Showing posts with label Artdog Recommended Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artdog Recommended Reading. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2020

For the characters

Book Four is Aces and Eights. Available now!
(Photo courtesy of Amazon.)
I've heard it said that people pick up the first book of a series for the plot, but they stay with the series for the characters. This is true in spades (sorry: pun intended), when it comes to the "Aces High, Jokers Wild" series by O. E. Tearmann.

If you're already a fan of this series, I have excellent news! The fourth book, Aces and Eights, is now available in e-book format (here's hoping a paperback and audio version are released soon!).

If you're not already a fan of this series, I have even MORE excellent news! There is a wonderful series awaiting your discovery--and it's now four books long! (plus a Christmas-themed novelette, After Hours Game, that ideally should be read between Books 2 and 3)

If you're not reading the XK9 books, why not these?

Dystopian warm fuzzies?


Personally, I tend to steer clear of fictional dystopias, although I have a dear friend, Lynette M. Burrows, who writes a great dystopian series. (Scroll down her homepage for a list of great dystopian novels, if you love to read them).

The Hands We're Given  (Book One) was
a tour de force introduction to this world.
(Image courtesy of Goodreads.)
But I made an exception for the "Aces High, Jokers Wild" books--and I'm very glad I did. The people in these books are all their own kind of special. Talented, broken. Abused by the brutality of the world in which they live. But they rise above. They pull together. And, bit by bit, the oddballs and misfits of Base 1407, AKA The Wildcards, triumph. They use their unique talents and diverse strengths to succeed where more conventional approaches fail.

I love these people so much, I will gladly read anything Tearmann writes about them. Strictly for the characters, this series has become an "insta-buy" for me.

I love them because they're smart. They're perceptive--about their situation, and about each other. They love first, and while they may quarrel about details, their love is unconditional. Put to the most severe tests, they stay true to themselves and their team.

If you haven't discovered this series, you're in for a treat (Image courtesy of the Aces High Jokers Wild website).


The world they inhabit

Call the Bluff, Book Two, is a bit shorter,
but every bit as riveting. New dangers
threaten, and cherished lives endangered.
(Photo courtesy of Amazon.)
Tearmann has done some interesting world-building in these books. The Unites States of America that we know has been overrun and subsumed. In this world, seven corporations rule much of North America, each with its own territory, its own rules, and its own moral code. Codes which are imposed on the subject-citizens, although the "Corps" themselves follow an amoral code of self-interest and absolute control to the greatest extent possible.

Climate change has wreaked its havoc on the world, and most of the formerly-verdant plains states are now desolate near-deserts. Only the areas farmed by AgCo, with its patented, genetically engineered food crops that can't reproduce on their own (no seeds but those controlled by AgCorp will grow) feeds the nation.

The Co-Wy Grid (contemporary Colorado and Wyoming, where the Wildcards of Base 1407 stay on the run) is a patchwork of danger and sanctuary, respite and conflict. For the past 60-some years, the Democratic State Force (on the Co-Wy Grid they're informally known as the "Dusters") has sought to restore democracy.

The LGBTQ angle


Raise the Stakes leads the Wildcards
into newrealms of possibility, and sees
a promising new turn in the fight
against the Corps. (Photo courtesy
of Goodreads).
If you're not normally a reader of LGBTQ fiction, this series may take you by surprise. As with everything they do, the Wildcards don't particularly adhere to conventional gender norms.

That starts with the protagonist of the very first book, Commander Aidan Headly (born Andrea), who gradually transitions into his true self over the course of several volumes.

The books include a fair number of rather graphic sexual interactions. They may or may not be your "cup of tea," but as I noted in my review of the first book, I've never read a book in which such scenes were more essential to the plot, or more appropriately used to express character growth. If you're willing to roll with it and let your hair down, these scenes are pleasantly steamy no matter what your orientation. After all, love is love. And it's masterfully handled here.

For the characters.


But there's also a lot of plot between the steamy sex scenes.

Do you like suspense? Join Kevin and his team when they go on the Grid. Do you enjoy sticking it to "the man" and triumphing over the machine-like inhumanity of large corporate entities? Then Tweak and her unique talents are your sweet spot. She'll have you cackling with glee.

Do you love the drama of bringing a traumatized human being into an accepting space, then helping him or her understand they are finally, finally safe? (Or as safe as it's possible to be, in this world.) Then you will love these books.

Buy them. Read them. You will not regret it.

IMAGE CREDITS:

Many thanks to Amazon for the cover images for Call the Bluff and Aces and Eights. Thanks to Goodreads for the cover images for The Hands We're Given and Raise the Stakes. And many thanks to O. E. Tearmann's website for the four-book series image. I appreciate all of you!

Friday, February 14, 2020

Detectives in the Wild

The Capricon Project - Detectives in the Wild

My first panel at Capricon  40 was one of the three I'm scheduled to moderate, "Detectives in the Wild," about the many ways that mystery stories show up in speculative fiction.

"Detectives in the Wild" panelists, L-R: Jan S. Gephardt (Moderator), Deirdre Murphy, Mark H. Huston, and Clifford Royal Johns. (photo by a kindly audience member who didn't share his name).

Deirdre Murphy, Mark Huston, and Clifford Royal Johns joined me as co-panelists. All of us have written, or are writing, speculative fiction mysteries. Just between the four of us, we covered the mystery sub-categories of Cozies, Amateur Sleuth, Detective, and Police Procedural.

L-R: Jan S. Gephardt's What's Bred in the Bone and soon-to-be-released The Other Side of Fear feature crime-solving, super-smart police dogs. Mark H. Huston's Up-Time Pride and Down-Time Prejudice takes an alternate-history look at Austen. And Clifford Royal Johns' Walking Shadow explores the implications of a memory-erasing procedure. Unfortunately, Deirdre Murphy's book, Murder and Sea Monsters, isn't out yet. (See below for full image credits for these covers).

The panel's description made it seem as if mysteries in the speculative genres that range outside of urban fantasy are hard to find, but between us and the audience we came up with a bunch. We quickly found ourselves sub-categorizing them, too.


Alternate History 


"Detectives in the Wild" aren't hard to find in the alternate history genre, which can encompass any number of co-genres. Our panel's alternate history point-person Mark Huston gave us an excellent overview.

Mark writes in Eric Flint's 1632 Universe.  Here are just a few of the recommended alternative history mystery novels we came up with.

Randall Garrett, Georg Huff and Paula Goodlett, Julie McElwain, and Michael Chabon all have entries in this category. Garrett and McElwain each created a series after publishing their series-openers shown here. (See below for full image credits).

Noir 

No discussion of mysteries would be complete without the Noir Mystery category. For some people, it's the first kind of mystery they think about when they hear "mystery fiction." The Noir sub-genre has its own tropes and unique characteristics

These often extend into speculative fiction categories in distinctive ways, including stories with the feel and general optics of traditional Noir, but are played for laughs or to make a different point. Here are some of the Noir-style novels we touched on.

Some panel- and audience-recommended recommended examples of Noir-style mysteries in speculative fiction. Authors are Richard K. Morgan, Jonathan Lethem, David Carrico, and Glen Cook. (See below for full credits).


Paranormal

Yes, we know we weren't supposed to get into urban fantasy, and the line between it and paranormal stories is blurry. But there are just so many good ones! We and the audience shared ideas about some that are well worth reading. Many are the first books in enduring and well-loved series.

Lee Killough's Garreth Mikaelian, Charlaine Harris's Sookie Stackhouse, Laurel K. Hamilton's Anita Blake, and Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden all anchor satisfying series. These are covers for the first book in each. (See below for full credits).

Robots and AIs

Speculative fiction's detectives aren't always human. The unusual capabilities of extrapolated and imagined artificial intelligences--whether they're in the form of androids, robots, or other things--have made these creations a favorite for speculative fiction writers, especially since Isaac Asimov's classic team of R. Daneel Olivaw and Elijah Baley. Panelists and audience came up with several highly-recommended titles and series.

From left to right, these covers represent the Isaac Asimov classic The Caves of Steel, A. Lee Martinez's The Automatic Detective (with distinctly Noir-ish cover art to reflect the adventures of Mack Megaton, an investigative robot), Guy Haley's Reality 36 (a cyborg and an AI team up as investigators), and Donna Andrews' cozy mystery You've Got Murder, the debut outing for Turing Hopper ("a computer with the heart of Miss Marple"),

General Science Fiction

But not all science fiction mysteries fall into easy categories. That's the nature of the genre--it's grounded in the unexpected. We couldn't complete our survey of "Detectives in the Wild" without talking about some that defy confinement in traditional mystery categories.

These covers represent some of the unique places science fiction can go with a mystery. Lee Killough's The Doppelgänger Gambit explores the nature of a "perfect alibi" in a world where one's digital privacy has reached a new dimension. Kristine Kathryn Rusch explores questions of justice in a world where the presence of aliens changes the rules, in The Disappeared (first in the Retrieval Artist Series). Mur Lafferty's Six Wakes is the ultimate closed-room mystery in which seven crew members of a starship awaken to discover their previous bodies were murdered--by one of them. But they don't remember who is the murderer. And in Arkady Martine's "interstellar mystery" A Memory Called Empire, an ambassador must discover who killed her predecessor (everyone swears it was an accident) before she meets a similar fate.

I'm sorry I couldn't transport all of my readers into the panel room itself. This little overview has only scratched the surface of our discussion. I have to give a lot of credit to the breadth and depth of our panelists' knowledge--and also to our stellar audience. It took all of us to create what was for me a fun and informative panel. I hope they enjoyed "Detectives in the Wild" as much as I did.

IMAGE CREDITS:

First of all, many, many thanks to the kind gentleman from the audience who volunteered to take our picture. (Who was that nice man?) He didn't identify himself, but he has my deep gratitude! 
The images of our book covers come from varied sources. The cover art for Jan S. Gephardt's What's Bred in the Bone is © 2019 by Jody A. Lee, and the cover art for Jan's The Other Side of Fear (watch for it in late March 2020!) is © 2020 by Lucy A. Synk.  The cover image for Mark H. Huston's Up-Time Pride and Down-Time Prejudice is courtesy of Amazon. Many thanks to Goodreads for Clifford Royal Johns' Walking Shadow cover image. Unfortunately, Deirdre Murphy's Murder and Sea Monsters isn't yet available online.

ALTERNATE HISTORY and NOIR Covers:

Many thanks to Goodreads, for the cover of Randall Garrett's Murder and Magic, the first Lord Darcy book. I also wish to thank Ring of Fire Press for the cover image for A Holmes for the Czar. Many thanks to Goodreads again, for the cover image for Julie McElwain's A Murder in Time. Finally, thank you to Abe Books, for Michael Chabon's cover image from The Yiddish Policemen's Union
I'm grateful to Book Depository, for the Altered Carbon cover art on Richard K. Morgan's book. Many thanks to Wikimedia for the first edition cover for Jonathan Lethem's Gun, with Occasional Music. Gratitude and thanks to Amazon for the Magdeburg Noir cover image, from David Carrico of Ring of Fire. Note: Carrico has showed up previously on Jan's Artdog Adventures blog. Last but not least for the Noir section, I am indebted to Abe Books for a good image of cover art for Glen Cook's Sweet Silver Blues, first of the Garrett Files series.

PARANORMAL, ROBOT/AI and GENERAL SF Covers:


Many thanks to Amazon for the cover of Lee Killough's Blood Hunt, and to Goodreads for the cover images of Charlaine Harris's Dead Until Dark, Laurel K. Hamilton's Guilty Pleasures, and Jim Butcher's Storm Front. 
I'm grateful to Amazon for the cover of Isaac Asimov's The Caves of Steel, and to Goodreads for cover images for A. Lee Martinez's The Automatic Detective, Guy Haley's Reality 36, and Donna Andrews' You've got Murder
Finally, many thanks to Amazon, for the covers of Lee Killough's The Doppelgänger Gambit, and Mur Lafferty's Six WakesI'm grateful to Goodreads for the cover of Kristine Kathryn Rusch's The Disappeared, and to NPR (nice interview there, too!) for the cover of Arkady Martine's A Memory Called Empire. I literally couldn't have created this post without y'all! Thank you!

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Reading outside the Western World

How "worldly" is your reading?
This post started as a panel at Westercon 71/ Myths and Legends Con 6. It was presented on Saturday, July 7, 2018, by panelists Olivia Wylie, Stant Litore, and Amalie Howard.

From L-R: Amalie Howard, Stant Litore, and Olivia Wylie at their Saturday Westercon/MALCon panel.

They discussed the lively and fascinating world literary scene, and the diverse literary works that are becoming more and more widely available in English. During the panel, Wylie announced that she was compiling a list of the books, stories, and resources mentioned during the panel discussion.

She has kept her word. Better yet, she has agreed to let me share her list on here on my blog. Links within the list are those provided by Olivia Wylie. Cover artwork and other imagery chosen to illustrate the list on this post, as well as links embedded outside the list, have been my choices.

Resources


These logos represent some but far from all of the resources on Olivia's valuable list!


Books


Yet a fourth collection of covers, and we still haven't exhausted the list! L-R: Arresting God in Kathmandu, by Samrat Upadhyay; Memories of Sun, ed. by Jane Kurtz; Wavemen, by Robin and Cory Childs & associates; The Roads of the Roma, ed. by Ian Hancock, Siobhan Dowd, and Rajko Djurić; and Nyota's Tyrannosaur, by Stant Litore.

For The Kiddos
The Desert Is My Mother/El Desierto Es Mi Madre-Pat Mora

Yes, I did have a hard time narrowing it down. Here are young peoples' book covers for: All the Colors of the Earth, by Sheila Hamanaka; Ming Lo Moves the Mountain, by Arnold Lobel (bilingual English and Hmong); The Story of Noodles, by Ying Chang Compestine, illustrated by YongSheng Xuan; Aru Shah and the End of Time, by Roshani Chokshi; The Desert is my Mother, by Pat Mora, illustrated by Daniel Lechon (bilingual English and Spanish); and The Serpent's Secret, by Sayantani DasGupta 

As panelist Amalie Howard put it, "Diversity isn't a 'trend.' It's a reflection of the world as it is." This list is truly a trove of wonders that traverse the world as it is--and as it might be, given a rich imagination and a world of fantastic possibilities.

I hope you'll explore it for untold riches! And if you have additional suggestions, please offer them in the Comments section! We'll all be the richer for it!

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS and IMAGES: First of all, MANY, many, many thanks to Olivia Wylie, for compiling this list, and also to Stant Litore and Amalie Howard, for their suggestions for it and participation in a fascinating panel discussion.
The photograph of the panelists at Westercon 71/MALCon 6 was taken by Jan S. Gephardt, with permission. If you wish to reblog or repost it, please credit Jan as the photographer, and identify (ideally with hyperlinks to their websites!) Amalie, Stant, and Olivia, plus please include a link back to this post, as well. Thanks!
The logos representing some of the websites in the "Resources" list are those of Escape Pod, PodCastle, Native Realities Press, and Singing Bones, for all of which, I thank them!
For the five covers in Book Collection One, I owe many thanks to Amazon: Lagoon, by Nnedi Okorafor; Americanah, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie; Is'Nana The Were-Spider, by Greg Anderson Elysee, illustrations by Walter Ostlie; and Ghana Must Go, by Taiye Selasi; and to  Marcellus Jackson, via Djele's DeviantART page, for the Steamfunk! cover.
For the five covers in Book Collection Two, I once again owe thanks to Amazon, for Dream Keeper, by Morrie RuvinskyLabyrinth Lost, by Zoraida CĂłrdovaMulengro, by Charles de LintThe Golem and the Jinni, by Helene Wecker; and The Marrow Thieves, by Cherie Dimaline.
For the third set of book covers I'd like to thank Penguin/Random House, for the cover for Throne of the Crescent Moon, by Saladin Ahmed, as well as Amazon for these covers: Want, by Cindy PonThe Sea is Ours, ed. by Jaymee Goh and Joyce Chng The Mistress of Spices, by Chitra Bannerjee Divakaruni; and  The Years of Rice and Salt, by Kim Stanley Robinson
For the fourth set of book covers, I'd like to thank Moko Press for the cover of Wavemen, by Robin and Cory Childs & associates; and Stant Litore for the cover art for Nyota's Tyrannosaur. Many thanks to Amazon, for these covers: Arresting God in Kathmandu, by Samrat UpadhyayMemories of Sun, ed. by Jane Kurtz; and The Roads of the Roma, ed. by Ian Hancock, Siobhan Dowd, and Rajko Djurić
Certainly not least, I am grateful to Amazon, once again, for all the covers in the Youth Collection: All the Colors of the Earth, by Sheila HamanakaMing Lo Moves the Mountain, by Arnold LobelThe Story of Noodles, by Ying Chang Compestine, illustrated by YongSheng XuanAru Shah and the End of Timeby Roshani ChokshiThe Desert is my Mother, by Pat Mora, illustrated by Daniel Lechonand The Serpent's Secret, by Sayantani DasGupta
My deepest gratitude goes out to all resources named!

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Found on Twitter

Jennifer Foehner Wells
Back in ancient days before the Tweeter-in-Chief became a thing and I became more focused on boosting my productivity, I could beguile hours at a time on Facebook and Twitter. I made some great discoveries during that time period, including the marvelous Debbie Ridpath Ohi (@inkyelbows), who writes and illustrates children's fiction, creates delightful cartoons about the writing life, and turns doodles, found objects and table detritus into fanciful visions.

I also discovered sf authors for older-than-children, especially Jennifer Foehner Wells, who's become one of my all-time favorites (and a great inspiration), right up there with Lois McMaster Bujold and Louise Penny, as well as another Indie, Zen Di Pietrowhose space opera series I'm not done reading yet (reviews to come at a future date).

Patrick Weekes
During the same period, I discovered Patrick Weekes, a fantasy author whose unique takes on magic systems and morality within what looks like high fantasy world kept me reading and chuckling (He also happens to be the lead writer for the Dragon Age game).

Since my theme this month is catching up on my reviews, I thought I'd dedicate this post to reviewing books by two of my "Twitter finds," Wells and Weekes.

I've already reviewed two of Wells' books, Fluency and Remanence. I figure it's now time for a couple more, along with Weekes' Rogues of the Republic Trilogy. You know if they're featured on my blog, I think they're worth reading. Now let me tell you why.

Jennifer Foehner Wells
The Confluence Series continues

Darcy Eberhardt's story ended up being rebranded as Book Three of the Confluence Series (with two different Galen Dara covers), but whichever title you read it under, it's quite a ride.
Jane, Alan, Brai, and the rest of the Speroancora crew are back for another adventure in Valence (with a Stephan Martiniere cover)--in which Zara, an interesting new voice, also chimes in for Book Four.

Turning the tables on The Most Dangerous Game
Inheritance (published earlier as The Druid Gene)
By Jennifer Foehner Wells

Here's a new twist on the "abducted by aliens" idea, from an author whose entire "Confluence Series" deserves attention. Darcy Eberhardt is a second-year medical student who steals a break from studying for a test, to take an overnight camping trip with her boyfriend Adam. He's determined to take her to a special place he's found, so she can relax and rest.

It's pretty special, all right. Unwittingly, Adam has led her to a place where a secret hidden for millennia in her genetic makeup can suddenly activate—and land them both squarely in the bulls-eye of an interstellar target.

Can Darcy learn to control and use her ancient gift—as well as all of her other aptitudes and capabilities—to forge new bonds with undreamed-of allies, and rescue both herself and Adam from the trap they've fallen into? Join her for a crash course in the myriad lifeforms of the "Confluence" universe (including a reunion for some Wells readers with Hain, protagonist of her novelette The Grove), as Darcy struggles to confront the most dangerous lifeform in her new, expanded world, and pass the hardest test of all.

A note on the covers: both The Druid Gene and Inheritance  have covers by Galen Dara, whose distinctive style adorns much of Wells' website, too.

A riveting space opera series, and a worthy new addition to the cast

The "Confluence" series continues to provide fascinating non-Terran worlds and cultures, and plenty of excitement, danger and suspense to keep me turning the pages. This book brings together our old friends, Jane Holloway, Alan Bergen, Ei'Brai the kuboderan, and the rest of the Speroancora crew, as well as their accumulating list of friends from an accumulating list of worlds.

Some of these friends realign themselves into new configurations in this episode. We also get relatively brief glimpses of Darcy and Hain, but even more striking is a parallel plotline that introduces a strong new character, Zara, along with some other very cool new characters and a whole lot of new complications.

All the while, our assorted friends do their part to support each others' quests and keep the Swarm away from Earth. Relationships continue to evolve in realistic ways. Wells has written a worthy next chapter in this riveting space opera series, and has brought in a great new plotline. This is science fiction the way it OUGHT to be written! I already can't wait for the next book.

A note on the cover: As with Fluency and Remanence, Stephan Martiniere created the cover art for Valence. Wells has credited his covers as a factor in her early success. It's a case in point for Indies: people DO often judge books by their covers. Invest wisely in a cover from a real professional!

Patrick Weekes
The Rogues of the Republic Trilogy

Cover design and illustrations by Lili Ibrahim, Deron Bennett and Jason Blackburn do a remarkable job of keeping the look of Patrick Weekes' Rogues of the Republic series visually consistent (extremely important) despite the changing artistic hands for each book. 

Will skill, grit and a large bag of magical tricks be enough?

Getting imprisoned for life on the impossible-to-escape crystals of the lapiscaela was not necessarily part of the plan. 

But Loch, along with her band of rascals, rogues and magical miscreants are adaptable. Misdirection and sleight-of-hand might be pickpockets' tools, but they know how to employ those techniques and a whole lot more to further their ends—which actually are more worthy than they'd ever want to admit. Now, if only the implacable Justicar Pyvic wasn't so dedicated to tracking them down!

Soon it becomes clear that escaping from the lapiscaela was the easy part of their quest to regain a treasured artifact stolen from Loch's family. Before it's over she and her diverse companions (who include a shapeshifting unicorn, a talking magical warhammer, a disgraced mage, and a handful of others) will take on thugs, bullies, and power-mongering politicians, take a zombie for a stroll, and fight the Hunter Mirrkir, who is not mortal. But that's just the warm-up. 

Patrick Weekes brings to life a memorable cast of characters in a vivid fantasy world that is diverse, perverse, and consistently unlike others you may previously have explored. 

May the best cheater win . . . 

How can a book of naughty elf-poetry keep the Republic and the Empire out of a war?

Former Scout, rogue, and daughter of an all-but-extinct noble house in her homeland, Loch doesn't mind indulging in a little thievery, if that's what it takes, and she has an intrepid band of friends and fellow miscreants to help her. This crew of sorcerers, sleight-of-hand artists, safecrackers, acrobats and others, as well as possibly the outcome of a high-stakes card game, may be all that stands between peace and mutually-assured destruction. 

But there's a lot of interference to run, between the golems, daemons, elves, dwarves, mercenaries . . . And did I mention the dragon?

A more unlikely lot of heroes you'd be hard-pressed to find, and they line up some unlikely allies, too—some of whom prove more trustworthy than others. Patrick Weekes once again brings all the seemingly-chaotic parts together for a fast-paced, adventure in which the dangers are high, but the cost of losing is even higher.

Beset on all sides in the hardest test yet
The Paladin Caper

Targeted where it hurts the most: their families!

The Ancients want to rise again, but they've been stymied by Loch and her band of "unusual suspects" twice, now. This time they'll stop at nothing, and they have a head start. They've already infiltrated the highest ranks of the Republic. Their tentacles reach everywhere, and Loch's group has no lack of mortal enemies with grudges too.

Not to mention enthralled elves and dwarves, golems galore, and a temple full of reanimated-but-dead priests among the obstacles. With the team scattered and hard-pressed, and the Glimmering Folk on the march, Loch would die to stop the Ancients. 

Or has she, already?

IMAGES: Many thanks to Joe's Geek Fest, for the head shot of Jennifer Foehner Wells (be sure to read Joe's review while you're at it!), and to Goodreads, for Patrick Weekes' head shot. Thanks are due to Amazon for ALL of the covers: The Druid Gene, Inheritance, Valence, The Palace Job, The Prophecy Con, and The Paladin Caper.