Showing posts with label Jonathan P. Brazee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan P. Brazee. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Authors everywhere

There seemed to be authors everywhere at Capricon 40. I've already introduced several of them in the "Capricon Project" posts "Detectives in the Wild" and "Indie Author Speed-Dating." But there were yet more!

(image courtesy of Capricon 40 website)

Personal experiences

These Capricon Project posts focus only on authors I met and interacted with personally at the con. My apologies to all the other authors who were there. If I didn't encounter you in a meaningful way at the con, I didn't include you.

I did also video-record a series of short interviews with Indie authors with tables in the Capricon 40 Dealers' Room. I'm still working on those. I need to learn how to use Premiere Pro to edit them. I hope to produce them for posting during the spring months.

Yes, there were authors everywhere at Capricon 40. Let me mention a few more here.

Jonathan P. Brazee

Jonathan P. Brazee at the Indie Author Speed-Dating event at Capricon 40 (Photo by Jan S. Gephardt)

I've had the pleasure of being friends with Jonathan Brazee since we met in Puerto Rico in 2017. He is a prolific, successful Nebula Award-nominated, Dragon Award-winning author who mostly writes military science fiction. I included a short profile of him in one of my post-Capricon articles last year, but he's expanded several of his series since then.

He wrote his 2020 novel Gemini Twins in honor of his own twin daughters. Other recently-completed series include Ghost Marines and The Navy of Humankind-Wasp Squadron.

Books by Jonathan P. Brazee from right to left: the Navy of Humankind-Wasp Squadron series, Gemini Twins, and the Ghost Marines series. (Book cover images courtesy of Amazon).
Dorothy Winsor

I shared a reading time-slot with Dorothy Winsor at Capricon 40. She read a wonderful short story. I believe she said it's unpublished to date, but it deserves to be seen and read! She writes mostly middle-grade and Young Adult fantasy.

The book she promoted most at Capricon was The Wind Reader. It's a story about a young boy who tells fortunes on the street to earn a living. Then he tells a fortune for prince that later actually comes true(!) Next he's compelled to come to the castle to be the royal fortune teller--a role for which he's not prepared.

At right is Dorothy Winsor, just before her reading at Capricon 40. At left, her current novel, The Wind Reader(photo by Jan S. Gephardt. Book covers are courtesy of Amazon).
Lance Erlick

I stayed for the readings that followed mine and Dorothy's. This gave me the opportunity to hear an excerpt from Lance Erlick's book Reborn. It's the first of his Android Chronicles books. Interesting and well written, it probably ought to come with trigger warnings.

Erlick's android protagonist "Synthia Cross is a state-of-the-art masterwork of synthetic human design—and a fantasy come true for her creator." She shows enough alarming signs of emergent behavior, however, that her creator wipes her memory each day to keep her in control. He has his nefarious reasons, but she's already learning how to leave herself clues so she can reconstruct her past--and reveal her creator's true intentions.

Lance Erlick listens to Kristine Smith's reading at Capricon 40, before it's his turn. At right are three books of the Android Chronicles. (photo by Jan S. Gephardt. Book covers are courtesy of Amazon).
Kristine Smith

Kristine shared the reading time-slot with Lance. A winner of the John W. Campbell Award, she's been writing the Jani Kilian Chronicles for several years. Its multiple volumes tell the story of a struggle for understanding and peace between humans and an exo-terrestraial species called the idomeni.

The title character is a former captain with powerful enemies and a body that's been expensively repaired after traumatic injuries that allowed her death to be faked. Kilian subsequently forms a friendship with the idomeni ambassador. Smith's reading selection this time was an excerpt from the most recent Jani Kilian book. She also writes the Lauren Reardon series, under the name of Alex Gordon.

Kristine Smith reads from part of the Jani Kilian series at Capricon 40. (photo by Jan S. Gephardt. Book covers courtesy of Amazon).
Donna J. W. Munro

I shared an autographing table with Donna J. W. Munro, who primarily writes dark fantasy horror, YA fiction, and science fiction. She is a prolific writer of short fiction, including two stories, "Death's Day Off," and "My Forever Love," in the anthology Beautiful Lies, Painful Truths, Vol. II.

According to her blog, the first of a series about zombies, called the Poppet Series ("about tamed zombies and the girl who wants to save them"), will be available in May 2020.

Donna J. W. Munro and one of the anthologies in which her short fiction is published. (photo by Tyrell E. Gephardt; book cover image courtesy of Amazon.)
W. A. Thomasson
W. A. (Bill) Thomasson
(photo: Tyrell E. Gephardt)

Like Jonathan Brazee, I met Bill Thomasson in Puerto Rico in 2017, and we've bumped into each other at conventions ever since. Bill has been working on a sword and sorcery novel for some time. He'd hoped that The Whip of Abadur would be available in time for Capricon 40, but it's still in production (indeed, there's no cover yet!).

He describes the story this way: "In an ancient Fertile Land that is not quite the one we know, the cat burglar Teema is hired to retrieve a demon-god’s stolen symbol of power and return it to its proper temple. But she quickly learns that meddling in the affairs of gods and demons is more dangerous than she had thought."

As you can see, Capricon 40 featured authors everywhere! I hope you've enjoyed one more small tour through some of the exotic and interesting worlds they've created, in this final episode of the Capricon Project.

IMAGE CREDITS:

The photos of Jonathan Brazee, Dorothy Winsor, Lance Erlick, and Kristine Smith all were taken at Capricon 40 by Jan S. Gephardt with the subjects' knowledge and consent. If you wish to re-use or reblog any of these photos, please credit Jan as the photographer and if possible include a link back to this post. 


The photos of Donna J. W. Munro and W. A. (Bill) Thomasson were taken by Tyrell E. Gephardt, also at Capricon 40, and also with the subjects' knowledge and consent. Please observe the same courtesy of including an attribution and link back, if you use these photos.

The Capricon 40 header is courtesy of Capricon 40's website. All of the book cover images are courtesy of Amazon (see captions for individual links).

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Some characters and character-creators of Capricon 39

When you talk about science fiction and fantasy, you're going to meet a lot of memorable characters.

And that's just the people who write it.


Beguiling as the fictional characters might be, they have to be dreamed up and written about, by someone. And a science fiction convention such as Capricon 39 is a great place to meet writers.

Meeting a writer is sometimes as startling as meeting your first radio personality, but the wit, the knowledge, the humor and the perceptiveness you enjoy in their fiction didn't come by accident from that person. Most of the writers I know are interesting in their own right.

And some of them are a particular pleasure to be on panels with or to listen to on panels you're not on. In this post I'd like to feature three writers who made this year's Capricon a particular treat for me. I've included links and some of their covers to give you an idea of what they write. Perhaps you'll find something that's right up your alley.

Megan Mackie
Megan Mackie
Megan was on a couple of panels with me, "Book Reviews vs. Literary Criticism," and "Things Authors Always get Wrong!"

She brought perceptive comments from personal experience with a troll to the "Book Reviews" panel, and discussed unrealistic descriptions of women, their behavior, and their bodies, to the "Authors Get Wrong" panel.

I found her to be well-informed and well-spoken, altogether a positive addition to our panel discussions.

And no wonder. Her website reveals she's a podcaster (The Princess Peach Conspiracy) as well as the author of a growing series of urban fantasy books.

Set in a magical alternate Chicago (Megan just happens to live in the Chicago of our space-time continuum), her "Lucky Devil Series" seems to be off to a strong start.

Finder of the Lucky Devil is the first in Megan Mackie's "Lucky Devil" series, followed by The Saint of Liars.

Chris Gerrib
Chris Gerrib
Chris was on the "Space Opera" Themed Reading panel with me, as well as the "Things Authors Always Get Wrong!" panel with Megan and me. He is the author of the "Pirates of Mars" Trilogy.

He, too, hails from Chicago, and his cover story is that he's an IT director at a Chicago-area bank, with only a small, manageable Mars obsession.

He read selections from the first book in his "Pirates of Mars" series, The Mars Run, for the "Space Opera" Themed Readings.

In the "Things Authors Always Get Wrong!" panel, he discussed the ways that authors who don't do their homework can be tripped up by actual facts that readers may know in the realms of the way military organizations work, logistics, and economics.

Chris Gerrib's "Pirates of Mars Trilogy" is available in print or e-book format from Amazon.
The Thursday panel, "Publishing and Marketing for Indie Authors," featuring (L-R) Lance Erlick, Jim Plaxco, Beverly Bambury, Blake Hausladen, and Jonathan P. Brazee.
Jonathan P. Brazee
Jonathan P. Brazee
I first met Jonathan Brazee at Northamericon '17 in Puerto Rico, and we've been bumping into each other periodically ever since. I have enjoyed his comments on many different panels.

At Capricon 39, I particularly enjoyed the panel discussion "Publishing and Marketing for Indie Authors."

He is the highly prolific author of "more than 75 titles," including 44 novels. But don't let that high output fool you about the quality of his work.

In 2017 he was a Nebula Finalist for Weaponized Math." In 2018 he was a Nebula Finalist for Fire Ant, and a finalist for the Dragon Award for Military Science Fiction or Fantasy Novel for Integration

He also is an active member of SFWA, the esteemed  Science Fiction Writers of America organization.

Jonathan Brazee's nominated works from 2017 and 2018, L-R: for the Nebula: Weaponized Math (2017) and Fire Ant (2018); for the Dragon Award for Military Science Fiction or Fantasy Novel, Integration (2018).

IMAGES: Many thanks to Capricon 39 for the convention's header, which I cropped for size. I am grateful to Megan Mackie's website for her author photo and her two book covers.  Many thanks to Chris Gerrib's Amazon Author Page for his author photo, and to the individual Amazon pages for The Mars Run, Pirates of Mars, and The Night Watch, for their book covers. Many thanks to Jonathan Brazee's Amazon Author Page for his author photo, and to his Amazon listings for Weaponized Math, Fire Ant, and Integration, for the cover images.