Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month for June 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 May 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 science fiction, space opera, military science fiction, science fantasy, paranormal romance, post-apocalyptic fiction, dystopian fiction, YA fantasy, epic fantasy, time travel romance, Steampunk, weird western, horror, vampires, dragons, djinns, starships, magical schools, teen superheroes, otherworldly dogs, magical bookstores, vampiric bees, villainous teabags 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:

The Lost World by Susan AlisonThe Lost World by Susan Alison

Lily’s life was dog-free and uneventful until one night when it became absolutely the reverse.

That same night Matt Lannings was reluctantly drawn into the fantastical scenario that Lily’s life had become – the only thing was that Lily believed she’d been chosen to save another world in another universe – and Matt didn’t.

Matt didn’t believe any of it!

Katie Fforde (internationally best-selling author, and President of the Romantic Novelists’ Association) said of ‘The Lost World’ — ‘Magical! Full of warmth and humour.’

Malevolent by K.M. CarrollMalevolent by K.M. Carroll

Libby is a high school senior who should be preparing for graduation. Instead, she’s been bedridden for six months with valley fever, stuck on her father’s farm in California’s central valley.

When the beekeepers arrive in February, bringing their bees to pollinate the almond crop, one of them looks like a vampire, acts like a vampire, says his name is Malevolent, and tries to murder Libby’s lousy boyfriend. Yet he offers her honey that dramatically improves her illness, and his bees sing words that she can understand.

Mal took up beekeeping in order to preserve the last remnants of his humanity. What started as a simple trip to California quickly turns into something far more complicated, as he meets a lovely girl who is deathly ill, infected by Mal’s own brother. Feeling guilty and responsible, Mal sets out to heal her with his precious, magic-infused honey, and with each passing day, comes closer to breaking his personal creed:

Befriend Many, Serve Some, Trust Few, Love None.

Once healed, Libby has the strength to break up with her boyfriend–touching off a war between Mal and his brother. This escalates into a realm of awful magic Libby has never dreamed of, where she is both pawn and prize in the battle against a Necromancer. In the end, Libby must face her growing feelings for Mal, and decide whether to destroy him–or rescue him from his soulless existence.

Transcend by Stacy ClaflinTranscend by Stacy Claflin

Eylin is hiding in the underground city from the group of ancients who want her dead, but she’s not safe even there. On the other side of some massive tunnels, an unknown group is systematically removing magic from each underground city.

As pressure mounts, Eylin has big decisions to make, and each could have deadly consequences. After being personally attacked, she makes a bold decision, and goes after it with the hopes of saving those she loves.

She becomes deeply invested in an ancient culture. If she gets too close, she could put all of her loved ones at risk.

This is book 8 of The Transformed series.

Hunted Hero Hunting by Timothy EllisHunted Hero Hunting by Timothy Ellis

Jonathon Hunter’s world grows darker each day. Assassins, Pirates, Bounty Hunters, Mercenaries, and Retros, all want a piece of him. Each trap leads to yet another trap. When the unthinkable happens, the prey becomes the predator. The hunted goes hunting. But how does a young spiritual warrior cope, as the kills mount?

The Hunter Legacy series:
1. Hero at large
2. Hunted Hero Hunting
3. Send in the Hero ***forthcoming***

Alex Armstrong: Awakening by Hayes FarleyAlex Armstrong: Awakening by Hayes Farley

Alex Armstrong is definitely not telekinetic.

But he will be. And all it takes is a little red pill.

Welcome to Pal Tech, the top-secret school for kids with latent telekinetic powers. Like the other freshmen, Alex was recruited sixteen years ago, when neonatal scans revealed his capacity for telekinesis. Now that he’s of age and his powers are ripe for unlocking, he can begin his training.

Alex excels. Whether he’s navigating a mock Star Wars Trench Run in lab class, crushing his friends in a game of no-hands basketball, or dodging a paintball-shooting helicopter drone during his Simtest, Alex makes telekinesis look easy.

Pal Tech’s president takes notice, moving Alex out of the simulation rooms and into field work with the upperclassmen. His first assignment: join the juniors as they oversee the school’s latest diamond shipment.

But somebody talks, and what should have been a routine delivery gets intercepted by a rogue telekin—a rogue telekin who’s already murdered two senators in his quest to kill Pal Tech’s founders.

With the other students scrambling to survive, Alex must stop the telekin before he causes any more destruction. There’s just one problem: The bad guy can fly.

The Twiceborn Queen by Marina FinlaysonThe Twiceborn Queen by Marina Finlayson

Kate O’Connor’s had a rough week. Thrown into the middle of a war of succession between the daughters of the dragon queen, her introduction to the hidden world of the shifters almost proved fatal. Now, because of Kate and her new powers, that hidden realm has been revealed to the world, which hasn’t exactly won Kate any popularity contests.

Still, it’s not all bad news. After all, it’s not every day someone you love comes back from the dead. Throw in a hot new boyfriend, and suddenly Kate’s got a lot to live for—which is bad timing, because now the queen’s set a bounty on her head and every shifter in Sydney is trying to collect it.

Kate may have defeated a dragon already, but there are plenty more where that one came from. As her enemies close in and the body count mounts, Kate begins a desperate search for allies. The deadly game of the proving continues. If Kate is to save the people she loves, failure is not an option. The rules are simple: win or die.

The Twiceborn Queen is the second book in the urban fantasy trilogy The Proving.

Revelation by Kevin HardmanRevelation by Kevin Hardman

The pressure of being a super – especially a teen super – can get to anyone, as Jim (aka Kid Sensation) has witnessed firsthand. Now he wonders if he himself might be succumbing to the strain in some way, as he can’t shake the feeling that he is now being watched by some new stalker. Moreover, despite his wide slate of powers, he hasn’t been able to discover to a single clue to substantiate the existence of this potential new enemy, making him wonder if it’s all in his head.

Looking forward to a few days of R&R and hanging out with his friends, Jim’s downtime is interrupted by the unsettling news that Alpha Prime, the world’s greatest superhero (and Jim’s father), is missing. As if that wasn’t bad enough, Jim finds his world rocked by an even more ominous revelation: his deranged half-brother, Paramount, has escaped from confinement in a maximum security installation.

In the course of investigating these events and trying to ascertain what connection, if any, there is between them, Jim becomes privy to information concerning a potent alien device capable of laying waste to the entire planet. But he’s not the only one – an enigmatic villain wants the alien technology for his own purposes, and it’s up to Jim to find a way to stop him before the world pays the ultimate price.

The Hartshire Bank by R.D. HendersonThe Hartshire Bank by R.D. Henderson

Crepier is missing and the bank he created is foundering at the start of Hartshire Bank, the fourth novella in the Nambroc Sequence, a fantasy novella. His disappearance sends members of Watley Greywall’s crew reeling. Crepier was the longest-serving lieutenant in Watley’s crew.

Sir Sander Guyle, a reputed crime lord who wants to be thought of as legitimate merchant, steps into the void created by Crepier’s disappearance to lead the bank. He seizes the opportunity of managing the bank to complete the evolution to becoming a tycoon.

Things become dangerous and precarious when Crepier’s dead body is discovered on the rocky banks of the Waterford River a few leagues outside of Hartshire. The cause of death was several stab wounds in the chest.

Several senior members of Watley’s crew suspect that Sir Sander Guyle was responsible for Crepier’s death.

Watley, on the other hand, does not seem to be too troubled by the murder of Crepier, her most loyal and longest-serving lieutenant.

It appears Watley Greywall is hiding something, but what is it?

Planet Bloom by Jessie JasenPlanet Bloom by Jessie Jasen

The year is 2350.
Earth is in the Planetary Alliance with aliens who claim to be our creators. But not everybody agrees with the new doctrine.
Starship Scorpius is sent to explore space in search of advanced extraterrestrial technologies that will give us an advantage over our alien allies.
The battle for supremacy begins here…

The race is on when Scorpius encounters an alien phenomenon that leaves a mysterious extraterrestrial technology stranded on the ship—a strange machine that can teleport the crew to parallel dimensions.

But a deadly accident forces Captain Megan Ashley to forbid further usage of the machine. First Commander Sy Race supports Ashley’s decision, but secretly starts exploiting the technology when he realizes he can create his own parallel worlds and use them to attain his personal goals.

The STARSHIP SCORPIUS SERIES is infused with aliens, AIs, ghosts, starships, high-tech, mysterious space phenomena, battle between good and evil, and the central question of what it means to be an individual within the collective—human and alien—in the galaxy of the 24th century.

The Shadowseeker by Victor KlossThe Shadowseeker by Victor Kloss

Spellswords, Wardens, Traders, Scholars, Diplomats – the five departments of the Royal Institute of Magic an apprentice must master to become a full member.

Ben Greenwood has no idea what to expect when he begins his apprenticeship, but he quickly realises his family history is going to make life difficult. On his very first day, a Shadowseeker – a mysterious and dangerous dark elf – surfaces, and Ben suspects the dark elves might be trying to capture him again in an effort to flush out his parents.

When Ben renews his own search for his parents, he soon discovers they are closing in on a piece of Queen Elizabeth’s legendary armour – the only weapon strong enough to defeat the dark elf king once and for all – but it is guarded by something even more deadly than a Shadowseeker.

A race against time ensues, with Ben desperate to warn his parents they’re walking into a death-trap, while somehow completing the first level of his apprenticeship and securing his place at the Royal Institute of Magic.

Through a Mirror Darkly by Kevin LuciaThrough a Mirror, Darkly by Kevin Lucia

There are a lot more truths in the books we read, than we’d like to admit.

What if a book delves into the lives of the very town you live in? Reveals to you some personal stories of people you know? Or thought you knew.

Bookstore owner Kevin Ellison faces this truth when a mysterious book shows up in Through a Mirror, Darkly by Kevin Lucia.

Through a Mirror, Darkly is a Supernatural Thriller collection masked as a novel. With elements of mystery, suspense, and otherworldly horror, Through a Mirror, Darkly successfully delves into the worlds of Lovecraft, Grant, and the mysterious Carcosa.

“Arcane Delights. Clifton Heights’ premier rare and used bookstore. In it, new owner Kevin Ellison has inherited far more than a family legacy, for inside are tales that will amaze, astound, thrill…and terrify.

An ancient evil thirsty for lost souls. A very different kind of taxi service with destinations not on any known map. Three coins that grant the bearer’s fondest wish, and a father whose crippling grief gives birth to something dark and hungry.

Every town harbors secrets. Kevin Ellison is about to discover those that lurk in the shadows of Clifton Heights.”
Through a Mirror, Darkly is a Supernatural Thriller collection masked as a novel. With elements of mystery, suspense, and otherworldly horror, Through a Mirror, Darkly successfully delves into the worlds of Lovecraft, Grant, and the mysterious Carcosa.

Ranger Rising by Salvador MercerRanger Rising by Salvador Mercer

A thousand years ago, on the world of Claire-Agon, a war raged between men and dragons, destroying both the creatures and the land’s many civilizations.

When his family is enslaved, Targon Terrel must battle the sinister Kesh wizards to save them, but a desperate group of refugees from his home country of Ulatha needs his help, too.

With the unexpected aid of a Druid of the Arnen, Targon discovers his destiny as a Ranger, but far from solving his problems, this discovery will soon reveal a personal betrayal. Targon’s fate brings him closer to long-buried truths about the ancient war between wizards and dragons — truths that could plunge his world into darkness forever.

Fallen by Christine PopeFallen by Christine Pope

When a group of rogue djinn attack the sanctuary of Taos, New Mexico, Jessica Monroe has no choice but to activate the device that was designed to destroy the elementals’ supernatural powers. With her lover Jace and the other friendly djinn in Taos doomed to a weakened half-life as long as the machine is active, Jessica and the other members of the community launch a desperate mission to retrieve the one man who might be able to help them — Miles Odekirk, the scientist in Los Alamos who invented the device in the first place.

The threat of retaliation by the Los Alamos survivors is only one of the perils facing Jessica, however. For Jace has his own enemies, and when an ancient rival returns to seek his own revenge, Jessica may have to make the ultimate sacrifice to save not only the man she loves, but everyone in the Taos community, human and djinn alike.

This is book 3 of The Djinn Wars.

McSorely's Evil Tea by Helen RyanMcSorely’s Evil Tea by Helen Ryan

Sky Swift lives happily in a cosy home with her mother. She enjoys the simpler things in life like drinking tea, munching biscuits, oh and sniffing everything. One day evil pays a visit. Her world has changed forever. Stalked by an evil tea bag and chased by an evil tea company that will stop at nothing to get her.
They want her for their wicked plan.
Sky is in trouble. She needs help.
But who can she turn to?

 

A Prospect of War by Ian SalesA Prospect of War by Ian Sales

Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it, but those who ignore history do so at their peril. The Empire was born in civil war and now, 1,300 years later, a fresh civil war is brewing. But who is the mysterious “Serpent” who threatens the Imperial Throne? And what can the renegade naval officer known only as the Admiral, and her single battlecruiser, do to combat him? Casimir Ormuz, a young man of low birth, may be the key. Whoever controls him is most likely to win—but he is determined to be his own master.

And then the historical origin of the Serpent’s conspiracy abruptly intrudes into the present… And the civil war becomes a battle for the Empire’s survival.

Set in a colourful and richly-detailed universe, An Age of Discord tells an epic story of derring-do and intrigue, while subverting space opera sensibilities and traditions.

Wake by Maia SeppWake by Maia Sepp

It’s 2020, and there’s an environmental crisis brewing in the depths of the Greenland ice sheet that’s a threat to everyone on the planet. But California girl Camilla Brightly is an expat just trying to make a buck, working for an offbeat PR firm. Their latest project? Everyone on staff has to get their “domestic helpmates” –anything from dishwashers to disco balls–networked via a new client’s “smart” home automation system. Camille doesn’t want Big Brother knowing that the only thing in her freezer is the makings for a vodka smoothie, but that’s not the worst of her problems.

A hacker intent on taking down one of her firm’s customers stumbles across a secret Camilla didn’t even know she was keeping, and her refrigerator turns out to be so smart it’s figured out how to stalk her. On top of that, there’s an environmental crisis brewing in the depths of a glacier halfway across the world that’s a threat to everyone on the planet. Global warming has reached a tipping point–and so has Camilla. She can’t stop the impending apocalypse but can she save herself?

With the help of an adorably nerdy co-worker and his polyamorous cousin, Camilla has to untangle herself from her less-than-harmonious home, foil a blackmailer, and face down an ecological disaster that might change life as she knows it forever. “Wake”–the prequel to “An Etiquette Guide to the End Times”–is a novel of climate change, unruly appliances, and finding a place to belong.

The Magician of Dustville by Hollis ShilohThe Magician of Dustville by Hollis Shiloh

Magic, danger, and love in the Old West

A small yet powerful magician moves to Dustville. He’s prickly about his height (or lack thereof) and extremely private about his past.

Magician meets sheriff, also private about his past and quite firmly in the closet. It is, after all, the only safe place to be in the little almost-town of Dustville.

Attraction blossoming between them promises pleasure, and possibly more. Can this become what they both truly want — a real relationship?

And can they survive cruel villains, dark pasts, and a grave magical danger that will test them both to their limits … or beyond?

Enchanted by Ella SummersEnchanted by Ella Summers

Born in the land of magic, Ariella has never cared for the nightmare world of technology beyond Elitia’s borders: airships, bombs, some dubious thing the humans call fusion energy. Her last encounter with technology very nearly killed her, and she’s not eager for a rematch. But then her friend Davin, the crown prince of Elitia, is abducted by agents of the Avan Empire. To save the man she secretly loves, she has to travel beyond Elitia to the Avan capital city. Her only hope lies with rogue mercenary Everett—and trying to fight technology with magic.

Everett, mercenary and rescue mission expert extraordinaire, knows he’s in for trouble as soon as he sees his latest client. Ariella is Elition; the enormous glowing sword she carries around won’t let him forget that, just as he can’t forget the last time he crossed paths with Elition magic. Ten of his friends died, victims of telekinetic sorcery, and Everett learned to be very wary of magic. But Ariella is offering him a substantial reward for his help—if they can save Davin before the Avans’ unknown endgame plays out.

Enchanted is the first book in the Sorcery and Science fantasy adventure series.

The Wanderer by Vincent TrigiliThe Wanderer by Vincent Trigili

Episode one of The Silverleaf Chronicles follows the life of Silverleaf, a dragonmaster who was born into a world without dragons, and doomed to die as a madman alone in the wilderness until a young woman enters his life, and a mysterious army marches across the land destroying all in its path.

The Silverleaf Chronicles is the first season in The Dragonmasters and is made up of seven episodes, each around 70 pages in length.

 

Godspeed by Michael TrinidadGodspeed by Michael Trinidad

The America of the late 21st century is a pale shadow of its former glory. Decades of war and the growing divide between the poor and the wealthy leaves all but the super-rich in the grips of the greatest depression since the 1930’s.

This is the world that sixteen-year-old Sharon Hall lives in. With her city teetering on the razor’s edge of dying, the dream of graduating and getting the diploma she needs to get a real job and save her family grows more distant with each passing day.

However, a team of television developers has other plans for her city. In exchange for around 140 high school students selected at random, her city will receive the millions of dollars it desperately needs to jump-start its broken economy. Before Sharon knows what the developers are really filming, she’s drafted into the production, known simply as “The Battle.”

But, “The Battle” is anything but simple. While touted as an ordinary wilderness survival show, the game is, in fact, a staged war that splits Sharon’s circle of friends in two and equips everyone involved with rifles, machine guns and other deadly weapons of modern warfare.

Of course, Sharon is going to survive. She has a family that needs her. But when the cost of her survival is the lives of her friends on the other team, it may be a more expensive price than she’s willing to pay.

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New German short story available – Neue Kurzgeschichte auf Deutsch erhältlich: Unter dem Galgen

I have a new release to announce. This one is another German language story, namely the translation of my short historical romance Hanging Day.

***

Ich habe ein neues e-Book anzukündigen, diesmal wieder eine neue Kurzgeschichte auf Deutsch. Es handelt sich dabei um Unter dem Galgen, die deutsche Übersetzung meiner historischen Liebesgeschichte Hanging Day.

Unter dem Galgen
Unter dem Galgen von Cora BuhlertLondon, 1751: Es ist Hinrichtungstag und neun verurteilte Verbrecher, sechs Männer und drei Frauen, sollen am berüchtigten dreistempligen Galgen von Tyburn sterben. Unter jenen, die gekommen sind, um die Gefangenen hängen zu sehen, ist auch Jack Blackstone, besser bekannt als Blackjack, der Straßenräuber.

Aber Jack ist an diesem Tag nicht nach Tyburn gekommen, um das Spektakel einer öffentlichen Hinrichtung zu begaffen. Denn unter denen, die heute gehängt werden sollen, ist auch Jacks große Liebe Eliza Colson, zum Tode verurteilt für ein Verbrechen, das sie nicht begangen hat.

Jack hat geschworen, Eliza vor dem Galgen zu retten oder bei dem Versuch zu sterben.

Mehr Informationen.
Länge: 5700 Worte
Preis: 0,99 EUR, USD oder GBP
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, Amazon Indien, Kobo, Apple iTunes, Thalia, Weltbild, Hugendubel, Der Club, BOL, Otto-Media, Donauland, buecher.de, buch.de, eBook.de, Barnes & Noble, Scribd, txtr, Inktera, Smashwords, Casa del Libro, Flipkart, e-Sentral und XinXii.

Diese Geschichte gibt es auch auf Englisch.

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Wolfgang Jeschke, Nutty Nuggets and mixed SF Links

Since my last post, a couple of other obituaries for Wolfgang Jeschke have popped up online, including a few in English:

There has also been some good news on the German SF front this weekend, because the winners of the 2015 Kurt-Laßwitz-Preise for German language science fiction have been announced. The award for the best German language SF novel went to Tom Hillenbrand for Drohnenland (Drone Country), another novel of which German cultural critics don’t seem to be aware that it is SF at all. Even Amazon Germany has it listed as a crime novel rather than as SF. The award for the best international SF went to Ursula K. Le Guin’s Paradises Lost.

Meanwhile, in the US, the Hugo war is still going on and reaching ever more ridiculous heights. The latest skirmish has the various puppies threatening to boycott Tor, i.e. the publisher whose books they claim to be hating anyway, and everybody else weighing in.

I’m largely keeping out of the puppy war these days, because I have better things to do than waste my time on a US-specific culture war that looks very quaint from the outside. Though I’ll probably post my personal Hugo voting policy.

However, I have to point out Mark Barrowcliffe’s a.k.a. M.D. Lachlan’s brilliant takedown of Brad Torgersen’s by now infamous “Nutty Nuggets” post.

Finally, for a non-SF-related link, here is a great article on the decline of the British seaside resort and its eventual rebirth. I have something of a weakness for British seaside towns, simply because they are so very different from the staid and dull German seaside resorts, so I’d be sad to see them die off.

Comments are closed. Puppies, please poop elsewhere.

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Too Many Deaths – Sir Christopher Lee, Wolfgang Jeschke, James Last and a couple of others

We only just lost Pierre Brice, but it seems the universe is conspiring to take away even more of our best and brightest, because the wave of deaths of much beloved celebrities continues unabated.

The most discussed death today is of course that of Sir Christopher Lee after a long and full life at age 93. Christopher Lee was just as ubiquitous as Pierre Brice. But unlike Brice, who was only known for a single role, Christopher Lee was known for many, many different parts.

He was Dracula and the Mummy and Frankenstein’s Monster and Fu-Manchu and Lord Summerisle and both Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes. He was both the Bond villain Scaramanga and the real-life cousin of Ian Fleming as well as an actual spy during WWII. He was Count Dooku and Saruman the Grey and duelled on screen with three Jedi knights as well as Galdalf, while in his eighties. He was in a Dr. Mabuse movie (sort of – it’s complicated) and in two Edgar Wallace movies, playing a police officer who turns out to be the killer in one and the obvious villain, who turns out to be innocent, while Eddi Arent is the real killer, in the other. He lent his voice to the animated adaptation of Peter S. Beagle’s The Last Unicorn. He was a trained singer, recorded several Heavy Metal albums and spoke nine languages. He was, in a word, amazing and he will be sorely missed.

The second death of the day is a particular blow to German science fiction, because noted German science fiction writer and editor Wolfgang Jeschke died on Wednesday, aged 78. The state of German language science fiction has never been particularly happy and that we have something approaching a science fiction genre at all is largely due to Wolfgang Jeschke’s tireless work on behalf of the genre at the publisher Heyne. Dietmar Dath, himself an SF writer as well as one of my favourite German critics, puts it very well in his obituary for Wolfgang Jeschke at the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: He was the one who made German language SF possible.

Since Wolfgang Jeschke was not all that well known outside Germany, there are no English language obituaries yet. Though his novel The Cusanus Game was translated into English and published by Social Justice Cabal Central – pardon, Tor Books – a few years ago. Here is a review by Gary K. Wolfe from the Chicago Tribune.

What is more, we also lost James Last, musician, composer, bandleader and king of easy listening this Wednesday, when he died in Florida aged 86. In his own way, James Last was as ubiquitous as Pierre Brice and Sir Christopher Lee. If you grew up in 1970s and 1980s Germany, you knew his music and your parents or grandparents probably had one or more of his records. Mine certainly did. When they were recently remodelling their living room, I came across a stack of old records of bad German pop music from the 1970s and asked, “Can we throw those out or at least hide them where the handimen won’t see them?”, they vehemently answered “No”. One of those records was a James Last record. It’s the one I would have rescued, along with the Johnny Cash in Folsom Prison record and the “Musikalische USA-Reise” (A musical trip through the US), a compilation of country songs named after US cities.

Because – in spite or because of what this kind of mean obituary in the Guardian claims – James Last was one damn good musician, even if his music was not quite to your taste. His songs were sung by various international stars including Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra and Luciano Pavarotti, he wrote the scores for many movies and the title songs for several popular TV series. His piece “Einsamer Hirte” (The lonely shepherd), originally written for an album called “Film scores without films” (which is a bloody brilliant title), wound up becoming a film score not once but thrice, most famously in Quentin Tarantino’s (who, whatever else you think about him, knows a thing or two about music) Kill Bill, Vol. 1.

Since James Last was born in Bremen as Hans Last, started his career here and remained connected to the city of his birth throughout his life, his death received a lot of coverage in the local media. Radio Bremen, where his career began, has a lot of background material about James Last, including some rare photos and early clips.

His most famous work was probably the wonderfully evocative tune “Biscaya”:

But my favourite of his is probably the Herz Schmerz Polka (Heartache polka). James Last didn’t actually write it – that honour goes to Czech composer Václav Bláha – but his orchestra sure played it wonderfully. The Herz Schmerz Polka starts at 1:10 BTW:

However, Sir Christopher Lee, Wolfgang Jeschke and James Last were not the only great people who left us in these past few days. Here, mentioned in brief, are a few others.

Ernst Waldemar Bauer, German nature documentary filmer and TV host, died aged 89. If you’re German and were into nature and animal documentaries (which I never was, not even as a child), he was probably as ubiquitous to you as Pierre Brice, Sir Christopher Lee and James Last.

British actor, singer and writer Ron Moody, best remembered for portraying Fagin in the musical Oliver! on stage and screen, died aged 91. He almost became the Third Doctor instead of Jon Pertwee.

Margueritte Patten, British author of cooking cooks, including one about war-time ration cooking, as well as one of the first TV-chefs, died aged 99. Even the New York Times has an obituary for her.

Ornette Coleman, revolutionary jazz saxophonist and composer, died aged 85. The New York Times shares some of his greatest hits.

Wrestler Dusty Rhodes a.k.a. “The American Dream” also died, aged only 69. I’ve never really been a wrestling fan and considered US-style pro-wrestling mostly as this really curious phenomenon that I sometimes saw on the original Sky Channel in the 1980s in Rotterdam, where my Dad worked and where we had that most marvelous miracle of the modern age, cable TV. Dusty Rhodes would have been active in those years and he was recognisable enough that I knew who he was as soon as I saw a photo.

Please, universe, just make it stop.

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Winnetou Redux, German SF and Two Audio Links

My post about the passing of Pierre Brice, the actor best known for portraying the noble Apache chief Winnetou in the Karl May adaptations of the 1960s, attracted some unexpected attention, because it led to me being interviewed by Carol Off on the program As It Happens by CBC Radio today. You can listen to the interview here.

As for how that interview came about, I was just sitting down to watch the evening news, when I was handed the telephone with the words “Someone speaking English.”

Now English language phonecalls in this house are usually for me and even when they’re not, I’m usually the one who ends up answering them. Most of those English language calls are work-related, but since I wasn’t expecting anything along those lines, I was naturally a bit curious.

So I answered the phone and found myself talking to a very nice lady who works as a producer for CBC Radio in Toronto. Turned out that they wanted to do a piece about the late Pierre Brice and my blogpost was one of the very few English language articles about him. So she asked me a few questions, I tried to explain why Pierre Brice and Winnetou were so important for many Germans and then she asked if she could call me back for the interview with Carol Off.

They called me back an hour later, we did the interview and this is how I ended up getting interviewed on Canadian radio, which impressed my parents mightily. when I told them.

If you’re not all audioed out yet, I’d also like to point you to this recent episode of the Skiffy and Fanty Show podcast about German science fiction. I wasn’t interviewed for this one, since it’s a recording of a panel about German SF at Loncon, the 2014 WorldCon. But I did help out the Skiffy and Fanty team by decyphering the German names and tracking down the relevant links, for which they kindly thanked me in the subsequent episode dedicated to Mad Max: Fury Road.

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Thoughts on the 2014 Nebula Awards

The debate about the Hugo Awards is still going on and reaching ever more ridiculous proportions. If you feel like wading into all that, the tireless Mike Glyer at File 770 offers daily summaries of the latest entries in the debate. And if you’re in need of a laugh, check out “Sad Puppies Review Books” by Alexandra Erin, parody reviews of popular (American) children’s books written Sad Puppy style.

With all the controversy surrounding the Hugos, it’s easy to forget the other important SFF award, which would be a pity, because the winners of the 2014 Nebula Awards have been announced this weekend.

As I said in my Nebula nominations reaction post from February, this year offered a worthy and pleasantly diverse group of Nebula nominees and the winners reflect this.

Jeff Vandermeer wins in the Best Novel category for Annihilation, the first book in his Southern Reach trilogy. It’s certainly a worthy winner, though personally I prefer both Ancillary Sword and The Goblin Emperor (and it’s going to be very hard to decide which one to give the top spot on my Hugo ballot). What is more, Jeff Vandermeer’s Southern Reach trilogy very likely lost a Hugo nomination due to puppy shenanigans, so I’m happy to see him win the Nebula.

I loved Ursula Vernon’s “Jackalope Wives”, which won in the short story category, and indeed the story was on my Hugo nomination ballot. Alaya Dawn Johnson took home two well-deserved Nebulas, one in the novelette category as well as the Andre Norton Award for the best YA book. Nancy Kress in the novella category is another worthy winner, though I haven’t read the work in question.

Guardians of the Galaxy won in the dramatic presentation category, proving that at least this year, colourful and fun science fiction won out over dull and earnest entries like Interstellar. But then I feel that Guardians of the Galaxy is really the SFF movie to beat this year, even though puppy shenanigans may have harmed its chances at the Hugo due to several voters having vowed to place all slate nominees (and Guardians was on the puppy slate, because even crying canines occasionally have taste) under “No Award”.

The recipients of the Grand Master and Solstice Awards are all very worthy choices as well, though it’s a pity that Joanna Russ couldn’t receive this honour in her lifetime. I also agree with some of the commenters at File 770 that deserving as Larry Niven is, it would be great to see more Grand Master Awards go to the many great women writers in the genre.

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Rest in Peace, Pierre Brice a.k.a. Winnetou

French actor Pierre Brice died today at age 86.

If you grew up in (West) Germany between 1962 and approx. 2001, this news will come as a shock to you, because Pierre Brice in his star role as the noble Apache chief Winnetou was very much part of your childhood. Barbara Moeller’s obituary from Die Welt expresses it perfectly: The hero of our collective childhood is dead.

Winnetou and his white blood brother Old Shatterhand were created in the 1870s by Karl May, one of the most popular German language writers. Karl May’s Wild West adventures starring Winnetou and Old Shatterhand as well as his Middle Eastern adventures starring Kara Ben Nemsi and Hadschi Halef Omar Ben Hadschi Abul Abbas Ibn Hadschi Dawud al Gossarah (I could once recite the whole name without looking it up) were read by generations of young Germans and the classic Karl May editions in their iconic dark green jacket, unchanged since the late 19th century, were a common sight on German bookshelves. Albert Einstein was a fan, as was Adolf Hitler. Too bad he did not take May’s lessons about pacifism and tolerance to heart.

When I was a kid in the 1980s, Karl May was still a childhood reading staple, even though those novels were more than a hundred years old by that point. My then best friend was a hardcore Karl May fan and was planning to marry Winnetou someday. I was not quite that huge a fan, but I still read the novels – in slightly mouldy editions inherited from my Dad, because my Mom had lost her set – and besides, I was going to marry Old Shatterhand. And then we’d live happily ever after in the American West.

By the time I read Karl May’s novels, the face of Winnetou was already irrevocably that of Pierre Brice, the actor who played the character in a series of highly successful film adaptations between 1962 and 1968. The face of Old Shatterhand and Kara Ben Nemsi for that matter (but then, it was always pretty obvious that they were the same person) was irrevocably that of Lex Barker. The Winnetou movies were true blockbusters and later television staples. Der Schatz im Silbersee (The Treasure of the Silver Lake), the first film in the series, was watched by more than 3 million people and grossed a then stunning 6.4 million Deutschmarks. The subsequent movies were similarly successful and when Winnetou died in Old Shatterhand’s arms at the end of Winnetou III in 1965, there was not a dry eye in the movie theatre. Sadly, the death scene is no longer on YouTube, where all of the Winnetou films could be found until fairly recently. Coincidentally, Rik Battaglia, the Italian actor who played Winnetou’s killer, died earlier this year. Supposedly, he never lived that particular role down and kept getting snarls and ugly remarks even decades later.

I belonged to the last generation of German kids for whom Karl May’s novels and their film adaptations were a childhood staple. For soon after I grew up, kids simply stopped reading Karl May and the Winnetou movies were no longer event programming in the vastly expanded TV landscape of the 1990s and beyond.

In retrospect, it’s not difficult to see why Karl May eventually fell out of favour. His novels are massive Victorian tomes, heavy on the description and Christian lecturing and low on the accuracy, since Karl May had never actually visited all the places he wrote about, a fact that was becoming increasingly notable as time went on. What is more, the chronology is an unholy mess. Come to think of it, the books were sometimes tough going even by the time I read them and I totally understand why modern teens wouldn’t want to read them.

The books are problematic in other ways as well. Winnetou is very much a “noble savage” stereotype, while Old Shatterhand is a complete Mary Sue to the point that Old Shatterhand (and Kara Ben Nemsi for that matter) share notable features of Karl May’s own biography such as the fact that they hail from Saxony (which shocked me as a kid, for how could someone as cool as Old Shatterhand possibly be East German) and spent some time in jail, May for fraud and theft and Old Shatterhand, because the cruel world misunderstood him, as he puts it. The novels are very male focussed as well. Women play only minor roles and often get fridged for their troubles. And though the movies expanded the roles of the female characters and cast roles such as Ribanna, Apanatschi, Ellen Patterson and Winnetou’s sister Nscho-tschi with big female stars of the period, the women’s roles were still limited to damsel-in-distress. Their final fate was inevitably either death (Nscho-tschi most notably) or getting married off to someone who was neither Winnetou nor Old Shatterhand (Ribanna and Apanatschi, though the latter at least nabbed a young Götz George). For no woman could ever disturb the sheer and overwhelming slashiness of the Winnetou/Old Shatterhand relationship.

Rewatching the Winnetou movies today, the slashiness is so striking that it’s stunning that 1960s audiences apparently didn’t notice the homoerotic undertones at all. And indeed the currently highest grossing German movie of all time (all time meaning since 1968, since calculations for earlier movies were made differently), Der Schuh des Manitu (The shoe of Manitou) is a Winnetou parody, which is basically Winnetou/Old Shatterhand slash, proving that even in 2001, Winnetou and Old Shatterhand were still iconic enough that a parody of the 1960s movies could break box office records.

The (apparently unintentional) slashiness isn’t the only issue with the 1960s Winnetou movies. For starters, it’s kind of obvious that the Croatian landscape where the movies were shot – though beautiful – bears zero resemblance to the American West. The fact that all Native Americans in the film are played by white actors is another huge issue, though the practice of casting white actors as Native American continues in the Karl May Festivals in Bad Segeberg, Elspe and Radebeul, actual Native Americans being kind of rare in Germany.

Nonetheless, the Winnetou movies still make for surprisingly entertaining viewing on a lazy Saturday night in summer. What is more, early exposure to Winnetou completely ruined Hollywood westerns for me, because after the focus on brotherhood, cooperation and pacifism of the Winnetou stories, the macho antics of US western heroes were hard to take, as was the fact that Native Americans were inevitably villains. I still remember watching a random Hollywood western as a kid and being outraged at the white heroes fighting the Apaches, because to me the Apaches were Winnetou’s tribe and therefore the good guys. Not too mention that the stars of Hollywood westerns were inevitably craggy-faced old men, whereas Pierre Brice and Lex Barker were both strikingly handsome. Coincidentally, I can watch Italian westerns just fine – even though they are more violent and cynical than Hollywood westerns. But then, nobody in an Italian western is under the illusion that they are the good guys and their macho bullshit is usually revealed exactly for what it is. And once again, the actors are a lot more handsome than their US counterparts.

As an adult, it is obvious to me that the “noble savage” stereotype promoted by Winnetou is just as problematic as the “red devil” stereotype pushed by Hollywood westerns. Nonetheless, it is notable that Native Americans have always been viewed positively in Germany, largely due to the lingering influence of Winnetou and his spiritual heirs like Zeerookah, the Native American FBI agent from the long-running German pulp series G-Man Jerry Cotton. When playing “Cowboys and Indians”, every German kid always wanted to be the Indian.

As for Pierre Brice, he never quite lived down the Winnetou role and returned to the part several times, for the last time in 1998 for a TV two-parter entitled Winnetou’s Rückkehr (Winnetou’s Return). He also continued to remain a lot more popular in Germany than in his native France.

Coincidentally, Pierre Brice did make one foray into the science fiction genre in the execrable TV series Star Maidens in 1976, where he plays one of the poor widdle white men who escape the matriarchical tyranny of a planet ruled by women. It’s just as offensive as it sounds, though Pierre Brice was certainly one of the better looking domestic slaves.

So rest in peace, Pierre Brice, hero of my childhood. My you forever ride through those great hunting grounds in the sky side by side with Lex Barker and the rest of the Winnetou cast who has gone before you.

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Indie Speculative Fiction of the Month for May 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 April 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 science fiction, space opera, paranormal romance, post-apocalyptic fiction, epic fantasy, YA fantasy, time travel romance, Steampunk, Cyberpunk, horror, werewolves, wizards, fairytale princesses, monkey queens, pearl divers, heroic thieves, dwarves in love, alien invasions, conspiracies, ghosts, lots of LGBT characters 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:

The Time Slip Girl by Elizabeth AndreThe Time Slip Girl by Elizabeth Andre

What if the woman you loved was more than a century away? Dara, a computer programmer from Chicago, is visiting London when she opens a door in an Edwardian house and slips into Edwardian England. Agnes, a beautiful London shop girl, takes in the bewildered 21st century American lesbian, but, as Dara begins to accept that she is stuck in 1908, she also begins to accept that she has feelings for Agnes that go beyond gratitude. And the longer Dara stays, the harder Agnes finds it to hide her growing love for the accidental time traveller from the future. Will they overcome grief and prejudice to acknowledge their true feelings for one another? Or will Dara be snatched back to the 21st century before they can express their love?

The Pearl Diver by S. Elliot BrandisThe Pearl Diver by S. Elliot Brandis

I’m Elsie, from the planet Caelum.

It’s 96% ocean, but that’s okay. Out of all six planets (or seven, if you believe the myths), we’re the only people with gills. I can breathe underwater for minutes at a time, discovering the secrets of the deep-sea. Diving is my first love.

But not everybody understands.

Each year they run a competition—a single black pearl is dropped into the ocean, and graduating students dive to find it. It sounds easy, but it’s not. The ocean is a dark and dangerous place, with caves, crevices, and flesh-eating creatures. Some years, not everybody survives.

It’s how my brother died.

My parents won’t let me compete. At times it seems like the whole island is against me. I don’t care. I will enroll, win, and gain the ultimate prize—a job diving on the head planet of the entire system. I’ll do whatever it takes. I’ll fight for a better life, out there in the stars.

I will be the Pearl Diver.

Or die trying.

A Tiding of Magpies by Robert DahlenA Tiding of Magpies by Robert Dahlen

“One for sorrow, two for joy.”

When Jiao, a princess from Faerie’s Far Lands, comes to the Wonderland Diner and Tavern looking for help, it’s showtime for the Monkey Queen! Michiko and her best friend, Beth McGill, have to rescue the princess’ boyfriend from the minions of a scheming warlord, and then race against time and fend off goblins, ogres and monsters to fulfill a prophecy.

But Michiko has been hiding something from everyone, even Beth, and no secret is forever. And when that secret is revealed…

Everything will change for Michiko and Beth.

This is book 4 of the Monkey Queen series.

81hhX7nJQ1L._SL1500_Inoculated by Scott Michael Decker

Orphaned on a muddy planet and reared by giant paramecia, Lydia observes with inoculated indifference as the nearby Gaean Empire crowns its new, ugly Empress. Suddenly, her life goes haywire. Pursued across the galaxy, she tries to discover why her fellow Homo sapiens have taken such a sudden dislike to her, and why her adoptive Paramecia are going to such lengths to protect her.

 

 

The Initiative by Bruce FottlerThe Initiative: In Harm’s Way by Bruce Fottler

Sam Maxwell hates his bland, dead-end job at a company that’s little more than a labyrinth of cubicles. Seeking a better position, the Blanchard Corporation quickly extends him a surprisingly generous job offer. But something mysterious is lurking beneath the prestigious veneer of this multi-billion dollar technology giant. After accepting the offer, Sam’s life is surreptitiously evaluated by a board of directors who are anxious to recruit candidates for their clandestine consortium. To those already part of this consortium, it’s simply known as The Initiative. To Sam, it’s the start of a perilous venture to help protect one of the most closely guarded secrets in modern history.

Lady in Blue by Kimberly G. GiarrantanoThe Lady in Blue by Kimberly G. Giarrantano

The Lady in Blue stole a car and fled Ash.
Out on Devlin Road she emerged from a crash.
She wandered the woods with her head dripping blood.
Then drowned in the river in water and mud.

All her life criminology student Liz Bloom has heard this rhyme, meant to scare young campers. When she’s about to take on her first cold case, Liz learns the eerie song is about her great aunt Lana. Liz isn’t big on studying, but she does have one advantage most criminologists don’t — she can speak to the dead.

In 1955, Lana Bloom was an eighteen-year-old beauty with Hollywood dreams who fell in love with a stranger. When Lana died in a bloody car crash, all signs pointed to the mysterious man who was never seen again.

As Lana unravels the details surrounding her last week of life, the tale she weaves for Liz is one of desire, betrayal, and murder. If Lana can’t identify her killer, not only will a murderer escape punishment, but her ghostly form will cease to exist. And Liz will have failed the most important assignment of all – family.

Twisted Cogs by Malcolm HemmingsTwisted Cogs by Malcolm Hemmings

It is the turn of the 16th Century, and the world has entered a golden age of art, invention, and architecture. This renaissance of literature and learning in Europa is suddenly thrown into overdrive when a chosen few “Stormtouched” begin displaying supernatural abilities. Torn between the age’s burgeoning love of science and the dark promises of magic, Europa has become a powder-keg of clockwork and sorcery.

Elena Lucciano doesn’t care about increasing mankind’s knowledge or exploring the mysterious workings of magic. Even though she herself is Stormtouched, Elena doesn’t have high ambitions. All she wants is for her mother to be proud of her, for her teacher to accept her, and to become one of the best artists in all of Italoza, content to ignore all thoughts of science and magic.

Unfortunately for Elena, the tides of invention and magic are sometimes not content to ignore those who ignore them…

Emergence-2500x1563-Amazon-Smashwords-Kobo-AppleEmergence by Michael Patrick Hicks

Still recovering from the events that befell her in Los Angeles, Mesa Everitt is learning how to rebuild her life.

The murder of a memorialist enclave changes all of that and sets into motion a series of violence that forces her into hiding. Hunted by a squad of corporate mercenaries, with the lives of her friends and family in danger, Mesa has no one to turn to, but she holds a dark secret inside her skull. She has no knowledge of that secret, but it is worth killing for.

The ghosts of her haunted, forgotten past are about to emerge.

The thrilling sequel to Convergence!

The Sentience Sentence by Ian JaymesThe Sentience Sentence by Ian Jaymes

What if your housemate was trying to take over the world?

Chris Kelton decides to stick it out one last summer in his college town after graduating, and takes on a housemate for few months to help with the rent. Why? He’s not sure. His new boarder, faculty at the university, wasn’t what Chris was looking for, but he takes him in anyway. Before Chris knows it, he’s helping with research, neglecting his cat, making big lifestyle changes and ignoring his friends. Even though he knows his summer guest is strange, Chris doesn’t seem to mind the mystery. Yet true intentions can only stay hidden for so long, and Chris soon discovers that his guest is not who he says he is. Has Chris inadvertently hastened the end of the world as he knows it? What will Chris do next? What can he do?

The Sentience Sentence is approximately 13,500 words in length.

Thea's Tale by Lisa ManifoldThea’s Tale by Lisa Manifold

Does true love really conquer all? The old fairy tales say yes.

Thea doesn’t believe in magic, witches, or fairy tales. They are merely stories for children. She’s not even sure about love, until she meets – again – the man of her dreams. When he tells her, “We do not see one another as we are. Love changes us, and we see one another through the eyes of love”, she’s lost. There’s no one else for her. All that remains is for him to speak to her father, and they will be able to live happily ever after.

Except Thea discovers that’s not quite how things work. Her father has his own agenda. There are handsome suitors vying for her hand. And her crown. Being next in line to the throne also means she’s got enemies. One is a powerful witch who places a curse upon her. Unfortunately, it’s doesn’t affect only Thea.

With many forces conspiring against them, the question is no longer will Thea and her love live happily ever after. It’s will they live at all?

The Sisters of the Curse series follows the twelve dancing princesses who found themselves cursed, and what happens afterwards. Thea’s Tale is the story of the eldest.

Naya's Invasion by Mia MitnsNaya’s Invasion by Mia Mitns

Falling for a human wasn’t part of the plan.
A Stand Alone Story

#29831 a.k.a. Naya is a fierce commander of the quiet alien invasion. Her tasks were minimal. Remain invisible. Direct the invasion. Reach the quota of humans. See how the other humans react.

Falling for a human wasn’t part of the plan.

Will Naya be loyal to her heart or her family?

Second story in the “Fallen Invasion” Series, following Fallen.

The Outsiders by Joe MynhardtThe Outsiders, edited by Joe Mynhardt

A Suspense Thriller / Horror featuring the gated community of Priory, with its cult leader Charles Erich and his followers, including those who want to overthrow him, and those who’ll do anything for him. Is that which they worship the true evil, or does evil reside in them?
Inside Priory awaits a lot more than meets the eye. The people might seem friendly, but only because their enigmatic leader Charles Erich accepts nothing less.

The cottages within this gated community seem simple enough, and even though what lurks beneath them is more ancient than mankind itself, can anything be more evil than the people worshipping it?

If you dare follow this UK invasion of five prime authors as they each tell their own story of the people living behind Priory’s steel gates and high walls, you’ll quickly find yourself an outsider, as well.

Featuring stories by Stephen Bacon, James Everington, Gary Fry, V.H. Leslie, and Rosanne Rabinowitz.

Nightfall by Shiriluna NottNightfall by Shiriluna Nott and SaJa H.

Gibben Nemesio thought his life was over the day he received a conscription notice demanding he train to be a soldier. When he left his home for Silver City, he never expected he’d thwart a terrible plot to murder the King and become an overnight hero—and he definitely hadn’t expected to find love in the form of a handsome mage trainee named Joel.

Three years later, Gib has fought his way from lowborn farmer to hold the coveted position as understudy to the seneschal. Despite heightening tensions between the King and High Council and the rumors of impending war still terrorizing the people of Arden, Gib finds solace in the company of his wise mentor, loyal friends, and beloved companion.

But with the arrival of an ominous message from a powerful enemy in the north, Gib quickly realizes peace is fleeting in a world where chaos lurks in every shadow, and treacherous forces—from both outside the country and within—threaten to destroy everything he holds dear.

This is book 2 in the Chronicles of Arden series, following A Call to Arms.

Forging Change by Alix NovarraForging Change by Alix Novarra

Ostracized and shunned, due to a mysterious illness that has left him in constant pain and with a limp, Elin, crown prince of the dwarven kingdom Quatnu doesn’t believe he has much of a future left.

When he’s ordered to attend a celebration for the safe return of the Diamond Warband, all he wants to do is catch a glimpse of Valodym, Captain of the warband and the dwarf he still loves. Just to make sure that Valodym has returned safely from the mission that many considered suicidal.

Valodym though? Is not the kind of dwarf who gives up so easily, especially not when there’s something worth fighting for. Like Elin, their happiness, and their future.

Jadia by Greg PippinJadia by Greg Pippin

If you slept one day and woke up in a grand palace – to which you had never been before – only to find yourself lying in a coffin, what would you do? What if you woke up in the body of someone else than yourself, or even worse yet if that person, of whom you supposedly took the body, had been long dead? Jadia, Secret of Sagebrush, steep in paranormal adventure and speculative mystery, is a middle grade fantasy about a girl, who embarks on a quest to find out the truth behind her impaired memory, which will trap her within a mazelike riddle.

 

As The Ash Fell by A.J. PowersAs the Ash Fell by A.J. Powers

Life in the frozen wastelands of Texas is anything but easy, but for Clay Whitaker there is always more at stake than mere survival.

Yellowstone, along with two other Super Volcanoes, exploded with a tremendous fury following months of heightened seismic activity worldwide. The devastating eruptions released unmeasurable quantities of ash into the atmosphere. Coastlines were changed. New canyons were formed. Temperatures plummeted, dragging economies down, too. With no real way to sustain order, governments around the world began to fold, societies collapsed.

It’s been seven years since the ash rained down from the sky. Populations are thinning. Food is scarce. Despair overwhelming. Clay and his sister Megan have taken a handful of orphaned children into their home—a home soaring 16 stories into the sky. Providing for his adopted family is a 24/7 job for Clay. And with roughly six short months a year to gather enough food and supplies to last the long, brutal winter, Clay is forced to spend much of his time away from home—scavenging, hunting, and bartering.

Despite the vicious, unforgiving world he lives in, Clay has grown accustomed to his new life. That is, until he meets Kelsey Lambert.

Now, with winter rolling in earlier than ever, Clay must swiftly adapt to the changes in his life to ensure the safety of those he cares about.

The Wizard and the WoodThe Wizard and the Wood by Becca Price

“I’m dying.” Only a special kind of wizard could hear the cry that was carried by the whispery winds. Only a special kind of wizard could answer it.

He followed the cry to the Wide Wild Wood, a place that should have been filled with magic and wonder. But the dryad, the guardian of the Wide Wild Wood, was gone. Without its Guardian, The Wood had sunk into sadness. Its waters sat dark and stagnate, its creatures hid, its plants grew unhealthy. Not even a very special wizard could dispel the sadness by himself. But if the wildfolk came to his aid, he might just have a chance.

The Mages of Bennamore by Pauline M. RossThe Mages of Bennamore by Pauline M. Ross

A fragile peace. A clash of magic. A woman with secrets.

The war between Bennamore and the coastal region was over almost before it began. But the uniquely powerful mage who forged the alliance is dead, and the coastal folk are restless. Now the victors are bringing their spellcraft to the Port Holdings, unaware that the locals have their own less conspicuous magical ability.

Fen’s new job with the mages of Bennamore seems pleasant enough, but their powers threaten to expose her shady little habits. And then she can’t shake off the attentions of the flirtatious and uneducated guard, Mal. Nothing, it seems, will deter him.

The mysterious disappearance of a mage uncovers a dragon’s nest of deceit. Mal needs Fen’s help to figure it out, but she has divided loyalties and her past drags everyone into the middle of a violent conspiracy. Yet she may be the only one who can stand between the two countries, and stop them plunging back into a war which, this time, would destroy all of them.

The Sea Calls My Name by Hollis ShilohThe Sea Calls My Name by Hollis Shiloh

He lost his magic. How?

Returning to the bookstore by the sea, Daniel worries about how to tell his father that the money he saved to send his gifted son to magic school was a waste.

Daniel buries his secret under the pretense of coming home for a vacation. Then he meets Leaf Springfield, a beautiful young man who’s been systematically beaten down by his uncle.

Irresistibly drawn to one another, they learn they share more than a love for raw fish and the ocean—both have lost a mother, and their ties to the ocean may be more fantastic than they can imagine.

Passion explodes between the two. It terrifies Daniel how quickly his feelings for Leaf grow. There may be more here than meets the eye—about both of them.

My Sahil by Hollis ShilohMy Sahil by Hollis Shiloh

Grant Ralstead has loved Sahil Singh for years, working with him and being his friend but knowing all the time that the angry, fierce human is his mate.

Singh doesn’t believe in mates or love, and doesn’t trust anyone. But he worries every time Grant has to go away on a mission, endangering himself. Even though he pushes Ralstead away, his feelings about the wolf shifter are clearly complicated.

Is there any hope for a happily-ever-after between a wounded human and the wolf shifter who loves him?

A Ralstead and Singh short novella. Fits in the Shifters and Partners universe.

Relationship-centered, very low heat, some angst.

Approx. 19,000 words

911fUqS1pLL._SL1500_Thief of Pailtar by Robyn Wideman

Kiana is a thief.

But to be a thief in Pailtar you either join the Thieves’ Guild or pay them to work in the city. Kiana wants to join the Guild.

Kiana’s adventures take her to places she never dreamed of. Deadly animals, vicious monsters, and angry armies all stand between her and survival…Nobody said being a thief was easy!

 

Lifemaker by Dean F. WilsonLifemaker by Dean F. Wilson

The Regime is on the hunt, forcing the Resistance to take refuge aboard the Lifemaker, an advanced submarine that houses a special cargo: a handful of women who can still give birth to human children.

To evade the Regime’s own submersibles, all parties must work together, but tensions are high, and not everyone on board is looking out for the greater good.

As they descend into the deeps, they quickly learn that not all monsters work for the Regime.

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New Story Available: The Revenant of Wrecker’s Dock

May has not been a good month for me writing-wise. Nonetheless, I did manage to publish a new story, a nice little sailor’s yarn with a dash of zombies or rather revenants.

So what are you waiting for? Make yourself a good hot mug of grog, our it into a Tiki mug if you have one (and I totally want a Tiki mug now), though any other mug will do as well, and settle down to visit the seaside town of Hallowind Cove, Harbour of the Weird, and meet one of the local tourist attractions, The Revenant of Wrecker’s Dock.

The Revenant of Wrecker's DockStrange things keep happening in the permanently fog-shrouded seaside town of Hallowind Cove, earning it the nickname “Harbour of the Weird”.

When Paul comes Hallowind Cove, after inheriting an old house from an uncle he barely knew, he doesn’t put much stock in those stories. But then he finds himself hunted by an angry zombie, who is looking to avenge a century-old crime…

 
 
 

List price: 0.99 USD, EUR or GBP
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Sirens in the Night

Yesterday at shortly after midnight, I was sitting at my PC trying to write, when suddenly the fire sirens went off. Since I live in a semi-rural suburb, we still have a volunteer fire brigade that is assembled via sirens installed on various rooftops around town (though they also have pagers and probably other alarm systems as well). These sirens are really, really loud, but not exactly uncommon and most of the time they don’t announce anything more dramatic than a burning trashcan.

A few minutes later I heard more sirens, this time of the fire trucks. Again, this was only to be expected. Though the trucks did pass fairly close by my house. Then, barely a minute later, there were more sirens and more fire trucks, suggesting that the volunteer fire brigades of neighbouring villages had been alerted as well. So whatever was going on, it was clearly a bigger fire.

By now I got curious and looked out of every first floor window, trying to find out what was going on. But though I could make out the approximate direction in which the fire trucks were moving (there were steadily more of them, too, at least several villages worth), there were no first floor windows in that direction. So I unlocked the front door and went outside to take a look. I wasn’t the only one who had that idea either, since the lights came on in several neighbour houses.

Outside, I could still hear the sirens and – more worryingly – something that sounded like distant explosions. I could also make out what looked like a smoke plume in the otherwise clear nightsky, which worried me a tad.

Since I couldn’t make out anything more, I went back indoors to check the websites and Twitter feeds of various local news organisations. Alas, it was half past midnight on a holiday weekend, so pretty much everybody was asleep. Nobody else seemed to know anything either.

Meanwhile, there were still more fire engines arriving. The sirens went off twice more to rouse even the last firefighter from their sleep.

I went downstairs again and this time I could make out a distinct fireglow as well as a smoke plume in the nightsky. I also heard more distant explosions and I could smell smoke.

By now I was pretty worried, so I checked Twitter again. At 1 AM I finally found this message on the stream of a news agency specializing in disaster footage.

Turned out that a recycling facility approx. three kilometres from my home was on fire. More than two hundred fifty firefighters from the entire region did their best to stop the fire – they even drafted one of the big airfield fire engines from Bremen Airport (which was closed for the night anyway, so it’s not as if they will miss it). The fireglow and smoke plume could allegedly still be seen from twenty kilometres away. Luckily, the recycling facility is located inside an industrial park, so there were no homes in danger, though a nearby animal shelter had to be evacuated. No casualties either, thank goodness, even a cat that had been on the premises managed to get away. The fire is still burning, too, and the smoke hindered traffic on the adjacent highway throughout the day.

Here is a report from the news agency that first reported about the fire and here is the report with lots of photos from the local fire brigade.

There is a video, too:

I actually know the recycling facility, since I’ve been in the industrial park before, e.g. to buy screws at a hardware wholesaler right next door. The company has a good reputation as far as I know.

What is more, the massive concrete walls around the facility, which likely saved adjacent buildings and businesses from the fire last night, actually featured on the original cover for The Other Side of the Curtain, standing in for the Berlin Wall.

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