Friday, July 31, 2020

Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month for July 2020

Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month

It’s that time of the month again, time for “Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month”.

So what is “Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month”? It’s a round-up of speculative fiction by indie authors newly published this month, though some June books I missed the last time around snuck in as well. The books are arranged in alphabetical order by author. So far, most links only go to Amazon.com, though I may add other retailers for future editions.

Once again, we have new releases covering the whole broad spectrum of speculative fiction. This month, we have urban fantasy, science fantasy, fantasy mysteries, paranormal mysteries, paranormal romance, science fiction romance, space opera, military science fiction, post-apocalyptic fiction, horror, non-fiction, vampires, werewolves, ghosts, unicorns, necromancers, bounty hunters, galactic peacekeepers, magical assassins, magical cats, code monkeys, crime-busting witches, post-apocalyptic chickens and much more.

As always, I know the authors at least vaguely, but I haven’t read all of the books, so Caveat emptor.

And now on to the books without further ado:

Free Station by Rachel AuckesFree Station by Rachel Auckes:

The Galactic Peacekeepers are being hunted.

The tables have turned. Marshals are going missing.

Marshal Throttle Reyne and her Black Sheep are sent on a mission to investigate the recent surge in pirate attacks. But when the pirates unite and take over Free Station, the headquarters of the Galactic Peacekeepers, the Black Sheep must make a suicide run against the pirates and save the lives of their friends. If they fail, the system will belong to the pirates.

Bounty Hunter: Nothing to Nobody by Rachel AuckesBounty Hunter: Nothing to Nobody by Rachel Auckes:

A dark threat is creeping across the wastelands.

Bounty hunters are the closest thing to law enforcement across the wastelands, but most folks can't tell the difference between the criminals and their chasers. Havoc Joe Ballast and his team at the Haft Agency are trying to change that by picking their own targets and going after the worst criminals. But that's not working out so well for them.

They should've stuck to the rules.

Their first target, the bloodthirsty Red Dead gang, is terrorizing hapless refugees. Things go bad fast when Havoc and his friends are ambushed and forced to flee to the lawless Wilds. Stranded in deadly territory, the hunters must align with a secret rebel group to survive while turning the tables on their merciless enemies.

Join the bounty hunters as they fight for their lives in the post-apocalyptic wastelands. Their enemies may think they have won, but the hunters are just getting started.

Aloha Thrive by Ginger BoothAloha Thrive by Ginger Booth:

An ex-cop who cannot die. A moon full of settlers who cannot thrive.

Mahina's terraformers built a high-tech urban paradise. Then Earth flooded the colony with desperate refugees, cop Sass Collier among them.

The settlers who arrived with Sass died decades ago. Outside the citadel, their descendants die weak and young.

Sass fought a rebellion against the city once. She won concessions to give the settlers a chance at health. She paid with 20 years in prison.

Now she’s out, a reformed character. She assembles an oddball crew doing odd jobs. She intends to mind her own business – how to make a profit on the skyship Thrive.

But her fellow settlers are still failing.

While her business model careens toward circus acts, Sass dares to defy the city again, to solve Mahina’s failure to thrive.

Book of Dark Magic by Sara BourgeoisBook of Dark Magic by Sara Bourgeois

When Richard Jordan is found dead in the woods outside of Coventry, the town's reputation for being paranormal is put into the spotlight.

Richard wasn't just murdered. The person who found him was shocked by what looked like a Satanic ritual murder.

Suddenly, the town's regular tourism starts to dry up. In its place is a flood of weirdos and wannabe Satanists who are there to finish the ritual they believe Richard's murder began.

Is this the apocalyptic scenario that Kinsley was prophesied to stop? Or, did someone want the town drunk dead and used a bunch of dark magical items to make it look paranormal?

What about the mysterious black book that shows up on Kinsley's doorstep? Does it hold the key to solving the crime, or does it represent something far more sinister?

Come along as Kinsley and friends solve this crime one spell at a time!

The Pegasus Pulp Sampler by Cora BuhlertThe Pegasus Pulp Sampler by Cora Buhlert

Get an overview of the works of Hugo finalist Cora Buhlert and her one-woman small press Pegasus Pulp Publishing.

Space opera, military science fiction, alien invasions, hostile planets, sword and sorcery, pulp thrillers, men's adventure, murder mysteries, cozy fantasy, historical romance – we have all that and more.

Enjoy twelve novellas, novelettes and short stories in five genres.

Contains the following stories:
•Evacuation Order
•Baptism of Fire
•Mercy Mission
•Acacia Crescent
•Valentine’s Day on Iago Prime
•The Four and a Half Minute Boiled Egg
•The Cork and the Bottle
•The Crawling Death
•Countdown to Death
•The Valley of the Man Vultures
•The Revenant of Wrecker’s Dock
•The Kiss of the Executioner’s Blade

Mist and Magic by Lindsay BurokerMist and Magic by Lindsay Buroker:

As a freelance assassin, Val Thorvald leads a dangerous life.

She’s learned not to stay in the same place for long and not to get too attached to anything. For example, she would never consider adopting a pet.

But when she’s searching for a missing friend, she finds an abandoned silver tiger cub.
The magical feline is clearly from another realm, but Val has no idea which one or how to send it back. All she knows is that it’s the only witness to her friend's kidnapping.

Val can kick the butts of ogres, trolls, and wizards, but she has no experience taking care of pets—certainly not magical tigers. And as she quickly learns, the cub has teeth like a chainsaw. Soon, everything from her apartment to her seat belts to the hair on her head is in danger.

But if Val can’t forge a bond with the cub, figure out what it knows, and find her missing friend, more than her belongings—and her hair—may be at risk.

Deadland Sentinel by J.N. Chaney and Ell Leigh ClarkeDeadland Sentinel by J.N. Chaney and Ell Leigh Clarke:

With the trafficking ring obliterated, Jack turns his attention to wiping out the dregs of the criminal empire.

But when he arrives to take out a particular scumbag, he only finds the man's corpse.
And he's missing a shoe.

As the investigation begins, Jack surmises he has either stumbled into a conspiracy or there's a serial killer on the loose. The team must mobilize to figure out exactly what is going on.

Corruption, kidnapping, and life as they know it all collide as the group comes up against deadly elements within the very organizations they were sworn to protect.

With their own lives in the balance, and the integrity of the Union government at stake, it’s a race against the clock to figure out who the players are and how to bring them down.

All without being taken out themselves.

Heartless by Dannika DarkHeartless by Dannika Dark:

“For you, I’ll wait an eternity.”

Despite the spoils of a solid relationship and an idyllic life at Keystone, Raven is itching for the thrill of another big case. Things begin to heat up when a dangerous assignment falls in her lap.

Searching for the mastermind behind an illegal fighting ring is no easy feat, but as the weeks roll by, Raven’s undercover job begins to take an unexpected emotional toll. It’s a deadly mission, and if she’s not careful, she could lose everything.

The Ark War by Chris FoxThe Ark War by Chris Fox:

The Ark War Has Begun

War on a scale not seen in this sun-cycle has begun. Nox and his demonic army were thwarted at the Proto-Ark, but not before forging the tool that will hasten the destruction of the world. The Grey Men have a Primary Access Key, and are ready to bring their masters home. The Builders are coming.

Millions of deathless surround Jordan in the broken Ark of the Mother. The only thing standing between Lima and destruction is the last god anyone wants to trust...Irakesh. Jordan follows Sobek to Australia in search of allies, but what lurks there predates humanity.

Blair and Trevor spearhead a desperate gambit to alter time and save the Mother from her death at The First Ark. To do that they need powerful allies. The time has come to wake Jes'ka, so that she can train Liz in the ways of the Ka-Ken. If Blair and Trevor succeed, then ensuring Set doesn't return to the present falls upon them.

But there is a spy in their midst. The Builders are far, far closer than anyone suspects.

Necrotech by Chris FoxNecrotech by Chris Fox:

The Unseen Fleets Come and Worlds Burn

The Unliving are implacable. Unreasonable. No one knows what they want, beyond souls, and bone for their war machines and ships. Now they've set their sights on the Inurans, and hey, I couldn't wish an army of necromancers on a better target.

There's just one problem.

I'm trapped on the Inuran Trade Moon, and the necromancers are attacking. Even if I can get the minister back to her ship we'll still need to find a way to fight their flagship. That's going to be tough to do without enough magic to power the Word of Xal.

If I pull it off I think I get a bonus though. Also, there's that living thing.

324 Abercorn by Max Allan Gunnells324 Abercorn by Max Allan Gunnells

Brad Storm doesn’t believe in ghosts, but moving into the house at 324 Abercorn just may change his mind.

Best-selling author Bradley Storm finally has enough money to buy and restore his dream home. Despite 324 Abercorn's reputation as one of the most haunted houses in America, Bradley isn't worried. He doesn't believe in the supernatural. Then strange things begin to happen. Objects no longer where he left them. Phantom noises heard from empty rooms. Shadows glimpsed from the corner of his eye.

Is his house truly haunted, or is there something more sinister happening on the property?

With the help of Bradley’s new boyfriend and a few friends who are just as intrigued with the seemingly inexplicable occurrences surrounding the infamous house, they set out to find the truth of what stalks the halls at 324 Abercorn.

Proudly represented by Crystal Lake Publishing—Tales from the Darkest Depths.

Silent Cravings by Jess Haines and E. BlixSilent Cravings by Jess Haines and E. Blix:

What’s a vampire to do when the werewolf she craves is playing hard to bite?

Christoph needs to save a young girl from a vampire’s clutches. It’s his fault she’s there in the first place—and rescuing her is the only way he might get back into his alpha’s good graces.

Unfortunately for them both, he’s just not that good.

He and his packmate soon find themselves caught and magically “neutered” by enchanted collars so they can’t hurt anyone in the vampire’s entourage.

Just when Christoph thought it couldn’t get any worse, a mute vampire named Mouse decides to claim him as her boy-toy.

She has her own set of problems involving some lingering issues from her past. She hungers for Christoph, but can’t stand to see someone victimized or—even worse—afraid of her.

The two must learn how to live together (and deal with his new fashion accessory)—without driving the rest of the vampire’s household crazy in the process.

Wicked Games by Lily Harper HartWicked Games by Lily Harper Hart

Ivy Morgan knew she was in for a world of hurt when she was sentenced to community service. She had no idea just how bad things were going to be, though. On her first day of picking up trash along the roadside, one of her crew members stumbles over a body, and it happens to belong to someone she knows.

Sasha Carmichael was described as a “good girl” and nobody can figure out how she ended up alone in the woods, so close to a road and help, and abandoned. When Jack Harker and his partner start digging down, though, some dark possibilities come to the surface.

It seems Sasha had ties to more than one person on Ivy’s work crew, which means Shadow Lake’s favorite witch is working with a killer. Finding the guilty party is difficult, especially given the way her crew chief is watching her.

If Ivy sticks even one toe out of line, her community service could be extended. That means her wedding is on the brink and her honeymoon might be lost. Jack isn’t about to let either of those scenarios happen.

It’s going to take both of them working together to solve the crime, and even then nothing is guaranteed.

Hang on to your hats, because murder has come to Shadow Lake and this killer might not be done … by a long shot.

Zero by Simon HaynesZero by Simon Haynes:

Hal Spacejock loves to watch cargo ships taking off for distant star systems.

One day, he promises himself. One day I'll leave this dump of a planet and explore the galaxy!
But Hal's not supposed to watch the ships.

No, his job is to load cargo into them... and he's not very good at it.

After a particularly bad mixup, Hal flees from his boss, certain he'll get the sack.

Instead, he runs smack-bang into an adventure that will alter the course of his life.

This prequel covers events leading up to Hal 1: A Robot Named Clunk. You can read it before or after any of the main Hal Spacejock novels.

Brewing up a Storm by Amanda M. LeeBrewing Up a Storm by Amanda M. Lee:

Storm season has hit Moonstone Bay and with it comes a whole lot of trouble.

Hadley Hunter thinks she’s ready for what’s to come, but she’s not. Before the storms can wreak havoc on her life, though, she has something even more frightening to deal with … lunch with her boyfriend Galen Blackwood’s mother.

Despite her best intentions, things don’t go as smoothly as Hadley envisioned. Before she has a chance to deal with that, though, the storms bring another surprise in the form of an unconscious woman on the beach and a yacht that keeps appearing (and then disappearing) with each subsequent storm.

Hadley can’t wrap her head around what’s happening, especially when news breaks regarding the identity of the individual who was found in front of the lighthouse. It seems she’s the wife of a very rich and powerful man … who disappeared a year before. In addition to that, the couple had two daughters with them at the time their boat fell off the map. What happened to them?

It’s a race against time for Hadley and her motley band of paranormal friends. They must find the yacht and uncover every horrible secret one family has managed to bury beneath a deep blue sea … and they have to do it with a monster on their tails.

At the heart of almost every family is love. At the heart of this one is despair. Somehow, Hadley will have to overcome her worst fears to become the best witch she possibly can.

Here’s hoping she’s up to the challenge.

A Blood Moon Swindle by W.H. LockA Blood Moon Swindle by W.H. Lock:

It's the end of the world and it's all Quinn's fault.

Quinn is a talented conman and sorcerer, but even the best get caught. On his first day out of prison, Quinn was offered a job he should have refused. Quinn’s parole officer wanted him to steal a skull from a necromancer in Los Angeles.

It all went to downhill from there.

Quinn put together a team of the best criminals he knew. Together they stole the skull without getting caught. Only to be betrayed by one of the team and the parole officer. The pair was secretly working for the archangel Uriel in a plot to end the world.

Quinn and his team tried to stop the trio from getting the last artifact they needed to destroy the world, only to fail at the last moment because of Quinn’s antics.

Now Quinn is on the run from the FBI and his former team and he has made a literal deal with a devil.

If Quinn doesn’t save the world he’ll suffer an eternity of torment at the hands of Mamon, the Demon Prince of Greed. If he saves the world, all the debts he piled up will come due.

And those are the sort of debts that take an IOU.

Can Quinn save the world and escape certain death?

Ex Inferis by Nazri NoorEx Inferis by Nazri Noor:

Get ready for a hell of a ride.

Spoiled, sarcastic, and brutally self-obsessed, fledgling sorcerer Quilliam J. Abernathy has never worked a day in his life. And why should he? Being the half human son of a demon prince comes with its perks, among them a palatial lifestyle of luxury and excess.

But Quill’s comfort comes with a price. He is the Chosen of Asmodeus, destined to destroy the world and fated from birth to become the harbinger of hell. One last trial now stands in his way, the final obstacle to his ascent: a deadly game of devils...

Ex Inferis is the prequel to the Infernal Inheritance urban fantasy series, set several years before the events of the Darkling Mage and Sins of the Father books. Experience Quill’s rise to power as the Chosen of Asmodeus in an intense, action-filled supernatural suspense story filled with demons, devilry, and danger.

Of Flesh and Feathers by L.M. PierceOf Flesh and Feathers by L.M. Pierce:

"A modern Watership Down meets The Walking Dead - but with a lot more feathers."

A foul wind blows through the chicken coop. The flock's caretaker no longer comes to collect Chickory's eggs or bring her feed, and the stench of death is everywhere. Her friend Fayne is haunted by visions of danger, and by a prophecy of safety beyond the farthest horizon a chicken has ever known. With the help of their faithful farm dog, Chickory must convince her flock to follow her into a frightening world of disease and predators, both natural... and unnatural.

Their survival may depend on fateful premonitions, but in order to save the world of humans and birds, Chickory must discover the truth behind the prophecy and the sickness that turned their keepers into killers.

From the mind that brought you Trans Liberty Riot Brigade, L.M. Pierce presents:
Of Flesh and Feathers

Winds of Change by Christine PopeWinds of Change by Christine Pope:

One surge of magical power could free her — or short-circuit her future.

Jake Wilcox thought he’d covered their tracks when he hid his love, weather witch Adara Grant, in a remote Wyoming town under the watchful guard of the Northern Arapahoe. He should have listened to his instincts that he was making a horrible mistake.

Now Addie’s gone, taken in the dead of night by the very nemesis they thought they’d eluded. Locked away so deep in a government testing facility, it’ll take more than magical luck to find her, much less get her out alive.

Addie is living her worst nightmare, and feeling every one of the three thousand miles between her and Jake. The temptation to use her wild gift to free herself is strong — but it’s not just her own life at stake. The facility is full of orphaned witches.

And one faint signal that could be glimmer of hope — or a sign that luck has run out for Addie, Jake, and everyone they love.

Road Seven by Keith RossonRoad Seven by Keith Rosson

Mark Sandoval—resolutely arrogant, covered head to foot in precise geometric scarring, and still marginally famous after Hollywood made an Oscar-winner based off his memoir years before—has been strongly advised by his lawyer to leave the country following a drunken and potentially fatal hit and run. When a woman sends Sandoval grainy footage of what appears to be a unicorn, he quickly hires an assistant and the two head off to the woman's farm in Hvíldarland, a tiny, remote island off the coast of Iceland. When they arrive on the island and discover that both a military base and the surrounding álagablettur, the nearby woods, are teeming with strangeness and secrets, they begin to realize that a supposed unicorn sighting is the least of their worries.

Fraternity by Alasdair ShawFraternity by Alasdair Shaw:

The Indescribable Joy of Destruction has to choose between his human friends and his fellow Artificial Sentiences.

Legate Olivia Johnson struggles to adjust to life without her enhanced brain implants.

Decurion Anastasia Seivers rejoins the Legion to face her biggest challenge - command.

Together they are closing in on the war criminals in the Red Fleet. Will they succeed in bringing its commander to justice or will he evade their clutches once more?

Fraternity is the last in the trilogy of novels: Liberty, Equality and Fraternity.

Cosmic Lock by Aurora SpringerCosmic Lock by Aurora Springer:

Three sets of enemies and a wormhole to shut?

Follow the superpowered Griffins on a rollercoaster adventure where new threats counter each success.

Grand Masters Violet and Athanor Griffin return from beyond the Cosmic Rift with two shiploads of rescued children and escaped slaves, but their enemies have not been idle in their absence. Avalon is in flames and their baby son is missing. Finding him may be the easiest of their problems. They must unite the fractious Grand Masters, stop the bloodsucking Ixioths from enslaving sentients, and seal the cosmic rupture to prevent new incursions of the vindictive Nulls. The clock is ticking. They have twelve days to squash their enemies before their final venture into the alternate universe. Can they overcome the challenges and secure peace for the galaxy?

Deception by Glynn StewartDeception by Glynn Stewart:

A new home on the edge of nowhere
A new hope for a peaceful future
An old enemy that won’t let go

Kira Demirci left her homeworld of Apollo pursued by assassins seeking revenge for her victories in the war against the Brisingr Kaiserreich. Now she has a new home and a new role: as the nova fighter wing commander aboard the mercenary carrier Conviction under Captain John Estanza.

Conviction is on retainer with the royal family of Redward, who encourage Kira and her pilots to make themselves a new home on the frontier planet. But there is a reason they want to tie the mercenary carrier’s crew more tightly to themselves and stormclouds are brewing on the horizon.

Those clouds break when a Redward warship goes missing on a standard patrol. Conviction and her fighters are sent out to find the destroyer—but instead they find a deadly plot by old enemies that will bring down the Syntactic Cluster in fire and war.

Unless Kira Demirci can do the impossible.

Lacey and Alex: The Dagger of Ill Repute by V.R. TapscottLacey and Alex: The Dagger of Ill Repute by V.R. Tapscott

Talking Plants, Explosions, Gunfire, Mayhem,
Magic and a Hint of Romance.

Lacey & Alex, roommates in San Francisco, are a barista and a cook by day. By night though, Lacey is a part time private investigator and Alex talks to plants. And they talk back.

In this book, they get dragged into hunting for a lost dagger. Of course, it winds up being so much more than simply a lost dagger.

The pair spend a couple of action-filled weeks travelling from San Francisco to Los Angeles, Barstow to Vegas and all parts between in their hunt for the elusive artifact.

They meet up with loose cannon Stevie and step it up a notch with exploding cars and tension of a whole nother kind, as she makes it clear what she thinks of Lacey.

Olive from Jane Bond shows up with a little tiny insignificant part (heh) and Jane herself has a cameo.

Join Lacey & Alex and Stevie as they have the adventure of a lifetime! Talking plants, explosions, gunfire, mayhem, magic and a little bit of romance all enter the picture before the end, in this slightly humorous, slightly serious, and always fun mystery.

Child of Wrath by R.K. ThorneChild of Wrath by R.K. Thorne:

Commander Ellen Ryu, Lieutenant Kael Sidassian, and the crew of the starship Audacity barely escaped Capital with their lives. Then betrayal kicked down their door. Now they need to clean up the mess.

The one team member they thought was safe has disappeared—their benefactor Doug Simmons. Doug’s former classmate is also in danger, and he’d planned a mission for them to rescue her. And the crew is zeroing in on just what exactly Ellen’s nemesis Dr. Arakovic is planning as the clues sharpen into focus.

Will the team be able to put together the pieces of many different puzzles before it's too late? Attacked on multiple fronts, Ellen and her crew will have to divide and conquer if they want to triumph.

Because cyborg super soldiers, awkward aliens, gang members with secrets, and an ex-girlfriend from the past are just a few of the problems on their plate.

The baby they've been hiding from the entire galaxy is also about to make herself known.
Loudly.

Code Monkey by A.E. WilliamsCode Monkey by A.E. Williams

THAT IS ONE ANGRY MONKEY!

A.E. Williams opines on more matters of concern to thinking people, philosophers and chicken farmers.

CODE MONKEY follows the trajectory set by ROCKET SURGEON, as A.E. Williams opens up a can of whoop-ass on science, technology, politics and religion. Yeah, all those uncomfortable subjects that polite people eschew during cocktail party banter are just gristle for the mill as far as Williams is concerned.

Rocket Surgeon was just the first stage! Code Monkey ramps it up with a second-stage-to-orbit collection of articles, essays and unpublished works that will leave you shocked, aghast and rolling on the floor laughing.

Follow irascible raconteur, voyeur and mental saboteur A.E. Williams down a whole slew of rabbit holes, conspiracy theories, discussions about the fallacies and truth of the challenges of our times! You’ll discover why Williams is one of the most sought-after essayists on the planet. (Sought after by aliens, Sasquatch, sea serpents and hackers, that is…)

Once more, A.E. takes you by the hand and shoves facts, figures and statistics up your…nose, until you are spitting mad at finding out you have been duped all this time by Big Brother, the Deep State, the Man, the Establishment and even your lying parents! (Oh, for the sake of Santa! How could you!)
Williams regales you with personal tales from the aerospace trenches. He shows why firmly held ‘scientific’ facts are just as suspect as ‘truths’ that have been debunked, time and again. You’ll be cramming your tinfoil hat past your ears as you are exposed to the grim secrets of how the world REALLY works!

And, as always, you’ll chuckle and chortle your way through page after page of outrageous stories, anecdotes and observations by the man Cleopatra* said was “So funny I laughed my asp off!”

Get your copy TODAY and join the ranks of computer-literate primates who have gone bananas over riots, COVID19 and all the troubles in the world that have you praying for the Second Coming, World War 3 or a long-overdue asteroid strike!

*Cleopatra Jones works as a hair stylist in Roanoke, Va.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Speculative Fiction Links of the Week for July 30, 2020


It's time for the latest weekly round-up of interesting links about speculative fiction from around the web, this week with the various iterations of Star Trek, The Old Guard, Radioactive, the virtual San Diego Comic Con and the virtual Worldcon CoNZealand and much more.

Speculative fiction in general:

Film and TV:

Comments on the various iterations of Star Trek:

Comments on The Old Guard:

Comments on Radioactive

Awards: 

Writing, publishing and promotion:

Interviews:

Reviews: 

Classics reviews:

Con and event reports:

Crowdfunding:

Science and technology:

Free online fiction:

Odds and ends: 

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Lacey & Alex: The Dagger of Ill Repute by V.R. Tapscott

Release date: June 25, 2020
Sub-genre: LGBT Fantasy

About Lacey & Alex: The Dagger of Ill Repute:


Lacey & Alex, roommates in San Francisco, are a barista and a cook by day. By night though, Lacey is a part time private investigator and Alex talks to plants. And they talk back.

In this book, they get dragged into hunting for a lost dagger. Of course, it winds up being so much more than simply a lost dagger.

The pair spend a couple of action-filled weeks travelling from San Francisco to Los Angeles, Barstow to Vegas and all parts between in their hunt for the elusive artifact.

They meet up with loose cannon Stevie and step it up a notch with exploding cars and tension of a whole other kind, as she makes it clear what she thinks of Lacey.

Olive from "Jane Bond" shows up with a little tiny insignificant part (heh) and Jane herself has a cameo.

Join Lacey & Alex and Stevie as they have the adventure of a lifetime! Talking plants, explosions, gunfire, mayhem, magic and a little bit of romance all enter the picture before the end, in this slightly humorous, slightly serious, and always fun mystery.

Excerpt:


I shrugged. “Well, it says in here that she’s an excellent marksman, black belt in karate and a Bachelor’s Degree in accounting, and not only that, she has her CPA.”

“What does that mean?”

“I guess she does her own taxes?”

Alex slugged me. Pretty hard. “You know what I mean.”

“Yeah, of course. But since she mentioned that she was in computers, it didn’t sound like she was counting computers, it was more like programming or monitoring or maintenance. Doesn’t it say in there someplace?” I pointed to the hated document.

Alex picked her phone back up like it was hot, or possibly covered in slime. She read for a few minutes (the thing was pages long) and then commented, “Well, she’s an expert in cyber warfare as well. Looks like she trained in cyber defense at Purdue, I guess that accounts for her being able to hack into whatever she wanted to. Probably including the child’s play of the battery cut-off in the Vette.”

I mused over that for a few minutes. “Maybe we can get her to help? I mean, it’s not like she’s being gross or anything. It’s all pretty stylish, and if I was in the mood for a girlfriend, this might actually be attractive.”

“Attractive? Are YOU nuts? This just drips of Fatal Attraction. Watch for polyester bunnies arriving.”

I didn’t mention to Alex that the vision of Douglas and Close in the bathroom scene had been the first thing that went through my head.


About V.R.Tapscott:


It seems like I've been writing forever in some way, shape or form. 

However, most of my real experience comes from role playing in World of Warcraft. That may seem a strange place to learn how to write, but that isn't the case at all. 

Visualize having to always know what to say, instantly, and be in character saying it. Now visualize doing this for 1-4 hours a day for months and years. 

What it does is eliminate the need to think when writing. You instinctively know how this character will react since you've been trained over hundreds and hundreds of hours of spontaneous improvisation. I always know what she's going to say, since she is me. I am her. After all, we all know what we're going to say, or we find out immediately after having said it. Sometimes to our chagrin.

And I've found that this carries over into writing on digital paper. Or at least it appears to. I suppose my readers will decide if it's a fun read, or a boring load of tripe. 

But let me know either way. :-) 

Website | Facebook

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Code Monkey by A.E. Williams

Release date: June 26, 2020
Sub-genre: Science Essays, Humor

About Code Monkey:


THAT IS ONE ANGRY MONKEY!

A.E. Williams opines on more matters of concern to thinking people, philosophers and chicken farmers.

CODE MONKEY follows the trajectory set by ROCKET SURGEON, as A.E. Williams opens up a can of whoop-ass on science, technology, politics and religion. Yeah, all those uncomfortable subjects that polite people eschew during cocktail party banter are just gristle for the mill as far as Williams is concerned.

Rocket Surgeon was just the first stage! Code Monkey ramps it up with a second-stage-to-orbit collection of articles, essays and unpublished works that will leave you shocked, aghast and rolling on the floor laughing.

Follow irascible raconteur, voyeur and mental saboteur A.E. Williams down a whole slew of rabbit holes, conspiracy theories, discussions about the fallacies and truth of the challenges of our times! You’ll discover why Williams is one of the most sought-after essayists on the planet. (Sought after by aliens, Sasquatch, sea serpents and hackers, that is…)

Once more, A.E. takes you by the hand and shoves facts, figures and statistics up your…nose, until you are spitting mad at finding out you have been duped all this time by Big Brother, the Deep State, the Man, the Establishment and even your lying parents! (Oh, for the sake of Santa! How could you!)

Williams regales you with personal tales from the aerospace trenches. He shows why firmly held ‘scientific’ facts are just as suspect as ‘truths’ that have been debunked, time and again. You’ll be cramming your tinfoil hat past your ears as you are exposed to the grim secrets of how the world REALLY works!

And, as always, you’ll chuckle and chortle your way through page after page of outrageous stories, anecdotes and observations by the man Cleopatra* said was “So funny I laughed my asp off!”

Get your copy TODAY and join the ranks of computer-literate primates who have gone bananas over riots, COVID19 and all the troubles in the world that have you praying for the Second Coming, World War 3 or a long-overdue asteroid strike!

*Cleopatra Jones works as a hair stylist in Roanoke, Va.  


Excerpt:


ADULTING

In March 2019 I attended another AirShow in Titusville, with my daughter. This time, she was accompanied by her fiancé, and some of his work friends. This time, there was not a corresponding SpaceX launch scheduled. There had been a problem, when the escape devices for the Dragon capsule had detonated and spread debris all over the launch area.

But, this time, my daughter had a larger perspective, I would imagine. 

Her fiancé and I book-ended this project. 

I mean, I don’t know what he does there, but I know he is in software development, so maybe his team had contributed something to the effort. I had been there at the inception of the program, and now he had picked up some virtual torch, I suppose.

I did get a lot more respect, I felt, this time around, because I knew a LOT about the parameters and capabilities of the plane.

When it basically stood on its tail, hovering in the air, it was old news to me. Hell, Harriers were doing that a long time ago.

But, to these kids, seeing a plane hover like that was almost magical.

Only, they took it for granted, just as they did the supercomputer videophones they carried around, taking Instapics or Snapphotos or whatever they have now. This was a generation that literally grew up with technologies I had only imagined at their age.

And, it was wonderful to behold, as the F-35 arced off into the sky, only to return a bit later with a P-51 Mustang in tow.

The juxtaposition was not lost on me. I was a P-51, where once I was an F-35.

Getting old has its rewards, but just then, I wanted to travel back to when I was a younger man, excited to see things the rest of the world wouldn’t see for many years. That entire nostalgia thing, right?

And, once more, I was given another lesson in Relativity.

See, I was watching these events unfold through the eyes of experience.
The same dangers that were present a year ago, at the earlier Air Show were still here.

I have written about risk in ‘Rocket Surgeon.’ It’s a factor that cannot be escaped in the world of aerospace. But, this time, these children of technology also were beginning to understand just why, despite all of the risks, we pursue these elusive and incredibly difficult goals. I watched their faces as the strong Florida sun hit us, baking the airfield. I saw the others in the crowd nodding their heads as the announcer recited bald facts. I smiled along with them with the realization that America was getting greater – at least in some small way.

At the end of the day, we walked back to our car, and waited, along with all the other techno-pilgrims, to exit this place of miracles. The F-35 and the P-51 had since departed, but every time a helicopter or other aircraft passed by, they, too, craned their heads to catch a glimpse of the future.

Their future…

I spoke with my daughter a while later. She’s gotten her degree and was thinking about going to grad school, and her soon-to-be mother-in-law was probably going to be moving in with them. She was optimistic about it, but said that ‘adulting’ was a lot harder than it looked.

I had to grin.

I remember the trials and tribulations of my life, and how many times things were bleak, and times they were great, and all the while we just keep on floating through space on this fragile spaceship we inhabit.

Today’s generation seems hell-bent on fixing things that may be unfixable. 
Or, maybe they aren’t even problems at all…

But I have great hope that they will grow into their roles as stewards of our planet, and maybe not be as ready to get into useless wars, or pollute the environment to the degree which their forefathers felt was acceptable.

Because, I saw the future when I was young. 

And, lo and behold, many of the miracles have indeed come to pass.

I still want a jetpack, though.

A.E. Williams is running a special on Code Monkey beginning on July 28, for five days. It's a Kindle countdown, with the initial price at $.99 and the final reverting to the current price of $5.99 on August 2.



About A.E. Williams:



A.E. Williams has a unique background of military experience, aerospace engineering and intelligence analysis. He has a varied career, from inventor to consultant, and pretty much everything in between.

Born near Pittsburgh, A.E. Williams is man of a mystery.

As a young man, Williams served the United States government in various capacities, which he then followed with fifteen years as a consultant. Williams currently resides in rural Central Florida.

He does his writing at night, usually accompanied by a bottle of Maker's Mark bourbon and a large supply of Classic Dr. Pepper and ice.  

Website | Youtube

Monday, July 27, 2020

Interview with Craig Stewart, author of Follow Him



Today it gives the Speculative Fiction Showcase great pleasure to interview Craig Stewart, author of Follow Him and Worship Me.

Your novel Follow Him, published by Hellbound Books, had its debut in October last year. It’s safe to say it’s a horror novel. What drew you to horror as a genre in the first place?
In my experience, horror is for the outsider; it’s an angry, anarchistic genre. When I was a kid, I wasn’t terribly angry, but I was gay. Still am. And growing up gay in a small town in the 90s, there’s just no way that you’re not going to feel like the outsider. So, while perusing the video rental stores, I stumbled upon this section near the back filled with people with knives for fingers and pins in their heads, and I thought, well, this is where I belong. These films did more than scare me (though, they really did), they expressed something in me that needed out, exorcised demons, if you will, and let me face them.

Your biography says you learnt to count from the words: “One, two Freddy’s coming for you.”! That’s – unexpected. Were your parents horror fans, or was it a coincidence?
My parents hate horror, haha! I had to watch this stuff secretly, hidden away in the basement, which really only made everything more frightening. 
That comment from my bio is a little facetious. I didn’t literally learn how to count from A Nightmare On Elm Street – I probably learned that from some poorly illustrated book about a kid trying to share apples. What I did learn from Wes Craven’s masterpiece, was a way of dealing with the horrors of life, and of understanding them. It profoundly influenced me. I first saw the film at a very young age, so, Freddy made his mark. But, how Nancy defeated Freddy is what I really attached to. She didn’t run, she learned everything she could about him, thereby taking away his power, and then she turned her back on him. That’s powerful stuff. We’re all afraid of the unknown, so, what happens when the unknown becomes known? Well, then, whatever nightmare we were afraid of becomes just another dream.

Horror and childhood seem to be deeply associated. Sometimes children are the pathetic victims of horror, sometimes the terrifying perpetrators – see films like Poltergeist, Stephen King’s It and A Nightmare on Elm Street, to name a few. What’s that about?
I think horror as a genre serves many roles in a society. The most important being an exploration of the forbidden. When a new idea is being introduced to a society, usually there are these rings it needs to pass through. The first ring is horror, because new ideas emerge from the unknown. The next ring is usually comedy, as people start to poke fun from a distance, becoming acclimatized to it. The final ring is drama, where the idea is honestly explored. For example, queerness in cinema didn’t start with Brokeback Mountain, it first journeyed through The Bates Motel, and even before that, Bride of Frankenstein (in a more coded way). So, if you want to know what ideas a society is struggling with, look to horror.
(at the risk of sounding too much like a thesis paper) Furthermore, horror deals with many troubling and universal ideas that challenge us all; the biggest one being that we are meat bags, capable of being spilled. For kids, the horror genre is usually the first real exploration of this idea. And so, they are often represented in peril, threatened by the bogeyman. Of course, there’s the sub-genre of evil kid movies, which, unless a demon is involved, usually turns out to be more psychological horror, which, ironically, kids rarely enjoy as much as adults do.

Plus, deep down, everyone is creeped out by kids, right?

Follow Him concerns a religious cult that establishes itself in the town of Dreury. Is small-town Canada, like the same milieu in America, a particularly good setting for horror and the weird? (See King again and David Lynch)
I think they’re similar, but not exactly the same. Small town Canada feels… quieter? More subdued, maybe. Open fields; hollow wind; not a friendly face for kilometres. I think the creepiness of a Canadian small town has a lot more to do with isolation, whereas American small towns in horror stories often have terrible secrets, hidden histories, that sort of thing.

The cult is called The Shared Heart and the protagonist, Jacob, joins because he is emotionally broken. His fiancee tries to rescue him and finds they are both in mortal peril. Would you say there is psychological horror as well as the supernatural?
Absolutely! This novel certainly has a great deal of both. Actually, I’d argue that all supernatural horror that’s any good is psychological. For example, no one is actually afraid of zombies coming out of the graves, but, everyone is afraid of what they represent: our inevitable death that shambles closer every day. Same can be said for werewolves (sexual repression), demons (mental illness), and clowns (just clowns… they don’t need to represent anything other than pure terror).

In what way does this story tap into our deepest fears about cults and indeed religion?
I view all established religious institutions as big cults. There’s no difference in my mind between an obscure sect who meets out in the desert every full moon and the Vatican, other than one happened to come to power and one didn’t. They have a way of creating a hive mind. I think, right now, we’re living in a time, certainly politically, that’s ruled by cult-thinking. It’s a terrifying thing to see. There’s something disturbingly dehumanizing about cults. With Follow Him, I wanted to exploit this frightening trend, while also questioning… what if the cult were right?

You wrote your own hymn for the cult known as The Shared Heart – can you tell us about that and how important music is to your writing?
I love music. It’s my main source of inspiration. It’s also the easiest way to evade someone’s rational brain and go right for their heart – which cults need to do in order to brainwash. That’s why music plays a huge part in all religions. In terms of my own writing, I often compose a couple of tracks of music to emphasize certain themes or characters. It’s kind of like scoring a movie, only, a book. I wrote a couple of inspirational tracks for Follow Him, including one that’s the main tune for the hymn sung by The Shared Heart. If you’re interested, you can find it here.



Your first novel, Worship Me, also centres on a religious subject – a church congregation whose prayers are answered, but not in a good way. In older horror, such as The Exorcist, the church is the locus of good, against the power of evil. Have your novels abandoned that classic trope?
Oh yes, I’ve abandoned that notion wholeheartedly, haha! It’s funny because horror has always had a tough relationship with religion. Like you said, sometimes it’s a force of good, like in The Exorcist (though, I would argue that in that film/book, god fails, and it’s Father Karras’ love for the child that forces the devil out), and sometimes it’s a force of evil, like in The Wicker Man
I grew up attending church every Sunday. I was confirmed into the faith and all that. In fact, the small country church in Worship Me is based off the actual church I attended as a child. I lost my faith while reckoning with my sexual orientation. Then, I hated faith for a while after my sister died. Now, I view faith and religion as this ancient, antiquated monster that doesn’t really know how to function in the new world. Like all good monsters, it’s both powerful and pitiful. That’s really what my first book is about.

In what way does Follow Him continue the story of Worship Me?
I think of Follow Him less as a sequel to Worship Me, and more like a sister novel. Both of them are their own stories. Worship Me is about religion, Follow Him, although centred around a cult, is about love. That being said, there is a very important character in Follow Him that connects the two books and brings both stories to an end. Or, maybe just opens the door to a third book. Things are bubbling.

Horror seems on the surface like a very moral genre, ending with the big bad defeated and the protagonists saved. But it can also have a nihilistic ending. What does this say about changing tastes?
A lot has been written regarding the morality of horror tales. I don’t know if it’s a changing tastes sort of thing, or, if there’s always been nihilistic horror and morally driven horror, and critics from certain eras just chose to focus on either one or the other. For example, while papers were being written about the morality of slasher films, at the same time, Dan O’Bannon was ending Return of the Living Dead (spoiler alert) by dropping a big bomb on everyone, and Carrie was burning her school down. 

What is your view of recent horror films like Midsommar, which combines beauty, folklore and body horror?
I was a huge fan of Hereditary (it was heredi-scary!). And I had big hopes for Midsommar. There’s a lot of interesting stuff in that film, and, you’re right, I like how the horror is almost surreally beautiful, but, for me, I’m a huge fan of The Wicker Man (the Cage version… kidding), and Midsommar just didn’t feel as fresh as Hereditary was. Maybe I was just in a bad mood and need to rewatch it.  

As a filmmaker yourself, do you have plans to make longer movies?
Yes, I’d love to. The problem is one that all independent filmmakers face… cash. Movies take a lot of it. Books, however, well, that’s just me and a typing machine, so, pretty cheap. At least I have a couple of books to base screenplays off of. Now, if I could just remember where I left that 30 million dollars... Jokes aside, I do plan on building a story that’s more contained within a modest budget. That’s the next project!

What books do you read, within and outside the genre?
I’m almost finished Scott Hawkins’ Library At Mount Char, which has been a fun read. Not very horrific, though, it has its moments. I like to read independent authors as well. Keep a nice mixed bag. Also, I love a good memoir. I read Words Without Music by Philip Glass. It was a delight. Amazing artist.

Have you got any recommendations?
If you’re interested in Canadian queer horror, I highly recommend Michael Rowe’s October. It’s just a great, classy creep-out with a wonderfully gut-wrenching finale. It’s a story that anyone who has ever felt like an outsider will be able to deeply relate to… and that might be the most terrifying thing about it.

What are you working on now?
I’m suffocating myself with a couple of projects. I’m doing the final draft of this horror/comedy novel based in the 80s about a woman who dreamed of being a princess, but found out she’s actually a monster. I’m really enjoying how this one is coming together. Lots of splattery fun! Beyond that, I have plans to focus a bit more on film-making again. A few scripts ideas are floating around. And I have at least one more novel in there too, I know. That one will be a very personal book, so, I don’t want to rush it.

To keep up with all my projects, please feel free to checkout my social feeds, or find me here on my website.




About Craig Stewart:



Craig Stewart is a Canadian author and filmmaker who learned how to count from the rhyme, “One, two Freddy’s coming for you.” He’s a creator and connoisseur of everything horror; never afraid to delve into the dark. His first novel, Worship Me, received the New Apple Literary Award of Excellence for horror in 2018. He has also written and directed several short films that have enjoyed screenings across North America. He currently wanders dark hallways in Toronto, Canada.