Das Literarische Quartett Reloaded, Take 2, or the State of Literary Programming on German TV

Don’t worry, I’m not planning to review every episode of the revived Literarisches Quartett, a literature discussion program on German TV (For more information about the program in general, see my review of the first episode of the revival here). But watching the second episode of the revival last night, featuring regular critics Volker Weidermann, Maxim Biller and Christine Westermann and guest critic Ursula Maerz, I realised that I have some more to say about this. The full episode may be watched online here BTW.

For starters, I’m still not sure whether we are truly witnessing the resurrection of Das Literarische Quartett like phoenix from the ashes or just an undead zombie version of the program shambling across the airwaves to suck out viewers’ brains. I’m hoping for the former, of course, but at the moment it’s looking more like the latter.

Lots of neepery about the program, Star Wars, Russian anarchists, Thomas Mann and German literature in general under the cut: Continue reading

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Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month for October 2015

Indie Speculative Fiction of the MonthIt’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 September 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. We have quite a bit of horror (it’s Halloween, after all), science fiction, space opera, planetary romance, military science fiction, paranormal romance, science fiction romance, post-apocalyptic fiction, near future science fiction, epic fantasy, urban fantasy, historical fantasy, weird westerns, prison planets, interplanetary wars, lost worlds, were-bears, dragon shifters, aliens, zombies, immortal demon hunters, demons that feed on fame and fortune, wild west mages, Boston witches, biotech specialists, politicians moonlighting as necromancers and much more.

Don’t forget that Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month is also crossposted to the Speculative Fiction Showcase, a group blog run by Jessica Rydill and myself, which features new release spotlights, guest posts, interviews and link round-ups regarding all things speculative fiction several times per week.

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:

Zero Hour Part 2: BadlandsZero Hour Part 2: Badlands by Eamon Ambrose:

A soldier transformed begins a perilous journey with an unlikely companion to find answers in this thrilling continuation of the hit short story Zero Hour.

 

 

 

 

Odd Tree Quarterly, edited by Joel AnselOdd Tree Quarterly, edited by Joel Ansel:

Odd Tree Quarterly, your source for quality short fiction, presents its fantastic debut issue: a fabulous Halloween Special.

Featuring nineteen stories, a humorous essay and amazing art, this issue has much to offer the discerning fan of short fiction including:

Meet Mister Boogley by Jill Hand
Dean thought he could finance his dreams of making it as an MMA fighter by scamming the elderly Edna McGintley. How wrong he was. Because Edna’s not as defenseless as she seems: she has someone watching out for her. All the fighting skill in the world might not help Dean when he meets Mister Boogley.

Collateral Damage by Robert Stahl
A lethal threat literally hangs over the planet’s head and the outcome may hang on General Rex Perkins and his willingness to send his best friend, the most qualified person for the job, to die. Things are only complicated by the fact that his choice may not be entirely selfless.

The Girl on the Stump by jb raines
Ten-year-old Henry makes a new friend over the summer; a girl he meets near his home who spends her time siting on a stump, never speaking. As the long, bright days go by however, the question arises: is this girl real, or the mere flickering of childhood fantasy? Or is she something else entirely?

Don’t Be Afraid of the Lights by Die Booth
Thanks to a careless childhood prank, Bill has gone through his life with a debilitating fear of spiders. Luckily his wife, Barabara has the answer: a visit to the hypnotist Agnes Crawford. Full of hope to finally be rid of the source of his greatest anxiety, Bill is about to learn that to worst terrors don’t crawl about on eight legs–they live entirely in your mind.

Beer, Wine & Spirits by Jon Etter
Sharon’s Pub is a very special drinking establishment where one can come for a brew, a bite to eat–and directions to the afterlife.

Bill Ornette sets out from Sharon’s on a mission to confront his deceased wife over a past transgression he hasn’t forgiven her for. Along the way, he has to deal with the bad attitude of the boatman on the River Styx, a guy who bares a striking resemblance to Santa Claus, and something completely different from the airing of grievances he came for.

Also Fiction and Art By
Mark Mills, Lee A. Forman, Gillian French, Voss Foster, S.C. Hayden, Floyd Looney, Sarina Dorie, T.C. Powell, Kevin Bannigan Jr., Jon Chan, Benjamin Sperduto, Ross Baxter, Cassandra Ray-Stanley, Joel Ansel, and featuring original art by Jeremiah Morelli

Children of the Stone Gods by Cora BuhlertChildren of the Stone Gods by Cora Buhlert:

This is a collection of seven tales on the borderline of science fiction and fantasy. Seven stories of lost worlds, where carcasses of crashed spaceships litter the landscape and science and technology have long turned into myth and legend.

Enter a world of sacrifices and stone gods, where people live in the hulls of the great space arks that brought their ancestors to this planet, where four-armed assassins ply their trade and wandering priests warn of great cataclysms, where gods lie sleeping inside mountains and strange lights shine in the sky by night.

This is a collection of seven short science fiction tales of 12000 words or approximately 40 print pages altogether.

Moore Hollow by J.D. ByrneMoore Hollow by J.D. Byrne:

Ben Potter’s life is a shambles. As a journalist he’s hit rock bottom, writing dreck about monsters and ghouls to make ends meet after a big story blew up in his face. As a son he’s a disappointment, unwilling to follow his father, grandfather, and great grandfather into the family business. As a father, he’s mostly just not there.

Now a new assignment could change all that. All he has to do is go from London to the hills of West Virginia to investigate the strangest of stories his great grandfather told. Did a sleazy politician really raise the dead to try and win an election? And if he did, what happened to the zombies? Could they still exist? Ben needs to find out, to solve the mystery and find a way to get his life back on track.

But finding the answer only presents Ben with a whole new batch of problems. Does he use what he learns to put his life back on track? Or will he be compelled to do the right thing, even if it leaves his life a mess?

The hardest part of a mystery is deciding what to do once you’ve solved it.

White Sky by Lara Campbell McGeheeWhite Sky by Lara Campbell McGehee:

In a forgotten village on the windswept tundra of a small planetary colony, a young man called Jem is the only Sanndai. He knows nothing of his own people but the stories told by the Torvik villagers: stories of how the Sanndai came from the sky, bringing weapons that made people disappear, and banished the Torviks to this harsh land.
Now that Jem is grown, the elderly midwife who raised him can no longer protect him. Strong-willed and defiant, Jem struggles to prove his worth, but he’s shunned by most of the villagers. A man with mad eyes who seems to know something of Jem’s unknown past despises him most of all—a brutal man who could kill Jem without remorse.
If staying alive means leaving, Jem must have the courage to seek a new life outside the only world he has ever known—and to face the people he knows only from tales of their arrogance and cruelty.

Caught in the Glow by Eva ChaseCaught in the Glow by Eva Chase:

She’ll risk her heart to save his soul…

When she was a child, Avery Harmen watched her father die at the hands of a Glower—a breed of demon that feeds on dreams of fame and glory. Now she secretly protects the rising stars of Los Angeles from the demons that prey on them, determined to make sure her clients never suffer the same fate.

Then Avery finds herself assigned to Colin Ryder, a young indie rocker who just landed a major label deal. Colin is cocky, rebellious, a brilliant musician, and already in the Glowers’ sights. He’s also far too hot for Avery to ignore the chemistry between them—especially when she gets to know the tender side behind his celebrity facade. Though Avery knows she’s falling too fast, she’s willing to risk heartbreak if fanning the flames of attraction distracts Colin from his Glower-tempting antics. But Colin is keeping a secret of his own, one so big it will put both her heart and his soul on the line.

The first book in The Glower Chronicles, a steamy New Adult paranormal series.

Rider's Revenge by Alessandra ClarkeRider’s Revenge by Alessandra Clarke:

K’lrsa loves her life as a Rider for the White Horse Tribe. She spends her days hunting with her Amalanee horse, Fallion, and her nights avoiding her mother’s attempts to settle her down.

Even though there are hints that the world around her is changing, K’lrsa thinks her life is perfect.

Until the day her father is brutally murdered and she sets out to avenge him.

As she follows the vision the Great Father Sun showed her, determined to kill the man she thinks is responsible at any cost, even her own life, she’s haunted by dreams of a beautiful young man she can never have and a life she was never going to live.

Alone in a world vastly different from the one she’s known, she’ll have to decide: Avenge her father or follow her heart.

Will she succeed in destroying the Toreem Daliphate and killing the man responsible for her father’s death? Only the gods know.

A Witch's Feast by C.N. CrawfordA Witch’s Feast by C.N. Crawford:

“There are new rules governing the country–namely, no magic. But Fiona Forzese has never been good with rules.”

After a ghostly army terrorized Boston, the Ranulf family say they’ll help Fiona and her classmates finish up junior year. They say their old Virginia plantation is a safe haven. All Fiona and her secret coven have to do is show up to a few math and English classes.

It should be a perfect solution. And it would be, if the Ranulfs weren’t members of a witch-hunting cult.

As Fiona digs deeper into the Ranulf’s past, she learns a dark truth that shocks her to her core. But it isn’t only the Ranulfs who are keeping secrets, and as the witch-hunting cult closes in, Fiona is forced to confront the demons of her own past.

Archangel Down by C. GockelArchangel Down by C. Gockel:

In the year 2432, humans think they are alone in the universe. They’re wrong.

Commander Noa Sato plans a peaceful leave on her home planet Luddeccea … but winds up interrogated and imprisoned for her involvement in the Archangel Project. A project she knows nothing about.

Professor James Sinclair wakes in the snow, not remembering the past twenty four hours, or knowing why he is being pursued. The only thing he knows is that he has to find Commander Sato. A woman he’s never met.

A military officer from the colonies and a civilian from Old Earth, they couldn’t have less in common. But they have to work together to save the lives of millions–and their own.

Every step of the way they are haunted by the final words of a secret transmission:

The archangel is down.

City of Mages by Kyra HallandCity of Mages by Kyra Halland:

A nightmare come true – Silas is taken by mage hunters. Determined to rescue the man she loves, Lainie braves the perilous passage through the Gap to follow him and his captors into the mage-ruled land of Granadaia. There, she discovers a betrayal she never imagined and a deep-rooted conspiracy that threatens the safety and freedom of the settlers in the Wildings. Alone in a strange land, with no one she can trust, Lainie must find a way to free Silas and put an end to the danger facing their beloved Wildings.

This is book 5 of the Daughter of the Wildings western fantasy romance series.

Ranger of Mayat by Jim JohnsonRanger of Mayat by Jim Johnson:

The Scales Are Out of Balance

When Tjety, an exiled Ranger of Mayat, discovers a ransacked village along the lawless northern Kekhmet frontier, he marshals his training and divine hekau magic to hunt down the ruthless cultists responsible for the attack. But can he find them before their prisoners are twisted into mindless slaves serving a necromancer bent on shattering the tenuous balance between order and chaos?

Ranger of Mayat is the first episode in PISTOLS AND PYRAMIDS, an all-new monthly series best described as an ancient Egyptian-themed weird western with magic. And mummies. Lots of mummies.

The Sane King by Matt Knott The Sane King by Matt Knott:

Heroes are not born, but forged.

A lone warrior takes up the cause of a hunted boy. A desperate nation seeks to bolster its fragile army. A malevolent god feasts on the nightmares of men and seeks to bring ruin to all.

The wanderer, Rayle, stands against the preternatural forces lurking on the edges of civilization and sanity. In the bleak lands of the Wrack, he rescues Bray from brutal men. Swearing to help the boy seek vengeance for the death of his brothers, Rayle finds himself locked in a savage contest that tests both his strength of arms and will.

The Younger Union, losing its long war against a tyrannical enemy is moved to enforce ancient contracts. Tensions build as an idyllic farming community becomes the stage upon which the future of the north will be decided.

When events collide, and a monstrous power threatens to drown their world in blood, Rayle and his unlikely allies must fight to stop the tides of carnage. To win they must first survive, and to survive they must overcome their fears, doubts, and regrets.

They must unite and set aside differences, and in doing so they may stand against the madness of The Sane King.

Lost with a Grizzly by Desiree MoonLost with a Grizzly by Desirée Moon:

Out in the cold and escaping from a horrific past…

Nina Jacoby makes a desperate escape and runs away from her abusive past. When she stops to catch her breath, she finds herself in Black Oak forest. A home to shifters in the icy Alaskan wilderness. She meets Rafe Hart–a grizzly who runs a lumber yard nearby. Immediately, he’s entranced by her fuzzy curls, and luscious curves–eager to seek out a mate. But not if his brother Axle has anything to say about it!

Axle can’t stand Nina and her weak-puny-human ways. The two of them hate each other instantly, but slowly Nina starts to chip away at his ice-cold heart. Nina’s about to find out that living with grizzlies is not as easy as it seems. With these two bears at her beck and call, just how will poor Nina keep herself warm through those snowy winter nights?

Finding the Phoenix by Caitlin O'ConnorFinding the Phoenix by Caitlin O’Connor:

Descended from humans and a vanished race of elemental beings, only the Awakened know the truth about our world. Only they can hold back the fanatic Handmaidens of the Skaath Diurga–shadow creatures born from an ancient betrayal.
However, the Circle of Awakened is incomplete without the Child of Heaven: a human destined to Wield the Spirit element. Before she can Awaken, she must die.

Heaven has no memory of dying, except the experience of death itself. It’s that memory, of a place called ‘The Between’, that convinces her the man claiming to be her Guardian might not be completely crazy. Besides, even crazy is better than the life she’s leaving behind to be the Circle’s Wielder of Spirit. All she has to worry about now is her training, and figuring out how to fit in with the Awakened.

Tragedy strikes when one of the Guardians is killed, and ulterior motives thrust Heaven into the middle of the Circle’s quest for justice. She’ll have to decide just how far she’ll go for the people she’s come to care about.

A Vanishing Glow by Alexis RadcliffA Vanishing Glow by Alexis Radcliff:

It is an Age of Revolution, an Age of Industrialism. Constructs, living men who are as much brass and steel as they are flesh, man the factories and wage the wars of a ruling elite who gorge themselves on the fruits of the common man’s labor. Mystech, a brilliant fusion of magic and machine, gives rise to a new class of privileged inventors and merchants even as the country festers with wounds from decades of internal strife.

Only one man holds the promise of a brighter future: Nole Ryon, the crown prince. When his childhood friend Jason Tern answers his call for aid, the two of them set out to fight for the change their country needs in order to survive, even as shadowy foes frustrate their efforts. But soon, Jason and Nole’s idealistic mission of hope becomes a furious manhunt for a political murderer as the nation balances on the precipice of a country-wide civil war. Can they cut through the threads of intrigue to discover their true enemy before everything is lost?

Sweeping from the ancient cities at the heart of the nation to the dusty edges of the war-torn frontier, A Vanishing Glow tells a tale of lords and ladies, soldiers and assassins, friends and lovers, who come together in a time of epic struggle. Here a brave officer risks everything to win back his estranged father’s respect; a brilliant young engineer attempts to atone for her sins; a war-weary commander tries to pick up the pieces of the life he lost; and a man touched by the gods struggles to prepare a nation for the coming of an ancient evil which only he can see. In the dying light of a once-prosperous society, amid twisting plots, suffering and betrayal, lost love and shattered dreams, all must fight for what they hold dear. Who will taste the fruits of victory and who will lie bloodied on the ground in the light of a vanishing glow?

Prison Planet by Jim RudnickPrison Planet by Jim Rudnick:

“After a failed planetary rebellion, the rebel leader and his men are all given life sentences on Halberd, the RIM Confederacy prison planet and sent to the maximum island penitentiary—a prison that has never had a successful escape.

And under his Admirals orders, Captain Tanner Scott has also been sent to do RIM Navy duty on the planet with the mission to give up his alcoholism dependency. While he knows that this is what is expected of him by the Admiral, he finds it more difficult to do that he’d ever imagined.

Tanner meets a woman—the sister of the rebel leader and while he falls in love with her, he is not sure that the feeling is mutual. Yet he tries to straighten out his life and his drinking but instead he is faced with the choice of a lifetime—love or death.

Against incredible odds in the middle of a prison planet escape, he makes his choice . . . and more than his own life depends upon that choice . . . forever changing the future of the RIM!”

Devil's Thumb by S.M. SchmitzDevil’s Thumb by S.M. Schmitz:

After a fateful decision in Baton Rouge, Colin and Anna move to Boulder where they hope they will get some much needed time off from hunting. But the demons who wanted retribution in Baton Rouge have followed them, and this time, they’re not alone.

This is the sequel to The Immortals.

 

 

Beyond Regeneration by Jenny SchwartzBeyond Regeneration by Jenny Schwartz:

It’s complicated. Charley Rowdon knew Dr. Jack Bradshaw years ago, before the accident, before she lost her left arm. Before her husband died. Jack is an internationally respected regeneration specialist, and he’s just made the breakthrough of the century: using QNA to grow non-human bio-enhancements on people, including himself. Think superhuman senses, claws, and even, wings.

However, when, as a journalist, Charley accepts Jack’s invitation to accompany him to his private clinic, a luxury resort on the beautiful south west coast of Australia, she finds more than medical science and altered humanity.

Murder, espionage and a scientific development that Jack never ever predicted will challenge Charley to shed her grief and fear, and solve a mystery beyond imagining.

But as Charley regenerates her life, how much will she risk by loving again?

“Beyond Regeneration” is a novel of old grief and new beginnings. The science is fabulous, more fiction than fact, but the emotions are real. This is the story of a woman badly hurt by life who finds the courage to embrace the unbelievable, and love again.

All the Things I've Lost by Hollis ShilohAll the Things I’ve Lost by Hollis Shiloh:

I am not from this world. I don’t know where I was from originally. When our pod landed, I was the only one to survive, and my memory was damaged.

That day, I lost the man I think I must have loved.

I don’t age, and I’m far too strong compared to these humans around me, but even so, I fear their finding out the truth about me. I try to protect the ones I can, but I am weak when it comes to saving them — or even just not hurting them by my ignorance and strength.

And now for the first time in decades, I’ve met a man like myself from another world — the world where we both hatched. I wonder what he can tell me about myself . . . and what I dare ask without giving away the fact that I remember nothing?

Mercenary Magic by Ella SummersMercenary Magic by Ella Summers:

Long ago, the Dragon Born were hailed as the most powerful mages in the world. Today, they are condemned as abominations and have been hunted to near extinction.

Sera Dering has spent her entire life hiding her forbidden magic from the supernatural council who would kill her for the crime of being born. After years of drifting, she’s finally found a new life working as a low-grade mercenary for San Francisco’s oldest monster cleanup guild. She’s safe—as long as she pretends to be human.

But a dark and mysterious power is taking control of mages’ minds, and Sera’s guild sends her in to investigate. To save her city from a magical apocalypse, she must work together with a sexy and deadly mage who represents the very council that sentenced the Dragon Born to death. And if he finds out what she is, she’ll be next…

Mercenary Magic is the first book in the Dragon Born Serafina urban fantasy series.

51yI7M62cqL._SX332_BO1,204,203,200_All Hallows Eve by Stella Wilkinson:

It’s Halloween and Eve is stuck babysitting a group of fourteen year old girls. When she tries to prevent them from performing some magical ceremony, the last thing she expects is to find herself trapped in the Underworld. Not only that, but she is apparently there as a date for The Lord of the Dead. The fact that he is hotter than Hades makes no difference to Eve, she knows she must resist his dark charm or she’ll never make it back to school on Monday morning.

A fun short story filled with Halloween folklore and mythology.

Terminal Reset Omnibus by A.E. WilliamsTerminal Reset Omnibus: The Coming of the Wave by A.E. Williams:

Dr. David Harding Stared in the Mirror, and Could Not Believe What He Was Seeing!

Dr. David Harding is an Astrophysicist who discovers a mysterious force on a collision course with Earth. As The Wave hits our planet, its effects have devastating consequences. Governments topple. The world is poised on the brink of nuclear devastation. The effects are of an apocalyptic scale.

The ongoing strife between the countries of Earth, coupled with the ominous goals of an ancient scourge create a hazardous background.

Harding sets out with his catatonic wife to survive in this brave new world. But when his former lover and colleague, Dr. Tatania Golovanov, contacts him via radio, he is faced with choices he never expected to have to make.

The physical changes wrought by The Wave create massive upheavals in the traditional ways of previous generations.

Can these long ago lovers salvage their feelings from the ruins of a drastically altered world? Will Harding abandon the woman to whom he vowed his life? Will they all survive the daily challenges of living in a post-apocalyptic Earth the likes of which have never before been described in any science fiction story?

Terminal Reset is a story set in today’s world. Experience a world populated with complex characters, each learning to cope and adapt to the new reality imposed by the effects of The Wave.

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Back from Birmingham and some random pop culture musings

In case you noticed my absence, I’ve been away for a few days in Birmingham in the UK. I actually came back a couple of days ago, but I didn’t get around to blogging until now. Photos are forthcoming, but for now I’d like to talk about a couple of SF-nal things that happened while I was away:

I watched an current episode of Doctor WhoThe Girl Who Died – and it was actually pretty good. Plus, it guest-starred Maisie Williams, the young actress who plays Arya Stark in Game of Thrones. In fact, I might have some more words about that later on.

Captain America – currently not Steve Rogers, who is taking a well deserved break, but Steve’s pal Sam Wilson, usually better known as Falcon – fought anti-immigrant racists (Can we have him smash up PEGIDA, please?) and decided to sever his ties with both the US government and SHIELD, because both are failing ordinary Americans. Predictably, some American conservatives led by Fox News were very upset about this. I guess they missed the time where Steve Rogers was so disillusioned by the Watergate scandal that he hung up his shield and took off his costume and went around calling himself Nomad, Man without a Country, for a while. Or any of the many other times before or after that had Captain America take a political stance to the left of the US Republican Party.

Captain America also further shocked certain Americans by kissing Thor on a gorgeous Alex Ross cover. Don’t get your hopes up, slash fans, it’s not Steve Rogers kissing Thor Odinson (though that would be awesome), but Sam Wilson kissing Jane Foster, who’d currently wielding the hammer, while Thor Odinson is taking a break. Still, Captain America – a black man – kissed Thor – a white woman – on the cover of a mainstream Marvel comic, which is pretty awesome. Now how long do we have to wait to see that in the movies?

At Wired, Amy Wallace offers a follow-up to her article about the 2015 Hugo controversy. It’s a pretty good article, just don’t read the comments.

Meanwhile,the Sad Puppies are still busily whining and rewriting history to suit their preferred narrative. Okay, that’s not exactly new, but the epic meltdown by this year’s spokespuppy in the comments is somewhat amusing.

Talking of SFF books, Birmingham is quite well-endowed with bookstores. In addition to the usual W.H. Smith and Waterstones stores (including gorgeous Waterstones in a repurposed 19th century bank building), Birmingham also boasts what appears to be the only Foyles bookstore outside London (opened only two weeks before I visited, too) as well as a big Forbidden Planet store, which had moved since I was last there and was somewhat hard to find (I even had to resort to asking likely looking people on the street to find where it had gone).

Now Forbidden Planet is mainly a store for comics, toys, t-shirts (I bought a great Dalek t-shirt) and general geeky stuff, but the bigger stores such as the flagship store in London and the one in Birmingham also tend to have a good selection of SFF books. And this particular Forbidden Planet was much better with regard to carrying SFF books by women writers than either Waterstones (okay, we know they’re crappy in that regard), W.H. Smith (somewhat less crappy, amazingly) and Foyles (not really the place where I’d go for SFF, whether by women or not, anyway).

Coincidentally, Forbidden Planet also carried a surprisingly amount of what I like to term “puppy fiction”, i.e. either books by prominent puppies and supporters (I spotted novels by Larry Correia, Sarah Hoyt, John C. Wright among others) or books by writers not affiliated with the Sad and Rabid Puppies, that nonetheless contain all the Nutty Nuggets that Puppies tend to enjoy including this year’s puppy nominee The Dark Between The Stars by Kevin J. Anderson*. I wondered about this a bit, especially since many of those books and authors (not Kevin J. Anderson, but others along those lines) are hard to find and little known in Europe. But then I realised that the abundance of Nutty Nuggets on Forbidden Planet‘s shelves was due to the fact that they carried a lot of imported US paperbacks, including a lot of Baen Books, which are normally hard to find in Europe. And Nutty Nuggets are more likely to appeal to American readers and Baen publishes quite a bit of it. But on the plus side, I also found a Sharon Lee/Steve Miller book (published by Baen) that had eluded me so far.

Finally, a new trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens has landed. Now as I’ve explained before here and here, I initially wasn’t particularly excited about more Star Wars (even though I’m as much a fan of the original trilogy as any geek who was a kid when they movies came out), because IMO that story has been told and it’s time for new stories. And besides, I’ve yet to enjoy anything that J.J. Abrams has wrought.

Hence I was pleased that I found myself rewatching the trailer a few times, because – hey, this looks actually good. But of course, some people were less than satisfied by the trailer for The Force Awakens, including a bunch of racists so angry that there are character of colour in Star Wars now (apparently, they missed Lando Calrissian, Mace Windu, Jango and Boba Fett, Bail Organa, Captain Panaka, Captain Typho and a couple of other characters of colour in the original trilogy and the prequels. Oh yes, and the fact that James Earl Jones provided the voice of Darth Vader) that they proposed a boycott that may or may not be intended seriously. Jessica Lachenal and Chuck Wendig weigh in and expose this boycott for the idiocy it is.

Talking of Star Wars, I even checked out the Force Awakens toys at Forbidden Planet, but alas, no Rey or BB-8 or even Gwendoline Christie’s character Captain Phasma. I did spot Finn and Poe Dameron and Kylo Ren, but the women (and the cute robot) were not available as usual. Yes, I probably should have checked out the Disney Store, especially since I passed one in Birmingham’s Bullring shopping center. But I’m still not used to the fact that Star Wars and Marvel superhero merchandise can now be found in Disney Stores of all places.

By the way, the Birmingham Forbidden Planet store has a big Yoda statue (I’d say lifesize, but the statue is actually bigger than Yoda) standing near its entrance. And while I was waiting at the cash register, I watched how a little girl stared at the Yoda statue and then told her mother, “Look, mummy, it’s a booger monster.” I and most other customers in earshot could barely contain their laughter, but the little girl actually wasn’t wrong. Because my then friends and I observed even thirty years ago that Yoda was the colour of snot.

*Wow, that book is hefty in physical form. I didn’t notice this when I got an electronic copy in the Hugo voters’ packet, but then I never finished that particular novel, because it wasn’t my cup of tea at all.

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And another new release: Operation Rubber Ducky

I said yesterday that there would be more new release announcements coming up and here is the next one.

It’s another collection of short stories – three this time – to come out of the July Short Story Challenge, where I wrote a short story per day in July 2015.

One thing I noticed while writing so many stories in such a short period of time was that my critical side completely shut down after a while and my creative side came out to play. A lot of the stories I wrote during this time were unusual, a handful were downright bizarre.

Operation Rubber Ducky collects the three strangest stories to come out of the July Short Story Challenge. It collects stories of Kaiju, Trojan rubber ducks, anthropomorphic ducks working as mob enforcers and fluffy killer bunnies from outer space who are trying to conquer the Earth and exploit our mental health system for their nefarious ends, while they’re at it.

In short, these stories are strange, weird, bizarre and completely offbeat:

Operation Rubber Ducky
Operation_Rubber_Ducky_03Three short tales of anthropomorphic terror, featuring Trojan toys, axe-wielding ducks and fluffy killer rabbits from outer space.

When the world is besieged by Kaiju, the only weapon that can stop them turns out to be a rubber ducky with a deadly secret…

His name is whispered in terror: Mock Duck, the mad axe-man of Chinatown, deadly enforcer for the triads. No one has ever seen his face and lived to tell the tale. Which is probably for the better, because Mock Duck’s nickname is more accurate than anybody could have guessed…

It’s the latest psychiatric epidemic to sweep the nation: Angoraphobia, a pathological fear of fluffy angora sweaters. Those who suffer from the disorder claim that fluffy killer rabbits from outer space are trying to conquer the Earth and exterminate humanity. Are they merely deluded or could they perchance be right?

More information.
Length: 7000 words
List price: 0.99 USD, EUR or GBP
Buy it at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Netherlands, Amazon Spain, Amazon Italy, Amazon Canada, Amazon Australia, Amazon Brazil, Amazon Japan, Amazon India, Amazon Mexico, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, Apple iTunes, Scribd, Oyster, Smashwords, Inktera, txtr, Thalia, Weltbild, Hugendubel, Der Club, Libiro, Nook UK, DriveThruFiction, OmniLit/AllRomance e-books, Casa del Libro, Flipkart, e-Sentral and XinXii.

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New release: Children of the Stone Gods

I have a new release to announce. This time, it’s a collection of seven short stories on the borderline of science fiction and fantasy entitled Children of the Stone Gods.

The seven stories in Children of the Stone Gods were all written during the July short story challenge, where I wrote one short story per day in July 2015.

While doing the challenge, certain themes began to emerge after a while. One of these themes were stories that were science fiction and yet had more of a fantasy feel. Many of these stories were about lost worlds and long isolated planets, where the hulls of crashed spaceships and other remnants of higher technology litter the landscape, even though science and technology itself have long turned into myth and legend.

Children of the Stone Gods collects seven of those stories.

I haven’t published all of the stories from the July challenge yet, so expect more announcements in the near future.

Children of the Stone Gods
Children of the Stone Gods by Cora BuhlertThis is a collection of seven tales on the borderline of science fiction and fantasy. Seven stories of lost worlds, where carcasses of crashed spaceships litter the landscape and science and technology have long turned into myth and legend.

Enter a world of sacrifices and stone gods, where people live in the hulls of the great space arks that brought their ancestors to this planet, where four-armed assassins ply their trade and wandering priests warn of great cataclysms, where gods lie sleeping inside mountains and strange lights shine in the sky by night.

This is a collection of seven short science fiction tales of 12000 words or approximately 40 print pages altogether.

More information.
Length: 12000 words
List price: 2.99 USD, EUR or GBP
Buy it at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon Germany, Amazon France, Amazon Netherlands, Amazon Spain, Amazon Italy, Amazon Canada, Amazon Australia, Amazon Brazil, Amazon Japan, Amazon India, Amazon Mexico, Kobo, Barnes & Noble, Apple iTunes, Scribd, Oyster, Smashwords, Inktera, txtr, Thalia, Weltbild, Hugendubel, Der Club, Libiro, Nook UK, DriveThruFiction, OmniLit/AllRomance e-books, Casa del Libro, Flipkart, e-Sentral and XinXii.

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Photos: Toadstools

The meadow across from my house is currently home to a colony of toadstools of the species Amanita muscaria or fly agaric. They’re very pretty, very toxic and a traditional good luck symbol.

According to Norse legend, fly agaric mushrooms grow either where Odin’s horse Sleipnir has left spittle on the ground or where some of Odin’t entourage have fallen from their horses. So I guess a whole company of Asgardians landed on my meadow while I wasn’t looking. If they looked like their counterparts in the Marvel movies, I wouldn’t even mind.

Fly agaric

A whole colony of toadstools has sprung upon both sides of the fence. Seeing so many in one place is rare.

Fly agaric

Three toadstools, one of which is already a bit battered.

Fly agaric

Take a look at this beautifully patterned toadstool. Alas, it’s as poisonous as it is pretty.

Fly agaric

This particular toadstool looks more like a New Year’s decoration, but it’s 100% real.

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Missile Hill Revisited, now with bonus pumpkins

Back in 2012, I posted about a place near the town of Syke colloquially known as Missile Hill, an abandoned US Army installation turned nature preserve with look-out tower. Unfortunately, I couldn’t take any photos from the top of the look-out tower back then, because the battery of my camera died.

Last week, I drove out to Gessen-Leerßen, a village near Syke again, to buy pumpkins, since those in my own garden did not bear fruit this year. And since it was a clear and sunny day, I took the opportunity to take a stroll around the “Hoher Berg” (high mountain, since it’s the highest elevation in the area. High means 65 meters above sea level in this case – North Germany is flat) and climb the look-out tower. And unlike last time, I made sure that my camera battery was fully charged.

So here are some photos of Syke’s own high mountain as well as of the farm where I bought the pumpkins:
Continue reading

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A Few Shout-outs – Ein paar Lesetipps

First of all, Swedish crime fiction write Henning Mankell died of cancer, aged only 67. He was best known for the Kurt Wallander mysteries, though he also wrote other things.

Now I’ve never read any of his novels, though I watched the Wallander TV adaptations starring Kenneth Branagh. However, my Mom was a big fan of the Wallander novels and was quite literally devastated to hear of Henning Mankell’s death.

***

I will have a new release of my own to announce in the next few days, but for now I want to offer a shout-out to some books and stories I haven’t written, but that I nonetheless had some involvement with.

Let’s start with a science fiction story in which I was tuckerized, which is very cool indeed.

The story is called “Hullabaloo on Cora” (yes, I was tuckerized as a planet) by Floyd Looney and you can read it online at Aurora Wolf.

Regular readers of this blog will probably know that I’m a professional translator. I usually translate technical, legal and business documents, not fiction (unless it’s my own). However, this summer I was engaged in proofreading the German translations of three indie novels in two very different genres. And yes, switching between Regency romance and dystopian science fiction can be quite disconcerting.

Let’s start with the Regency romance.

Elizabeth Ann West has carved out a niche for herself in the field of Jane Austen reimaginations. Two of her novellas have been translated into German so far, one of which I proofread. The translator is Peggy Strachan of Triple Text Translations.

Ein Pferd! Ein Ärgernis! by Elizabeth Ann WestEin Pferd! Ein Ärgernis! von Elizabeth Ann West, übersetzt von Peggy Strachan:

Als Elisabeth Bennet während eines ihrer vielen Spaziergänge auf ein reiterloses schwarzes Pferd trifft, begibt sie sich eigenhändig auf die Suche. Sie findet einen Gentleman in der Böschung eines Bachbetts, verjagt Schlangen, holt Hilfe und bringt ihn letztendlich für seine Genesung nach Longbourn. Verliebt in seine dunklen Locken und in sein attraktives Gesicht scheint ihr Leben den romantischen Geschichten ihrer Romane zu folgen. Bis der stolze und arrogante Fitzwilliam Darcy of Pemberley aufwacht.

Die romantische Novelle ‘Ein Pferd! Ein Ärgernis!’ ist als leichte Lektüre für alle gedacht, die hoffnungslos von Jane Austens Welt verzaubert sind. Der Schreibstil soll keine Imitation der unvergleichlichen Jane sein und die Autorin hofft, dass Sie diese lustige und humorvolle Geschichte wie Ihren Nachmittagskaffee genießen werden.

Erhältlich bei Amazon Deutschland, Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Amazon Niederlande, Amazon Frankreich, Amazon Italien, Amazon Spanien, Amazon Canada, Amazon Australien, Amazon Brasilien, Amazon Mexico, Amazon Japan und Amazon Indien.

And now for something completely different:

David VanDyke writes action-packed military and dystopian science fiction. The first two novels of his Plague Wars series have been translated into German and I proofread both of them:

Die Eden-Seuche von David VanDyke Die Eden-Seuche von David VanDyke, übersetzt von Frank Dietz:

Heute schon Zeit in einem guten Techno-Thriller verbracht? Halbfinal-Gewinner des Best Indie Award von Kindle Book Reviews 2013 (Englisch Version).

Als Afghanistan-Veteran Daniel Markis in seinem Haus bewaffnete Eindringlinge vorfindet und eine Schießerei einsetzt, muss er erstaunt mit ansehen, wie die Wunden einer Frau vor seinen Augen verheilen. Was macht diese Frau so besonders? Bald erfährt er das Geheimnis: Ein Wunder der Wissenschaft, lange vergessen und verloren geglaubt seit dem Untergang der Sowjetunion, wurde wieder entdeckt – und es wird die Welt für immer verändern. Als Daniel bemerkt, dass das Militär diese gentechnologische Erfindung als Waffe einsetzen will, wendet er sich an seine ehemaligen Kameraden, um die Frau zu finden und den Plan der Regierung zu durchkreuzen.

Ein Action-reicher Militär-Thriller vom amerikanischen Bestseller-Autor David VanDyke, mit über 350 Rezensionen im amerikanischen Kindle-Store.

Dieser apokalyptische Science-Fiction-Thriller wird die Vorstellungskraft von Lesern fesseln, die rasante Action-Abenteuer lieben. Keine Zombies kamen in der Produktion dieses Buchs zu Schaden. Es kommen überhaupt keine Zombies darin vor. Im Ernst. Dies ist kein Zombie-Buch.

Die Seuchenkriege-Serie, eine futuristische Militär-Thriller-Serie, beginnt in der heutigen Zeit mit einem Mann und einer Frau, die vom Schicksal zusammengeführt und dazu auserwählt wurden, die Welt ein für alle Mal zu verändern. Die Serie entführt den Leser in eine immer trostlosere Zukunft voller Turbulenzen, Kampf und Krieg, gekennzeichnet von den Tiefen des Bösen und den Höhen selbstloser Opferbereitschaft. Seuchen, geheime Technologien und außerirdische Einmischung bilden die Leinwand, vor der Helden und Schurken um die Kontrolle über das Schicksal der Menschheit kämpfen.

Bücher der Seuchenkriege-Serie (auf Deutsch):
– Die Eden-Seuche
– Reapers Rennen
– Skulls Schatten

Erhältlich bei Amazon Deutschland, Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Amazon Niederlande, Amazon Frankreich, Amazon Italien, Amazon Spanien, Amazon Canada, Amazon Australien, Amazon Brasilien, Amazon Mexico, Amazon Japan und Amazon Indien.

Reapers Rennen by David VanDykeReapers Rennen von David VanDyke, übersetzt von Frank Dietz:

Heute schon Zeit in einem guten Buch verbracht? „Alles, was eine gute Story ausmacht, findet sich zwischen diesen Seiten … Diese temporeiche Lektüre stellt genau die Fragen, die man von einem in der nahen Zukunft spielenden Thriller erwartet, doch sie tut es mit Frische und Ausdruckskraft und – wenn ich das sagen darf – einer moralischen Richtschnur, die man in vielen anderen Büchern dieser Art vermisst.“ — Charles de Lint: Books to Look For, Fantasy and Science Fiction Magazine (Juli/August 2014)

Als US-Marine-Sergeant Jill Repeths weggesprengte Beine plötzlich anfangen, sich zu regenerieren, glaubt sie erst an ein medizinisches Wunder. Doch der Durchbruch, der ihre Kriegsverletzungen heilen lässt, ist auch genau das, was die Regierung unter allen Umständen vernichten will. Gejagt von der Obrigkeit muss sie ein von Unruhen zerrissenes Land durchqueren, auf der Suche nach einer Familie, die vielleicht schon tot ist, und nach dem unmenschlichen Geheimnis, mit dem alles begann.

Reapers Rennen, ein apokalyptischer Science-Fiction-Thriller, zeichnet den Weg einer wahren Kriegerin von der Berufssoldatin zur Freiheitskämpferin und weit mehr. Er führt den Leser in die von Kritikern gefeierte Seuchenkriege-Serie von futuristischen Techno-Thrillern ein.

Bücher der Seuchenkriege-Serie (auf Deutsch):

– Die Eden-Seuche
– Reapers Rennen
– Skulls Schatten

Erhältlich bei Amazon Deutschland, Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Amazon Niederlande, Amazon Frankreich, Amazon Italien, Amazon Spanien, Amazon Canada, Amazon Australien, Amazon Brasilien, Amazon Mexico, Amazon Japan und Amazon Indien.

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A Hot Air Balloon on a Misty Morning

Early on Sunday morning, I was awoken by the distinctive hiss of the gas burner of a hot air balloon.

I got up, grabbed my camera, looked out of every window on the first floor and was finally able to capture this photo:

Hot air balloon

A hot air balloon floats above the roof of the neighbouring house.

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Das Literarische Quartett Reloaded

Hot on the heels of the deaths of Hellmuth Karasek, one third of the original Literarisches Quartett (no, that’s not a typo), came the revival of what was once the preeminent literary program on German TV.

So what is Das Literarische Quartett? It’s a program where four literary critics – three regulars and a guest critic – discuss books, mostly literary fiction, mostly new releases, but also memoirs and the occasional classic. Put that way, it sounds boring, which is not fair, because in its original form, Das Literarische Quartett was frequently the funniest and most entertaining program on German TV. It didn’t matter if you had read the books or if you had any interest in them at all (though looking back, it’s interesting how many future classics and/or award winners were discussed at the Quartett), because the real reason people were watching a literature program in a Friday night graveyard slot was the interplay of the three regulars, Marcel Reich-Ranicki, Hellmuth Karasek and Sigrid Löffler, and how they tore both into the books discussed and each other. For those who want to know what the original Literarisches Quartett was like, there are plenty of clips and even full episodes on YouTube. Meanwhile, the new program is also available online at the ZDF mediathek.

The fact that the three regular critics and their personalities was a large part of the reason for watching Das Literarische Quartett in the first place was also the main hurdle for the reboot to overcome. For the shadows of Marcel Reich-Ranicki, Hellmuth Karasek and Sigrid Löffler loom large, even though or maybe because two of them, Reich-Ranicki and Karasek, are no longer with us.

If anything the new guys, critics Volker Weidermann, Christine Westermann and Maxim Biller, tried a bit too hard to channel the originals. It doesn’t help that the set-up, two guys and one woman plus one guest critic, is identical to the original. One of the new regulars, Maxim Biller, is even Jewish, just like Marcel Reich-Ranicki in the original. And since the parallels were obvious to everybody anyway, Maxim Biller clearly decided that he was going to channel Reich-Ranicki, complete with acerbic remarks and arguing with fellow critics, and he obviously relished the role. Not surprising, considering that Reich-Ranicki was everybody’s favourite in the original. Weidermann quickly fell into the peacemaking Hellmuth Karasek role, leaving the thankless Sigrid Löffler part to Christine Westermann, who clearly did not want to fill it (well, no one ever wanted to be Sigrid Löffler) and instead remained rather pale, leaving Maxim Biller to argue with this week’s guest critic, lawyer and writer (even of SF on occasion) Juli Zeh, who rather obligingly played Sigrid Löffler to Biller’s Reich-Ranicki.

So we did get the expected arguing, but there was just one problem. I’d much rather watch Maxim Biller, Volker Weidermann and Christine Westermann (and Juli Zeh) be themselves than pale imitations of Marcel Reich-Ranicki, Hellmuth Karasek and Sigrid Löffler. Because at the moment, it seems as if Biller, Weidermann and Westermann are just playing roles, whereas Reich-Ranicki, Karasek and Löffler were not acting (as we all found out during the epic blow-up between Marcel Reich-Ranicki and Sigrid Löffler over a Haruki Murakami novel, which ended with Löffler walking out), they actually were being themselves. And it isn’t as if the three new people don’t have the potential to be interesting in themselves, though both Weidermann and Westermann remained rather bland. Meanwhile, Maxim Biller is one of the very few people in postwar Germany to have a novel banned for allegedly violating the personality rights of Biller’s ex-girlfriend and her mother, a decision that many people found deeply troubling. A summary of the whole sordid saga surrounding Biller’s novel Esra may be found here.

Besides, great as the original Literarisches Quartett was, one aspect that I wouldn’t be sorry to see gone are the dated boys vs. girls gender dynamics of the two male regulars teaming up against the lone female regular. Because though I never particularly liked Sigrid Löffler (I don’t think anybody did – she was always the boring one), I still find the way in which she was treated and particularly how her treatment was linked to her gender troubling. So yes, let the regulars of Das Literarische Quartett argue their hearts out – that’s why we’re watching after all – but don’t turn it into boys versus girls again.

But while it was only to be expected that the three regulars would still need to find their feet – after all, the first episode of the original Literarisches Quartett probably did not look like the show we all loved either – another issue that will probably be less easy to resolve is the length of the program. Now the original Literarisches Quartett was 75 minutes long and discussed four or five books in those 75 minutes, which gave the critics plenty of space to discuss the books and even go off on those weird tangents that often made the program so magical.

However, in the more fast paced and regimented TV world of the 21st century, few programs that are not prestige drama or what passes for it these days are given 75 minutes. And a cultural niche program most certainly doesn’t get 75 minutes these days, especially not if some of that time could be used to run bad comedy programs instead (and comedy programs have been steadily encroaching on the Friday night culture programming slot in the past ten years or so). So the new Literarisches Quartett was only 45 minutes long – the same length as the general culture program aspekte, whose timeslot it takes over once a month – divided among four books.

The lack of time spent on each book definitely showed, because several potentially interesting discussions, e.g. about cliched western expectations of African literature, about religious imagery in a largely atheist culture, how books chronicling the pain of white dudes resonate with – guess whom? – white dudes, etc…, were all nipped in the bud. Honestly, the program either needs more time or fewer books.

As for the books themselves, they were a nicely diverse range of ethnicities and subjects with The Fisherman by Nigerian writer Chogozie Obioma (which is also on the Booker Prize shortlist this year – Biller loved it, Westermann and Zeh did not), Macht und Widerstand by Bulgarian-German writer Ilja Trojanow (which Weidermann and Biller really did not like, though Trojanov’s occasional co-writer Juli Zeh did), one of the volumes of My Struggle by Norwegian writer Karl Ove Knausgård (the two male critics really liked it – well, duh) and Fever at Dawn by Hungarian writer and filmmaker Péter Gárdos, which was pretty much shredded by everybody. The range of ethnicities and subject matter was pleasantly diverse, though sadly all four books were written by men. This was a bit unfortunate, especially the “white dude pain” chronicled in the Karl Ove Knausgård novel would have needed a female counterpoint.

So now you’ve had my take, let’s see what German TV critics have to say:

The last point is interesting, because I very much believe that the 21st century has not just room for a program like Das Literarische Quartett, but also for serious literary criticism. Because at least for me, consumer reviews at Amazon and similar places don’t replace in-depth criticism. I do pay attention to reviews and reviewers I trust (not necessarily by professionals – e.g. I’d rather trust a bookblogger whom I know shares my taste than a professional newspaper review), but consumer reviews at Amazon, Yelp, tripadvisor, etc… play hardly any role for me when deciding which book to read next, where to eat and where to stay on holiday, which products to buy, etc… because they rarely match my personal preferences.

Of course, the Literarisches Quartett never really matched my preferences either and indeed they usually discuss books that I’d never even consider reading. But I get a kick out of listening to other people – particularly smart and insightful people – discussing books, whether I actually want to read them or not.

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