sci-fi author, beatmaker

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Flash Book Sale, New Interview, and Beautiful Leia

99 cents today only (Kindle version)

Science fiction deal seekers, today is your day. My debut, four-star-reviewed novel The Sky Woman is available on amazon and elsewhere for 99 cents. Yep, less than a buck. Grab it here (Kindle version). For you whale readers, it’s Book 1 of the Reclaimed Earth series (Book 2 is out next month, and I’m outlining Book 3).

Rethinking Book Marketing, and Some Quotes from Reviewers

A 1970’s artist depiction of a ringstation (from https://settlement.arc.nasa.gov/70sArt/art.html).

Becoming a published science fiction author was a jubilant moment for me, and I coasted on that high for a long time.

But of course everything that goes up must come down. I’ve found my mood and attitude regarding my nascent writing career to be significantly less jubilant now that I’ve struggled with the problem of how to sell more books.

The Guardian Cover Reveal

Yesterday I sent my editor Don D’Auria a very-close-to-final version of the manuscript of The Guardian, sequel to The Sky Woman and Book 2 of the Reclaimed Earth Series. I’ve been working on revisions for the past couple of weeks, and it’s been gratifying to re-immerse myself in the minds and lives of the characters (including Tem, the ten-year-old son of Car-En and Esper, and Umana, aka the Squid Woman, the novel’s archvillain).

Here’s the cover!

You can preorder the book here, or at your local bookstore (most Barnes and Noble locations carry the Flame Tree line). The novel (hopefully) stands on its own merits, regardless if you have read The Sky Woman, so you can jump in wherever.

Please feel free to share the word on social media!

In the year 2737, Earth is mostly depopulated in the wake of a massive supervolcano, but civilization and culture are preserved in vast orbiting ringstations.

Tem, the nine-year-old son of a ringstation anthropologist and a Happdal bow-hunter, wants nothing more than to become a blacksmith like his uncle Trond. But after a rough patch as the only brown-skinned child in the village, his mother Car-En decides that the family should spend some time on the Stanford ringstation. 

Tem gets caught up in the battle against Umana, the tentacle-enhanced ‘Squid Woman’, while protecting a secret that could change the course of humanity and civilization.

The Guardian, the sequel to the The Sky Woman, is a story of colliding worlds and the contested repopulation of a wild Earth.

2018 Awards Eligibility

Nominations are now open for the 2018 Nebula Awards, for SFWA members (including Associate members). This post lists my fiction eligible for the 2018 awards, and includes reading links. If you read and enjoy a story, please consider nominating it (I can’t nominate my own fiction, nor can the publishers).

I’ll write a follow-up post in a few weeks about the fiction I’ll be nominating myself — lots of great choices this year.

2018 Nebula and Hugo Eligible Fiction

Novel category

The Sky Woman (Flame Tree Press)
“wonderfully entertaining debut novel” – Compelling Science Fiction
amazon link
audible link
SFWA member forum link (Ch.1-2)

Novelette category

The Icelandic Cure (Omnidawn)
“a strong, thoughtful story that inspires hope for the future” – Publisher’s Weekly
amazon link
SFWA member forum link

Short Story category

The Equationist (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction)
“emotionally affecting and thought-provoking” – SF Crow’s Nest
SFWA member forum link
Purchase back issue

Targeted Behavior (Compelling Science Fiction)
read online for free

Money in the Tortoise (Intergalactic Medicine Show)
IGMS subscription link
SFWA member forum link

Plastic Eater (sfreader.com)
read online for free

First YouTube Review of The Sky Woman

Enjoyed watching this YouTube review of The Sky Woman. Warning — some spoilers!

You can purchase The Sky Woman on amazon, Audible, or (ideally) request from your local bookstore (distribution is Baker & Taylor).

If you’ve already read the book, I’d be in your debt if you took a minute to leave a brief (or long, if you want) review on amazon, Goodreads, or even YouTube.

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