The Fall is All There Is, by C.M. Caplan

I’ve been on a run of captivating self-published novels, and The Fall is All There is was no exception. The is grimdark meets palace intrigue with its own unique twists and turns. Something like Prince of Thorns meets The Goblin Emperor. There’s a lot going on that Caplan takes time to reveal to us without it feeling info dumpy, but ultimately this story is a family drama.

The dynamics between Petre Mercy and his siblings are what make this novel go. Amidst the palace intrigue, the cyborg horses, and the possessed humans we encounter on the road, we have a family that doesn’t trust each other, with a broken past, a mess present, and a future I’m yearning to find out more about.

Petre trusts none of them and yet is now in the middle of everything… and he though he ostensibly resents that, he also appears to long to trust them all. At every turn he is hoping they’ll open up to him and be honest about everything… he’s always disappointed, but to be fair, he’s not exactly an open book to them either.

I’ve bloviated long enough, because there are some stellar reviews out there of this book that will get you more excited than mine. This one from Andy Peloquin absolutely blew me away and if I wasn’t already mid novel when he wrote it, I’d have quickly moved it to the top of the pile.

Felan’s Rescue is available in Ebook form (and Kindle Unlimited), AudiobookHardback, and Paperback!

The Descendants of Prontoth is available as an Ebook (and Kindle Unlimited), Audiobook, hardback and paperback!

Seventh Contact is now available!

Eclipse, by Herman Steuernagel

One of the indie science fiction authors that kept coming up in the book community was Herman Steuernagel, so I jumped at the chance to purchase Eclipse when it was discounted.  Eclipse didn’t disappoint.  It was a fast-paced, intriguing blend of Space Opera and Dystopian Science Fiction.  The story follows two distinct POV characters, both interesting in their own right.  Though the two characters never connect (this was very much part 1 of a series, without any real conclusions to the narrative threads), you get the idea of how they will in the future and they each add to a cohesive story. 

The best thing I can say about this book is it really moves (it’s shorter length undoubtedly has something to do with it).  Steuernagel does a good job creating distinct settings and weaving in the mystery.  The characters feel well thought out, with their own history.  I thought the first big even Django faced was missing some emotional weight, but then in the fallout the emotional toll is done very well, and the relationships between Django and his sister and friend, Eventide form a strong core to that part of the story. 

I actually enjoyed Mikka’s story anymore which deftly blends space piracy, shady underworld elements, and a moral redemption arc that seems to be coming.  Her actions make sense, and the conflict from them creates resolved and unresolved intrigue.  The end of Eclipse leaves the reader in a good place moving forward.  I look forward to continuing this series soon.

Felan’s Rescue is available in Ebook form (and Kindle Unlimited), AudiobookHardback, and Paperback!

The Descendants of Prontoth is available as an Ebook (and Kindle Unlimited), Audiobook, hardback and paperback!

Seventh Contact is now available!

Down Below Beyond, by T.A. Bruno

I was very excited to listen to this book, as I really enjoyed Bruno’s previous novel, In the Orbit of Sirens, and I was familiar with the narrator, Kyle Snyder, who did a fantastic job narrating both my novels, Felan’s Rescue and The Descendants of Prontoth.  Neither the story nor the narration disappointed.  Down Below Beyond was a fast-paced, galaxy-spanning, adventure travelogue.  The characters were fun, diverse, and interesting.  Though self-contained, the universe feels big and lived in.  Few novels achieve the continued sense of fun and discovery that Down Below Beyond manages throughout.

Our main perspective into this universe is a prospector named Levort Aatra, who stakes a claim to a salvage on Tayoxe.  That claim sets the stage for a story that moves quickly, with Aatra discovering much of the forgotten history of Lodespace.  He jumps around worlds after the gift of a portal, allowing him to travel like Rick Sanchez, though with far less control over where he is going.  The planets and species populating them are diverse and the characters he finds along the way are a joy.  And the characters he meets along the way, become an incredible, found-family supporting cast. 

Meanwhile, Levort is being followed across the galaxy by his friend, who wants to both protect Levort from the trouble he believes Levort to be in, but also sees an opportunity for himself.  His friend is not going to let anything get in the way of his quest. 

I highly recommend this book, particularly if you are looking for a fun, stand-alone novel.  And of course, Kyle Snyder’s narration is on point. 

Felan’s Rescue is available on Audiobook!

Felan’s Rescue is available in Ebook form (and Kindle Unlimited), Hardback, and Paperback!

The Descendants of Prontoth (Galactic Civilizations Book 2) is now available on Audiobook!

The Descendants of Prontoth is now available as an Ebook (and on Kindle Unlimited) hardback and paperback!

Thoughts on Felan’s Rescue being an SPSFC quarterfinalist!

I finished writing Felan’s Rescue roughly four years ago. Roughly a year later I had finished its sequel, The Descendants of Prontoth. For most of those four years after writing Felan’s Rescue I was submitting the books to various agents hoping it would find the one that would get Felan’s Rescue a book deal. Nothing materialized… the query process isn’t fun.

It was a chance discussion with a client’s mother that got me thinking about self-publishing. She had a law degree and was asking about running a private practice. She volunteered that she’d been successful as a self-published romance author and swore by self-publishing as the future of the industry.

When you are querying you become well aware of the longshot that is finding an agent. The chances they read more than a fraction of your novel are miniscule. Your work is judged by a 300–400-word query letter that has to be well written, but also uniquely appeal to the agent’s personal taste. And then there is the publishing industry which agents continue to complain about. Even if an agent likes your query enough (and finds it to his or her unique tastes) then reads your novel, thinks he or she can sell it, then signs you as a client, then sends off to publishers, then signs a book deal…you still need the book to be promoted and the publisher to get behind it. It’s an uphill battle.

With all that as the backdrop, I heard about last year’s Self-Published Science Fiction Contest. I began reading about it, following some of the novels, and made the decision to self-publish, hoping to get Felan’s Rescue in this year’s contest. The hope of getting people to actually read the book, not just a query letter was a huge factor in my decision.

But even the unique nature of this contest makes every reviewer reading every book impossible. In this first phase, the reviewers were charged with reading 10-20% of each book in their group. I know there are great books that don’t get through because they don’t click with the specific reader in that amount of time. I was happy to see a book from last year’s contest that didn’t get out of the quarterfinals, make it through this phase this time. Because now, reviewers/judges are going to read the entire book.

That’s probably the coolest part of being a quarterfinalist in the SPSFC. My book in particular is a book that takes its time, with point of view characters a galaxy apart, and 3 separate stories you have to trust will come together. I try to make the book fun, with action and humor from the earliest pages, but you have to trust me to bring everything together.

I’m so excited for the judges and reviewers to now see how things come together. I believe the novel really takes off as things start to make sense and the reader starts to understand the connection between the characters and the worlds the occupy. It’s an honor to be a quarterfinalist in the contest. Congrats to the other quarterfinalists! And to any authors that didn’t get through, a view of 10-20% of your book from a few readers will never tell the entire story. Keep on doing the work and telling the stories you want to tell.