A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #6

A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #6

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In this issue: Out of Due Season Information, A Word about the Sequel, New Posts, An Indie Author Program Review Selection (a review).

Get Out of Due Season at the Lowest Price

Out of Due Season: The First Transit was released on February 8, 2022 and will remain $0.99 through February 14th. Don’t miss out on this deal and get it now before the price goes back up!

What if humanity had a second chance?

On a June afternoon, a body is discovered floating in a remote lake in northwestern Washington. When a recovery team attempts to retrieve it, they make a shocking discovery: 311 other bodies lie under the water, all members of a previously unknown religious cult. However, what appears to be a tragedy of immense proportions is only the beginning.

When a few relatives and friends of the victims discover inconsistencies in the stories, a small group bands together to learn the truth. As government agencies apply pressure for reasons unknown and civil unrest in the country makes communication and movement difficult, this tiny yet determined team unravels what may be the greatest event in recent—if not all—human history.

Something epic is about to happen in that remote lake, and as competing sides inch ever closer to the truth, the last pieces of the puzzle are revealed.

The First Transit is for those who follow the rules, while disaster awaits everyone else.

You can read excerpts here

As I mentioned, this book is the first in a series called Transit. The sequel is expected in mid-2022 with the third shortly thereafter. In sum, there are eight books scheduled! This is a whirlwind ride that ultimately asks the question:

Would humanity’s sociological journey look the same if it had a chance to start over?

If you like generational stories or are a fan of science fiction epic series such as Dune or Foundation, Transit is for you! Get your copy today!


A Word about the Sequel

What? I’m already talking about the sequel when the first book has only been out a week?

Yes!

While I work on the third sequel in the Transit series, you’ll be excited to know that the second book, Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or the Second Transit is now available for preorder from Amazon. The preorder price is only $0.99, and like Out of Due Season: The First Transit, this low price won’t last long.

Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or the Second Transit is coming in July!


New Posts

  • New blog articles:
    • Religiosity in Fiction
      • Religiosity in fiction covers a broad area. Religion can act as both antagonist & protagonist bringing a different level of realism to the sci-fi thriller reading experience.
    • Research: Some Odd Findings
      • I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve looked up how to [redacted] or fit a [redacted] into a [redacted]. Still, though, authors do look up some rather odd things.

An Indie Author Program Review Selection

Gathering of the Four: Book One of the Serrulata Saga

In 1997, I remember standing outside one of my first apartments and looking up at Comet Hale-Bopp. Little did I know at the time that the comet–with one blue tail and one yellow–would play a part in the demise of a cult named Heaven’s Gate which I have since read about and studied ad nauseum. I recall thinking to myself at the time: “Self, what would life on Earth be like when the comet returns to the solar system in 4385?”

In the Gathering of the Four: Book One of the Serrulata Saga by A.E. Bennett, we are given one possible version, and it is one that I would not have guessed. Rather than some idyllic, technologically advanced future with flying cars and robots, the world of 4385 (at least within this first book in the series) is a medieval one that reminded me both of Game of Thrones with its various families and any other book set in pre-Renaissance Europe.

Leora–an orphan with yellow eyes and abilities that include producing fire, transforming her appearance, healing and more–learns that she is to be sold into slavery. She runs from her adoptive family and joins up with three other deep, and very well-developed characters: a thief and ragamuffin named Roland, a refined lady of the gentry named Aurora, and a soldier named Leopold. Together, they make strong bonds, escape from those who hunt them down, and learn to survive on the road.

Gathering of the Four is filled with adventure, high stakes, familial spats, and blossoming love while being reflective on racial prejudices, societal constructs and norms which are still apparent even 2300 years from now. The look back on our own version of life through the eyes of these travelers was great to see, and the character development was so complete and rich that they became “book friends” by the end. I want to drink an ale with them.

Bennett’s writing is crisp, witty, philosophical at times, and filled with great narration that rarely detracts from the storyline. I greatly appreciated each chapter’s epigraph and the detail with which the evolution and devolution of our society is both shown and hinted at. Gathering of the Four is the setup to a great series, and one that I am excited to continue.

Read the Interview with A.E. Bennett!


Please let your friends know if they’re interested in blog posts about writing and all the other odd things you might find on this site. They can sign up at this link: https://www.bxwretlind.com/blog/subscribe

That does it for this issue of the newsletter. I’ll see you back here next time!

— Ben


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