A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #16

A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #16

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In this issue: All We Leave Behind: Transits of Three • Nominate an Indie Book for 2023An Indie Author Program Review Selection (a review).

“I’ve learned that you can tell a lot about a person by the way he handles these three things: a rainy day, lost luggage, and tangled Christmas tree lights.” ~Maya Angelou


The Transit continues! All We Leave Behind: Transits of Three is now available.

Get your copy for $0.99 until 12/27

Their new paradise doesn’t want them, but to what lengths will these tired colonists go to survive in spite of the odds and a world that rebels?

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.

Three ideas. Three directions. Not everyone will survive.


IARP, a place for Indie Books

The Indie Author Review Program for 2023 is now accepting nominations.

The nomination period for the 2023 Indie Author Review Program is now open. What is this? Simply my way of helping out Indie writers.

I read quite a bit, and as an Indie author I know the pain of trying to get reviews for one’s work. In 2023, I plan to read at least 12 books by Indie authors and post reviews on Goodreads, LibraryThing, Amazon.com, and this blog. These books will also be promoted through my Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter and via social media (Twitter and maybe Instagram if I can ever figure it out). In addition, I try to interview a few of the authors and post them along with their review.

If you want to know how it went last year, see the 2022 selections here.


An Indie Author Program Review Selection

Pearl in the Deep

I have been a fan of caves and mines for the longest time. My first few books were about caves, and later in life, I find myself drawn to more novels about caves. I have been in many as well, always alert to the possibilities that surround me in the dark. So when I was presented with the opportunity to read and review Pearl in the Deep by Katherine L. Parker–set in cave/mine–I jumped.

I was not disappointed. It starts simple enough–Lotus Calanthe gets a new job on a planet which has a cavern system beneath her. It’s not the job she wanted, and she doesn’t feel welcome. From the start, her curiosity draws the reader into the story immediately, and when Lotus is first brought down into the caves–mines–and shown the fuel known as blue pearl, nothing is really as it seems. When two worlds collide–above and below–the action takes off.

Pearl in the Deep does not let up on the story despite its length. Delightfully interspersed throughout the book are poems which both foreshadow and dig deeper into the emotions. Parker does an outstanding job with extensive biological world-building. Learning that she had once intended to write this book as a graphic novel, I would have been interested to see artwork within the pages, and if it was my ability to ever influence writers to do such a thing, I would say–do it.

This novel is at once mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and thriller. The writing is both crisp and poetic, especially within dream sequences. I connected with Lotus from the beginning and enjoyed running around the cave system with her. Pearl in the Deep is a highly recommended novel, and one that deserves much more attention than it has been given to date.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0947C2JB4/

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

— Ben


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