J.D. Moyer

sci-fi author, beatmaker

The Guardian Goodreads Book Giveaway, Awards Eligibility

If you’re interested in my new anthropological science novel The Guardian but you don’t want to pay for it, you can either check out a copy from your local library, or you can enter this Goodreads giveaway contest to win your own paperback copy:

Goodreads Book Giveaway

The Guardian by J.D. Moyer

The Guardian

by J.D. Moyer

Giveaway ends November 30, 2019.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter Giveaway

Good luck, I hope you win! Please share with your science fiction loving friends.

Awards Eligibility

In 2019 almost all my writing efforts were dedicated to my new novel The Savior Virus (currently in first draft form). That meant I didn’t work much on much new short fiction, though I did start a Duotrope subscription in August, which got me back into the habit of submitting stories. I went back to some older pieces with fresh eyes and made substantial revisions (and changed the titles of a couple stories). That resulted in some new sales, the first of which was just published in Into the Ruins.

So my 2019 awards eligibility list is very short:

Short Story
“The Sacramento Sea” – Into the Ruins #14, November
SFWA members can read the full story here

Novel
“The Guardian” – Flame Tree Press, September
Available at your local library, your local bookstore, via the contest mentioned above, or here

SFWA members and WorldCon attendees, thank you for your consideration!

How and When to Use Negative Visualization

I don’t enjoy worrying or ruminating. Excessive rumination is linked to depression, a loss of hope, and a more negative interpretation of events and experiences. When I find myself obsessing on a negative possibility, I do what I can to break out of that thought pattern. Exercise or sports usually helps, as does any kind of physical activity that demands my full attention. Writing and journaling can help to crystallize or express my thoughts, and to gain perspective.

There are advantages to optimism. Optimists tend to live longer and have better health outcomes when they get sick. They may be more successful in their careers and have better financial health. I’m usually optimistic, but I have plenty of worries and anxieties as well. I also wonder how much I should try to be optimistic and not worry about various possible calamities, and in what circumstances it makes sense to consider worst case scenarios and other poor outcomes.

I usually try to imagine best case scenarios. Even though those best case scenarios are unlikely to materialize, imagining them help keep me oriented in the direction I want to be going.

But I think there is a place for imagining bad possibilities in detail.

The Guardian Book Launch, and a New Published Story

Thank you so much to everyone who came out to East Bay Booksellers in Oakland for the launch of The Guardian! We had a full house, the books sold out, and I think I’m getting marginally better at reading my own work (despite some minor microphone malfunctions). Wine, cookies, and pretzels were consumed, books were signed in gold sharpie, and — as far as I could tell — a good time was had by all.

Reviews so far are great, at least in terms of average ratings. I could definitely use more reviews; as of today I only have nine reviews on Goodreads and three reviews on Amazon. If you’ve read The Guardian please take a second or a few minutes to leave a rating or review (both appreciated, including short one sentence reviews). As I’ve acknowledged before, writing reviews is much harder than it feels like it should be, so I will definitely owe you one if you write me a review (feel free to cash in if you need me to water your cat or walk your plant while you’re on vacation).

Reclaimed Earth

The Guardian is exactly what I’m hoping for when I pick up a sci-fi novel – richly descriptive worlds; the scientific elements are advanced and incredible but written in such a way to be plausible and the interesting, generally sympathetic cast of characters are thrust into situations which are exciting and thought-provoking. – Karen Cole (Hair Past a Freckle Book Blog)

If  you’re not familiar with my Reclaimed Earth science fiction series, here’s a blurb to give you taste of what’s going on:

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.

I’ve had some generous reviews from book bloggers, including Karen Cole who writes: “The Guardian is exactly what I’m hoping for when I pick up a sci-fi novel – richly descriptive worlds; the scientific elements are advanced and incredible but written in such a way to be plausible and the interesting, generally sympathetic cast of characters are thrust into situations which are exciting and thought-provoking.”

The Sacramento Sea

My first ever cli-fi story The Sacramento Sea was just published in Issue #14 of Into the Ruins, a deindustrial/post-industrial/economic collapse magazine edited by Joel Caris. Whether you’re an optimist or a pessimist regarding the fate of humanity (or the fate of humanity’s ongoing “civilization” experiment) it’s useful to imagine collapse scenarios. It’s useful because they are continuously happening (Puerto Rico, Haiti, the U.S. Executive Branch), even if your part of the world is peaceful and overflowing with abundance. My short story imagines a devastating, isolating local environmental collapse in California as the rest of the world continues business as usual. That seems to be the way these things often play out. Of course global economic and/or environmental collapse is possible (and some would say probable), but localized collapses are far more common.

The California inland sea also makes an appearance in my drafted-but-not-yet-finished novel The Savior Virus, and though the short story and the novel don’t share any characters, both works take place in the same fictional world. The levy system that prevents flooding of the bay delta during surges is somewhat precariously maintained, and sustained sea level rise of just a few feet could turn the Sacramento Valley into an inland sea, just as it was during the Great Flood of 1862, and before that as described by Native Americans.

Upcoming Posts
  • The Benefits of Negative Visualization
  • Shared Location Tracking Among Bay Area 11-Year-Olds as a Security Measure
  • Gaming Update

 

Imagining Best Case Scenarios

I’ve been experimenting with two complementary techniques for influencing the quality and direction of my life. In this post I’ll write about one of those methods: imagining and describing best case scenarios.

While it’s easy and natural for most people to imagine and try to mentally prepare for worst case “what if” scenarios, it’s less intuitive to imagine what life would be like if everything went amazingly well.

How It Feels to be a Novelist

With the pending release of my second novel this week (The Guardian comes out Sep. 26th on Flame Tree Press), my emotions are in turmoil. I’ll just go through them, as a way of clearing my head, and maybe my emotional laundry list will offer insight to those of you also on the writing path, or entertain those of you who enjoy knowing how the sausage is made.

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