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Book Review: Lilith’s Brood by Octavia Butler

December 4, 2022 by Carolynn

As of December 4, 2022 $2.99 … check for current price: Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon Au, Amazon DE, Nook, Apple, Kobo, and GooglePlay

Ah, the classic alien abduction for purposes of breeding trope…innocent human women abducted by hot, blue, warlike aliens whom the human women inevitably tame with the power of sexy times.

If you’re looking for that story, Lilith’s Brood by Octavia Butler is not it. Her aliens are not sexy–think giant sea anemone–but they do want to breed. They’re not particular when it comes to male or female.

I recently reviewed Sue Burke’s Semiosis and Interference, and praised those for having genuinely alien voices. Sue’s aliens are very alien, but Butler surpasses even her. This is one of the most disturbing series I have ever read, and I highly recommend it. 

It asks a lot of the biggest questions that sci-fi is so good at addressing. What does it mean to be human? If you sacrifice your humanity in order to survive, have humans survived at all? A great, weird, and wonderful read. I highly recommend it.

Lilith’s Brood is available at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon Au, Amazon DE, Barnes&Noble, iBooks, Kobo, and GooglePlay

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Box Sets, Sci-Fi Tagged With: Octavia Butler

Featured Science Fiction: Starshot (The Skyward Saga Book 1) by A.R. Knight

September 3, 2022 by Carolynn

Featured Science Fiction: Starshot (The Skyward Saga Book 1) by A.R. Knight

FREE as of September 3, 2022
Click for current price: Amazon US, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Australia

Apple, Nook, Kobo, GooglePlay

To save her family, Kaishi fights a desperate war for survival against enemies from Earth and far beyond. Meanwhile, an alien warrior must choose between his honor and his orders as his love faces a fate worse than death.

Caught between warring factions, Kaishi and her tribe face extinction. When a burning meteor lights up the night, Kaishi investigates and finds a creature with answers for everything, with secrets that could let Kaishi save her people. All Kaishi has to do is follow Its orders, no matter where they might lead.

Sax leads a final assault against the galaxy’s most hated enemy, one that holds surprises deep inside its besieged ship. With his claws, teeth, and tail, Sax is a living weapon, but some evils are not so easily erased. He must hunt down every last one, and if Sax survives the assault, he’ll turn his eyes to Earth.

Starshot is the first book in The Skyward Saga, a completed sci-fi adventure series that features mind-bending alien encounters, far-future action, devious villains, and a heroine that won’t stop fighting.

If you’re ready to dive into a new, immersive sci-fi series, you’ll love A.R. Knight’s Starshot and the entire Skyward Saga.

Filed Under: Box Set List Featured Sci-Fi, Sci-Fi Tagged With: A.R. Knight, Starshot, The Skyward Saga

UPDATE: Please don’t buy this box set! (But I’d love some reviews)

July 10, 2020 by Carolynn

Worlds of Wonder a Sci-fi Fantasy Collection by C. Gockel

Available at:
Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon DE, and Amazon AU

Nook, Kobo, Google Play, iBooks

Hey Everyone,

I’ve put together a box set with selections from I Bring the Fire and Archangel Project with the express intention of making it free. 

I also included Let There Be Light because I think John must find Hana, and I will probably tie that into the Archangel Universe at a later date. 

Please don’t buy it–I mean, you can if you want, and I would gladly take it as a tip–but I will be setting it to free hopefully by August. 

More than anything though, I’d really like reviews on this one. If it goes free with some nice reviews it will get more downloads. More downloads hopefully will mean I’m reached by new readers. New readers will hopefully buy more books.

If you do want to purchase or, (please with sugar on top) leave a review, just click the button below for links to all vendors:

Amazon US, Amazon UK, Amazon CA, Amazon DE, and Amazon AU

Nook, Kobo, Google Play, iBooks

Filed Under: Archangel Project, Box Sets, Fantasy, I Bring the Fire (A Loki Series), Sci-Fi Tagged With: Worlds of Wonder

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

Book Reviews: The Spark and the Storm by David Drake

May 23, 2019 by Carolynn

The Spark by David Drake

I have had a weakness for Le Morte d’Arthur fanfiction–even though I’ve never read Le Morte– ever since I read The Once and Future King* by T.H. White. Since then I’ve read more versions of the Arthurian tales than I can fully remember. Tales from Genevieve’s point of view, tales from Mordred’s perspective, tales of Arthur and Genevieve’s only son (What? You didn’t know he existed?) tales of Gawain and the other knights … and tales of A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court**.

So I like Arthurian legend. But a few months ago, if you had asked me if I’d ever want to read a novel where the main hero was based on Galahad I wouldn’t have been interested. Galahad was the son of Lancelot and Lady Elaine in the legends. He was the perfect knight: brave, capable, bold, and so noble he ascended directly into heaven. He was also kind of boring, an irritatingly judgmental holier-than-thou, and a prude.

But here we are. I’ve read not one, but two books based on Galahad. Why did I subject myself to this?

Because the books were written by David Drake, the writer of Red Liners, the book that puts the marine in Space Marines. Or at least puts the space marines in an alien jungle with sentient man-eating plants. It is a laser firing, grenade exploding, gritty, emotional masterpiece. I like emotions in my fiction, because, as a robot, it’s how I study humans and blend in. (Fiction reading improves empathy. Possibly even for robots.) Red Liners looks unflinchingly at military vs. civilian mindsets, and I don’t think it favors one over the other … or rather, shows how superiority is situational. Also, it made me cry.

So, anyway, I picked up The Spark. Drake doesn’t name his characters after their Arthurian counterparts. I can’t decide if this is a strength or a weakness. Galahad is Pal, the hero who narrates the tale, and all the others have their own names. Writing this review I can’t remember their Drakian names because I keep thinking of them as Merlin, Gawain, Gareth, Lancelot, Arther, and Geneviere. So it might be a weakness, but I know why Drake renamed them–despite similarities in personalities and certain situations, he has given them different destinies, and it does keep you wondering how the story is going to unfold. Also, the story isn’t set in the traditional Arthurian landscape, England after the collapse of Rome. Instead it is set in a future where the Ancients, a mighty, intergalactic human civilization that travelled between the stars on “roads” visible only to animals, has collapsed. The Arthur figure in the story is slowly rebuilding civilization in habitable “nodes” on these worlds. More on that later.

Drake has given Galahad, ahem, Pal, all the traits that I found irritating in the original Galahad. He is judgmental and a prude. But Drake shows the positive side of these traits. Pal wants to be part of Arthur’s better future for mankind–idealism goes along with that judgmental attitude. And being a prude can keep a man out of a lot of trouble … that doesn’t really need explaining, does it? Also, Pal does grow throughout the story. At one point in the second book, Pal, in thinking about a woman who is in charge of the royal archives, ponders that she could be beautiful despite her age if she just tried. Eyerollingly annoying but in character, and by the end of the book he acknowledges to himself that she really doesn’t have the time for superficial trappings–it would keep her away from the vocation she loves and is really good at. He also realizes that his judgemental attitude leads him to give up on people too quickly, and also to be a bit of a hypocrite at times. Overall, I liked Pal, and what I didn’t like of him–and his girlfriend, May–was believable for characters with their backgrounds and in their age groups.

What really made the story for me though, was the world. It was a beautiful creation of science-fantasy. The humans in the intergalactic civilization have left behind artifacts that “Makers”–people who enter into trances to feel the purpose of the artifacts–can manipulate. They manipulate them into weapons, primarily for the knights of Arthur’s court. Humans, Makers, warriors, and common folk alike, travel to the court with the help of dogs whose minds some can enter to see the roads between worlds. The knights also use the dogs to see the movements of their opponents. Pal has the ability to be both Maker and warrior, which sets him apart from most of the knights in court. He’s also of refreshingly humble birth, and doesn’t look down on common folk. The first book is his journey from idealistic farmboy to a knight in a court that is far less ideal than he imagined back on the farm–complete with duels, a quest, and Guinevere being accused of treason for infidelity–and it doesn’t end the way it did in Le Mort. In the second book is the search for Merlin. Both have plenty of action if that is your thing. For me, there was just something magical in the way Pal’s personality–the good and the bad of that idealism–intersects with the sci-fantastic universe and the human folly of the court.

The Spark and The Storm are available at Amazon, Nook, GooglePlay, andiBooks.

* The Once and Future King is a classic that is funny, wise, and wonderful. I highly recommend it. It was very influential in my understanding of human emotions … as a robot and all. It’s available at Amazon, Nook, GooglePlay, iBooks, and Kobo.

** A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court is also a classic and manages to lampoon the arrogance of those obsessed with progress and the stupidity of those dead set on hanging onto the old ways no matter what. It’s available at Amazon, Nook, GooglePlay, iBooks, and Kobo … and also ManyBooks if you don’t mind giving them your email address.

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fantasy, Sci-Fi Tagged With: David Drake, The Spark

Book Review: Games of Command by Linnea Sinclair

May 14, 2019 by Carolynn

Games of Command by Linnea Sinclair

I did not read Games of Command before writing Starship Waking or Darkness Rising. I’m saying it right now, WHY? Well, this book is allegedly about courageous and plucky Captain Tasha “Sass” Sebastian and Admiral Branden Kel-Paten, the cyborg officer who falls in love with her, but it’s really about the furzels, the furry sidekicks that keep them from dying. (Sound familiar?) Okay, maybe it’s not really about the furzels, like my books aren’t really about Carl Sagan … maybe.

In the Games of Command universe, cyborgs designed for killing people are supposed to be incapable of love–Kel-Paten’s emotions are confined to useful feelings like the desire to squeeze someone by the neck until their eyeballs pop out. (Handy in board meetings!) But Kel-Paten’s gotten around his programming and has found ways to have a thoughts and feelings of his own between uploads. Some of those feelings that aren’t anger are jealousy towards the furzels (who on the cover are cats.) The furzels get lots of attention from Captain Sass, the object of his longing, and he wonders if it might not be better to be a furzel, considering they have it made in the easy- love-from-the-ladies department.

Furzels are also routinely neutered, so I would think the answer should be, “No,” but 6T9 wonders the same thing about werfles. (Granted, werfles aren’t routinely neutered.) I do feel like saying again, I didn’t read this book before writing mine!

But the furzels and werfles bring up an interesting trend: cute furry animals in sci-fi. There are treecats in the Honor Harrington series, Jonesy in Alien, and Spot in Star Trek (Cat in Red Dwarf is not cute, and I’m not going to mention him here … well, not without parentheses.) There is The Cat Who Walks Through Walls (because he knows no better), Lying Cat in Saga, and too many others to mention. There are also, dogs like Porthos. Does Pip count from Pip & Flinx? He may not be fuzzy or cute, but Pip’s definitely a worthy sidekick.

I think maybe the phenomena boils down to the fact that space is big and bad and scary–but somewhere deep in our heart of hearts, we know that if we bring our pets, it will be alright.

But back to the book … I liked it! It is a great adventure / mystery that keeps you guessing about who is bad and who is good. The main characters are also very likable and believable, and the setting varied and interesting. There is the comfort of cats, errr … furzels. If you wish sometimes that your sci-fi came with a little more romance (maybe you’re even mad at me for delaying 6T9’s happily ever after) I think you’ll like it. I also think you’ll like it if you like more spice than I typically write. (You know who you are “Do-you-have-to-fade-to-black-here?” Folks–also, the answer is yes, I do have to fade to black because I’m boring like that. And also, emotions to me are more porn than porn probably because I’m a Vulcan. Or a robot. My husband hasn’t decided, and I will never tell.)

I have picked up Linnea Sinclair’s An Accidental Goddess because I liked this book so much. Errr … but haven’t read it yet because I fell into a C.J. Cherryh well and I haven’t gotten out. (Maybe the humans are the cute-fuzzy sidekicks in the Foreigner series? We’re certainly small and causing problems…)

If you’re looking for a fun read with action, adventure, and romance, pick up Games of Command at Amazon, Nook, iBooks, Kobo, and GooglePlay.

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Sci-Fi Tagged With: Games of Command, Linnea Sinclair

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