A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #9
In this issue: The Transit continues Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or the Second Transit, Two New Reads, New Posts, An Indie Author Program Review Selection (a review).
When I was a much (much) younger, I loved reading Choose Your Own Adventure books. For those who don’t remember them, they were second-person adventure stories where you (the reader) were given a choice after so many pages.
You’ve come across a mysterious object. If you pick it up, go to page 43. If you walk away, go to page 128.
Things like that.
Little did I know that I would use that very concept decades later when I started to write a series called Transit. Granted, I did not write the series in second-person, but the question is still buried in there:
You’re given a chance to join a group of people who will be taken to a planet far away, much like Earth, with the sole purpose to start over.
If you agree to join this “cult,” go to 483. If you would rather stay behind and try to stop them, go to page 517.
Now that we’re only 45 days away from seeing what happened to all those who chose to join in The First Transit, it’s time to see what happened.
The journey from a normal life into the unknown will test the strength and resolve of all. Find out how Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or The Second Transit.
Coming July 12, 2022: Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or the Second Transit
No one said colonization would be easy.
Book 2 in the Transit series – Preorder for $0.99 Now
I have written quite a few books, and they are often published in relative silence. Like you–like all humans–I have a brain full of imaginative stories.
What are your story ideas? Do you see yourself on a ship at sea with pirates or are you in a romance with a mysterious stranger you saw riding a horse on the beach?
Stories are a huge part of any society, and we can all do our part to add a little here and there to make that society richer.
Two New Reads
One world preys on trauma.
Another creates it.
A Lovecraftian steampunk apocalyptic sci-fi horror
Life is a Journey.
Enjoy it.
A young adult literary Greek fantasy with a bit of heart
New Posts
- The Thunderstorm Story Model
- I’ve always loved the dynamics behind thunderstorms and recently, I’ve been seeing parallels to the standard plot curve many writers have been taught.
- A Little Experiment with Weather & Emotions
- Earlier this year, I did a little study about weather and emotions. Here are some thoughts on what I found.
- On Fog & Emotion
- Like the cat of Carl Sandburg’s poem, fog does not announce itself very well. So how can we use this stealthy behavior as a writing tool?
An Indie Author Program Review Selection
Captain Madigan (Tales of the Whiskey Richard Book 1)
There are mashups of various genres that I find appealing, science fiction and the enduring Western being near the top. Some might argue that science fiction is the enduring Western, but without the dust, grime, nasty characters and horses that pepper the setting. Captain Madigan (Tales of the Whiskey Richard Book 1) by Patrick Fullmer is both a science fiction and a Western…without the horses.
When I find characters that are surely flawed up front, I want to know if they change. Within the pages of this novel, you can certain see a gradual shift in the varied cast of privateers who just want to get paid for a quick heist to those who seek vengeance while being chased down to a definite adjustment of personalities near the end. It is not a quick change, either, which remains true to life–we don’t get to make dramatic turnarounds in just a few chapters. We sometimes have to go through Hell.
Told from the perspective of Captain Madigan, this first of a series is a great set up to what I hope will be many more books with many more adventures. The writing is crisp and to the point. As with many stories of this nature, scene setting is necessary and Fullmer does an excellent job bringing us into the world in which the Whiskey Richard exists. It is not a clean world, either. It is one of bars, gambling, shady venues and grit. The dialogue is reflective of this tone, remaining honest to each of the characters.
Overall, Captain Madigan is a gritty science fiction western that holds no punches. It is well worth the read and highly recommended for those who are looking to get their hands dirty with the characters.
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That does it for this issue of the newsletter. I’ll see you back here next time!
— Ben