Tales from Alternate Earths ~ Review

tfae-cover4.5 ducks for Tales from Alternate Earths
4.5-duckies

I normally don’t like anthologies and tend to avoid short stories. Yes, I’m one of those people who gets very involved with the characters and the story and I hate for them to end. I would read a thousand page book just to stick with my favorite characters. With that said, I loved this book.

Alternate History is such a fun genre. I’ve spent hours daydreaming about alternate endings to books and movies since I was a kid. In college, I started thinking about the possibilities if one tiny thing changed in history. What would the world be like? What about time travel? What would it be like, if I was allowed to go back in time in my own life? Would I be willing to sacrifice the present to change the past?

Tales from Alternate Earths addresses many of my daydreams. Time travel, slight changes that affect big outcomes, and what if possibilities abound. At the same time, you get the feeling you could turn a corner or wake up from a nap and the bent timelines would be real. As Brent A. Harris so deftly stated it, “The idea of alternate history is to create a world that—no matter how different—is also just similar enough that there’s this kinda creepy reflection of our own world, which hopefully provides the reader a new perspective.” This book is full of tales that have that “creepy reflection of our own world” feeling.

*Fair warning, the links in each review might be considered to be spoilers. Click through at your own risk.

September 26th, 1983  by Jessica Holmes was well chosen as the opening short story. I will freely admit that I am not as well informed on either current world events or historical events as I should be. I was busy with my small life in 1983 and never heard of Stanislav Petrov. Despite not knowing the original history, this alternate version was so well written and compelling that it kept me glued to the page until the masterful twist at the end. What if the button had been pushed? After reading this story, I was eager to dive into the next one.

One More Dawn by Terry Pray was a complete contrast in style and setting. The story opens with the knowledge that someone has come to the end of their life, yet the emotional impact is softened for the reader by description of the lavish, luxury of the surroundings. Very soon I realized this story was an alternative of ancient history in Egypt. Reading it, I felt the soft breezes blowing the linen hangings, heard the fear in the voice of the priestess, knew the sorrow of the Great Queen. The story has no action, no great cataclysmic changes, but was written almost poetically as the loss of a loved one was suffered by one of the most famous of ancient rulers. What if love was stronger than ambition?

Twilight of the Mesozoic Moon, a joint effort by Brent A. Harris and Ricardo Victoria, is a fun ride that left me guessing until the end. I thought I knew what it was about when the Two Faced God was mentioned, but the twist at the very end completely surprised me. This particular alternate history is really alternate PREhistory. However the authors wove an interesting story with commentary on many aspects of modern life that made me think. This story, most of all in this book, exemplifies the “what if” aspect of the alternate history genre. What if another species had evolved instead of us?

One World by Cathbad Maponus was the one story in the book that scared me. I was born the same year that President Kennedy was assassinated and grew up with that extreme event being the pivotal horrific event in US history until 9/11. The assassination was awful, but it could have been so much worse. Unlike many, I never really hero worshiped JFK as so many seem to do. For this reason, I jumped right to the premise of this story and it felt like reading a real account of that period in history. This story is well written and I could tell the author had a good background in history by the little details he included that made the story seem so real. What if a President decided to seize more power?

Stargazing on Oxford Street by Rob Edwards is a poignant story of loss, sorrow, and angry grief. If the previous story scared me, this one made me sad. A midnight trip through the tormented ruins of a great city, one slight change in trajectory and millions of lives lost rather than a lot of forest. Such a loss is unfathomable to us. Yet it could happen, we could lose more than the lives of millions. One small change in trajectory and we could lose the whole world. This is the kind of thing that this story made me think about. The author wrote it in such a way that I could feel Charlotte’s pain, a deep, soul wrenching pain at such a monumental loss. What if a big one hit?

The Secret War by Leo McBride is wonderful and the title did not give away even a bit of what was to come. From the first hints of calling an automobile a contraption to the nickname of the protagonist that my mind kept telling me I should know, the author gave pieces of the puzzle to the reader.  There are probably very few adults in the English speaking world who would not know the protagonist once his name is put forth at the end of the story, but Leo McBride wove his tale in such a way that I was not completely sure until the end. This story delivers a delightful twist to the alternate history genre. It follows one of the crooked paths my own mind often wanders. What if the stories in books were about real events?

Treasure Fleet by Daniel Benson in my opinion does not belong in this anthology. I did not enjoy it. The story idea is interesting. Unfortunately the execution is juvenile at best. It read a lot like an essay done by the class screw up who thinks he’s funny, but isn’t.

Tunguska by Maria Haskins closes the anthology with a fascinating story of alien overlords and struggle in a world of peace, prosperity and plenty. In Maria Haskins own words, “Utopias are complicated.” She delivers a well crafted story that made me think one thing then changed it all up on me at the end. I particularly enjoyed the past time line blended with the present time line, so that clues were dropped along the way, but I never guessed what was coming until the author was ready to reveal it. This was a great choice to end the book.

I enjoyed Tales from Alternate Earths enough to keep it in my stack of “to be read again” books and I recommend it to anyone who enjoys thinking “What if?”

Altered Earths release date 2

Here are a few other short stories by these authors at Altered Instinct.

Leo McBride 

Brent A. Harris

Ricardo Victoria

Rob Edwards

Jessica Holmes

 

 

 

 

Tales from Alternate Earths

tfae-coverToday’s spotlight is different. I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing five out of nine authors from a wonderful anthology called Tales from Alternate Earths. What a great time I’ve had both reading the short stories and interacting with these talented people. Because there are so many stories and interviews, I will put the bio of each author with their short interview. You can find my review here.

Our first author wrote Stargazing on Oxford Street. Meet Rob Edwards.

DQ: Your story felt so normal at first and I was curious to see where the alternate history part came in. What made you think of this particular “alternate” possibility?

RE: Alternate History was something of a challenge for me, I’m not a history buff like Brent or Cathbad, so I chose to write about something I do know, which is London. I lived there for twenty years, and the journey my characters take in the story is, after a fashion, my old commute to work. I lived near White City, where the 1908 Olympics were based, and the idea crystalized when I realized that the Tunguska meteor fell during the span of time those Olympics covered… although as far as I was able to find, no actual events were taking place on that date.

DQ: You’re from the UK, but living in Finland. Where else in the world would you like to live?

RE: Hmm. Tough one.

I moved here earlier this year, my wife is Finnish and she is the reason I’m here. It’s a great place, the lakes are beautiful, and the pace of life is much quieter than London, an ideal writing environment in fact. There is, perhaps, an alternate history where I live in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands. I lived and worked there for a while in my youth, and back then it had a great atmosphere, but I’ve not been back in years.

Oh, I know! The moon. I’d like to live on the moon, in some sort of permanent lunar settlement. Can we get on that?

DQ: What is your favorite genre to read? To write?

I wrote an article on the Altered Instinct blog about the books that stayed with me* and they are mostly science fiction and fantasy (although my love of comic books is also represented). I love a good adventure in a setting which is a little bit off-beat, and that’s what I read and what I write.

Note* I did check out the article on Altered Instinct and Rob has a great list of favorite books.

robedwards

Rob Edwards is a British born writer and podcaster, currently living in Finland.  His podcast, StorycastRob, features readings from his short stories and excerpts from longer work.  His work can also be found in the anthologies Tales from the Universe and Tales from Alternate Earths, published in Kindle format by Inklings Press, and as guest spots on episodes of R B Wood’s Word Count Podcast.

His greatest geek pride is his entry on wookieepedia, the a result of writing several Star Wars RPG scenarios back in the day.

Rob is currently working on a YA novel featuring superheroes in space and an  urban fantasy novel set in and under 90s London.

Follow Rob on Twitter and his blog.


Tunguska had much of the dark feel of Stargazing on Oxford Street. It was gritty and I expected any moment to see devastation. Then it surprised me. I love when I think I have a story figured out and it twists at the end in a way that fits my preconceptions yet adds more. Maria Haskins gave me chills with the story that closed this anthology.

DQ: I have to say your story was the perfect close to this anthology. What made you think of this type of alternate history story? Where did you get the inspiration for it?

MH: Thank you so much! I’ve never really written alternate history before, so when I saw that Inklings Press had a call out for submissions for an anthology, I initially didn’t think I would participate. But I guess my brain had other ideas, because two scenes kept sort of tapping me on the shoulder. One was the opening for the 1987 storyline, with a girl looking out her window and seeing a spaceship land just beyond the birch trees. And the other was the opening “chase scene” for the 1929 storyline, with a man running through the snow, being pursued and shot at by some kind of drone. I tried ignoring those scenes for a while, but finally decided to see where they’d take me if I tried to put them together in a story. My working title was “The Best of All Possible Hells”, imagining an alternate timeline that’s sort of a Utopia because there’s peace and humanity has avoided all the wars since 1908, and where there’s also some kind of environmentally sound progress. And yet the people in that world do not necessarily feel particularly happy, because, well… Utopias are complicated.

Right from the get-go I had a strong idea about what the two people in the two timelines were like, and once I figured out the connection between them, the whole storyline sort of popped into my head.

Around the same time, I’d also gone through some old photos of mine that included a photo of the dog my dad had when he was a kid. That dog’s name was Ajax, and that’s how a dog named Ajax ended up as part of my story. I knew from the start that the story would be set in northern Sweden. That’s where I grew up, and the 1929 storyline is partly inspired by the real lives of my grandparents – my grandfather’s squirrel hunting, particularly.

DQ: This story had so many elements that reminded me of others I have read, yet you kept it uniquely your own. What is your favorite genre to read? To write?

MH: Thank you again! That’s high praise and much appreciated! I was trying to take familiar themes and tropes and sort of put some sort of unique spin on them: hopefully I succeeded to some extent. My favorite genre to read is any kind of speculative fiction: different shades of science fiction and fantasy, a lot of dark fantasy, some horror as well. Those are the genres I’ve loved reading since I was a kid. Speculative fiction is also what I love to write right now: over the last year I’ve mainly worked on short stories that are either fantasy-ish or science fiction-ish. I also write poetry, and that crops up occasionally for me no matter what else I’m writing.

DQ: Can we look forward to other, perhaps longer, works in this genre from you, or do you have other plans?

I definitely got a taste for alternate history storytelling while writing this story, and also while reading the other stories in the anthology. I have no alt-history projects brewing right now (too many fantasy and science fiction tales on the go!), but I think I will probably dive into the genre again in the future. There are so many cool “what ifs” to imagine.

Thank you Maria. I do hope you will write more in this genre, but from the quality of this story, I’m sure all your work is worth the read.

MariaHaskinsMaria Haskins is a Swedish-Canadian writer and certified translator. She writes speculative fiction and poetry, and debuted as a writer in Sweden in the far-off era known as the 1980s. Since 1992 she lives in Canada, just outside Vancouver, with a husband, two kids, and a very large black dog.

Follow Maria on Twitter and Facebook. You can also learn more about Maria and her work on her website.


The Secret War was a great read and Leo McBride kept me guessing until the end. I should have caught the clue in the protagonist’s nickname, but I didn’t. Other clues told me what was going on in this wonderful twist on a well known tale.

DQ: Of all the stories this one was the most fun for me, more for its sheer audacity than anything else. It takes some cheek to take on one of the best known Science Fiction writers in the world. You did it well and made the story your own. What inspired you to create this story?

LM: Thanks! And very much felt under pressure considering who I was paying tribute to! I’ve always been a huge fan of HG Wells, and The War of the Worlds particularly, not just the book but the fabulous Jeff Wayne version on record which I used to play over and over on vinyl. I think it was one of the first stories that stuck in my head in which humans face such an overpowering, overwhelming force, but at the same time, I always wondered what next for the world? The Martians are wiped out by bacteria, but what next for humanity? I also figured a lot of contributors would be writing about the world taking a twist and turning out differently, so I thought perhaps it might be fun to have something take place in our world that we didn’t know about, that shaped our world in the way it turned out, but all remaining hush, hush.

DQ: You obviously have read at least one classic Science Fiction book. What is your favorite genre to read? To write?

LM: Gosh, that’s a tough one. I’ve always loved science fiction, but also fantasy and horror. I think any genre that makes the imagination take flight is one that I’ve enjoyed reading, so I grew up reading the likes of Le Guin, Clarke, Tolkein, Donaldson, but the writer whose work I most fell in love with was Ray Bradbury and the way he could transport that picket fence world of small town America into futures far and distant. He has a magical way with words that makes the incredible seem like you could reach out and touch it, and creating worlds that feel lived in, and the people seem like Jimmy from the bar, or Annie from down at the library, folks you could have as your neighbours, no matter what planet you’re on. In terms of writing, I think I’m still finding my way. I seem to have taken to writing science fiction tales more easily so far, and enjoy exploring the possibilities in those stories. That said, the two novels I’m working on are very different from that – one a supernatural horror and the other a paranormal comedy. That latter is the main one I’m working on most at the moment, and sprang from just a silly idea that seemed far too good to ignore!

DQ: I’ve now read this short story and another on your blog. I enjoyed both. Do you have plans for more anthology work, or perhaps a longer alternate history book?

LM: You’re very kind! And I’ve got a couple of plans. There’s a story of mine due to feature in a collection by Starklight Press, and I’m sure Inklings Press will have another call out this year for the next anthology there. I’m also planning a series for the blog involving other authors in a shared-world series of weird Wild West tales. That latter one is mostly for a bit of fun writing and to try to encourage some of the other authors from the Inklings group who might want to take part without the pressure of a deadline. My main focus for the rest of the year though is to try to make progress on the novel. I’m being outpaced by some friends who have completed their novel projects, so I need to catch up!

Thank you Leo McBride for your answers. I look forward to reading more from you.

StephenHuntLeo McBride has worked in journalism for more than 20 years and lives in The Bahamas. He self-published a collection of short stories with a fantasy twist, Quartet, and has featured in four anthologies published by Inklings Press in the science fiction, horror, fantasy and alternative history genres. He has also had a story accepted by Starklight Press in their Blue Moon Season anthology. He blogs at his website, Altered Instinct, where guest authors are also welcomed to publish short fiction, and where he features his book and podcast reviews. Leo is working on a paranormal comedy novel, set in the world of US politics.

Follow Leo McBride on Facebook and Twitter. You can learn more about Leo at his website.


Twilight of the Mesozoic Moon is a joint venture by Brent A. Harris and Ricardo Victoria.

DQ: Twilight of the Mesozoic Moon was a serious subject, yet you seem to have injected some fun into it with the troodons and some of Gon’rak’s attitude. What made you come up with the idea of “alternating” history from that far back?

RV: Because I have never read a story like that and Brent is a fan of dinosaurs. The story actually started different. The first idea was a homage to the Apollo 11 mission but in a world where the asteroid that hit Yucatan was deflected by the Moon (hence the Scar in the Moon) and dinosaurs (of the raptor kind) evolved into sapient, sentient beings with a civilization paralleling ours but millions of year before and with some differences, such as the mission being a joint effort between different ‘nations’ as an Ice Age is approaching and the whole species is looking for ways to survive it, including going to space. Then Brent, who had his own ideas by the time I pitched the idea, took it to the possibility of the species evolving to the point where they could time travel to stave off a cataclysm and end changing the timeline. It was a mix between two parallel stories coming about and deciding to merge them to make them work with their respective best bits.

BH: Two reasons: dinosaurs are fun. And I wanted to break the mold that alternate history is limited. There is so much out there to explore, ponder, all sorts of ways: environmental, geographic, bacterial, I mean even how the Earth tilts, that could have profoundly changed Earth’s history.

DQ: You work well together. Was it difficult to keep the story to short status with both of you working on it?

BH: Thank you. Ricardo can write short stories. I cannot. It did require a bit of policing and self-control to make sure it didn’t become an unabridged history of the world. There’s always a danger in not knowing if you haven’t given enough of a story or you’ve given too much. It was a fine line and I hope we found a balance people will like.

RV: Brent and I have very different approaches to writing, so yes, it was tricky to keep the story under a limit. Luckily Brent is evolving (lots of evolution going around here folks) into a good editor on its own and thus he is aware of where the story needs to be trimmed. Brent writes in a more linear fashion, from start to end, while I’m more of writing individual scenes and putting all together. Getting the story done required a fair share of back and forth emails, but nothing too difficult.

DQ: Can you give me an idea of why this particular story worked for you?

RV: Because it is different and crazy. I like different and crazy. And in my case the theme of a species trying to save itself from an impending doom hits a personal fiber since it relates with my field of work (my actual day job, not the moonlighting as writer), see I have a PhD in Sustainable Design and most of my work is either researching or teaching the topic. And the question about what we could do as species to stave off climate change and all the different scenarios that are in front of us is one that keeps popping up in my head all the time and in my lectures. So having the idea of a doomed species trying to survive through science appeals to me, even if the consequences as you saw in the story are… well, not as expected. Finally, the ending that Brent proposed reminded me of a classic science fiction story from the golden age. You can’t go wrong with those!

BH: I was inspired by Ricardo’s short story about a sapient civilization of dinosaurs coming together to work on landing on the moon, as sort of an homage to our own historic moon landing. Not to be cynical, but it does seem we’ve lost sight of setting and attaining goals as a civilization, of working together. Mesozoic Moon works for me because it’s a reminder on a couple levels: first, our civilization isn’t guaranteed—it can be wiped out at any second, as it has for other species several times in the past. Secondly, our knowledge of even our own history is incredibly thin. We know almost nothing. We only have an inkling of an idea of the sacrifices, tragedies, and triumphs that have come before us to get us where we are right now. Hopefully, the story is a reminder of not just the fragility of our species, but also the strength. Plus, dinosaurs.

DQ: I would like to read more by the two of you as a team. Do you have any plans to collaborate again?

BH: Not at this time. We both have our own projects going on. I have an alternate history novel about the American War for Independence that I am shopping around to agents and publishers (hopefully I’ll close on a contract soon!) while I’m steadily working on the next book in the series. And I know Ricardo has his hands full with his own projects. However, I think that if enough people like our story and it gets a good response (fingers crossed) I’d would definitely work with Ricardo again.

RV: Right now as writers in specific, we don’t have something as such planned, although talks of a shared ‘universe’ a la Wildcards from G.R.R. Martin have taken place between Leo McBride, Brent and myself. For the time being both of them are helping me with editing my first novel and a short story anthology that derives from it. Depending on the next anthology’s theme and the reception of this story we might see.

DQ: There were quite a few social issues in this story. Women’s rights, religion having a strong influence on government, the state controlling scientific advancement all were touched on. Were you intending to make commentary on these issues or did the story just unfold that way?

BH: The idea of alternate history is to create a world that—no matter how different—is also just similar enough that there’s this kinda creepy reflection of our own world, which hopefully provides the reader a new perspective. Again, it’s another one of those fine lines—you don’t want to beat your audience’s head in with social commentary. Yes, I want everything I write to mean something, sure. But if it isn’t fun, no one is going to read it anyway

With that in mind, there was a lot of work that went into the creation of Gon’rak’s world. We wanted to make it fully fleshed out so we had to ask how this society might function. From cosmogony, we know that early civilizations typically deified whatever it was which could make or break them. Usually, it was water, often-times, volcanos, corn and crops. Things of that nature.

In Gon’rak’s case, he has this very precarious lunar object just kind of hanging out in the sky, looking like it’s just going to fall at any time. We knew that would have a profound role in his civilization. From that, we were able to sort of grow Gon’rak’s world somewhat organically, taking cues and filling gaps in from our own society as part of that reflection alternate history does so well.

RV: It unfolded organically. I mean, Brent and I tend to have politically charged but always amicable discussions from time to time, since he is a student of history and sociology and me because of the postgrad studies I did. Thus we talk about those topics because they are derived from our respective fields of study and/or work. The original pitch for the story was more like a blockbuster idea of a cracking team of dinosaurs trying to save their world with a few hints of social and political issues that affected the way the characters went about the mission. But as with the collaboration that grew organically, those topics found a way from our day jobs into the story. And I’m glad for it because as writers we have a certain duty to explore such topics and how society is molded from them. Doing it without coming off as preachers is a tricky thing, but I believe we accomplished that with the story. Again, I give credit to Brent’s skills as editor too, as he kept us in check.

DQ: Given the chance, when and where would you travel in a time machine? Do you believe in the Butterfly Effect?

RV: For the first part? I would like to witness the Roman period in Britain or the birth of the first civilizations. Maybe a detour to the Renaissance or Mexico’s War of Independence. Those time periods are the ones that spark most of my imagination and would be good places to visit as writer. On the second part of the question. I’m going to be honest here: I hate time travel stories, with the exception of Back to the Future and our story of course. I not only believe in the Butterfly Effect, which is scary unto itself, but I kinda subscribe to the theory of Many-Worlds from Quantum Physics and as such thinking on the consequences of time travel gives me a headache. You not only would end with a different future on your path, but might not even be able to go back to your original timeline because you could end in a different universe. As with any chaotic system, a small change in time can create massive consequences.

BH: I’d be too overcautious to travel back in time, because I do believe in the butterfly effect—though I’d really want to see the dinosaurs. Safest bet is to travel to the future, just to see if we make it to the stars like I am really hoping we do. Then, I’d come back and write about it as a science fiction television show, featuring a diverse cast, social themes, and Vulcans.

Wait…

This has been a fascinating discussion and every bit as enjoyable as your story. Thank you Brent and Ricardo for your thoughtful replies.

BrentAHarrisBrent A. Harris is a part-time history and sociology student, part-time writer, and full-time stay-at-home-dad. He has lived in the U.K. in Lincolnshire and has traveled to Greece, Spain, and many parts of the U.S. He currently resides in Southern California where he is finishing his history degree in between bouts of writing and continuous diaper-changing. He has several works of short fiction published in anthologies through Inklings Press.

You can follow Brent on Facebook and Twitter.


RicardoVicrtoriaRicardo Victoria is a full time lecturer-researcher at his local university, part-time writer and game designer, and full time absent minded toy collector. Holds a PhD in Sustainable Design. He lived in the U.K during his postgrad and has travelled across northern Europe. He currently lives in his natal hometown in Mexico with his wife and dog. He is currently working in editing his first full length science fantasy novel ‘Tempest Blades’, a short story companion anthology titled Ravenhall and an illustrated book with a friend as well as designing his first board game. He has published short stories in anthologies through Inklings Press.

 Follow Ricardo Victoria on Facebook and Twitter.


 

The World of Alterraden

map-alterradenWhat is Alterraden?

I will let its creator tell you in her own words. Introducing Kat Caffee and her fantasy world.

Alterraden is the world I’ve built for my stories to be set in.  At first, I hadn’t really considered naming it, since I expected to work with just a single world that had a few decorative Realms attached magically to it.  Then, my stories not only took on a life of their own, but the demands I had for space on my starter blog exceeded the “space” I had available.

That is how Alterraden was born.

Alterraden: The World

Every book has something unique about their world, even ones set in “modern day” Earth.  However, when working with fantasy, there is more than just “something unique” to help the story stand out.  Unless the author is writing historical fantasy, they have a chance to take their readers to far off places, and to far different times.  I’m no exception.

Alterraden is a little play on words, suggested by Elizabeth Noreen Newton, one of my street team members.  (She has some fantastic books, and though she claims not to write in fantasy, had the most memorable idea offered.)  It’s a combination of what Alterraden initially was supposed to be – an “Alternative Terra Eden”.

Though my stories happen, for the most part, in a pre-human world, it wasn’t until I started having to fend off the concepts for a second series that I realized I wasn’t writing stories set on a pre-historic Earth, but an alternative Earth entirely.  Add to that the nostalgia of fairly straight forward black and white definitions between good and evil, I think you can see where the name fits so well.

I have not yet explored the entire world.  I’ve only “traveled” over a  tiny fraction of the available land in the stories written so far, which is reflected by the small map on the Alterraden website.  I’m sure, as time progresses and new stories emerge out of the wilderness of my imagination, or are patiently chiseled out of the cortex of my days story mastering various role play campaigns, I will see more and more of not only Alterraden, but also the Realms and worlds that you can reach from this central location.  That is one of the best things about the world I’ve created:  it IS a central core location for other stories and adventures to connect to.  There is so much potential, I find myself eager to explore it.

Alterraden: The Website

Like the world I’ve built, the website has a lot of unexplored potential.  It is the center piece of all my activities:

  • The Home Office, where I host interviews, articles about writing or platform building, and various reviews (mostly books, though a few movies slip in every now and again)
  • The Followers of Torments – where I post articles about the books belonging to that saga: “Behind the Scenes” articles that take you on a trip through the process of writing the saga; character sketches for important characters introduced in each book – these are not always the same characters that make it into print, just the initial concepts I started working with; and ongoing notices (if applicable) for how the writing is progressing.

Alterraden has information about the places, religions, cultures, and languages relevant to all the books that will touch upon the world.  These will be a constant work in progress, though I hope an ORGANIZED work in progress as I discover new races, new cultures, and new deities during my travels in the world.  Also, as new stories are written, and new series take shape, there will be new connections created so they, too, will filter into the cumulative collection, and help make Alterraden a rich and vibrant site with plenty to explore and investigate, just like the stories I write.

Welcome to Alterraden: A Multi-Realm Composite of the Real and Imaginary!

Travel to other blogs to learn more of Alterraden and inhabitants.
Monday: The Evolution of Pukah Works from Blog to Website by Zora Marie
Tuesday: Alterraden Spotlight by Ducky’s Quill
Wednesday: Nameless Interview  by The Protagonist Speaks
Thursday: Author Interview Kat Caffee by Kristan’s Desk
Friday: Celecanepo Interview by Aaron-Michael Hall
Saturday: A guest post by Kat Caffee by Character Madness and Musings

 

Assaph Mehr

assaphmehrThis week the spotlight shines on a talented author who likes to dabble in mixed genres. I very much enjoyed his first novel and have also enjoyed reading the short stories about Felix the Fox on his website.

Assaph has been a bibliophile since he learned to read at the age of five, (he had to yell at the librarian that he can read already so he could get a card) and a Romanophile ever since he first got his hands on Asterix, way back in elementary school. This was exacerbated when his parents took him on a trip to Rome and Italy – he whinged horribly when they dragged him to “yet another church with baby angels on the ceiling”, yet was happy to skip all day around ancient ruins and museums for Etruscan art.

With a rather diverse taste in reading – from fantasy to philosophy, from ancient times to the far future, he has since been feeding his addiction for books with stories of mystery and fantasy of all kinds. A few years ago he randomly picked up a copy of a Lindsay Davis’ Marcus Didius Falco novel in a used book fair, and fell in love with Rome all over again, this time from the view-point of a cynical adult. His main influences in writing are Steven Saylor, Lindsey Davis, Barry Hughart and Boris Akunin.

After years of reading and only dreaming of seeing his name in print, he suddenly started writing in 2015. He owes this to his wife, who complained that there was nothing good left to read. Once the challenge was accepted and Murder In Absentia was born, Assaph just kept on writing – short stories, flash fiction, and now a second full length novel. You can find them all on egretia.com.  His first novel Murder In Absentia is an “historically-themed, urban high-fantasy, hardboiled murder mystery, with just a dash of horror”.

When he’s not busy mashing up genres or interviewing other author’s characters on TheProtagonistSpeaks.com, this ex-Israeli-turned-Aussie enjoys his kids, cats, wife and even his day job. He hopes that his thirty years of martial arts make his fight scenes realistic, and that his love of history shines through his work.

Assaph now lives in Sydney, Australia with his wife Julia, four kids and two cats. By day he is a software product manager, bridging the gap between developers and users, and by night he’s writing – he seems to do his best writing after midnight.

All the places you can find Assaph and his writing on the web

Website: http://egretia.com
Blog: http://egretia.com/news
Facebook: http://facebook.com/AssaphMehrAuthor
Twitter: @assaphmehr
Google Plus: http://plus.google.com/+AssaphMehr
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14422472.Assaph_Mehr
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/assaphmehr
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/assaph/
Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Assaph-Mehr/e/B015U1F3NC
Amazon buy link: http://amzn.to/1XbfKN1

From the Author

Murder In Absentia is the story I always wanted to read. I have been in love with ancient history, and in particular Rome, since I first laid eyes on Asterix. Growing up in Israel, a country steeped in millennia of human history, and playing D&D just helped cement that love.

As a kid, I was a voracious reader. I borrowed my sister’s library card when the librarian said I was too young for the Sci-Fi & Fantasy section. I grew up on all the classics, reading and rereading them as I matured. Along with sci-fi and fantasy, I loved mysteries and thrillers – Agatha Christie, Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett and Alistair MacLean to name just a few.

So when it came time to write, I had it all in my head – all jumbled together in my hand. I sub-titled Murder In Absentia as “a story of Togas, Daggers, and Magic”, as it draws elements of ancient Rome, Fantasy and Mystery. It’s also a bit shorter than “an historically-themed urban high-fantasy noir detective mystery (with a splash of horror)”.

If you like any two out of the three (Rome, Fantasy, and Mystery), give Murder In Absentia a shot. I trust you will enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.

Videas Lumen!
Assaph

Ducky’s Quill interviews Assaph Mehr

DQ: Your bio says you were raised in Israel. Do you think growing up in a country once controlled by the Romans influenced your interest in that historical period?

AM: I recall standing on the hill of Old Jaffa, looking at the archaeological digs down. From the top you can see the Ottoman walls, and a few of Napoleon’s cannons that were brought up from the waters. Looking down, you can see the Arab settlement, and under it the Roman, which stands on top of the Greek. If you dig even deeper, you’ll find Phoenician (Philistine) and Egyptian temples. Across the waters are a few jagged rocks jutting out of the water. They are called Andromeda’s Rock, as according to legend this was where Andromeda was chained to the rocks to appease the sea monster Cetus, and Perseus rescued her by riding Pegasus.

I don’t think that the Roman occupation of Israel had much of an effect about my specific interest, but growing up in the place that was part of the dawn of civilization greatly influenced my love of history in general. I always liked the day trips to any old ruins, whatever the period (and, being Israel, almost every corner has a history going back a couple of millennia).

My love of Roman culture can be attributed to my love of Asterix, and to a trip to Italy my parents took me when I was 13.

DQ: I took a trip to Italy when I was in college. I loved Pompeii and Capri and would go back to spend more time in either place. Have you had a chance to go back to Italy since you were a child? What places there would you most want to visit again or for the first time?

AM: Sadly I have not. I also haven’t been south of Rome (we went north in our trip). It is certainly something I am looking forward to doing again!

I’d love to visit Pompeii, as well as Rome, Rimini and many other places I have only heard about.

DQ: As I read Murder in Absentia, I noticed that you included several kinds of food from the very common to richer fare. How did you come up with the dishes you describe?

AM: Some of them (most, really) are historically accurate. Garum (fermented fish sauce) in particular. The recipes come from various places, especially Apicius. There are also plenty of “experimental archaeologists”, who try to find out how Roman life was like – from how the legions fought, to how food was cooked and hair was braided. The obsession with squid is purely my own.

This goes beyond the food itself, though. All the dining arrangements and the culture around cuisine are true as well. From the street food (Romans were big on take away) to the arrangement of dining couches in formal dinners, it’s all historically accurate.

Food, wine and dining are such an important aspect of any culture, that I felt it critical to integrate it into the novel, to bring another layer of realism and richness to the culture in the novel.

DQ: Your book reminded me very much of the TV show Rome, except for all the backstabbing and plotting among the nobility. I couldn’t help but see a certain actor from that show as I read the book. Tell me who would you most want to play Felix the Fox should your book ever be made into a movie or TV series?

AM: There are a lot of good options… A younger Javier Barden or a (much younger) Harrison Ford would do nicely.  The role will need that rascally charm, as well as the darker undertones for some of the adventures.

As for the TV series Rome, I absolutely loved it despite the occasional historical inaccuracies. I think the cast was generally excellent, and carried the roles very well.

Ciarán Hinds (Caesar) is probably the best fit, both in looks and in charm (though again, he’s a bit older than Felix). Ray Stevenson (Titus Pullo) is a good actor, but he’s about a foot taller and twice the muscles than Felix.

DQ: There is a remarkable amount of data from the Roman era available to us. What made you decide to go with the “fantasy” aspect and add magic rather than a simple detective story?

AM: Two aspects. One, I know enough to know how much I don’t know. I knew that I could never be completely satisfied with the amount of historical research I’ll be able to do, and I wanted to get on with the actual storytelling. Second, it’s not necessary for the stories to be tied to a particular time in Rome’s history, with the associated people and events. It might actually be more distracting.

So instead I opted for a fantasy world. This opened up a lot of possibilities. I was able to pose many “what if” questions, and play around with how Roman society would develop – given the existence of magic, and certain highly influencing events.

For example, there is a list of past events detailed in the description of the bas-relief on the Pharos lighthouse. These all mimic events from our Rome’s history – but with a twist. I also toned down the grecophilia that took over Rome in later years.

DQ: I grew up on shows like Columbo, McCloud, Murder She Wrote and Quincy. The style of your story reminded me very much of Columbo and the way he would wrap it all up in the end based on one little thing he had observed that the viewer might not have. What “detective” stories/shows influenced Felix the Fox?

AM: I grew up on the same shows, as well as many similar novels – from classics like Agatha Christie, Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, to modern thrillers like Alistair MacLean and Tom Clancy. I think they all had an influence on the style of the novel – mixing adventure with cozy mystery.

In particular, two Roman-era detectives, Lindsey Davis’ Falco and Steven Saylor’s Gordianus, had the most influence on Felix. As a tribute, I made a passing remark that he learned to be a detective from Gordius and Falconius.

DQ: I thoroughly enjoyed Murder in Absentia. Do you have further adventures in store for Felix and when can we expect to see another book from you?

AM: Certainly. I am currently working on the second book, titled In Numina. I have plots for two more full-length novels, In Victrix and In Memoriam (spot the theme). I’ll probably come up with more as I write, considering the plots for these novels came to me as I was working on Murder In Absentia.

In the meantime, I publish short mysteries with Felix on my blog. It can give you a taste about the style of storytelling and about Felix. You can find them on http://egretia.com/short-stories.

DQ: You seem to have carved an interesting little niche with your Historical Fantasy story. What other genre/s might you try your hand at in the future?

AM: I’ll probably remain with historical fantasy (I just adore this blend). I have these plans for a retelling of the Crimean War – from the Russian side – with steampunk elements. I mean, who can resist a young and dashing Count Tolstoy with a mechanical arm?

It is a long way in the future though.

DQ: What character do you tend to play most in D&D? Do you think that has affected your writing?

AM: It’s been years since I played, but I often played the wizard. I have a tendency to pick up jacks-of-all-trades, but with a magical bend. Somewhat like Felix…

And if you ever played Shadowrun (and this joke will only make sense if you did), I used to play a Troll Decker.

Thanks much for the opportunity! It’s nice to see the personal questions.

DQ: Thank you Assaph for your answers to my questions.

Read on for my review of Murder in Absentia

 

Murder-In-Absentia-cover4.5 ducks 4.5-duckies

Murder in Absentia is a mixed genre tale of intrigue, complete with a plot to overthrow the 1%, travel to exotic locales, and hobnobbing with some august presences. The tale begins when Felix the Fox is summoned to the home of a wealthy politician. There he discovers a murder most foul and the father of the deceased hires him to find out who did the deed and why his son was killed. As Felix travels about seeking the answers, many wondrous creatures and events are uncovered. But can he find the murderer?

My flowery language above is an attempt to help prospective readers get in the right mindset for this story. I am a fan of the murder mystery genre, the fantasy genre, and the historical fiction genre. Consequently, I was happy to dive into this book that mixes and mashes all three into one delightful romp. The possibility for over the top campiness was skillfully avoided, as was the easy path of making everything magical. Instead Assaph Mehr wrote a story that could have taken place in a Sherlock Holmes mystery weaving the mundane with a light touch of magic to make an altogether engaging read.

I particularly liked the attention to detail in the historical dress, lifestyle, food, and housing of the people of Egretia. As I read it, I recognized names slightly changed and a focus on a different type of governing bodies than in ancient Rome, yet the places, names, styles and customs had so much familiarity that I felt like I was there walking the streets of the great city, sipping wine in the Forum while my contemporaries argued politics, economics, and academics. Any student of ancient Rome knows the mythology of the time was an integral part of the daily lives of the people. Because of that, meeting a sybil on a lonely island was not out of place at all. Each detail of the lives of the Egretians was skillfully interwoven with the fantastical and mythological.

I have traveled to Italy, visited the ancient ruins of Pompeii, and experienced the Italian propensity for good food. This murder mystery did not ignore the national past time and it made me hungry in several places reading about the meals in detail. (Although I must admit the tour of the garum factory left me very much not interested in sampling that delicacy.) I particularly enjoyed the fast thinking Felix exercised with the governor of Kebros before the feast.

Now to talk about the issues. There were a few typos and misused or missing words. This can be found in just about every book I’ve ever read. These kinds of errors were rare and not glaring, so it did not interfere with my enjoyment of the book. The part I did find distracting was the words in italics. I learned they are the ones in the glossary and I am the type that will interrupt the story to go look something up in the glossary, so that broke the rhythm of my reading a lot. It is a quirk of mine and should not cause anyone reading this to pass this book by. The story is compelling enough that these small issues can be easily overlooked.

Overall, I loved this book and recommend it to anyone who likes any of the genres listed above and isn’t too much of a purist about mashing them up. Good job Assaph and I’m giving you my highest compliment here: I can’t wait to read more about Felix the Fox.

 

Review: Rising: A Second Death Novella

0 Rising 415x6224 ducks 4-duckies

I do not read horror usually. Almost every time I do pick up a creepy book, I am disappointed with the read and frustrated. However Rising was the exception. It is an introduction to the Second Death series and I did not expect to like it. I was wrong and now I want to read the series. That is one of the highest compliments I can give to any book or author, that I want to read more.

Rising starts out slow and gives only tantalizing hints of where the story is headed. I felt compassion for Jessie, whose mother has buried her grief in sex and booze. The author captures the angst of a teenage girl living with neglect, abuse, and grief very well. The build up is steady with events building the suspense in a way that left me knowing something was coming, but barely prepared me for the intense ending that grabbed me like a monster and smashed all my preconceived notions about the story into mangled bits.

Was Jessie justified in the path she took? That is like asking if it’s ever alright to be a homicidal maniac. No she wasn’t justified. Did she have a choice? I believe she did not. She was only fourteen and not able to resist a powerful force that took advantage of her pain and emotional distress. What I liked about this book was that Jessie wasn’t some snot nosed brat who didn’t care about anyone but herself. That would have been Marie. No Jessie was a good girl for the most part who was vulnerable because her home life was a mess. Brian Rella did an excellent job of “speaking in the voice” of a 14 year old girl and she was very believable.

Since this is a novella that focuses on Jessie and her life, the other characters are really only snapshots. They are like the straws that are stacked up, one at a time, that finally break Jessie’s good nature and then evil uses the cracks they created to call her to itself. Over all, it’s a good read and despite not liking horror, I will read Watchers of the Fallen.

Brian’s Author Spotlight
Interview

Interview with Brian Rella

duckysmith

Today’s spotlight is shining on someone I am happy to call a friend. When I started on the perilous journey of gaining followers on Twitter for Stormhaven Rising, Brian offered a hand, some good advice and lots of support. This interview, I think, reflects some of what a great guy he is. It’s my pleasure to introduce Brian Rella.

DQ: Some authors say they have always written stories, while others chose it as a career, but only started writing fiction later. How about you? When did you first start writing? Do you remember the first story you ever wrote?

BR: I have a friend who knew he wanted to be a lawyer since the seventh grade. That wasn’t me at all.

After high school, I wanted to take a gap year and figure out what I wanted to do for a career, but I was nudged (with the best intentions) by my parents to go to college, which I did. Halfway through my sophomore year, I withdrew from school and went on a road-trip across the US with friends that started in New York and ended two years later in Alaska. It was during that adventure when I started to write. Journaling would be a better word for what I was doing, but still, it was the first time I wrote on a consistent basis.

When I came home from that trip, there was still resistance to write in me, and I went on to finish my degree in Finance and Information Systems, going to work on Wall Street.

Fifteen years later, I got the writing bug again and in December 2014, my first short story, “Scarlach”, was published in Stranger Views Magazine, and I will never forget that moment, the feeling of accomplishment, and the inspiration to keep going.

DQ: Who have been your greatest influences in choosing “the path of madness?”

BR: Stephen King has always been a huge influence on my storytelling. I remember going through his backlist when I was in junior high, methodically moving from book to book. I read The Stand cover to cover in three days and then immediately read it again. It’s still my favorite book of all time. I remember thinking, “I wish I could tell stories like that.”

But it was author and teacher, Joe Bunting, that actually got me to jump off the road of sanity and onto the path of madness as you so eloquently put it. I took his Story Cartel course in the summer of 2014, and was off and writing stories from then on. I published my second short story and first anthology with a group of writers from Joe’s course. We still keep in touch and help each other out regularly. Story Cartel was an amazing experience.

 DQ: If you were a rich and famous bestseller, what single thing would you say most contributed to getting you there?  What tidbit of advice would you give others that were just beginning to consider writing professionally?

Consistency and practice have been key for me. Writing is hard work and takes a lot of energy and practice. A lot of people, including me before I learned better, believe that authors like Stephen King and James Patterson have some kind of superhero-writing-power, and just sit down and the story pours out of them in one draft. That’s a fairy tale. Writing is an iterative process, and I don’t know anyone that knocks out a perfect first draft.

So my advice would be, every day, sit in a chair, close yourself off from the rest of the world, and write. Don’t aim for perfection because there’s no such thing, but revise until your mostly happy with it. When you have something you’re mostly happy with, publish it. Publishing includes posting to your blog, fan fiction on Facebook, self-publishing on Amazon, traditional publishing, etc.. Just get it out there.

Repeat.

Repeat.

Repeat.

DQ: Writing takes up a lot of time, so when you find (make) time, what do you read for pleasure?

BR: A bit of everything really. Online periodicals and dailies for news and story ideas. Some non-fiction about writing craft and self-publishing. I also enjoy reading religious mythos and of course, genre fiction.

I read a lot of horror, but I also read science fiction and fantasy, and the occasional thriller.

I’m an eReader convert, and my Kindle is always backlogged with a full “to read” list. Right now I’m finishing The Psychonaut by Tom Adams (Horror). Here are the next several books in my queue, in the order of most recently purchased first, though I probably won’t read them in this order:

  1. Prometheus and the Dragon by Eric Michael Craig
  2. The Sundered by Ruthanne Reid
  3. 5,000 Words Per Hour by Chris Fox
  4. Jet by Russell Blake
  5. The Colony: Genesis by Michaelbrent Collings
  6. Monster Hunter Vendetta by Larry Correia

DQ: Can you give a sense of what your books are about, without revealing too much of the storylines?

BR: I am focused mainly on writing horror right now, and most of my stories have a supernatural evil antagonist, and a protagonist that must fight against it, or else something incredibly bad will happen.

My current project is a horror urban fantasy series called the Second Death, based on a short story I wrote called “Arraziel”. There are three books planned, and I also rewrote “Arraziel” into a prequel novella called Rising: A Second Death Novella. Book One, Watchers of the Fallen, is published, and Book Two, tentatively titled Queen of the Fallen, is in editing and rewriting stages. I hope to release it in September 2016.

The story begins with a fourteen-year-old girl named Jessie, who unleashes a demon (Arraziel) to help her — let’s say overcome — her difficulties with an alcoholic mother, her abusive boyfriend, and the boyfriend’s daughter.

Jessie is seduced by a supernatural evil, and as the series progresses, Jessie comes more and more under the evil being’s influence, and the two of them plot to raise an army and take over the world.

If H.P. Lovecraft, Stephen King, and Jim Butcher had a book-baby, I like to imagine it would look like this story.

DQ: Rising gave hints of the darkness under the surface. (I particularly liked the Cthulu clock in Olga’s bookstore.) Where do you gather inspiration for the horrors you create?

BR: H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos was part of the inspiration for the Second Death Series. The other part was the Book of Enoch, a Christian manuscript, which was considered for inclusion in the bible, but ultimately rejected.

The opposing groups in the series, The Watchers (good guys) and The Fallen (bad guys) are my interpretations of good and evil beings from those two works. The antagonist and the Fallen are characters from the Cthulhu mythos with my own little twist on them. The backstory about who the Fallen and the Watchers are, comes from the Book of Enoch.

I also get ideas from the news (lots of horror stories there, unfortunately), and I put a little of myself into my fiction as well.

DQ: What sort of things can we expect to read from you in the future?

Books 2 and 3 of the Second Death will be released this year if all goes as planned. Following that, I have outlined a more traditional fantasy story in the same vein as Tolkien or George R R Martin.

I also have my “junk drawer” of started and unfinished stories that I’ve been collecting for two years, and there’s definitely some stories in there I want to tell.

I would like to write science fiction one day, but I honestly find it difficult to write, so that may be a while.

I’d like to thank you, Ducky, for your thoughtful and interesting questions, and for the opportunity to share my thoughts and work with your readers. It’s been a lot of fun getting to know you over the last couple of months and I’m so grateful we connected.

Thank you, as well, Brian Rella for your participation and your well thought out replies to my questions. I am not a horror fan, but I am looking forward to reading more of your Second Death series.

Brian’s Author Spotlight
Review of Rising: A Second Death Novella

 

Brian Rella ~ Author Spotlight

2014 350x350Brian lives in Tarrytown, NY with his wife, who he says is far too good for him, and his two vivacious boys who challenge his light-saber skills and knowledge of Transformers daily.

Most of his writing is done on the train to the cube farm where he works so he can buy stuff. In an effort to escape said cube farm, Brian decided to follow his passion for writing, and published two books in 2015. He hasn’t managed to escape yet, but he’s patient, and chips away at his dream every day. He published his first book in 2015 and hopes to write from his beachfront property overlooking the Mare Tranquillitatis one day.

The Monsters & Demons Horror Anthology he wrote in 2015 spawned the Second Death Series based on the story, “Arraziel”, from the collection. “Arraziel” was rewritten into a novella called, Rising: A Second Death Novella, which is currently free on Amazon. Watchers of the Fallen is Book One of the Second Death Series and picks up where Rising leaves off.

There are two more books planned in the series. Book two will be released in 2016, and Book three in early 2017.

Brian also enjoys American football, BBQ, 80’s Rock, craft beer, and the occasional small batch bourbon – not in that order specifically, though he wouldn’t complain about that sequence either.


0 Rising 415x622When Jessie unleashed the demon, Arraziel, she also awakened an ancient evil in the Realm of the Second Death. With a dark power at her command, will she leave her tortured life behind or take revenge?

Rising is the prequel to the Second Death Series.


watchersofthefallen

When Jessie Hailey stole a book of dark arts from the bookshop in her backwoods hometown of Beauchamp, Louisiana, she freed Arraziel, one of the Fallen, and used his power to take revenge on her tormentors. But Jessie was unaware the ancient evil she unleashed was intent on destroying the world.

Spellbound by the King of the Fallen, and with Arraziel at her command, Jessie travels to Chicago to build an army and free the monstrous King of the Fallen from the Realm of Second Death.

Watchers of the Fallen is Book 1 of the Second Death Series.


Website: http://www.brianrella.com/
Blog: http://www.brianrella.com/blog/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BrianRellaAuthor/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/brian_rella
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/brianrella/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brian_rella/
Amazon Author Page: http://amzn.to/29OZxgI

Author Spotlight – Chuck Kelly

Hello my readers, today I present Author and Entertainer Chuck Kelly. chuckkelly

Chuck Kelly was born in Dallas, Texas, raised in Anadarko, Oklahoma, traveled some, and moved to California where he became involved in several areas of the entertainment and writing professions. As a performer, Chuck played trombone with Glenn Miller (under direction of Ray McKinley), Dizzy Gillespie, and various jazz groups. He quit playing to become a group singer and sang with the Jones Boys (2 years), the Modernaires (5 years), and other vocal groups. After Chuck left the Modernaires he became a studio singer where he did many recordings, television shows, and motion picture sound tracks. Chuck was on The Red Skelton Show for 5 years, The Danny Kaye Show 2 years; and did several TV specials that included Don Knotts, Jim Nabors, Andy Griffith, Dick Van Dyke, Danny Thomas, Ronald Reagan, etc. He also sang on commercials for Wesson Oil, Shell, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Mattel Toys, etc. The motion picture voice tracks Chuck sang on include Sweet Charity, Hello Dolly, The Great Race, Peter Gunn, The Plainsman, Darling Lilly, Star, etc. Chuck’s singing career was in a period that was very special for group singers. They got to do it all. They sang TV and movie themes; were used as backup for other performers; backup for dancers to lip-sync their voices; and were used on camera as extras where they were transformed into every conceivable character and occupation known to man.

Chuck had always wanted to write and after 18 years of performing he became a writer. He wrote articles that appeared in the National Enquirer, International Musician, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Smithsonian Institute, Playboy, Ebony, Eros, and Society of Singers Newsletter, etc. Chuck’s writing credits include over 500 published articles. He has interviewed several personalities, including Tex Beneke, Tony Bennett, the late Sherri Lewis, the late Henry Mancini, Peter Marshall, Tony Marshall, Tony Martin, Johnny Mathis, Jaye P. Morgan, Kay Starr, the late Joe Williams, etc.

Chuck was technical writer for, “The Alchemy of Intelligence,” published by Metamorphous Press; technical editor for “Pharmacology, Biology, and Clinical Applications of Androgens,” for Harbor-UCLA Medical Research Center, published by Wiley-Liss, and has worked as a technical writer and editor for several aerospace corporations including Hughes Aircraft Company, Northrop Corporation, Boeing, etc. He wrote the novelization from the screenplay “Supercock” about cock fighting in the Philippines that starred Nancy Kwan. Chuck has had two screenplays optioned.

His education includes a Master’s Degree in Communication and Organizational Theory from Sierra University. Chuck is also a Certified Hypnotherapist.

Memberships and honors include ASCAP, AFTRA, SAG, and Society of Singers Board of Directors, 1986-93. Chuck is listed in “Who’s Who in Entertainment,” “Who’s Who in America,” and “Who’s Who in the World.”

Chuck lives in Long Beach, California where he works as a writer and hypnotherapist. He is working on several projects that include a novel, screenplay, nonfiction book, and a children’s/young adult book series called “Legend of Otherland.”

Chuck’s books:

Evil Does Exist (The Legend of Otherland Book 1) EDEmed

Young Bunker Charles, prince of the mysterious and beautiful planet of Otherland, gets more than he bargains for when he witnesses a kidnapping. His pursuit draws him across onto the Dark side of his world. Battling foul weather, a faulty cobaplane and sea monsters, he must struggle to free his new friend Gittel from the Evil Pencinell and her minions, and return to his safe world.



Adventure Underground (The Legend of Otherland Book 2)
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On the enchanted planet of Otherland, thirteen-year-old Bunker Charles is forced by a one-inch tall Flooglebopper to return with him to the center of Otherland in his cobamole. There he is required to defend the diminutive mining community’s precious mangolite from the one-foot tall Bargolians, who plan to steal the mangolite to light their underground city. Bunker’s friend Gittel is captured by the High Priest of Bargolia while attempting to rescue him and forced to to fight against him in their defence. Can Bunker use diplomacy to reconcile the two sides and rescue Gittel?


newspacecoverwebAdventure in Space (The Legend of Otherland Book 3)

Young Bunker Charles and his friend Gittel are accidental stowaways on the test flight of Bunker’s father’s new space ship.  They are drawn against their will to the planet Acron, which is run by the mysterious four-eyed graymanoids, who covet the triptonite from which inventor Steven Charles’ prototype spaceship is made.  He is captured and forced to work to provide them with the formula. Bunker and Gittel escape.  Can they overcome the mind control which keeps the planet’s kidnapped population enslaved, and free Steven and their new friends?


Adventure in the Secret City (The Legend of Otherland Book 4)  secretcityj

Young Bunker Charles’ first day at the Learning Center on the enchanted planet of Otherland goes awry when his father’s flying zoomer is ‘borrowed’ by a fellow pupil. Bunker and his friend Gittel give chase. In the legendary Secret City, they discover that all is not what it seems amongst snow-capped mountains, and before they can return home, they must battle to save their friends, new and old.


Where to find Chuck online:

Author’s Den
Synergebooks
Facebook
Crimson Cloak Publishing

My Interview with Chuck Kelly

Interview with Chuck Kelly

duckysmith

I am happy to introduce Mr. Chuck Kelly.

DQ: Your biography reads like a Who’s Who of the entertainment world. Oh wait, you’re in Who’s Who in Entertainment. 😉 I’m happy to interview you today for my readers. I visited your Facebook page and found posts regarding space exploration and science. Is your interest in science and space part of research for your writing or have you always been interested in them?

CK: I have always been interested in science. I used to read Popular Science magazines. The only science course I took was in high school. My stories are pure imagination on how I interpret science and the universe.

DQ: Your entertainment career is fascinating. So many great legends of TV, Screen, and stage have passed on. You knew a lot of them, worked with them. I am sure you have some good stories to tell. At some future date, will you write a memoir of that time in your life?

CK: I was lucky to have known a lot of the entertainers. As a studio singer, I worked with them on each TV show, or recording. I do have a lot of stories to tell, and yes, I am putting together notes now for a book about my experiences in life.

DQ: Like C.S. Lewis, your career seems firmly embedded in the adult world, yet Lewis wrote one of the world’s most beloved series of children’s books. What inspired you to write a children’s series?

CK: When I was in the fourth grade, Mrs. McMillian asked for those in class who would like to tell a story, to stand in front of the class and tell their story. My friends egged me on to make up a story and tell it, so I did. I used the people in the classroom as characters and we all began a wonderful adventure. Each day the kids in the class wanted me to continue the story, so I did. The time allotted for the storyteller was fifteen minutes. This quickly became thirty minutes each day after lunch. This continued all year. The next year Mrs. McMillian (who said she loved my stories) told the fifth grade teacher of my story telling talent and I continued the adventure stories for another year, all through the fifth grade. This developed my imagination greatly and I never forgot the experiences. When I read the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew Mysteries, I told myself that I could maintain the same kind of suspense and excitement that these books had by writing my own series of books.

But first I had to follow my talent in music, so instead of majoring in writing in college, I took music. I did fulfill my dream of playing with the big bands when I went with the Glenn Miller Orchestra under direction of Ray McKinley, and then I joined the greatest, the Dizzy Gillespie big band.

My career in music wasn’t over yet. I still had to pursue my singing talents and became a group singer. I joined the Jones Boys and we did an album for Liberty called “Sittin’ on Top of the World”. The Jones Boys joined Betty Hutton in her nightclub act and we stayed with her for two years doing some TV and recording.

My biggest break as a singer came when I auditioned for the tenor part with the Modernaires. I got the job and stayed with them for five years. During that time we averaged one national TV appearance a month for the five years. One of those appearances was with the Bell Telephone Hour, which we did in New York. PBS has since taken that 6+ minute spot and they use it in their quarterly/yearly promotion for PBS. The spot features the Glenn Miller singers, Ray Eberle, Tex Beneke, and the Modernaires with Paula Kelly.

After five years with the Mods, I came home to work the studios. I was on the Red Skelton Show for five and a half years, Danny Kaye for two seasons, and did several recordings. I did commercials, movies (Hello Dolly, Star, Sweet Charity, The Great Race, etc.) I had a great run in the studios and knew it was time to get on with what I really wanted to do: write. After several years of magazine writing, technical writing and working as a freelance, I began the series “Legend of Otherland”. The stories sprang forth, just like they did back in the fourth grade.

Through the greatest publisher in the business, Carly McCracken, the books came alive as paperback books. I have written four books in the series, “Evil Does Exist”, “Adventure Underground”, “Adventure in Space”, and “Adventure in the Secret City”, all available through Crimson Cloak Publishing.

DQ: I find,  as a reader, that authors with a lot of life experience tend to write deeper, richer stories. Tell me how all your varied life experiences have helped with your current writing career.

For me, my imagination is my greatest asset. True, I’ve had many experiences that will be written down someday, if that is what is meant to be, and these life experiences only add to fuel the imagination. Life is wonderful. I take the good and the bad, realizing that nothing lasts forever. Everything that happens, does so for a reason. I savor every ‘now’ moment and look forward to many more.

DQ: Which of your books is your favorite one and why?

CK: The first book Evil Does Exist brings back memories of my enthusiasm for the story. But my passion for writing the series continued throughout all four books. So, I don’t have a favorite. Writing each one was a series of ‘now’ moments that I cherish.

DQ: What would you like your readers to take with them from your books?

Enjoy the stories and adventures. I hope that I can inspire each reader to use his/her own thoughts and create something different and spectacular! Imagination is in everyone. All we have to do is to tap into that wonderful gift and it’s ours!

Thank you Ducky.

DQ: Thank you Chuck. For my readers, the links to Chuck’s books are here in this interview or you can follow the links in the Spotlight post. Chuck’s story is fascinating and I’m happy he chose to share a little of it with us.

An Interview with Sanna Hines

duckysmith

Hi Sanna,

Before we start your interview, I want to tell you that I thoroughly enjoyed Shining Ones: Legacy of the Sidhe. I know a little of the mythology and it was fun to follow how you incorporated it into your modern story.

Ducky: In another interview, you said you write Young Adult novels. I did not get the sense that Shining Ones was for that age group specifically. What makes you, the author, classify it as Young Adult?

Sanna: I think YA involves discovery—particularly self-discovery—and the fact that life decisions are yet to be made. Tessa begins her journey steeped in the beliefs she learned as a child. After new experiences, she questions those Rules, begins to think for herself. It’s a mental Coming of Age.

All my books (two more out soon, I hope) take place during a short period of time: a pivotal moment. I think this fits with Young Adult, too. You won’t see me writing whole lifespans or multi-generational sagas; I’m too impatient!

Now, I do defy convention by mixing adults, younger adults and teens. Most YA stories eliminate anyone who might be considered an authority figure, but I think there’s a place for adults, particularly when travel is involved. In the U.K., for instance, no one under age eighteen can drive. A character list made up entirely of teens would have a lot of train travel and hiking to do. There would be issues, too, about lodging, money, even being under-aged kids on their own. Adults have their uses.

Ducky: Your location detail was very good. Have you traveled to all the places you mentioned in Shining Ones? If yes, what was your favorite place to visit?

Sanna: I visited Ireland, Wales, England and Scotland, but not all the areas in the story. To write the book, I researched every step of the journey from posted pictures and travelers’ accounts. Lots of map work involved, too. I have been to ancient places in other parts of Europe, so the sense of awe they inspire is part of my personal experience.

Ducky: I was shocked to learn you are from the Midwest, USA. Your knowledge of the ancient places of Ireland, Wales and Britain made me believe you were from there. What sparked your interest in the Tuatha Dé Danann and the legends of the Sidhe?

Sanna: As a graduate student, I studied the nineteenth-century art movement called the Celtic Revival. Artists in Ireland and the U.K. drew their inspiration from Irish legends. I loved reading those stories, thinking they were pure fiction. As I wrote the book, I began to see them as history, embellished perhaps over the 700+ generations they were told and retold before being set down in writing. Clearly, the stories were more than fireside entertainment. They formed the basis of the Irish culture and have impact even today.

Ducky: Shining Ones deals with traditions, legacies, family, and enmities. What do you hope your reader takes to heart about your book?

Sanna: Experience creates understanding. Before going to Ireland, Tessa sees the world in black and white: Dananns=good, Formorians=bad, mortals=danger. She realizes that mortals like Maggie are essential to her people’s future, that Formorians aren’t crazed psychos but people with a different ethical code, that Dananns may have their dark side, too. Most bigotry derives from lack of personal experience—too narrow a worldview.

Ducky: Share with us what you like to read. What authors have written books that just capture your imagination?

Sanna: I discovered a contemporary fantasy called Half Magic when I was a child. Loved, loved, loved the concept of magic in the ordinary world. When I exhausted my library’s supply of what I call magic realism (there are a lot of definitions), I went on to mythology, SFF, paranormals and mystery. Most recently, I’ve been reading other writers who touch on Irish myth: Shannon Barnsley, A.M.H. Johnson, Pat McDermott, and Christy Nicholas. In the mystery genre, I’ve enjoyed Elizabeth Horton-Newton, Brian O’Hare and Georgann Prochaska.

Ducky: Tell us about your processes. Do you have rituals? How about specific steps? How do you go about writing your books?

Sanna: My background in business communications taught me how to produce materials on demand. (“You want your paycheck? Write!”) Never met a Muse, but I’ve met many deadlines. When I start a new project, I outline the basics of what each chapter should achieve. Of course, the story takes on more dimension as it fills in, sometimes going in an unexpected direction, but always working toward the ending. To stay in the spirit of the story, I listen to music—one album played over and over. This works even after a lot of time has passed. Just play the music, and I’m back in those characters, that world again.

Ducky: Shining Ones is a mixture of practical and fanciful. The characters are going through some insanely wild adventures, yet they solve them and stay safe through the basic skills that any “non-magical” person might have, such as martial arts. How did you reconcile the mundane with the magical in your story?

Sanna: Dananns have Talents, not magic. Each person has one inborn ability. Tessa can change shape, but she can’t turn invisible or heal or see the future. In this way, Dananns are like everyone else. Sports stars, for instance, don’t wake up each morning dazed and thrilled by their own abilities. They’re used to being who they are; they take their skills in stride. I love writing about the ordinariness of extraordinary lives.

 

This was an interesting and informative interview. Thank you for your time Sanna and I hope to see many more of your novels out there soon.