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Box Set List Featured Books

April 12, 2020 by Carolynn

Lioness Cygnus 5 Book One

Lioness Cygnus 5 Book 1 by Alexi Oliver

FREE as of 4/13/2020 6 AM
Click for current price:
Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon AU, Amazon DE

Barnes & Noble, Kobo, iBooks

In a Galaxy ruled by the regressive Kingdom,
Bryant Jones is on his way to a Penal Colony on the far reaches of the system… a colony he never intends to reach.

Once the Kingdom’s war angel, Captain Aurora Campos is now a lowly prison transport commander, when her ship is shot down by alien defenses of a penal planet, she will fight the world to win back her glory and keep her charges safe.

Two destinies collide, slamming truth and faith together in an epic battle that may shatter the very core of The Kingdom itself.

 
beauty and the beast by Vivienne Savage

Beauty and the Beast by Vivienne Savage

FREE as of 4/13/2020 6 AM
Click for current price:
Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon AU, Amazon DE

Barnes & Noble, Kobo, iBooks, GooglePlay

Princess Anastasia Rose dreams of attending school, but her plans are put on hold when war begins between her father and the beastly lord of a nearby castle in the mountains.
Prince Alistair isn’t an ordinary dragon. He’s a shifter afflicted by a curse, unable to become human again until he finds his true love. When a mortal king’s adventurers trespass in Alistair’s territory to steal a rare flower, the prince decides to steal a valuable prize of his own.

Undertake a magical journey in Vivienne Savage’s new romantic fantasy series loosely based on the lore of multiple fairy tales. Meet strong heroines supported by a cast of sexy heroes, intriguing friends, and devious villains.

Author’s Note: This is a magical retelling of the beloved tale written for an adult audience. Reader discretion is advised.

Filed Under: The Box Set List Features Tagged With: Alex Oliver, Cygnus, Lioness

Spinning Silver Book Review

March 19, 2020 by Carolynn

Spinning Silver

Available at Amazon US, Amazon CA, Amazon UK, Nook, iBooks, Kobo, iBooks, and GooglePlay.

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik is the second in a wonderful series, though I read it first and had no trouble jumping right in. This book is lush in its descriptions and emotions. There is plenty of love—of the friendship variety, of child to parent and parent to child, and even romance. 

This is a story is a take on Rumplestilskin, but in it the heroine Miryem owes nothing to a dwarf. She is the daughter of a money lender who is too kind for his own good. She goes about collecting on her father’s debtors to keep her family from starving. Lenders of money are seldom the heroes, but there is ethically lending  and unethical lending. (There is ethical denying of money—it is wrong to lend money to someone you know will never be able to pay it back.) Her family does spread their wealth around, and is good to those who work for them, treating them as family.

I loved the heroine. She is shrewd and hard when she needs to be, but her coldness is directed at those who deserve it. She is also brave…but not unflawed. In a moment of pride in an enchanted forest she boasts about being able to turn silver to gold, catching the interest of the forest’s powerful fae.

This isn’t just Miryem’s tale. It spins in the tale of a princess and a shepherdess. It’s really full and rich, and I highly recommend it.

Available at Amazon US, Amazon CA, Amazon UK, Nook, iBooks, Kobo, iBooks, and GooglePlay.

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fantasy Tagged With: Naomi Novik, Spinning Silver

Book Review: Medusa Uploaded

January 2, 2020 by Carolynn

When I explained the plot of this book to my husband and showed him the cover he said, “The book should be called Snakes on a Mainframe!”

That would be funnier. The book is a little darker than that title might lead people to believe. Or maybe not—I hesitate to admit it, but I’ve never seen Snakes on a Plane. Maybe a lot of people die?

A good book tells a story that keeps you turning pages. This does that with some super clever back-and-forth in time. As the book moves along, the main character grows and becomes funnier, too. Or more wry.

One of the things a good sci-fi book does is explore the future in a way that contributes to the collective consciousness of naked ape brains. (And perhaps the brains of cats inhabited by The One…you know some are possessed!) Sci-fi gets us ready for what may happen. Good sci-fi also let’s us talk about things that are happening now in a way that is more engaging.

This book does both of those things. An “Executive Class” rules a generation ship headed for a planet in the Goldilocks Zone of Charon. The Executives see themselves as better than the other classes in all ways. They live in splendor, while the “worms” and techs and others are banished to dark tunnels beneath the warm inner core of the ship. They are an incestuous lot, the Executives, and, despite their imagined superiority there is a lot they do not know…and a revolution brewing. The revolutionaries have copied the tactics of the Executive class, too, and those tactics are brutal.

The book did make me think a lot about how on Earth, we can always flee. On the generation ships of the future (I’m going to be optimistic here and believe we’ll have them) there will be nowhere to run.

I recommend this book for anyone who likes sci-fi, whether it is the Ursula LeGuinn sort, or more of the pew-pew sort. There is plenty of action and drama to carry the book along—although, I don’t think there were any pew-pews. Just tentacles.

Get it Amazon, Nook, iBooks, Kobo, or GooglePlay.

I haven’t read it yet, but I have already gotten the sequel, Medusa in the Graveyard.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Emily Davenport, Medusa Uploaded, Science Fiction

The “Lost Email”

November 9, 2019 by Carolynn

This email disappeared when my new email sender went on the fritz. I’ve posted it here for posterity.

Android General 1. Archangel Seven.

A Name Change and Two Bits of Good News

So, it turns out that the word “Droid” is trademarked by Lucasfilm, and they protect their trademarks fiercely. A friend pointed it out on Facebook when I mentioned progress on my next book, which at that time was a name that could have gotten me into serious trouble.   You may say to yourself, “Was Star Wars really where the term ‘droid’ originated?” No. It originated in a short story by Mari Wolf titled Robots of the World! Arise! written in 1952. But to the one with the most expensive lawyers go the spoils.  (Jokes about evil empires practically write themselves here.)   I had to go back through Darkness Rising and The Defiant and change all instances of the word. I also had to do an emergency cover modification Book 7. I hope at most I only get a cease and desist. I have ceased and desisted, but some of you may be looking for a different title for book seven. Archangel Project Book Seven is now Android General 1. 

Let’s move onto some good news. The Defiant broke even less than two weeks after release! I hope you enjoyed it. I loved writing 6T9, Volka, and Carl of course, but I also loved writing Alexis’s tricky mind–the tricks it plays are mostly on her, of course. She is so clever, but also so broken. I know a few readers have written to tell me that they are now rooting for Alexis and Alaric, and I’m glad of that. 

I love writing–and probably always will–but I could not continue to publish without fans buying my work. I appreciate your support, and am honored that you want to spend time in my day dreams.

I am almost done with the rough draft of Android General 1. I have just a little bit of the last two scenes to write, and then I have to wade through the rewrites. I actually like cleaning up the rough draft–finding plot holes, figuring how to fix them, and expounding on things that should be clearer. That part is a fun puzzle. It’s the comma catching that I do not like. I do not like it at all. 

Starship Waking

More good news! Starship Waking has 35 Reviews

Reviews on Starship are especially important because it is a series starter. At a certain number of reviews, the big advertisers start paying attention. If you review just one book, reviewing this would be the most helpful. 

If you could leave a note at Amazon US, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Nook, Kobo, iBooks, or GooglePlay it would be most appreciated. Audible reviews are great, too!

Thank you so much to everyone who has read it and reviewed it already! 

All the Other Stuff 

I am almost done with the rough draft of Android General 1. I have just a little bit of the last two scenes to write, and then I have to wade through the rewrites. I actually like cleaning up the rough draft–finding plot holes, figuring how to fix them, and expounding on things that should be clearer. That part is a fun puzzle. It’s the comma catching that I do not like. I do not like it at all. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Internet Memes are Stupid … the love story of Hannah and Martin Van Buren

July 9, 2019 by Carolynn

Martin Van Buren, 8th president of the United States wrote an 800 page autobiography, but didn’t mention his wife even once.

Ah, yes, ye Olde Misogyny, but was it really?

Hannah and Martin Van Buren were born in the same tiny community of Kinderhook, New York. They were, in fact, cousins, but they didn’t know then about genetics and the dangers of inbreeding. As cousins, they probably knew each other almost from the time of Hannah’s birth–a year after Martin’s. According to accounts by their contemporaries, they fell in love as children.

By the time he was fourteen, Martin had said he would marry Hannah but couldn’t until he had a way to support her. Martin was of modest means. His father was a farmer and tavern keeper with eight children and a wife to support. Martin left school at 14 and accepted the only gift his father could procure for him through his tavern connection: a job as a law clerk in far off New York City.

Law Clerk perhaps sounds more important than it was. He was an apprentice and basically a go-fer: he swept up the office and kept it clean, delivered messages, and filed papers. It paid next to nothing, but it gave him access to books of law. By night Martin hit those books. It took seven years, but by the time he was 21 Martin had passed the bar.

He could have stayed in New York, instead he went back to Kinderhook. and Hannah. He still had no money, but was able to open up a law firm with his half brother. They distinguished themselves by representing poor clients.

It took four more years to build up the business. He didn’t marry Hannah until she was 24 and he was 25–a little more than a decade after he had declared his intentions. Either one of them might have married someone else in the meantime, and certainly Martin, after establishing his firm, could have married someone else.

Hannah Van Buren

As Martin rose in prominence, Hannah hosted dinner parties for clients and contacts. She was sociable and lively, and their guests described their marriage as a happy one. Hannah and Martin were both of Dutch descent, and in fact, Dutch was Hannah’s first language. She never lost her Dutch accent. In public, Martin referred to her by a nickname he’d given her: “Jannetje”–Dutch for Hannah.

Despite being a woman of means, Hannah, like Martin, believed in service to the poor. Through her church she participated in many charitable causes, and was known for actually going to the homes of the poor and mingling with them. This wasn’t done by the other fashionable ladies at the time.

Together they had six children, though one died. It was during her pregnancy with the last that Hannah contracted tuberculosis. She managed to deliver the baby successfully, but the pregnancy and delivery weakened her. She died at the age of 35–18 years before Mr. Van Buren became President Van Buren.

It was fashionable at the time for pallbearers to be bought matching scarves. Mrs. Van Buren had requested that the money for those scarves be donated to charity to help the poor. Mr. Van Buren honored her dying request…

…And then he never mentioned her name again. Not to his children, not in his autobiography. When his son wanted to name a daughter after his mother, he had to confirm his mother’s name–perhaps because he remembered his father referring to her as Jannetje, yet the tombstone saying she was Hannah.

Martin also never remarried.

Van Buren built his entire early career around his Jannetje. They had shared convictions, and were in each other’s lives 35 years.

At the time they married, the woman’s vows included the words, “obey.” Did he blame himself for her death? Did he wonder over and over if he had just put his foot down and made her stop her charitable adventures she would she not have contracted TB? (TB loves the overcrowded, grimy, malnourished conditions of poverty. And it is often contracted by people who have weakened immune systems–who suffer from diseases like HIV, or malnutrition, or are pregnant.)

We can only speculate, but it seems he never recovered from her death.

Filed Under: Random Thoughts, Uncategorized Tagged With: Martin Van Buren, Romance, The Internet Is Stupid

An Excerpt from The Defiant. Archangel Project. Book 6

May 23, 2019 by Carolynn

They walked down the same road on the edge of No Weere they’d taken the day before, but Volka was no longer animated and chatty. He almost wished she’d point out a reservoir of diphtheria, cholera, or typhus that she’d played in, just to end the silence. She began falling behind, and he looked over his shoulder, expecting to see her exhausted and flagging. Instead her eyes were bright, her ears were forward, and her body was bent low.

He stopped. “You’re stalking me.”

Three point three meters behind him, Volka straightened. “I was not.” The rain had soaked her through, and he could see every outline of her body. The chill, the rush of hormones or both was giving her “hardware malfunctions.” His core programming insisted he help with the issue. His Q-comm screamed it was a bad idea.

Volka’s ears flattened sideways. “I was stalking you,” she admitted. “I’m so sorry, Sixty.”

“Never appologize to a sex ‘bot for stalking them,” 6T9 said. He meant to be flip, but the words came out heavy and serious.

Her amber eyes met his. “But you’re more than a sex ‘bot.”

“Nebulas,” 6T9 whispered. It was a common enough exclamation, but nebulas filled 6T9’s ocular processors, and he didn’t see the steps he took to close the distance between them.

Filed Under: Archangel Project, Sci-Fi

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