A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #14
In this issue: All We Leave Behind, Busy Days, New Posts, An Indie Author Program Review Selection (a review).
Thank you all who entered the October giveaway! The winner was selected, but fear not: if you didn’t win, there will be another in January you won’t want to miss. Stay tuned!
All We Leave Behind: Transits of Three–Coming December 20!
Following the exodus from rising floodwaters, the surviving descendants of those who came to create a society on a planet far from Earth have struggled to rebuild within the remains of an ancient temple. Now, as disease and an unfamiliar environment threaten to destroy them yet again, everyone seems to have an opinion about what to do next.
Miriam and Tobias Page, newly married, believe there may be a possible home beyond a distant canyon. Their journey with a quarter of the population doesn’t start well and soon nature and their own humanity will conspire to end it all. Meanwhile, Miriam’s two cousins, Joel and Micah, have different ideas. Joel is convinced the best course of action is to return to the mountains they left to mine for the ore that would make a great return to Earth possible. Micah hopes to stay, learn all he can about the temple’s previous occupants, and prove both of them wrong. But soon, he and his new partner Patience realize that no option is truly safe.
As the transits of three different groups get underway, new dangers and surprises emerge from within the rainforests, mountains, and deserts of the planet…and one of those may have followed them from Earth. While a final home is a dream away, present nightmares must be dealt with first if any of them are going to survive.
Busy Days
And so it begins…again. I am aiming for 50,000 words this November as part of NaNoWriMo 2022. Last year, I was successful at starting (and finishing) Beans of Anafi. This year’s project? Come on over to NaNoWriMo and find out!
As for all those other things that writers do when they’re not writing: I have finished round 7 of edits to All We Leave Behind. My friendly editors are spot on in some areas, and it took a bit to ensure I could get the story fleshed out the way it was meant to be. As this novel sets the stage for all that’s going to happen in novels 4 through 9, it was important to get it right.
Aside from edits, there will be a new cover as well. Take a gander at the cover above, as this may be the last time it’s seen. This goes for Out of Due Season and Sunshine and Shadow. I have an outstanding graphic artist putting the final touches on things right now, and I’m excited to share the new “feel” of the Transit novels with you in the next newsletter.
Speaking of things that take time to get right, there’s a new series coming next summer. With my NaNoWriMo project taking up most of my time in November, however, I have to put this one aside for a bit. That’s okay, though. There’s nothing wrong with taking the time to do it correctly. More to come as we roll into 2023. I’m pretty sure you’ll like this one.
Finally, I received word of a speaking/teaching engagement next year. Once the contract is signed, I’ll fill you in.
New Posts (it was a slow month for blog articles)
- Making the Switch to Scrivener
- I finally pulled the trigger and made the switch from my collection of Microsoft products to Scrivener. This is why.
- On Temperature & Emotion
- The emotions drummed up by your characters would also be the emotions that you feel when you are in that situation.
An Indie Author Program Review Selection
Soul of Lucifer: Lost
I have been a fan of stories involving Christian mythology since the dawn of, well, me. As such, I am drawn to stories which use the elements of that mythology in new and unique ways. From Supernatural to Good Omens to Lucifer and Sandman, the genre is primed to go in a million different directions. I should know: it’s what I wrote in high school so many decades ago.
Rune Rivers successfully taps into that mythology in a way that is modern, unique, and at times, humorous. Soul of Lucifer: Lost is the first in a trilogy that I will most certainly continue. The story revolves around Oren, a demon hunter who has happened upon a power of which she was not aware. That power attracts both a human and a heavenly/hellish host of characters who need to find her. From Gabriel to Uriel to a cast of lesser demons and an exceptional description of both Heaven and Hell, the story weaves together many different elements.
The episodic story flows well, and the writing is clean. Despite some unconventional narrative tricks, I was caught up enough in the pages that I did not want to put it down. If you’re a fan of stories involving Christian mythology, then this book–and series–is for you. Rivers also reminds me of how often good stories by Indie writers disappear into the void. There are some real gems out there, and Soul of Lucifer: Lost is one of them.
Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B096SRZ1TL/
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That does it for this issue of the newsletter. I’ll see you back here next time!
— Ben