Wednesday, October 24, 2018

REVIEW: New World (Iamos Trilogy, #2) / Lyssa Chiavari

TITLE: New World (Iamos Trilogy, #2)
AUTHOR: Lyssa Chiavari
PUBLISHER: Snowy Wings Publishing
PURCHASE LINK: Amazon



GENRE

Young Adult - Science Fiction

REVIEW

New World, the second full-length novel in Lyssa Chiavari’s YA sci-fi series, The Iamos Trilogy, picks up where the last story left off. [IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THE FIRST BOOK IN THE SERIES, FOURTH WORLD, STOP RIGHT HERE BECAUSE WHAT FOLLOWS WILL INCLUDE SPOILERS FOR BOOK 1].

After being whisked away from his mid-21st-century Mars colony home, Isaak spent three weeks in a strange world full of advanced technology and dark secrets—Iamos—that was actually Mars from the ancient past. But something wiped them out—and the cataclysm not only destroyed their civilization, but had world-shattering consequences that rendered Mars a lifeless planet and altered the makeup of the Solar system. Now, he’s back—and he’s brought one of the Iamoi, Nadin, with him. Only a lot more time has passed in his world than he experienced—two whole years. His friends, who thought he’d been captured by the sinister agency GSAF, have moved on with their lives—one becoming a pop star, and one becoming a revolutionary. The Mars he’s returned to has become a police state, and those in power seek to use the technology of Iamos to solidify their power. Meanwhile, Nadin hopes to bring her people into the future so that they might survive the cataclysm, even if their homes are destroyed. But GSAF sees her as their ticket to Iamos’ technology and aims to use her as a political pawn.

New World deals directly with the fallout from the first book—both for the plot and for the characters. I really like how it took the time to explore the impact losing two years had on Isaak and his relationships with his friends. At the same time, the ever-present danger of the increasingly dystopian world keeps the tension high. Like Fourth World, New World is split into two distinct acts. Without giving too much away, let me just say that Act 2 really takes off, sending the characters barreling down a perilous path. While New World takes place entirely in the future Mars world, it also expands a bit upon the history (and mystery!) of Iamos’ past, offering tantalizing glimpses at what’s to come.

The world-building in this series is truly phenomenal. Both Mars and Iamos feel like fully realized civilizations, and it was easy to get lost in their worlds. My favorite part about the Iamos stories, though, is the characters. Isaak and Nadin, who alternate POVs, are both fantastic protagonists. Isaak’s the ordinary teen who got pulled into an adventure he could never have prepared for, and Nadin’s the child of an oppressive system who’s finally breaking out and finding her own way. I really enjoyed reading their character moments and getting invested in their relationships, their inner struggles… all the feels! Not to mention the asexual rep (Isaak identifies as demisexual; Nadin explores her asexuality). It’s easy to fall into a book when you really care about the characters and what happens to them.

New World ends on a heck of a cliffhanger, which teases at an exciting conclusion to the trilogy. I’ll be here waiting patiently to find out how it all ends…


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Lyssa Chiavari is an author of speculative fiction for young adults, including Fourth World, the first book in a sci-fi trilogy set on Mars, and Cheerleaders From Planet X, a tongue-in-cheek send-up of all things sci-fi. Her short fiction has appeared in Wings of Renewal: A Solarpunk Dragon AnthologyBrave New Girls: Tales of Heroines Who HackMagic at Midnight: A YA Fairytale Anthology and Perchance to Dream: Classic Tales from the Bard’s World in New Skins. Her first published story, “The Choice,” was named one of Ama-giMagazine’s Best of 2014. Lyssa lives with her family and way too many animals in the woods of Northwest Oregon.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Ru Pringle


An interview with author Ru Pringle.

 


Hi! Welcome to Zigzag Timeline. Can you tell us about your background as an author?

I've written five novels so far, as well as several published short stories. The first two published novels - A Time of Ashes and Hunting Gods, part of a planned six-book series called Fate and the Wheel - came out this June. My first novel, Sanctuary, was written back when I was 23, but, despite netting me a well-known agent in 2005, hasn't been published yet. My most recently written book, October Song, was released this October. Apart from fiction, I published a hiking guide in my twenties, along with factual contributions to various anthologies and other books.

What got you into writing?

I always enjoyed creative writing at school, though I wasn't popular with a couple of teachers in particular who didn't see speculative fiction as 'proper' writing. At university I was lucky living somewhere with free university tuition and having parents who could help with accommodation, but living costs meant grim holiday jobs to meet living expenses. Reading a mountaineering magazine one day, I thought 'I could write this,' submitted a piece about a weekend I'd spent climbing, and to my surprise they published it. I enjoyed the magazine feature format, and kept myself afloat for much of the next decade largely through articles connected with mountaineering, hiking, and increasingly writing about travel and science as I got older and an injury stopped me climbing. I got my shoulder rebuilt with bits of plastic a couple of years ago - it feels as good as new now I'm a cyborg, so who knows, maybe I'll start climbing again.

What was the first idea you had for your book, and how did the story grow from there?

It started life as an idea for a screenplay, written for an actor I know (who's now my girlfriend). The original idea was to develop a short thriller that could be shot fairly close to where we both live, making use of the wonderful Highland west coast scenery. However, I'd only written a few pages when I thought 'hang on, this is starting to feel like a book.' Much to her disgust, I then got obsessed with developing the empryonic idea into a novel - I still haven't written the screenplay, though I've promised to make it up to her by writing something else. Some of my other books have been hard work, but for some reason this one developed a momentum all of its own, at least until editing, which I always find hard. I also got some good advice particularly from my agent about aspects of the story that weren't quite in balance - one of my favourite characters in the book was a last minute addition because of this.

Among your characters, who's your favorite? Could you please describe him/her?

Can't say too much for fear of spoilers, but definitely the lead. She's scarred, vulnerable and guilt-ridden, but also thoughtful, ferociously determined about what she feels is right, and utterly ruthless when she has to be. She's a survivor to an extent no one, least of all her, realises at the beginning of the book. But the personal cost of that survival is high. It's fair to say that I like all the characters though. I think that's important in writing a good character, even one that's not outwardly sympathetic. Each is very human, and all of them - well, perhaps all but one - believe they're doing the right thing.

What's your favorite scene from your novel? Could you please describe it?

That would give far too much away! Okay, well *one* of my favourites is when a well-known town in the Scottish Highlands is essentially pummelled to bits while two lead characters play cat and mouse around it. And I get to destroy a prominent Highland landmark in the process. It's not just pyrotechnics though: for various reasons, this is a pivotal and massively emotional scene too.

What's your favorite part of writing? Plotting? Describing scenes? Dialogue?

This depends on how the writing's going. When everything flows, writing feels like a cathartic draining of ideas from my brain into words via my fingers. Just as often though, when it's not flowing, I have to force every word out, which isn't fun. Oddly, I haven't found a correlation between how easy the writing feels to how well it reads. I enjoy developing plots and stories, but have to restrain myself from diving into writing too early. If I'm writing well, I don't differentiate between describing scenes or writing dialogue: it feels as though I'm describing a film playing in my head. Dialogue can be tricky though. Again, if it's going well, it can be immense fun, getting characters to spark off each other, and seeing how much unspoken meaning can be stuffed into outwardly simple dialogue. On the other hand, when dialogue just isn't right, I can spend hours just trying to tweak a couple of lines into submission. My least favourite part of writing is arguably the most important: editing. Every page edited can take hours. It's worth it, but I must admit, if I had an editor to do it for me, I'd be very happy!

How long does it take you to write a book? Do you have a writing process, or do you wing it?

I usually wing it - the process depends on the book. October Song was a relatively linear process: I more or less started at the beginning and wrote to the end, then moulded it into shape in around five different passes, then applied editing polish. Previous books have been more complicated: the first two instalments of Fate and the Wheel, for example, involved me writing each character's story as a separate thread, then combining them. I think October Song took around six months, part time (I was also renovating a house and doing part-time building work at the time), though a lot more if you include edits. Previous books have taken longer. My first, Sanctuary, I worked on for more than two years.

What is it about the genre you chose that appeals to you?

I suspect I'm a publisher's nightmare: I don't really pay attention to genres. I write stories I find appealing, and usually find out afterwards that they don't neatly fit any given pigeon-hole. October Song can probably best be described as a dark near-future thriller, though it has elements of things like police procedurals, spy novels, action thrillers and science fiction. To be honest, I haven't read many dark near-future thrillers. The closest I've come are probably Cormac McCarthy's 'The Road', P. D. James' 'The Children of Men', or Margaret Atwood's 'Oryx and Crake.' I like that such novels allow you to ask 'what if,' though typically their plots hinge on some unpredictable event. My aim with October Song was to extrapolate as plausibly and directly as possible from current events.

Are there any books or writers that have had particular influence on you?

Iain M. Banks has been a huge influence, especially his earlier books. I love their raw complexity. Although I've found Peter F. Hamilton's work patchy, he showed me how huge a book can be: The Neutronium Alchemist blew my mind when I first read it. I love the intelligence and emotional charge of Sheri S. Tepper and Vernor Vinge - two authors who can sustain an emotional charge beyond what I'd previously have thought possible. Neal Asher for his wilful weirdness, and Robert Rankin for his wickedly demented sense of humour and, in the Ealing (ahem) trilogy, unexpectedly acute and warm insight into what it means to be human.

Did you ever surprise yourself when you were writing your book? Characters who took on lives of their own? Plot elements that took unexpected turns?

Yes, this happens all the time. I see it as the sign of a well-developed character if they start to misbehave. The trick is writing a well-formed character that can live and breathe within the confines of your plot. I've had to rewrite plots because, when it came to the crunch, a character simply wouldn't do what I'd originally intended him/her to, leading the book in a completely different direction. There are quite a few I've tried killing off, but they just wouldn't die. I've had friends describe this as me being pretentious, but the way I see it is that a well-formed character is essentially an algorithm, with its own internal logic. Algorithms need to follow inbuilt rules, and it's the writer's job to construct a program - the book - in which the algorithms can function as intended. Otherwise neither the program nor the algorithm can work properly. I think it's far better to change the plot to keep characters behaving believably than have them acting out of character in the interests of the plot.

Thanks for stopping by!


ABOUT THE BOOK


'An absolute piledriver of a dark future thriller that instantly hooks you and doesn't let go till the end. Horribly believable and utterly compelling.' Neil Williamson, author of The Moon King.

'Reads like a perfectly structured thriller [...] Its combination of a gritty noir aesthetic with one of the most chilling depictions of the near-future since Children of Men results in a work of superlative readability.' Gary Gibson, award-nominated author of Angel Stations.

'A grim and gripping near-future thriller with sharp political edges and scarily plausible projections, rooted in intimate knowledge of real places.' Ken MacLeod, award-winning author of The Night Sessions.


Following a devastating bomb attack outside the North British Council Building at Holyrood in Edinburgh, a police officer finds herself fleeing from her employers and MI5, the domestic counter-intelligence and security agency of the United Kingdom, up the west coast of the territory of North Britain towards the front line of an intensifying war.

But it's not just her pursuers she must beware of. The wild coastline has become a hiding place for desperate boat-borne refugees. Meanwhile, someone unknown seems to be going to extraordinary and ever more lethal lengths to stop her pursuers finding her.

October Song is both a dark roller-coaster ride and a blistering reflection on a world on the edge of collapse.
'The little electric hatchback had vaulted cleanly over a drystone wall, mangling itself as it ploughed a furrow down a steep bank, flipping on to its side as it hit a half-buried boulder and slamming to a stop against a tree. As she sat suspended, watching airbags deflate, she could hear police sirens approaching. She didn’t dare move. Perhaps three minutes later, a police convoy screamed past. As if it would help her, she sat stock still as the sirens were killed. Flashing red and blue lights illuminated tree-tops where the vehicles had pulled up a few hundred metres further on.'

'As she drifts into the narrows there’s a noise from downwind, somewhere in front of her. She squints into the dark and raises her binoculars again. What the …? Some kind of battle is taking place on the bridge. Breathing very fast, she strains for details. Even in moonlight, it’s too dim for her night vision to make out much. There’s a scrum of movement, and a growing roar of voices. And clanging – lots of clanging. Also thumps, like haunches of meat being dropped on a floor. She sees a flash of something bright and metallic. There are screams. Something falls noisily off the bridge right in front of her, barely three kayak lengths away.'


Find it at:
Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07J5H56XZ
Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07J5H56XZ
Books2Read https://www.books2read.com/u/bazVaP

ISBN:9781540116932
ASIN: B07J5H56XZ
147,000 words
Published: 15th October 2018 (official release 20th October)
Available on: Amazon (Kindle), Apple (iBooks), Barnes & Noble (Nook), Kobo, Indigo, Angus & Robertson, Scrib'd, 24 Symbols, Playster and Mondadori.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

'Ru Pringle is one of the most interesting and exciting new writers to emerge north of the border since Iain Banks' - Gary Gibson, award-nominated author of Angel Stations, Against Gravity and Stealing Light.

Ru Pringle began his writing career at the age of 18, paying university bills by writing features for magazines. After a stint as an environmental scientist, he became a full-time writer, gradually veering towards travel journalism. He has also worked as a tree- and vineyard-planter, footpath builder, roofer, joiner, plumber, yacht crewperson, youth hostel warden, mountain and trail guide, oil-painting salesman, cook, sound engineer, and didgeridoo and mandolin tutor.

After several years as a touring musician, he now lives in the South West Highlands of Scotland.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

COVER REVEAL: No More Heroes: Hell or High Water / Michelle Kan


Hey everyone! I'm thrilled to participate in the cover reveal for Michelle Kan's NO MORE HEROES: HELL OR HIGH WATER! Here it is below! Pretty cool, right?



ABOUT THE BOOK
The peaceful nights are kept under the clandestine and watchful eye of young, gifted Vigilantes the world over – and since the Vigilante Killers were taken down six months ago, order has returned to the community once more. Vigilantes everywhere have resumed their usual rhythm, defending their domains within the safety of the shadows, and all is right with the world.

So when an old enemy resurfaces and asks them for their help, the Vigilantes of the City are reluctant, to say the least. But some offers are hard to turn down, and soon Team City find themselves diving headlong into a mystery that will test their limits, their capabilities as Vigilantes, and their relationships with each other. 

HELL OR HIGH WATER is an urban fantasy action/adventure novel about young, would-be heroes who find that sometimes camaraderie can come from the least likely of alliances… and strength can be found in the most unexpected of places. 

Featuring a diverse cast of players, discord, a mystery to be solved, plenty of literary action and high-stakes battles, NO MORE HEROES is a series about self-belief and camaraderie, persistence in the face of trials, and what it means to be the best version of yourself.

BONUS:
Preorders of NO MORE HEROES: HELL OR HIGH WATER will come with a bonus short story, THE STUFF OF LEGEND, presenting an alternate perspective on the events of Book 2, and a lone Vigilante’s experience with a long-lost Urban Legend of the Vigilante community.

LINKS:
Author Twitter: twitter.com/fswrites





ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Michelle Kan is an independent filmmaker/videographer and writer based in Wellington, New Zealand. Fish & Swallow Productions, her online content production studio, is dedicated to the documenting of arts/cultural events and the spotlighting of artists, creatives and other extraordinary individuals around New Zealand. NO MORE HEROES was her debut novel and was initially written during her first National Novel Writing Month in 2014.

A 1.5 generation Chinese-New Zealander, Michelle is passionate about the arts, exploring her cultural heritage through her creative output, and is a lover of graphic novels, video games, action/martial arts films and parkour – all profound influences which helped her shape the world and characters of No More Heroes.

#OWNVOICES:
NO MORE HEROES is #OwnVoices for Asian/Chinese, ADD, Anxiety/Depression, Aro/Ace-spec and Genderfluid rep.

Monday, October 15, 2018

AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Francesca Forrest


An interview with author Francesca Forrest.

 

Hi! Welcome to Zigzag Timeline. Can you tell us about your background as an author?

Thank you very much! It’s a pleasure to be here. I’ve been enjoying checking out this blog and your website. As for my background, I’m a pretty low-key writer, by which I mean, I’m not hugely prolific and I’m not widely known, but I’ve been fortunate in that the people who *have* discovered me have been very supportive. I’ve had short stories in science fiction and fantasy zines like Strange Horizons, GigaNotoSaurus, and The Future Fire, and I self-published a novel, Pen Pal.

What got you into writing?

My father is a writer, so I knew it was a thing that people can be. And I always had stories in my head. I used to tell myself stories as I walked to school—it was a mile walk; I loved that time.

What was the first idea you had for your book, and how did the story grow from there?

This I remember very clearly: I was inspired by a 2013 blog post by Sonya Taaffe in which she talked about the Roman term exauguratio, for the removal of a god from its temple or other sacred ground. She wrote, “Legendarily, when Tarquin the fifth king of Rome built the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline, the ancient gods Terminus and Juventas refused to be displaced by exauguratio and were incorporated into the new site.”

I was enchanted by that idea, but it was several years before I took it up in a story—and I’m not sure I’m done yet. One day I may write more.

Among your characters, who's your favorite? Could you please describe him/her?

That’s hard! I guess I love Ohin, the titular inconvenient god, a lot, because he’s so many things—provocative, dangerous, and bereft. But I also like Mr. Haksola, the university administrator, a lot too. He’s so nervous! He has so much to hide! And he keeps on having to reveal more and more.

What's your favorite scene from your novelette? Could you please describe it?

I like all the scene that have deities in them—I hope readers enjoy those too. The novelette’s so short I don’t want to give anything away, but I hope readers will find some of them funny and some of them moving. I’m hoping readers feel the presence of the gods and goddesses very intensely.

What's your favorite part of writing? Plotting? Describing scenes? Dialogue?

I like the part where I’m inventing it in my head! The writing part is hard work—trying to make what’s in there come alive on the page in a way that will conjure up similar sights and sounds and feelings in readers’ minds. It’s satisfying work, though.

I like revision, too—the feeling of “phew, much better,” that you get when you’ve fixed something.

How long does it take you to write a book? Do you have a writing process, or do you wing it?

It takes me a **long** time. I’m the opposite of a well-oiled machine—I’m a squeaky, rusty machine. I write mostly on computer, but if I wrote with a pen and paper, you’d see me mostly with the pen poised a few millimeters above the paper, running through different ways of saying something in my mind without actually committing to any of them. But I get there eventually!

So far, I’ve always started at the beginning of a story and then worked straight through to the end, rather than jumping around and writing a scene here and a scene there—though of course sometimes what you originally think will be the beginning doesn’t end up being the beginning by the time you finish writing. I have an overall sense of where the story’s going but not a detailed sense—that gives the story room to breathe and evolve as I write.

What is it about the genre you chose that appeals to you?

The sorts of ideas I get just happen to be fantasy and science fiction—I don’t know why that is. What makes me love a book is some mind-exploding quality about it—maybe it’s the insights, maybe it’s the vividness of the characters, maybe it’s gorgeous writing, maybe the flights of imagination. For me, it’s just easier to strive for that via fantasy and science fiction—at least, so far.

Are there any books or writers that have had particular influence on you?

Well, there are writers who made me the person I am today—they definitely influenced me. Those would be people like CS Lewis and Madeleine L’Engle and Lloyd Alexander. I feel like they were co-parents with my real parents. Then there are writers or novels that influenced me in the sense of broadening my horizons or my understanding of the human condition—The Grapes of Wrath did that, for example. And then there are writers or novels that teach me stuff about the craft of writing—about characterization, or pacing, or storytelling techniques. In genre fiction, a sci-fi YA novel that I both really enjoyed as a story and that I learned from was Paolo Bacigalupi’s Ship Breaker. Both his characters and his post-apocalyptic landscape really came alive for me in a way I want my own writing to come alive for other people, so I paid attention to how he did it, the sorts of sensory details he put in, the types of scenes he had.

Did you ever surprise yourself when you were writing your novelette? Characters who took on lives of their own? Plot elements that took unexpected turns?

Yes! I had no idea what Ohin’s ultimate fate was going to be when the story started—I felt like that was gradually revealed to me as the characters and the situation took on depth.

Thanks for stopping by!

Thank *you* very much for the opportunity!

ABOUT THE BOOK


What happens when you try to retire a god who is not ready to leave?


An official from the Ministry of Divinity arrives at a university to decommission a local god. She is expecting an easy decommissioning of a waning god of mischief but finds instead an active god not interested in retiring and university administrators who have not told her the full story about the god. Can the Decommisioner discover the true story of this god in time to prevent his most destructive round of mischief yet?

Check out this promotion for The Inconvenient God's release month! Click here: http://annorlundaenterprises.com/pre-orders-and-a-promo-offer-for-the-inconvenient-god/


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Francesca Forrest is the author of Pen Pal (2013), a hard-to-classify novel from the margins, as well as short stories that have appeared in Not One of UsStrange Horizons, and other online and print venues. She’s currently working on a post-apocalypse novel that focuses on the hope rather than the horror. 


She blogs at asakiyume.dreamwidth.org, and you can follow her on Twitter at @morinotsuma