Archive for February, 2011

Exit on Kindle, etc

February 23, 2011

My science fiction mystery – Exit, Pursued by a Bee – looks great on Kindle – even on my PC version buy it here  I need the sales!

Over the weekend I was kindly informed by someone who recently worked in the editorial offices of a SF publishing house that I should play down the original premise aspect of my Left Luggage trilogy when my agent queries to publishers. They are businesses and as such prefer to not gamble with the market, but take on tried and tested formulae. Shame. At least Left Luggage is the story of an apocalyptic Earth. The reader doesn’t know why the aliens left a pandora’s box with the virus (that’s the original bit: a disease not thought of before) that wipes out everyone eventually unless you can run and hide. It’s a story of survival, retaliation, coping and much more. Funny though, that publishers of the most creative people and ideas don’t really want to take chances on new ideas.

Into the Blast available in the UK

February 20, 2011

At last, Into the Blast (account of the skyjacker DB Cooper who was never caught)  is on Amazon.co.uk for both paper and ebook

http://amzn.to/hEudgH  paperback

http://amzn.to/i5ZY5U Kindle

Writing updates

February 18, 2011

Escape Velocity: the anthology is nearing completion. We’ve had the stories, poem, cartoon and editorials done and proofread for a while but two things held things up. 1) a few admin / finance issues but they’re sorted now. 2) the extraordinary success of Into The Blast – the story of DB Cooper, the skyjacker in the 1970s, who was never caught. WordPress won’t let me put a direct link to the Amazon (the dot com as only the first edition is on the UK version at the moment) selling for print or ebook.If you go to Amazon yourself and find Into the Blast revised edition you’ll a very low star rating by one person. Apparently, he is upset that our research came to a different conclusion to him, he’s brought out his own book and probably jealous of ours being the subject of a History Channel decoders programme. Healthy competition is fine in the publishing industry, though in the main I’ve only seen cooperation and friendship. Mean to diss your competition by putting low ratings for their products. Anyway, perhaps that reviewer will like our anthology, and it is due out in March.

I received a lovely rejection letter via my US agent this week. We didn’t realise that the science fiction branch of New Deer Press was headed up by none other than Robert J Sawyer. My agent had sent them a query letter for my Left Luggage science fiction trilogy a long time ago and hadn’t chased them. So she received this from the great man: “Please accept my profound apologies for being so long in replying — 13 months is unconscionable!. I don’t work in the Red Deer Press offices, and they only just forwarded your query to me.  Your project is fascinating, but, alas, my little line of books only publishes Canadian authors, sad to say.  I do wish you the very best of luck elsewhere.
Rob Sawyer”

Wow, that’s a rejection I didn’t mind. Of course it seems odd for that publisher to only want Canadian writers and there’s nothing on their submission guidelines to say so. Perhaps they receive a grant from their government. Anyhow, I mentioned this to some friends. One is Canadian and offered to help. We briefly discussed me marrying her, but that is problematical with both of us being already married. She is the charming Isabelle Prevost. Like me she won an award at Wuacademia. Her’s is for a collection of short stories called L’Objectif – in French as you see. Here at Wuacemia. My Hot Air is there too.

A flash short story of mine is in a charity anthology, The Write to Fight. Supporting young olympic hopefuls it is available here. The story is written from the point of view of a sparrow. It is rare for me to write from an animal viewpoint but it was a way to imbue a lot of irony into how humans live.

I heard that another short story, The Examination, has been picked for the Queensland 100 anthology. All proceeds are going to victims of the floods in Australia this winter. No link yet.

Ben Larken’s Pillar’s Fall

February 9, 2011

Pillar’s Fall: The Legend of Pillar – Book One, by Ben Larken
Reviewed by Geoff Nelder
A good policemen throws a young boy off a bridge. It saves life, but harbingers much more than simple life and death.
Paperback: 286 pages
Publisher: LL-Publications (October 31, 2010)
ISBN-13: 978-1905091874

Right from the start I fell into the easy style of Larken’s prose. Now that’s surprising given the uneasy depths that make up the story. Here we have Pillar, who seems to be a straight-forward cop, who doesn’t need to make promotion waves because he has an idyllic marriage and all’s well with the world – until he has throw a young boy off a bridge to his certain death. Now, that’s some hook. Was he saving his own skin, or those of others, or was he being worked on by mysterious forces? Pillar can’t or won’t believe in the supernatural although he helps out at his local church. That is, he might accept the concept of God but has trouble with the existence of demons and angels, more believing in hallucinations or that some criminal mastermind is messing with him.
The clever plotting of this book has the reader – for a long time – trying to guess whether the ensuing ghastly deaths and voices, along with weird visions are the hallucinations of a troubled cop’s mind or real? But then we are forced to consider what is ‘real’? The unravelling of more horrors with increasing hints of his own involvement – like it or not – takes Pillar to the edge, several edges, along with the reader.
The use of a police detective, who is drawn into abnormal forces has precedent in Jon Courtenay Grimwood’s masterful 9 Tail Fox. Pillar’s Fall is at least as brilliant. Characters are paired then turn against each other. Love, empathy, friendship slide between the forces of evil here. The detective story aspect of Pillar’s Fall is exceedingly convincing, probably a result of Ben Larken’s experience working in the police force. I don’t just mean the command structure and procedures but in the rivalry, and ‘feel’ of policemen encountering scenes of unbridled gore. The horror is more insidious than in most of the genre by the cunning use of moments of reflection, more so with tenderness. In particular, Pillar’s love for his wife, Charlotte, results in near poetic phrasing such as ‘her breath tugging on a soft snore’. No irritation there yet he is agonised by his love because of the awful secrets he’s having to hold.
I particularly enjoyed this paragraph from Charlotte: ‘I spend all day in counselling sessions, staring at people with dull, oppressed, dead eyes. And then on the drive home I see the same eyes on every commuter… Then I get home … your eyes are sad, but they’re full of the essence of life. In your eyes I see a battle to figure it all out.’ If only she knew, but then she yearned to know.
There are literary gems in the narrative I wish I’d written. Echoes are here of Wordsworth’s The Child is Father of the Man, when Larken has children able to detect (some) ghosts when ordinary people cannot. A master class in creative writing sneaks in several places such as when Paula is decapitated in a section following her point of view. In any other book that would be the end of her narrative, but whoa! she continues – and it makes sense. Brilliant.
For those admirers of Ben Larken’s debut novel, Pit-Stop, a work of genius, they will find shades of reflection here. For example we experience that state of limbo, with characters shivering with initial denial then comes the shock of acceptance. Detective Tom Pillar isn’t in limbo although he is initially in denial. He is pilloried by his detective peers, but escapes and thwarts the dark force enemy, for now… until Book Two.

Purchase from Amazon

Worth waking up for

February 7, 2011

The wind woke me by rattling my window, but my eyes didn’t fully open until they blinked at my inbox. Two Australian-related good news items. One, I have been accepted as a paid reviewer for Dare Empire: a passionate young publishing concern down under. Two, my short story, The Examination, has been accepted for the charity anthology, The Queensland 100. I am, allegedly, one of the headline authors!
The breeze out there isn’t just rattling windows, but keeping me and my bike from lengthy rides. I’ll just have to get on with writing my science fiction Left Luggage, and reading Gabriel Timar’s SF novel, The Falcon Project.


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