A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #17

A Semi-Not-Horribly-Regular Newsletter #17

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In this issue: A Sneak Peek (with no context)New Posts • Indie Author Review Program Selections for 2023An Indie Author Program Review Selection (a review).

“Plant seeds of expectation in your mind; cultivate thoughts that anticipate achievement. Believe in yourself as being capable of overcoming all obstacles and weaknesses.”

~Norman Vincent Peale

A Sneak Peek (with NO context)

All good fishing stories start with the phrase “So, there I was.” It’s the way of the world, the way narrators from the dawn of man have done things. Or the dawn of woman. Or the dawn of whatever it is dawned first. Homo habilis, the handy man, some 2.4 million years ago. Did they start stories?

Did they fish?

Surely they fished.

So, there I was on the Magnum Asinum Mare some light years from the dawn of that first storytelling man…or woman. All I wanted to do, mind you, was fish. It was my time—to be away from the hell that was the prison kitchen, away from the nagging expense reports and other piles of useless managerial paperwork that clogged up the circuits on my work pad, away from that god awful smell. You don’t get much of an opportunity to get away, not on the Amesware Abyss or any other prison mining rig on this watery rock known as Minor Pales. No, the company makes sure you’re well-employed, and if that means you don’t get time off, so be it. At least the local prisoner union—UPW 31—had negotiated a working day no more than sixteen hours with two fifteen minute breaks and twenty minutes to eat. It was not the same on other rigs.

I had this coming. All of it, I suppose. But before I get ahead of myself, I’ll go back to the beginning, back to when it all started…

Coming this year—A new series and a new adventure.

In the meantime…

The first three Transit novels are available now. Check out what Kirkus called “an engaging, personality-driven tale with detailed SF worldbuilding.

No one said colonization would be easy.

As humans transit from one world to the next, the societal mores and norms will continue, but at what cost? Broad and deeply interconnected, the Transit series take you on a journey to another world and beyond.

What if humanity had a chance to start over?

Would we follow the same paths or forge new ones?

Out of Due Season: The First Transit

A small group of relatives and friends of the victims of a massive tragedy band together to learn the truth: something epic is about to happen in a remote lake in northwestern Washington, and the genesis of a new world is underway.

Sunshine and Shadow: Exodus, or The Second Transit

When a flood on a newly settled world threatens to destroy their colony, a psychologically conflicted young woman and her two cousins must overcome obstacles to establish a permanent home far from danger, while making a discovery that may rewrite humanity’s history.

All We Leave Behind: Transits of Three

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. 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.


New Posts


The Indie Author Review Program selections for 2023.

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.

After careful consideration, here are the 12 selections for 2023. The first review, by the way, is below.

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

Indie Author Review Program Selections for 2023

An Indie Author Program Review Selection

A Giant Comes

I love fables–Brothers Grimm, Animal FarmThe Life of Pi. For that reason, I was immediately lured in to read A Giant Comes by A.J. Saxsma. This is a short but rich novel, told in a fashion that I have come to admire. And while I was pulled in to Saxsma’s fairy tale world from the first page, at the same time I felt a distinct and undeniable connection to the present. That, in itself, is a feat.

The plot centers on a traveler who invites an orphan to join him on a journey to a nearby village to warn them of an impending giant. In the village, we meet archetypes–the everyman, the hero, the outlaw, and the ruler along with the priest, the dullards, and those who blindly follow. I could picture these characters walking around our modern “village” saying the same thing, acting the same way.

This is a story full of deceit and trickery as we follow the young boy. I kept looking for an obvious twist but–delightfully–found none. In Saxsma’s portrayal of this fairy tale world, it is not hard to find parallels to Western culture. There is a rich cynicism of the church, of politicians, and of their blind constituents.

A Giant Comes is a cautionary tale, and not one that ends easily. I received no fuzzy good feeling. Rather, I am left to contemplate the connections between the traveler and the boy, between the priest and elder, between the workers and the merchants. This is a highly recommended book, and one I will return to again.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BM6LS2SB/

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. You can forward them this newsletter or 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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