Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Book Review: Girlfriend on Mars by Deborah Willis (sci fi, romance, literary fiction)

Thirty-one years old and newly transplanted from Thunder Bay, Ontario to Vancouver, BC, Amber Kivinen and Kevin Watkins are in a fourteen-year committed relationship--together forever. Until... Without Kevin's knowledge, Amber applies to enter a contest to travel to Mars. Amber is selected for the contest, and Kevin stays home to grieve her loss.

Girlfriend on Mars is about space, reality TV, climate change anxiety, infidelity, grow ops, travel...




Girlfriend on Mars

Deborah Willis

Hamish Hamilton

an imprint of Penguin Canada

a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited

2023

356 pages

longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller

Science Fiction, Romance, Literary Fiction

Amber and Kevin are polar opposites. Amber is an aggressive go-getter who lives life to the fullest. Kevin is a deep-thinking, deep-feeling observer of life. Raised by an ailing single mother, Kevin was taught from a young age to fear life and cling to one person. At first, this person was his mom and then Amber. Who will he cling to now that she's gone? 

Girlfriend on Mars is told in altering chapters of first and second person. The first-person chapters are narrated by Kevin. In the second-person chapters, we observe Amber--much as Kevin would. At one point, Kevin tells us, "I realize that Amber is a planet, and I'm a moon to her orbit." I understand this to mean that he doesn't think that he's as important as Amber and I disagree. Girlfriend on Mars is a balanced examination of both sides of a relationship.

The short chapters help to make this book enjoyable--especially for those of us with reading challenges.


If you enjoy reading Girlfriend on Mars (which (I hope) I'm sure you will), you may also enjoy reading An Ocean of Minutes by Thea Lim.

"Fog" by ldyck

It all starts next Sunday...

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Book Review: The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy (Sci fi, humour) by Douglas Adams

 Arthur Dent is living in a non-descript house overlooking the peaceful English countryside but...but then his world explodes--literally. Yes, The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy is a comedy. It offers a chuckle a page. All you have to do is find the funny bites.




Buy this book

Published by Pan Books

an imprint of Macmillan Publishers

Published in 1976

159 pages


Arthur Dent is blissfully unaware of... Well, a lot of things, actually. One of the biggest things is that his best friend Ford Prefect though pretending to be an out-of-work actor is, in fact, an alien--like from another planet. As it turns out, that's a good thing because when the earth explodes Ford being from another planet can "save" Arthur. 

What does it all mean?

Here's a guess: The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy is about the encroachment of technology into our everyday lives. 

When Douglas Adams wrote this book, in the 1970s, there were no social media. No cell phone. Heck, there weren't even personal computers. Hard to believe but true. Can we imagine our lives without the World Wide Web only fifty years later? Sometimes it's nice to try.

'"What's so unpleasant about being drunk?"

"You ask a glass of water."' (p.49) 

I met Arthur Dent when I was 21. I could relate to Arthur. My world, like his, had just exploded. (After coming home from participating in a nine-month youth group, I enrolled in university.) 

After reading and loving Douglas Adams' books, I lent them to a friend and... and... The friend refused to give them back. In his defense--. Sorry, no, there's no defence for this crime. 

Thankfully, my boyfriend, now husband, had the books. Did I marry him so I could re-read the series? 

Hmmm... 

Next year my husband and I will celebrate our 30th anniversary. And I just re-read the first book in the series. So, no. I married him for love, not books. 


(in Manon's garden)

 On this blog in October


Wednesday, October 13
Podcast Author Reading
Basket Weaving (short story) by Leanne Dyck

Sunday, October 17
Short Story
Dream (romance) by Leanne Dyck

Wednesday, October 20
Podcast Author Reading
Jaron Cardw, Author (short story) by Leanne Dyck

Sunday, October 24
Book Review
The Almost Wife (thriller)
by Gail Anderson-Dargatz

Wednesday, October 27
Podcast Author Reading
My Knitting Haven (short story) by Leanne Dyck

Sunday, October 31
Short Story
Eyes by Leanne Dyck

Sharing my author journey...

Congratulations our blog is eleven years old. I write "our" and I mean "our". I firmly believe

Sunday, October 3, 2021

Guest Post: Author Brian Van Norman (Science Fiction author)



Once a teacher, playwright, professional theatre director and adjudicator, Brian left those worlds to travel with his wife, Susan, and take up writing as a full time pursuit. He has journeyed to every continent and sailed nearly every sea on the planet.  His base is Waterloo.  For more, his website is www.authorbrianvannorman.com.


-How/why did you start to write?


Really, I started writing when I was about twelve.  Life got in the way, however, and I deferred writing until after University.  I wrote a thriller about Columbian/Cuban drug smuggling in Florida for a large Publishing Company (remaining un-named) which died in 1982, a year after they had sent me back to research more information to improve the book.  This set six authors, all under the tutelage of a brilliant editor, completely free.  I was so fatigued and shattered I stopped writing and did other things, and shifted my focus to playwriting.


-How did you become an author?


I’d been on the road as a Theatre Adjudicator for Theatre Ontario for quite a while.  When Susan, my wife, retired, she asked me to stop and pay more attention to my writing, treat myself more professionally as a writer.  After an initial brush with a disorganized and simplistic publishing house I was able to leave that contract and very soon after, Guernica Editions selected my novel IMMORTAL WATER for publishing.


-What did you do before writing full-time? Did it help your writing, how?


Every experience helps one’s writing as long as one is open to it.   I have used multiple people I’ve met to help create single characters with depth and genuine persona.  I’ve used places I’ve been as settings.  I worked in theatre for a long time and understand that publishing any book takes the efforts of multiple people from Printers to Editors to Designers and Artists.  I am very open to editing.  It seems to free me to make changes I’d considered but not accomplished.


-What inspires you to write?


I’m not sure.  For some it’s notoriety, for others its money, and for many more, it’s not being inspired to write, but understanding your need to write.  Perhaps it was inspiration, and I know many authors are avid readers who have favourite books they read which made them want to produce something similar, or very different.


-Why do you write science fiction? What is it about the genre that attracted your interest?


Because of this trilogy AGAINST THE MACHINE: LUDDITES, AGAINST THE MACHINE: MANIFESTO and (tentatively) AGAINST THE MACHINE: EVOLUTION I knew I was going to push borders. I was accustomed to historical fiction writing and even contemporary literary style, but I’ve never written speculative fiction and find it requires even more research and concentration than any other style I’ve tried.


-What science fiction authors have helped you develop your author voice?


In order to understand this style of writing, I’ve had to read quite a bit, but the authors who helped me find a narrative stye?  Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, Dick, Bradbury, Gibson, Atwood, Stephenson, Wells, Orwell and Huxley, I have read nearly every book of speculative fiction I could find and I’m gradually discovering a voice through a mix of several authors at one time.


-What are the most important ingredients that must go into very book?


To my mind characters who are unique, believable, complex and intriguing, mixed with action in the form of what these characters actually do and why, are the key elements to any novel.


-Reflect on your writing process...


My process requires a discipline.  I will descend to my office/library and remain there for four hours.  Sometimes it seems a waste of time and sometimes you explode with ideas and find yourself writing six and even seven hours, though at that length of time you may not be making the best judgements.  I realize the discipline is what keeps me going.  Sudden important elements might come to mind when I’m not writing so I always have a small pad and pen to write these out and attach them somehow to my basic outline or concept.


-Please offer some advice to new authors...


This is a hard question to answer because there are so many different styles and genres of writing.  I have to return to the tried and true: “Write what you know.”  If you’ve paid attention the small things which many people don’t notice, a setting can acquire surprising significance, and pieces of character can become interesting characters when put together, but the most important element of any writing, use action to express character or setting or mood: so show the audience what you want rather than tell the audience.





With three highly acclaimed novels currently on the market THE BETRAYAL PATH, IMMORTAL WATER and his latest, AGAINST THE MACHINE: LUDDITES available through Chapters/Indigo and Independent Bookstores(Canada), Barnes & Noble (USA), Waterstones (Great Britain), Amazon, Goodreads and his publisher www.guernicaeditions.com, Brian's next book, the sequel to LUDDITES set in Waterloo Region, is titled AGAINST THE MACHINE: MANIFESTO.  It will launch this fall on October 1

He is currently researching and writing a third book for his AGAINST THE MACHINE trilogy. An unusual trilogy, it deals with a single them: human/machine interface, but in three very different styles and time periods 200 years apart.  



LUDDITES is historical style with a twist (one person called it Jane Austen meets Quentin Tarrentino).  




MANIFESTO, set in modern Waterloo, Canada is in a more contemporary style (this one is referred to as Breaking Bad comes to Waterloo).  


The third novel, now in progress is written in the varied styles of speculative fiction and is set in a place called Toronto MEG, in 2212.  


His author site is www.authorbrianvannorman.com


Visit Brian Van Norman online at...


Website:

 www.authorbrianvannorman.com     

Facebook:

 https://www.facebook.com/brianvnauthor

Google:

https://www.google.com/search?q=brian+van+norman&rlz=1C1GCEA_enCA924CA924&oq=brian+van+norman&aqs=chrome..69i57j46j0i22i30l2j69i60l3j69i65.5160j0j15&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8



Thursday, January 8, 2015

Guest Post: Reality Skimming Press by Lynda Williams


Swords and space! For me, they cover the contrast between the personal and vast in science fiction. Reality Skimming is also the faster-than-light method of travel used by the heroes of my 10-novel Okal Rel Saga, and the founding purpose of Reality Skimming Press was to carry the Okal Rel Universe into the future, with a re-boot of the backlist and a new title every year. Our first legacies book was Hal Friesen's Shepherds of Sparrows in 2013.

Reality Skimming Press is owned and operated by myself, Lynda Williams, and my husband David Lott, with help from a group of collaborators such as artists Jeff Doten, Doriano Strologo, Richard Bartrop and Yukari Yamamoto. Christel Bodenbender has recently joined us as an interviewer for the Reality Skimming Blog. Other friends have helped out in the past and may again in the future.

Beyond Okal Rel, the broader vision for the press is to celebrate the heroic aspect of speculative fiction. The sort of thing that stirred me up and gave me courage, in my youth, reading comics, reading books and watching TV and movies. As a mature woman, I find it harder to believe in heroes without more shades of gray, and there are certainly dark patches in the Okal Rel Saga, itself. But on the whole I'm still interested in SF where readers remain motivated to cheer for the hero, flawed as he or she may be, and struggle for some version of good versus evil in the world. We brand ourselves as optimistic SF.

Adding children's books sprang from a personal connection. Jennifer Lott is our daughter, and the setting she writes about in her Family Magic Series is loosely based on our home when she was young. Working with books for new readers proved exciting, and we hope to add a second series over the next year, when we find a writer with the right profile for us.

Reality Skimming Press is in a development stage from now until the end of 2016. We're learning about the business, pacing ourselves, making connections and learning the trade. The plan is to expand a little, year by year, and see where it leads. Our core values are the joy of books in print and experimenting in online arenas, as opportunities arise.


Find us online at http://facebook.com/relskim to follow our progress and get to know us. And order Cursed Dishes and Shepherds of Sparrows through your local Chapters to join in the experience.

Jennifer Lott maintains a separate website for the Family Magic Series at http://familymagicseries.com/

You can explore the Okal Rel Universe at any of the following URLs. 


* The Okal Rel Site and Reality Skimming Blog http://okalrel.org

* Author Lynda Williams on Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/644584.Lynda_Williams