idaho that I have in my head.

Thanks for your time and participation! Hope you enjoyed it!
Thank you for taking the time to chat! It was a lot of fun!


Literary Locals logo

Saturday Miscellany—12/17/22

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Before we turn the page on 2022 Idaho, let’s talk about how books were in the ‘eye of the hurricane’—local public radio looked back at the book-related controversies in the state this year
bullet The Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest “Winners” for 2022—these winners and Dishonorable Mentions are all worth your time, but I’m going to have to insist that you all take a moment to read the Children’s Lit & YA entries.
bullet The Ultimate Guide to 35 Popular Book Genres—I’m not certain that Reader’s Digest can speak that authoritatively on this, but this is pretty solid.
bullet Legally bookish: Reese Witherspoon and the boom in celebrity book clubs
bullet Here are a few more Best of ’22 lists to embiggen your TBR Stacks:
bullet You can sod off, 2022, but leave the books please—from Criminal Minds (the blog, not the CBS show)
bullet Top Five Powerful Books I Read in 2022—an interesting approach to the idea
bullet The 13 Best Literary Adaptations of 2022—from LitHub
bullet 14 Authors Share the Best Books They Read in 2022—from NetGalley’s blog
bullet Operation 2022: Success! (Or Favorite Books From this Year)—from Witty and Sarcastic Book Club (so much temptation!)
bullet The 103 Best Book Covers of 2022—I love this post every year on LitHub, so many pretty pictures…
bullet How to Plan for Your 2023 Reading Challenge—It is the time of year for this project…some good advice from NetGalley’s blog
bullet Self-Education Project Part Two: The Extended Great Books Reading Plan—or you could take this approach…zowie
bullet Speaking of advice here’s some more: Bookish Gift Ideas #1 and Bookish Holiday Gift Ideas—likely too late for Giftmas or whatever you celebrate. But good for the rest of the year, too
bullet 746 Books is 9 today!—746 Books turned 9 this week and Cathy reflects on her Quixotic project.
bullet While I Was Reading announced an end to their well-deserved and understandable hiatus: Welcome Back
bullet QOTD: Do you use bookmarks? I do, just not actual ones. Here are some weird/random things I (and my daughter) use!
bullet 5 reasons why we love morally gray characters and 5 books that feature them

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon (and, for the second week in a row, a couple that I missed recently):
bullet Secrets Typed in Blood by Stephen Spotswood—Pentecost and Parker are hired by a mystery writer to find the killer who keeps lifting their method of killing from her short stories.
bullet Posthumous Education by Drew Hayes—Fred the Vampire Accountant spends a semester as a college professor. Sure, why not? I can see him really enjoying that. I just doubt he’s going to get to spend too much time teaching.
bullet Destructive Reasoning by Scott Meyer—a serial killer targeting actors playing Dr. John Watson. Sounds like a case for the Authorities! (because their funding source is about publicity first and crime-fighting second) I didn’t think we’d get a second novel featuring this team, so this is just gravy to me.

I may not know how to fly but I know how to read, and that's almost the same thing. Gregory Maguire

The Friday 56 for 12/16/22: Sacrifices by Jamie Schultz

The Friday 56This is a weekly bloghop hosted by Freda’s Voice.

RULES:
The Friday 56 Grab a book, any book.
The Friday 56 Turn to Page 56 or 56% on your ereader. If you have to improvise, that is okay.
The Friday 56 Find a snippet, short and sweet.
The Friday 56 Post it.

from Page 56 of:
Sacrifices

Sacrifices by Jamie Schultz

“You know they’re chock-full of demons, right?”

“I don’t know that. This is the twenty-first century. We tend to be extremely careful about calling aberrant behavior demonic possession when it might simply be mental illness.”

“Seriously? Under these circumstances?”

“None of them appear to have any history with the occult, that I can turn up, let alone the kind of lengthy history that results in end-stage possession . . .” Elliot spoke quickly and precisely, dressed it all up with technical-sounding jargon, but a note of uncertainty clung to her voice like a parasite, sucking the life out of it.

A Few Quick Questions with…James T. Lambert

Earlier today, I posted my take on the charming Aether Powered by James T. Lambert, and now I’d like to share this Q&A with you. Lambert got me to work a little harder than most authors do, which was a fun twist for me. Hope you like this Q&A and check out his work! He’ll be back in a week or two for another Literary Local post, too.

The second question and answer are probably technically a spoiler for his novel so you may want to skim/avoid them. But I think we’re both safe enough that it won’t really ruin much for you.


All authors have more ideas running around in their head than they can possibly develop—what was it about this idea that made you commit to writing it? Was there something about it that led it to be the first one you published—is it something as simple as of those you’d finished, it was the most worthy of being polished up, or was it something about that particular story?
So this was my second (and a half) NaNo project. My first had some style problems I wanted to fix and wasn’t making fast progress on, so when someone asked me which of my project was closest to completion, I thought Aether Powered was. Even after finishing some of my other NaNo projects, this one still seemed like it needed the least work to get to publication. After having published Steam Opera and Proxies I think I was wrong and Proxies was probably in better shape, but at the time I was convinced it needed a major rewrite to start in a different spot.

So my first NaNo project was Steam Opera and I attempted to write a sequel about 8 months later. It kind of fell apart between real life drama (a tree crushed both my cars while I was writing a few feet away) and problems with lack of direction in the plot. Steam Opera was a great NaNo idea as it had a specific goal for the plot: Get to the moon. If the characters got to the moon or failed in an interesting way the plot worked. So every decision while writing was ‘what do they do next to get to the moon?’ But Aether Powered was a less clever idea in terms of daily writing. I started with an interesting concept: trunk full of inventions. But every day was ‘what happens next?’ I didn’t have a goal like Steam Opera. But I wanted to succeed at NaNo and get those 50,000 words written, so I stuck to it.

When it comes to a character like Carol—how difficult was it to maintain (and/or arrive at) a believably overbearing girlfriend, without making her into a monster? Is the key in the way you write her, or in how Joseph reacted to her?
At the base she wasn’t that bad a person. She had the assumption that since Joseph owned a house and had a trust fund, he was rich. She just never moved beyond that to realize he was just scraping by. I just kept her focused on ‘I want money’ and always pushing and that gave her some ugly motivation. Also the jealousy and suspicion. I may have gone overboard with the ‘I’ll ruin your dating life’ but maybe she meant it as a joke and it just came out wrong. But with those motivations for acting the way she did, and with Joseph’s easy-going attitude letting him get steamrollered, their relationship was doomed, but not over-the-top unbelievable. People get stuck in bad relationships that aren’t quite bad enough to end. An old friend once said “it may be a cold, wet mudhole, but it’s YOUR cold, wet mudhole.” There’s a certain amount of inertia in most people and overcoming that to get out of a bad situation can be hard. I think Joseph’s reactions to her probably sold it better than anything. He tried to be careful, say the right thing, not make waves, but that just got him in deeper instead of fixing things.

There are several aspects of this book that I’d love to do a deep dive into, but I’m going to keep myself to one other: the Seafair Pirates. They are such a fun group! Is anything about their part of the story (a group like them, the Seafair, anything) based in reality, or is this something you made up en toto? When do we get a novel about them (either as a semi-sequel to Aether Powered, or something unrelated)?
I wish I was clever enough to make them up. Seafair and the Seafair Pirates are totally real. I just lucked into finding the information about them when I needed him to get some help. Here’s the website for the event: https://www.seafair.org/ The Pirates also exist (or did when I wrote the book) and I found news footage of them coming ashore. http://www.seafairpirates.org/

The descriptions of them in costume were from videos and pictures I found online. I read a lot about what they did and tried to incorporate as much as I could, but ended up modeling individuals and group scenes (like the singing) around fan groups I’ve been in. I’ve got a recording of Where the Red Queen Reigns from the group Annwn and I’ve been in Filk circles singing like that at conventions. When I was in my Science Fiction club we had all kinds of interesting people who did interesting things, so I made it a lot like that. Same with the SCA (Society for Creative Anachronism) where you could find one of everything in the groups. Just as examples: Federal radio techs fixing Smoke jumper radios at NIFC (National Interagency Fire Center), Ham radio enthusiasts who dispatched ambulances during power outages, rocket scientists who programed Martian rovers. Those are all people I’ve met through fan stuff.

I’m thinking about a sequel to Aether Powered with another invention as the key point. I’d most likely bring in the pirates again. My current working title is Rogue Wave and would be about the rogue wave phenomenon of Tsunamis. I don’t have much else yet and want to get a solid plot for it before I start. Maybe late in 2023? Depends on all the things, lol.

Who are some of your major influences? (whether or not you think those influences can be seen in your work—you know they’re there)
All my favorite authors are influences, but I never feel like I get enough of them in there. Lois McMaster Bujold, Terry Pratchett, Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, Alan Dean Foster, John M. Ford, Charles Stross, and more.

More personal people would be Troy Lambert (no relation), Danielle Gilbert, David Farland, M. Todd Gallowglas, John M. Olsen, and more.

I learned a lot from the Writing Excuses podcast with Howard Tayler, Dan Wells, Mary Robinette Kowal, and Brandon Sanderson.

You’ve published SF and Steampunk so far (and non-fiction about SF)—are those your genres of choice for writing and reading? Is there a genre you particularly enjoy, but don’t think you could/would want to try—or, given time are you going to get around to them all?
I was a huge SF fan growing up and still am. I used to be a bigger fan of Fantasy too, but am less so now. I like Steampunk, but don’t read it as much as I used to a decade ago. Of course, I’m not reading in general quite as much now as then.

I will probably continue doing SF and Steampunk a lot, but I also like Urban Fantasy and have several short stories I’m planning on getting out that are UF. I’m working on a fantasy as well, so we’ll see how that goes.

I really like humor. I’m a huge Discworld fan and would love to be able to write funny/satirical stuff like that. Or like Keith Laumer’s Retief books (more SF) or Douglas Adam’s Hitchhiker’s books. But I’m having trouble getting into writing it. I’ve got a plot idea for a humorous SF story, but it hasn’t risen to the top of the pile yet.

Let’s play “Online Bookstore Algorithm” (a game I made up for these Q&As). What are 3-5 books whose readers may like Aether Powered?
Ouch, I wish I knew, my advertising might be going better, lol. Seriously though… hmmm, that’s tough.

Flaming Zeppelins. It’s a Steampunk book. More crazy than mine.

City of Saints by DJ Butler. Another Steampunk book set in Utah in the late 1800s.

Rock Band Fights Evil by DJ Butler. A series that is exactly what it says. Again, I wish mine was as creative as this.

I am having some trouble finding books that would have crossover to mine. If you have suggestions, I love to hear it. I don’t seem to be good at that kind of matchup. My first thought when you asked was, Not Dressed by Matthew Hanover—if he was to write contemporary Steampunk, it’d be a lot like it Aether Powered (and Not Dressed is the closest match of his books). While reading the book, I thought of K.R.R. Lockhaven’s The Marauders, the Daughter, and the Dragon more than once (his pirates would love yours—and vice versa).

2022 has been a busy year for you, are you easing up on yourself soon? Can you tell us what’s coming up in ‘23?
I hope not! But didn’t have a great start, getting sick right at the end of NaNo. I’m shooting to keep up a three to four book a year pace, but it’s going to be tougher than it has been since I’m running out of written stuff that just needs rewrites and edits.

I know I’ve got Relics of War coming out in early 23, probably by February (I want it for the LTUE conference in February). Relics of War is a SF story set a few thousand years in the future after a devastating war with rouge AI warships set humanity back. A ship of privateers finds information that might lead to one of the warships from the AI wars, but they aren’t the only ones after it.

I was working on Dead Knowledge until I got sick, so I need to pick that up again and get that ready, hopefully in the Summer. It’s an idea I got when taking a class from Dave Farland where he said that Necromancers were never the good guys. So I have a story where one is. He’s a research necromancer who contacts the dead to answer questions and retrieve lost knowledge. Basically he’s a librarian and the dead are the internet.

I’ve got a bit done on a sequel to Steam Opera which just came out. Shadow Opera is a story of spies and spying. Think a little like Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows. I may get that out next year.

I’ve got a story idea with a couple of scenes written I plan on calling IGLOW: InterGalactic Ladies Of Wrestling. Aliens are kidnapping lady wrestlers and pitting them against alien female wrestlers. I may work on that this coming year.

I’ve got a partially finished story I’m having some trouble with I might work on. Muse asks the question: If the Greek Muses were alive today, what would they be doing? A college student with severe writer’s block finds one playing guitar on a street corner and another holding a cardboard sign: Lost Home, Lost Hope, Please Help.

Oh, nearly forgot. I’ve got six short stories in a connected set I want to polish up and print in thin little booklets. As a group they are called Monster Marshals and they are about marshals working for a secret government organization that polices magic and monsters in our world. One of the stories made it into the Haunted Yuletide anthology. “’Twas the Fight Before Christmas” has two marshals sent to a Reindeer farm in Maine to stop animated snowmen from attacking it.
WOW. I’m tired just reading that—that’s ambitious.

Thanks for your time—and thanks for Aether Powered, I had a lot of fun with it and I hope you have plenty of success with it.


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Aether Powered by James T. Lambert: 21st Century Steampunk

Literary Locals logoI’ve got a fun Q&A with the author, James T. Lambert, coming up in an hour or so—be sure to come back for it!


Aether PoweredAether Powered

by James T. Lambert

DETAILS:
Publisher: Bert Books
Publication Date: January 18, 2022
Format: Paperback
Length: 224 pg.
Read Date: November 30, 2022

What’s Aether Powered About?

I feel like I’m in danger of just going full-bore “here’s everything that happened in the novel” or not really giving you enough to know what the book’s about. Let’s give it the ol’ college try, though.

Joseph is studying Electrical Engineering and is just scraping by—his gig in the bar can pay the bills and come close to treating his girlfriend, Carol, in the manner she is accustomed to. But there’s no wiggle room in his budget—so when he gets an inheritance from his weird uncle, he could really use some money. Instead, he gets an oddly heavy trunk. Which isn’t going to do much for the huge tax bill he just received that’s going to hit his financial house of cards like a bowling ball.

The trunk is full of odd-looking bits and pieces, strange devices, sketches, and notes from a distant relative who’d collaborated with Nicola Tesla. Joseph doesn’t know what to make of them. He plays around with one a little bit and discovers that it seemingly has anti-gravity properties. Anti-gravity? You don’t have to think too hard to realize this could be the solution to his money problems—and a few other problems as well.

But wait…what was that thing Uncle Harry said about “Malevolent powers are at work…would do anything to secure this…”? Maybe Joesph should’ve paid a bit more attention to that because before he can figure out how to use the device to his advantage, someone tries to take it.

Joesph and Carol find themselves on the run and looking for allies they can trust (and end up finding in the least expected places).

Carol

The charitable way of describing Joseph’s girlfriend is that she’s “a real piece of work.” You know that at one point there had to be something between Carol and Joseph beyond the fact that she’s attractive, but they’ve been together long enough that it’s not evident why. The relationship isn’t in a great place, but when Joseph calls for help—she answers.

She’s out for herself at the same time, but she’s there to help, too. She proves to be both resourceful and creative.

I cannot tell you, however, how much time I spent wondering why Joesph was with her. It’s an interesting choice on Lambert’s part because I can’t imagine a lot of readers are going to warm to her for long. A morally gray protagonist, an anti-hero, or that sort of thing is pretty easy to get behind—some readers are drawn to them. But an unlikeable love interest is harder to accept (at least as I’ve been thinking about it since I read the book, maybe I’ll think of exceptions to this later). I think it’s a gutsy move, and I think it pays off.

The Seafair Pirates

On the other hand, you have the Seafair Pirates…these guys are great. There’s never a moment of doubt about what the reader is supposed to think about them, and I can’t believe a reader isn’t gladly going to fall in line.

Without getting into details they’re a bunch of people from a variety of backgrounds and industries in the Seattle area who like to get together, cosplay as pirates, drink a lot, sing pirate songs (they probably would’ve really gotten into the sea shanty craze of a year or so ago), and generally have fun together. A series of events brings Joseph into contact with them and they also end up proving to be a great source of aid to him in his struggles.

I’m not going to say more from a risk of oversharing, but I’d sign up for another book featuring them with or without Joseph.

The Steampunk Science

Most (not all) Steampunk that I’ve read dips a toe into the science, and explains a little bit of what’s going on in their contraptions, but largely, it can be summed up as: there’s a thing and it works. Not unlike the way that Philip Marlowe turns on a lamp or Kinsey Millhone uses a pay phone—we don’t need to know how electricity lights a bulb or how you can deposit coins into a…you know what? Never mind, that might not be the best example anymore.

The point I was trying to make is that Lambert doesn’t get down into the nitty-gritty to give us an explanation for how the devices from the trunk function. There was a part of me that wondered how our Electrical Engineering major was going to explain everything, and I was a little disappointed that he didn’t. But I got over it quickly—it’d have interrupted the flow of the novel, and honestly, I really don’t care. I just want to know that if he flips this switch and turns that dial, things happen. No one wants a Steampunk à la Tom Clancy.

The trunk isn’t big enough to contain too many devices, so this novel is primarily filled with things we all know and use—but we get a little Steampunk mixed in with smartphones and the Internet. Frankly, I love this combination and would gobble up more like it—from Lambert or anyone else.

So, what did I think about Aether Powered?

I don’t know that I’d consider this book a “cozy” of any particular genre. Although I probably should—it delivers the same sense of fun and warmth. Almost immediately, I had this warm attraction toward the book and Joseph—and ultimately, just about everyone in the novel. I don’t know a better way to describe it. There’s been a lot of talk this year about “cozy fantasy,” “hopepunk,” and things along those lines—and I get the same kind of feel from this book.

There’s some good action, some tense moments, and some believably unsavory characters/groups. But most of the characters you spend time with are the kind you want to see succeed and want to spend more time with because you like them. More than that, this is a fun story—it won’t take you long to see the general outline of the book as a whole, you’ll be pretty sure where you’re going to end up at the end. But it’s a fun ride along the way, and that’s the important part.

Also, as I touched on above—Steampunk tech in our world? Why don’t we see more of this? I’m all for full-on Steampunk novels. But a dash of it in a contemporary setting? It’s a great idea. Aether Powered is worth picking up just for the conceit. That Lambert surrounds this conceit with a good protagonist, rollicking supporting characters, and a fun adventure is a great bonus.

Check this out, you’ll be glad you did.


3.5 Stars

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WWW Wednesday, December 14, 2022

So…this week may turn out to be nothing but things I’ve already composed or that I can quickly plug a couple of things into—that brain fog thing is hitting me hard anytime I do something more strenuous than turning a page or pushing a remote button. So, here’s today’s plug ‘n play post.

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading Sacrifices by Jamie Schultz (7 years after I bought it!) and am listening to The Twist of a Knife by Anthony Horowitz, Rory Kinnear (Narrator), the new Hawthorne and Horowitz mystery, on audiobook.

SacrificesBlank SpaceThe Twist of a Knife

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Olivia Blacke’s Vinyl Resting Place, a fun cozy, and Junkyard War by Faith Hunter, Khristine Hvam (Narrator) on audio, which wasn’t cozy at all.

Vinyl Resting PlaceBlank SpaceJunkyard War

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Pet by Akwaeke Emezi—I have no idea what to expect out of this, I am going solely off of a recommendation. My next audiobook should be the third installment in the Pentecost and Parker series, Secrets Typed in Blood by Stephen Spotswood, Kirsten Potter (Narrator).

PetBlank SpaceSecrets Typed in Blood

Hope you’re having a better—and healthier—week. Reading anything good?

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