99.  (99) –  Dust of Dreams, by Steven Erikson

It’s the 9th novel in the Malazan Book of the Fallen Series, so don’t go picking this one up on my recommendation (do pick up Gardens of the Moon and Deadhouse Gates and read them in quick succession).  You’ll find 7 of the 10 novels from Malazan on this list.  The series is great, it’s unique, it’s different than anything else I’ve read. 

Erikson warns you immediately that this novel is part one, of his massive conclusion to the ten book series. Part 1 chalks in at nearly 1300 pages (mass market paperback), but despite this novel having extensive buildup, I enjoyed in thoroughly. The focus is Malazan heavy and the individuals in the Malazan Army keep you entertained. The suspense builds and stakes begin to come into focus as a character named Fiddler does a reading from the Deck of Dragons and the Bonehunters (a major portion of the Malazan Army) direct their attention to a new destination, across a desert called the Wastelands.

Along the way we check in with various armies seemingly converging together for something enormous. The build works far better than the build for the convergence in Toll the Hounds and the last three chapters are Erikson at his best. The only thing preventing me from having this book higher on the list is this book not completely standing on its own, but for what it is trying to be it’s incredibly entertaining.  And it sets up the incredible conclusion (The Crippled God) in every way.

(Felan’s Rescue Available in all formats August 19, 2022. E-book Preorders Available now)

100.  (100) – Shards of Honor, by Lois McMaster Bujold

This was my first foray into the Vorkosigan Saga. The story plows forward with event after event. The relationship between Cordelia and Aral is well developed and I was invested in it throughout. Nearly all the bit characters work. I can see why this is such well-regarded science fiction and I’m hearing Barrayar (the direct sequel) is even better.

Shards of Honor is the first novel in the Vorkosigan Sage by publication order and the second in Bujold’s recommended reading order.  It’s the only Vorkosigan novel I’ve read, though Barrayar is on the “to buy” list.  Bujold offers her thoughts on the reading order debate here:  https://www.goodreads.com/story/show/293438-the-vorkosigan-saga-reading-order-debate-the-chef-recommends .  Shards of Honor is quick, character focused and action packed.  It’s heavy on the excitement more so than the science (and that is not a criticism).  A worthy start to my countdown. 

Book One of the Galactic Civilizations Series. Available on Amazon.com in all formats August 19, 2022. Ebook preorders available now.

Top 100 Science Fiction and Fantasy Novels

It would probably help people deciding whether to read my novel, if they knew my taste in Science Fiction (and to a lesser extent fantasy). To do that I thought I’d provide rankings and brief reviews of my top 100 Science Fiction and Fantasy Novels. I will be releasing them regularly until we get to number 1. If I read a book that enters the list I’ll place it in the appropriate spot and the list will expand by a book.

My favorite Science Fiction author is Iain M. Banks and I’ve come to view Felan’s Rescue as a combination of two Banks Culture novels (Player of Games and Matter), but with a more John Scalzi style feel. What I mean by that is the style I’m going for has the quick flowing, not overly dense, character driven attributes of a Scalzi novel, but the ideas that excite me in Science Fiction are very Banksian.

I’ve come to view Felan, the main protagonist of Felan’s Rescue, as my own little Pham Nuwen (those of you that have read Vernor Vinge’s brilliant A Fire Upon the Deep and A Deepness in the Sky should get the reference). I’m not trying to be any other author, but even unintentionally I can sense the influence of many the more I read Felan’s Rescue to get it ready for its publication. Because of this, I thought sharing my taste with potential readers would help them in deciding whether to give my story a shot.

If you do give it a shot, I hope you enjoy Felan’s Rescue. I’ve grown to care about so many of the characters in the story and think the story offers fun ideas for the reader to consider. If you enjoy my work, please review and recommend to others. If not, be nice.

In the meantime, I’ll be sharing my top 100 favorites and I hope you’ll find some great reads from those incredibly talented authors as well.

How Felan’s Rescue Was Born

I’ve been an avid reader since I read Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card in the eighth grade.  It was assigned to me by one of my least favorite teachers in one of my least favorite classes (an advanced English class that was tedious and boring).  However, in assigning us to read Ender’s Game that teacher gave me a lifelong appreciation for Science Fiction and Fantasy novels that has never waned. You never know where important moments in your life will come from.

I remember putting off reading the assigned chapters until the last possible second.  I think she’d assigned us to read the first 5 chapters the first week.  The night before, I laid in bed around 9:00 picking up the book to read those chapters. I didn’t put the book down until nearly 4 in the morning.  I’d finish it the next day after school. 

From that day forward I plowed through the Ender’s series (It was 4 books at that time), the Foundation Series, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and every other piece of science fiction I could get my hand on.  I dabbled in fantasy with Watership Down and Lord of the Rings but struggled to get into some of the big series at the time like Wheel of Time and Sword of Truth.  Eventually, my tastes expanded, and I dove into the Hyperion Cantos, the Culture Series, Game of Thrones, First Law, etc. 

At some point I started coming up with ideas of my own.  I wrote out some vague plans for an ambitious series and even wrote a rough draft of the prologue and first chapter of what would eventually become Felan’s Rescue.  But ultimately, I never committed the time to following through and in my twenties, when there was plenty of time to be had, those pages stayed mostly blank.

Then came law school and limited reading beyond law school assigned readings.  Then came getting my law practice off the ground.  But shortly before the birth of my now four-year-old daughter I had an epiphany.   I knew I wanted to write these, but if I didn’t commit, those pages would always remain empty.  I wanted to tell my daughter that I gave it a shot.  That I had something I really wanted to do, and I took the time to do it.  So shortly after she was born, I began revisiting Felan’s Rescue.  Over the next seven months I wrote during my lunch at work, sometimes at night, sometimes if I had a light day, I’d write during work hours (the beauty of owning your own practice) and I finished a draft of Felan’s Rescue.

Several edits later I had a draft I was very happy with.  In the meantime, I wrote a second novel, a direct sequel to Felan’s Rescue and began work on a third.  Maybe the only people that will read these novels will be close to me, but I’m proud of the work I’ve put into them.  I love the characters and love how the pieces of both stories fit.  I hope one day they’ll be on bookshelves everywhere, but until that day I’m happy my daughter inspired me to commit to the writing process and write two novels I’ve intended to write for over a decade.