Bookshelf: Second Paradigm

51K0OzKyN4L._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_Second Paradigm‘s title refers to a new paradigm for thinking about time, time travel, and paradox, and its story is an exploration of that paradigm. The challenge in trying to tell you about a book as intricately plotted as this one is that just about anything I say risks being a spoiler. Still, I’ll take a crack at it.

Second Paradigm revolves around a paradox and efforts by various time travelers to resolve it. The basic paradox has to do with the inventor of time travel, Dr. Christopher Nost, who is convicted of murdering a colleague, is shot dead in the parking lot after his trial, and then invents time travel — as long as the colleague he murdered is still alive.

Nost’s efforts to solve / prevent his own murder are only one of the story threads that track through Second Paradigm. The others involve a scientist from the far future who wants to save his wife from a certain death he believes the Time Corp has cynically sent her to, various Time Corp agents with private and public agendas, and even a god.

One of the unique aspects of this story is that is written in thirteen “Causes” arranged in a ring-structure. Each Cause collects several scenes, tracking through most of the story’s plot threads. Starting with any of the Causes, the story is readable forward, through the end, and back to the reader’s starting point. The intricacy of plotting necessary to make that work makes this a book that requires affirmative mental effort to follow, but that effort is rewarded.  Second Paradigm is a first-rate, really provocative read.

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Bookshelf: Lincoln’s Wizard

51HL6exIioL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_Braxton Wright is no war hero, no matter what the newspapers say. He’s just the engineer who was aboard the Union battle walker Monitor at the Battle of Parkersburg, and who drove the Monitor across enemy lines, disrupting their formations and winning the day for the Union.

Mind you, Braxton had been trying to run away at the time.

And in the battle, the Monitor was assaulted by Grays (the Confederacy’s zombie soldiers, doomed to replay the battles in which they fell) and then blasted by a dragon, resulting in the death of Braxton’s best friend.

But war hero or not, President Lincoln has a job for Braxton Wright: get into Alabama’s Castle Thunder Prison with a message for the Union’s captured spy, Hattie Lawton. The content of the message is supposed to enable Hattie to end the scourge of the zombie Grays, and in order to get the message to her, Braxton’s orders are to get himself captured.

But with the Machiavellian Allan Pinkerton at Lincoln’s side, Braxton can’t quite shake the feeling that he’s getting set up.

Lincoln’s Wizard (book one of Dragons of the Confederacy) is the kind of mashup in which steampunk revels, shoveling historical personages, magical creatures, fantastic steam-powered technology, and high-powered action hi-jinks by the barrel into a riveting retelling of the Civil War. This book rumbles with the feel of tangible machines and groans with the anguish of the undead damned — you’re going to love it.

Bonus: cover art by my friend Jeff Brimley.

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Bookshelf: The Dandy Boys Mysteries

51TEpbJULsL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_The Dandy Boys Mysteries are the cast of Downton Abbey trying to prove that Bram Stoker’s Dracula is a figment of Mina Harker’s imagination.

This gothic mystery tale styles itself a publication of excerpts out of the journals of Friedrich Von Helsing, and some related documents. Von Helsing is a member of the Fellowship of Adventurer Scholars for the Revelation of Mythology and the Advancement of Natural Philosophy, a group of young and aristocratic members of the Royal Society who take upon themselves the task of debunking apparently supernatural phenomena.

The result is a series of adventures, each centered around an occult phenomenon progressively harder to debunk than the last. Boyett and Wacks write in an early nineteenth century voice, and the stories are larded not only with the physical and cultural paraphernalia of the past, but also with the ideas of the time: Bentham and Byron, empirical reasoning and discovery.

The Dandy Boys Mysteries is a fun read. Best of all, I understand that more books in the series are coming.

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Magic City!

Magic City Banner

Allegedly, Miami is called “Magic City” because the city sprouted up overnight due to a flood of immigrants. Since Juan Ponce de León rolled through here in the sixteenth century looking for the Fountain of Youth, though, I think the vibe might predate modern America.

This week it’s my turn to roll through Miami, and this week Magic City means the Magic City Comic Con. I’m here with WordFire Press (Kevin J. Anderson, Quincy J. Allen, Peter J. Wacks, Tracy Hickman, and others), so come look for us on the dealer room floor. In addition, I’ll be at the following panels:

Friday 6:15 – 7:15 pm
World Building in Science Fiction and Fantasy

Sunday 3:15pm – 4:15pm
Steampunk Through The Ages

If you’re in Magic City, I’ll see you there.  And if not… suckas! Because it’s January, and I’m walking around here in my shirtsleeves.

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New Worlds!

All Covers Large

As of the middle of the night last night, StoryBundle has a new bundle of books available. This one is a particularly huge bonanza, and I happen to be in it!

This is a package of deal of ebooks, designed to allow you to discover new series via extremely affordable ebooks. The basic deal is $7 for 12 books (including Rock Band Fights Evil 1, 2, and 3: Hellhound on My Trail, Snake Handlin’ Man, and Crow Jane), and for $15 (or more — you choose how much you pay), you get an additional eighteen titles.

That’s thirty ebooks for fifty cents each.  That includes Brad Beaulieu’s Lays of Anuskaya books, the first three Mythology books of Jody Lynn Nye, the entire Crystal Doors trilogy by Rebecca Moesta and Kevin J. Anderson, and more.  And more, you can even opt for some of your purchase price to go to charitable causes.  Go on over and check it out!

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We Have Winners!

I recently ran a meme generation contest, which I announced to my mailing list (you can sign up for my mailing list here). The Space Balrogs judged the entries.

The Second-Place Winner (and recipient of an ARC of THE KIDNAP PLOT) is Jaren Rencher, who created this meme of me:

Jaren Rencher meme

And the First-Place Winner (and ARC recipient) is John Olsen, whose meme is:

John Olsen meme

Honorary mentions: Daryl Conley, Craig Cutler, Quincy J. Allen, Aaron Spriggs, Helge Moulding, and Bear Putnam, all of whose memes can be seen on my Facebook wall.

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Bookshelf: Monster Hunter Alpha


51vjbx36SUL._SX326_BO1,204,203,200_Monster Hunter Alpha continues Larry Correia’s Monster Hunter series with all its trademarks: white-knuckle action, gritty gun details, wild swaggering characters on both the heroes’ and the villains’ side, and comic wisecracking in the best tradition of Hollywood action films.

Here, we get Earl Harbinger, MHI’s own inhouse badass werewolf, as protagonist.  Delightfully, we read two parallel stories: in the beginning of each chapter, we read Earl’s adventures as a young man.  Earl is bitten, transforms, and luckily falls under the zen-ascetic tutelage of a Spanish priest who helps him overcome his beast nature and become a warrior for good.

The main story follows Earl to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, where a series of murders and a mysterious ancient amulet draw our werewolf hero into a three-sided showdown.  The Alpha, the leader of the global werewolf pack, wants Earl and an old Russian werewolf nemesis (who is insane and bloodthirsty, and also possessed by an even more insance and bloodthirsty demon) to destroy each other, before either can challenge him and replace him at the head of the pack.

Throw in a local deputy bitten and infected, MHI agents trying to kill Earl for a personal grudge, and independent PUFF bounty hunters who believe Earl has gone rogue and lost his exemption from the PUFF list, and you get a recipe for non-stop entertainment.

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Bookshelf: The Worker Prince

51m4kd8uCvL._SX323_BO1,204,203,200_Prince Xander Rhii, fresh out of the academy and headed for his new post overseeing workers (slaves) on Vertullis, has been called Davi by his mother all his life. Like the unique necklace he wears, he bears the name as a mark of his royal upbringing without ever thinking about it very much.

There are rumors, though, rumors that cause his brutish rival (whose name, Bordox, delightfully echoes Brom Bones to my ear) to call Davi the “folkloric prince.” The rumors say that one of the royal princes is actually a foundling, extracted from a courier ship that one day landed near a royal palace. The palace was occupied by a childless princess and the child was raised as hers.

If you have not already twigged to the fact, The Worker Prince is a space-operatic elaboration of the story of Moses. This is not a new thing (Superman is also Moses), but the epic scope of the Exodus and the archetypal power of its key characters give Schmidt a strong set of tools with which to tell an engaging tale of identity, shame, redemption, exile, rivalry, power, liberation, and salvation.

With great science fiction action sequences.

 

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ARC Contest Still Open!

We are halfway through the contest to win one of two ARCs of THE KIDNAP PLOT.  You can read about the contest here, if this is news to you.

Here are some of the memes that have been submitted so far:

Helge Moulding meme

 

Jaren Rencher meme

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

David West memeMatt Santa Cruz memeQuincy Allen meme

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Bookshelf: Trial of Intentions

51gZ5QdYeUL._SX330_BO1,204,203,200_The characters in Peter Orullian’s Trial of Intentions curse by gods who are not there; dead gods, mute gods, deaf gods. This is a world abandoned by its creating gods, the Framers, who also sealed humanity apart from the rogue god Maldea (renamed Quietus for his rebellion) and his creations.

Now the Veil separating humanity from Quietus, the Quiet-given, and the other races who had the misfortune to be locked in the northern wasteland called the Bourne, appears to be weakening. While the armies in the Bourne marshal and prepare to invade, humanity is split by multiple rifts. The Sheason order of magicians is divided over whether use of its art is appropriate; human leaders argue over whether there should be a Convocation and who should lead.

Orullian’s Vault of Heaven series continue with all the drama and philosophy of its first volume, The Unremembered. His characters struggle with the morality of necessary lies and murders, and the ragged holes left behind by those who chose to exit the struggle entirely.

This is epic fantasy at its most high-minded and serious. It is also thoroughly enjoyable.

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