Archive for the Science Fiction Category

Book Review: The Lives of Tao, by Wesley Chu

Posted in Angry Robot Army, Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fiction, Science Fiction, Spy with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 18, 2013 by Jessica Nelson

The Lives of Tao coverTitle: The Lives of Tao

Author: Wesley Chu

Publisher: Angry Robot Books; April 30, 2013

Length: 464 pages

Price: $7.99 US/ $8.99 CAN

ISBN: 978-0-85766-329-0

Tao is a Quasing, one of a race of alien life forms from the planet Quasar whose ship broke up in Earth’s atmosphere millennia ago, stranding its inhabitants on a strange new world completely inhospitable to their gaseous forms. To survive, the Quasing discovered, they must become parasitic, inhabiting the bodies of the native life forms. Throughout prehistory, they inhabited dinosaurs and Neanderthals, until humans showed promise of the ability to evolve in a manner that might someday allow the Quasing to return to their home.

For the last five hundred years, the Quasing have been at war with themselves, split into two factions: the Genjix, who follow the original Quasing idea that humans evolve technologically faster when in a state of conflict, and the Prophus, a splinter sect who has come to appreciate humankind and who believe the same technological advances might be made through peaceful means.

Roen Tan is an IT technician living in Chicago. He spends his days plopped in front of a computer, whiling away the hours at a job he hates. His nights are spent shoving his face full of pizza and gaming or, on occasion, being talked into going to a nightclub and drinking himself into lonely regret. But after one such night, Roen finds he is no longer alone in his own head, and he is given the opportunity to live a life he’s only dreamed about.

Training to be a secret agent isn’t easy for anyone. But when you start out as an overweight, middle-aged slob, well … things are bound to get interesting.

Wesley Chu is an Associate Vice President at a bank by day, and a writer and martial artist by night. As a writer, he contributes to the magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland. With past work as an actor and stunt man as well, Chu has a background ripe for writing fun, action-packed stories, and his debut novel, The Lives of Tao, is just that.

The Lives of Tao is a blend of sci-fi and spy as we rarely see it. From the very first pages, the reader is dumped right into the middle of the story of the Quasing civil war, with quick, fluid action scenes that continue throughout the book. As the tension ebbs and flows along, so too does the narrative. Chu evades a lot of detail work, preferring to keep the plot moving and twisting along by pulling the reader from one event or action scene to the next, giving the story a good sense of motion and progress throughout.

After the events at the Chest of the Menagerie, I do not have much to tell that could show you any insight as to who I am. Because from that point on, it has been nothing but mindless war…

As the current situation races ahead at what is often a break-neck pace, each chapter begins with Tao telling Roen the history of the Quasing on Earth.

We used to be two sides playing chess with humanity’s evolution as the prize. Now, we play simply to defeat the other side. In a way, the Prophus fell right into the Genjix’s hands.

The Quasing have done a lot to influence human evolution, for good and for ill, and there are a lot of historical Easter eggs scattered throughout the story, adding to the fun and novelty of it. Tao himself has inhabited Genghis Khan, and other Quasing have had hosts as important to mankind as Voltaire, Shakespeare, Churchill, even Peter the Apostle. At the same time, Chu’s characters are rather simple, but in a good way. Like classic Bond characters, Chu fleshes out the stereotype for the reader to start with, adding small details along the way to flesh them in a bit, but never too much. This story is all about the action.

There are a few minor redundancies and unwieldy sentences throughout the book, but nothing out of the ordinary for a debut novel, and nothing that really upsets the story for more than a moment. All in all, Chu’s writing is strong, and his ability to write tragic, heart-rending scenes into such a fun, easy story is proof that he’s found his calling as a writer.

The Lives of Tao has some good take-away lessons for readers, as well. As comic as Tao’s training of Roen can be, it also contains inspirational advice that is bound to make readers reflect on their own lives. There is much about being the person you want to be and not making excuses to let yourself fail. Much as the practice of Tao is The Way of life, the character of Tao shows Roen the way to live fully. And isn’t that something we could all use a little help with?

Guest Post by Guy Hasson: Confessions of a Science Fiction Author

Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Fiction, Free Fiction, Guest Post, Science Fiction with tags , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by Jessica Nelson

Today, I am pleased to present you with a guest post by Guy Hasson, author of The Emoticon Generation and Secret Thoughts. Who doesn’t love free fiction? Enjoy!

Confessions of a Science Fiction Author

Guest Post by Guy Hasson

I got myself in a jam.

A year ago I came across a great idea for a science fiction story. But, innocently enough, since like many of my ideas it could actually be implemented today, I thought to myself: Why should I write a science fiction story about it when I can just create a start-up and potentially earn millions?

Well, that’s what I did, and that’s how the trouble began.

The idea was simple enough. Once upon a time, radio shows for greats like George Burns and Jack Benny were brought to us by sponsors, as in The Campbells’ Tomato Juice Program, The Hinds Honey and Almond Cream program, The Swan Soap Show, and so many more. Later, on TV we had such greats as The Colgate Hour Comedy Hour, and today some of the more popular podcasts are brought to us by Stamps.com, GoToMyPC, Audible, Adam & Eve, and more.

The SF author in me thought, “Why sponsor content? Why not sponsor time?” It sounds crazy, but it’s really simple. My company (which I named Brought To You By) market-tests how people spend their time, and tries to find patterns according to their jobs, income, hobbies, family status, etc. Next, we’ll be offering money to families in exchange for having a banner and push messages on their computers/iPhones/tablets/ etc. which the message is usually along the lines of: “This hour is brought to you by [so and so]”.

Sounds innocent, right? So why am I in a jam? Because right now, we’re beta-testing, and we’re beta-testing the product on people I know, namely: Myself and other science fiction authors. They (not me) are all getting money to have our apps on their various computers, iPads, and so on. So now, when I go to visit my parents, my iPhone tells me, “The next hour will be brought to you by Advil.” When I play with my kids, my iPad beeps every five seconds, “This hour is being brought to you by Toys R Us.” When I write, that time is brought to me by Interzone. When I spend time with my wife, that time is brought to me by the sex store three blocks down. My breakfast is brought to me by Honey Nut Cheerios, my sleep is brought to me by Prozac, and when I sit down to watch TV the commercials are brought to me by TiVo. The time I spend sitting by myself thinking about ideas for stories is brought to me by J.J. Abrams, looking for pitches to new shows.

And now I can’t stand it anymore. There are commercials everywhere I go, no matter what I do, and I can’t concentrate on anything. The entire thing was meant as a joke, as a funny idea for a story, and now it haunts me every minute of every day, and I have to endure two more months of beta-testing. And possibly I’ll be forced to continue to use it years later, as a personal example while we’re pushing the product.

I learned my lesson. My ideas belong on the page, not reality. But still, yesterday I had the best idea for a science fiction story, except that it could actually be done today. I shouldn’t just give it to the world, right? I can make millions from it if I keep it to myself and start another company. And this one is foolproof, and wouldn’t annoy me as much as this one does. Okay, one more, and then I’m out. Just one.

 

 

Guy Hasson is the author of The Emoticon Generation and Secret Thoughts. Check out his website and follow him on Twitter.

Book Review: Dark Faith: Invocations, by Maurice Broaddus and Jerry Gordon, ed.

Posted in Apex Book Company, Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Occult & Supernatural, Science Fiction, Slipstream, Urban Fantasy with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 30, 2013 by Jessica Nelson

Dark Faith InvocationsTitle: Dark Faith: Invocations

Author: Maurice Broaddus & Jerry Gordon, ed.

Publisher: Apex Publications

Length: 292 pages

Price: $15.95

ISBN: 978-1-937009-07-6

 

Not all of us are religious, but we’ve all got faith in something. Whether it be a god, another person, our own selves, or just faith in the knowledge that in the end, things will be alright, faith is what keeps us going when we have nothing else left. In this collection of twenty-six stories edited by Maurice Broaddus and Jerry Gordon, authors such as Jay Lake, Lavie Tidhar, Jennifer Pelland, and Mike Resnick walk us through the highs and lows of the human experience with tales of the successes and failures of our myriad faiths.

Maurice Broaddus is the author of the fiction series The Knights of Breton Court, the novel Orgy of Souls, and numerous pieces of short fiction.

Jerry Gordon has also published a number of short fiction works, and his book Breaking the World will be available from Apex Publications this year. Together, Broaddus and Gordon also edited the first Dark Faith anthology, also published by Apex.

In ‘Subletting God’s Head,’ author Tom Piccirilli graces readers with the story of Eddie, a young man who is, for $2600 a month, subletting “a three-bedroom walk-up on the top floor of God’s head, sandwiched between two five-story brownstones on West Sixty-eighth.” Fast-moving and easy-reading, ‘Subletting God’s Head‘ is an entertaining story. Piccirilli‘s writing is strong, whimsical but firm, flippant but serious, and absolutely blasphemous in its down-to-bare-tacks approach to bringing out the humor in what is a very serious situation to many. “[Eddie] doesn’t blame Adam and Eve for fucking up,” we’re told. “They were just doing the human thing. It was all God’s fault anyway. You let two child-like beings loose in the world and then tell them, Okay, you can touch anything BUT NOT THIS GIANT TREE RIGHT HERE IN THE VERY CENTER OF THE GARDEN. You can eat anything EXCEPT FOR THIS BIG TASTY DELICIOUS YUMMY REFRESHING RED APPLE, DON’T IT LOOK GOOD.”

Much of Piccirilli‘s irreverence is shocking in its audacity, but I suspect this is to get readers to examine their own thoughts and motivations, how they think of and treat other people. Above all, readers will find a perfect description of mankind’s struggle to live in the shadow of a religion which many believe is often inhospitable to human nature. We find other comforts. We enjoy the little things in life as their own rewards. We love. We find our place and live our lives, and if the Big Man we’re renting space from doesn’t like it, our choices are 1) live with that, or 2) spend our lives living for someone else, regardless of our own ideas, loves, wishes, comforts … our own selves.

Jay Lake gives us an inside view of life with cancer in ‘The Cancer Catechism.’ I told myself I couldn’t focus on this story in this review, because it struck a very personal chord. Cancer took one of the most important people in my life away from me less than a year and a half ago. Now that it’s review time, though, I can’t bring myself to overlook it, so you’ll just have to bear with me being unprofessional for just a moment.

Jay Lake has been fighting cancer since 2008. It started in his colon and has since metastasized to his lungs and liver, despite multiple surgeries and rounds of chemotherapy. In ‘The Cancer Catechism,’ Lake is therefore able to deliver to us a terribly moving story from a very personal viewpoint. With writing that is always clear and to the point, Lake describes what it’s like to live with cancer, why he fights, and what gets him through. I don’t think it would be possible for me to ever thank him enough for detailing this view, and letting me see the other side of the struggle someone I loved so deeply went through. In my thirty-seven years, I think this is the very first horror story to ever make me cry. Repeatedly. And if you intend to argue that nonfiction about cancer isn’t really Horror, please don’t. I have seen the Devil. His name is Cancer, and it is horrifying.

Back to being professional …

Multiple stories in Dark Faith: Invocations teach us that sometimes, faith isn’t religious, it’s just what gets you from day to day, such as in Lavie Tidhar‘s ‘Robotnik.’ Other stories, such as Elizabeth Twist‘s ‘Kill the Buddha,’ show us that sometimes, the faith we want  isn’t necessarily the faith we have, and when we see others who do have the faith we want, we do our best to destroy it, to smooth over our own insecurities.

All in all, Dark Faith: Invocations is a fantastically written, well-edited anthology. The stories range so broadly across the spectrum of human faith that just about anyone should be able to find some they identify with. Each and every story triggers deep, introspective thought and encourages the reader to examine their own beliefs and the ways they move through the world. I would highly recommend this one to any mature reader who enjoys haunting, beautiful, and sometimes downright silly stories. But I warn you: it will make you take a good look at yourself, the life you lead, and the life you want to lead. If this isn’t something you’re prepared to do, well … then this book is even more for you.

 

Glitter & Madness: Let’s Get the Party Kickstarted

Posted in Apex Book Company, Arts & Entertainment, Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Labor of Love, Science Fiction with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 17, 2013 by Jessica Nelson

Love to donate to worthy Kickstarter projects? Always wanted to donate but never knew where to start? I’ve got just the thing for you: Glitter & Madness, a planned anthology to be edited by Lynne M. Thomas, Michael Damian Thomas, and John Klima, to be published by Apex Book Company.

Glitter & Madness will include stories about Roller Derby, nightclubs, glam aliens (who doesn’t love an ET with good fashion sense?), literal party monsters, drugs, sex, glitter, and debauchery. Yeah, debauchery! Seriously, though, I can’t wait to read this book. It needs to become a reality.

When award-winning editors chat on Twitter, nothing is just a simple conversation. This is where ideas are born. From the press release:

“It all started on Twitter,” says Lynne M. Thomas. “John Klima mentioned that he wanted to throw a glitter party for all the science fiction and fantasy people he knows. Michael showed John a link to The Rollercade. We decided that instant to combine two fun ideas: a glow-in-the-dark roller skating party and a book about the secret history of 20th Century nightlife/party culture.”

Writers such as Seanan McGuire, Alan DeNiro, Amal El-Mohtar, Daryl Gregory, Damien Walters Grintalis, Maria Dahvana Headley, Kat Howard, Jennifer Pelland, Tim Pratt, Cat Rambo, Tansy Rayner Roberts, Diana Rowland, Sofia Samatar, David J. Schwartz, and William Shunn have all made commitments for inclusion in the anthology should funding be successful, and there will be an open reading period to find other worthy inclusions, as well.

Funding from the Kickstarter project will ensure all contributing authors get paid pro rates. It will also cover editing and layouts, a Rollercade Glow Party at Lone Star Con III, and promotional efforts.

Heard enough? If you want to read this as badly as I do, or if you want to help me be able to read it someday, the Kickstarter campaign can be found at http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/johnklima/glitter-and-madness-the-speculative-nightclub-anth . What are you waiting for? GO!

 

Book Review: Nexus, by Ramez Naam

Posted in Angry Robot Army, Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fiction, Science Fiction with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 16, 2013 by Jessica Nelson

Nexus CoverTitle: Nexus

Author: Ramez Naam

Publisher: Angry Robot, December 2012

Length: 464 pages

Price: $14.99 US/ $16.99 CA

ISBN: 978-0-85766-294-1

 

In the year 2040, governments are either embracing the new possibilities brought by nanotechnology or waging war against it. Often, waging war against a thing means using the very thing you’re waging war against, keeping it for oneself while trying to keep it out of the hands of the general populace.

Kaden Lane is a doctorate student at the University of California, San Francisco. He and his friends are up-and-coming new voices in the field of neuroscience. But when Kade and his friends are caught using and improving the banned nano-drug Nexus in their research, they’re pulled into a war they never intended to fight.

As various governments fight to keep the general populace and other governments from using new technologies to evolve into Transhuman and Posthuman beings, powerful new laws and international agreements are written. Human rights are redefined,  liberties taken away.

Ramez Naam is an expert in the technological field. He has been involved in the production of some of the most widely used software in the world, as well as nanotechnology research. Naam is an advocate for human biological enhancements, and was even awarded the HG Wells Award for Contributions to Transhumanism by the World Transhumanist Association. His previously published nonfiction work, More Than Human: Embracing the Promise of Biological Enhancement, supports his advocacy of these enhancements.

Given Naam’s background, it should come as no surprise that Nexus is a brilliant story, filled with smart, well-informed opinions from both sides of the debate on the ethics of biological enhancements; and of course, the concerns of those who fear unknown quantities simply because the future is unknown are covered, as well. Naam’s experience with emerging technologies lends realism to the scientific work carried out and studied in Nexus, ensuring that all of it is believable, and making a strong bond between the reader and those being vilified by people in power.

Naam’s writing is strong, clear and concise, with perfect ebb and flow in pacing. Readers are allowed to read at their leisure throughout the bulk of the story, but are pulled along at breakneck pace during action scenes filled with excellent tension and potential dangers ready to explode at any minute. Characters are wholly believable, with complete personalities and understandable back-stories that enable readers to relate to each and every one of them, in turn, but always coming back around to root for the protagonists in the end. Throughout Nexus, new twists and turns are introduced with new characters, each with their own motivations, causing readers to invest heavily in getting to know each of them and explore their own thoughts on each character’s motivations before deciding whether they are in agreement or disagreement with their views. This is no easy feat for a writer, but Naam makes it look like nothing in the world could be more natural.

At the heart of Nexus is a deep exploration of the course we as a society are currently on and where it is bringing us. In Nexus, one need only be suspected of being in breach of the Emerging Technological Threats Act to be scooped up by Homeland Defense’s Emerging Risks Directorate, or the ERD. These suspects have no right to a lawyer, no right to a trial by jury. They can be detained indefinitely, subject to the whims of a few select people; they just simply disappear one day, the story of their arrest appearing in the news as a government victory over potential terroristic threats to national security. Sound familiar? It should. These are the very provisions in the recent US National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, that caused such an uproar with activists online and was sadly dismissed as inconsequential by most members of the general public.

In so much of the scientific progress we make, the potential for abuse exists. With each new discovery, we must ask ourselves anew, “What price are we willing to pay to make this leap? Is this my decision to make for all of humankind?” And this is the crux, the main theme of Nexus. With technology moving and evolving so quickly that we, as a society, cannot keep up, science becomes as dangerous as it is beneficial. But which outweighs the other? Who gets to decide these things and enforce them? All-powerful government agencies who can strip basic rights away from human beings on a whim? The folly of that is as ludicrous as there being no oversight at all. As with all things, there must be balance. Too bad that’s something humankind has never been too good at …

Parts of this story are truly terrifying, which is really saying something, as it isn’t a dystopian future Naam paints, but the future reason and logic tell us to expect based on our current course; there is no reason to believe this isn’t what our future holds. Only if a willingness to explore and fully understand new things trumps fear can we ever hope to change this. One of the most moving and powerful scenes in the book sums it up nicely. In part:

“Power is best when it’s distributed most broadly. That’s what Democracy means. That’s what freedom means. The right to determine your individual destiny belongs in your hands, and no one else’s.”

Nexus is a story everyone should read. As a cautionary tale, it will likely be considered in league with Orwell’s 1984 and Huxley’s Brave New World in the years to come. The question is, will we learn from this one?

Magazines! Goodies! Free Books! Oh, My!

Posted in Apex Book Company, Apex Magazine, Arts & Entertainment, Books, Contests, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Occult & Supernatural, Science Fiction with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on October 31, 2012 by Jessica Nelson

A lot of you know that I write a monthly blog column for Apex Book Company called The In/Human Element: Creatures, Species, and Societies of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror, and How We Relate to Them. A lot of you read that column each month, and some of you are even kind enough to share links to it on social networking sites. (Thank you for that!) What some of you may not know, is that a lot of the subject matter for those articles is inspired directly by stories and interviews in Apex Magazine. It’s a great magazine, and I feel so lucky to be writing for such a fantastic team.

So what does this have to do with anything, you might ask? Well, Apex Magazine is currently running a subscription drive, and they’re offering tons of bonus goodies and chances at even more bonus prizes to people who are subscribing during the drive. Free samplers, books (even some signed books and ARCs!), Apex necklaces, even whole swag bags! And some of the books are by authors whose books I’ve reviewed right here on AllwaysUnmended, such as Lavie Tidhar.

So? What are you waiting for? If you want to know what Apex Magazine is all about (hint: if you like the books I review here, you’ll love Apex Magazine’s speculative fiction-y goodness), there’s no better time than right now to subscribe.

Click here to read more of the awesome things you could get with your new subscription, and to find links to subscribe!

Book Review: Broken, by AE Rought

Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fiction, Horror, Occult & Supernatural, Paranormal Romance, Science Fiction, Strange Chemistry, YA with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on October 8, 2012 by Jessica Nelson

Title: Broken

Author: AE Rought

Publisher: Strange Chemistry, January 2013

Length: 384 pages

Price: $9.99 US/ $10.99 CAN

ISBN: 978-1-908844-32-3

Seventeen-year old Emma Gentry has been floating through life in a depressed daze since her boyfriend, Daniel, died in a tragic accident four months ago. She’s finally beginning to make some progress in letting him go when newcomer Alex Franks shows up. Emma and Alex have a strange magnetism neither of them can explain, and the more they get to know each other, the more Emma Gentry is convinced, something just isn’t right with Alex Franks. When Emma visits the Franks family estate, what she finds makes her question not only her strength, but her sanity.

Broken isn’t A.E. Rought’s first novel, but it is her first YA novel, and her first novel under this pen name. The author has previously published romance novels, since 2006, but decided to enter the world of YA writing because it’s what she, herself enjoys reading. Frankly, I’m glad she did.

Rought writes a good tale, with a practiced pen. The quality of writing is fantastic, with believable characters and a storyline that moves, making it easy to sink into. Every time I was forced to put the book down, I thought about it until I got to pick it up again. There are numerous nods to classic sci-fi and horror stories and their authors throughout the book, from Shelley High School to Emma’s cat, Renfield. The author does a good job of keeping the tone of the book just on the dark side, even though most of it takes place in and around a high school, and she writes nightmares exceedingly well, always surreal, haunting, moving. Even the humor is well-placed, making me laugh out loud unexpectedly more than once, without ever upsetting the overall tone of the book.

The cruelty of gossip and rumors in a high school environment is a major theme in Broken, but Emma is not the type of character to be victimized by it. When she chooses not to ignore flung insults, she gives back as good as she gets, if not even better, making her a stronger female character that a lot of readers will be able to identify with and perhaps gain some strength from. From time to time, she’s even gone so far as to feed the rumor mill, recognizing it for what it is and playing with it just for fun – an idea that, if properly executed, could empower a lot of young adults who are trying to wend their way through high school with their sanity and sense of self-worth intact.

More than anything, Broken asks questions about self-identity and how we identify with others. What is it that makes each of us uniquely us? None of us wants to be just like someone else. We take pride in our small differences, our idiosyncrasies that we usually look to for proof that we are individuals, that we have something of value that no one other person can offer in one package.

Broken is one of those books you wish didn’t have to end, but you find yourself racing towards the last page despite yourself. I would recommend Broken to readers who have a love of YA, science fiction and horror, paranormal romance, or just a great story to sink into on a cold winter weekend. The expected release date is January 8, 2013 in the US and Canada, January 3, 2013 in the UK, Australia, and on eBook. Add this one to your Goodreads lists; you don’t want to forget it.

Book Review: Redshirts, by John Scalzi

Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Science Fiction, Tor Books with tags , , , , , , , , , , on August 17, 2012 by Jessica Nelson

Title: Redshirts

Author: John Scalzi

Publisher: Tor Books, 2012

Length: 320 pages

Price: $24.99

ISBN13: 978-0-7653-1699-8

The Universal Union Capital Ship Intrepid is a weird ship. It doesn’t take long for Ensign Andrew Dahl to figure out there’s something strange going on, even if this is his first posting as a Space Fleet member. When an odd, ill-kempt man comes out of the cargo tunnels with the nonsensical warning to “avoid the narrative,” things start making even less sense as they begin to make more sense. Dahl and his crewmates have a hard time grasping the reality of their situation, but it’s up to them to stop it.

Redshirts is the third stand-alone novel by award-winning author John Scalzi. Scalzi has also authored a number of series books, short fiction, and non-fiction, such as Old Man’s War, The Ghost Brigades, and The Android’s Dream. His blog, Whatever, is a favorite with fans, and has been the basis of his books You’re Not Fooling Anyone When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop: Scalzi on Writing, and Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: Selected Writing, 1998-2008.

John Scalzi is a master storyteller, with humor oozing out every finger. Redshirts was a delight to read. The story is brilliantly written, with clear imagery and perfect comic timing. I can’t imagine any Trekkie not loving this book. Jam-packed with serious laugh-out-loud humor, Redshirts is a glorious work of fan(tastic) fiction. The premise of the book is not a totally new idea, but Scalzi has found a totally new and wonderful way of presenting it.

Hidden away in all the comic goodness of Redshirts, though, are some priceless nuggets of wisdom. Seriously real, existential topics are covered in such a way as to make readers go from tears of laughter to tears of nostalgia and sadness in the blink of an eye. When one character is telling another the importance if doing something with his life, with the admonition, “You don’t win by getting through all your life not having done anything,” any reader who has had a difficult time figuring out where their life was going (and really, who hasn’t?) is going to feel a twinge. It’s sadness and gratitude and identification of the highest order, capable of inducing real reflection into one’s own life. For a book rife with comedy, adding these tidbits without disrupting the flow isn’t something just anyone could pull off, but Scalzi does it, again and again.

The message really hits home that it’s the choices we make that lead us to where we are. This is obvious when it’s spelled out, of course, but in the busy-ness of life, we need to slow down and think about that more often. As Scalzi’s characters must make a conscious decision to guide their own lives to where they want to be, so must we all. Sometimes it takes a slap upside the head, an unreal life situation we can’t believe we’ve gotten ourselves into, to see just how far off track we’ve gone from where we want to be.

Redshirts is a great book a lot of readers will find something to love in, and it’s a really easy read. I recommend it highly to anyone (probably mid-teen or older, for slight sexual humor) who loves science fiction and fantasy, particularly of the Star Trek and Stargate variety. Of all the books I’ve read so far this year, Redshirts is one of the best.

Book Review: One Hundred Years of Vicissitude, by Andrez Bergen

Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Book Reviews, Books, Fiction, Perfect Edge Books, Science Fiction, Slipstream with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 31, 2012 by Jessica Nelson

Title: One Hundred Years of Vicissitude

Author: Andrez Bergen

Publisher: Perfect Edge Books, October 26, 2012

Length: 268 pages

Price: $18.95

ISBN: 9781780995

One Hundred Years of Vicissitude is the second novel of author Andrez Bergen. It both is and isn’t a follow-up book to his first novel, Tobacco-Stained Mountain Goat. I say it both is and isn’t, because the novel takes a path less traveled as far as sequels go; it follows along what happens to TSMG’s antagonist, Wolram E. Deaps, after the end of that tale, rather than continuing on to tell more of the story of Floyd and Nina. It is difficult to review this book – or indeed, discuss it at all – without spoiling a bit of the end of TSMG, so if you have not yet read that book and plan to, I would suggest reading it before reading further about this book. That said …

Wolram E. Deaps is pretty sure he’s dead. He’s found himself wandering a silent, lonely road in some sort of purgatory, drifting aimlessly for time untold. Until he finds himself at the door of a beautiful Japanese geisha named Kohana. Kohana believes they are now ‘Gaki’ – “hungry ghosts” – “Spirits of jealous or greedy people, cursed with an insatiable desire for the good things in life.” Unable to help himself, Deaps finds himself following along behind Kohana as she revisits the events of her long life on Earth, eventually coming to revisit some of his own.

As I’ve mentioned, One Hundred Years of Vicissitude both is and is not a sequel. I would say Tobacco-Stained Mountain Goat is perhaps not a necessary prerequisite read, but highly recommended, to understand little bits of conversation that mention past events. That said, readers of Tobacco-Stained Mountain Goat should not come to One Hundred Years of Vicissitude expecting more of the same. It is a completely different book, both in content and in feel. Whereas TSMG was narrated by and told from Floyd’s perspective, Floyd has only bit parts in 100 Years, barely glimpsed on the sidelines. Here, the story is told by and from the perspective of Deaps, complete with his own style and way of speaking.  Whereas TSMG was decidedly post-apocalyptic science fiction, 100 Years crosses bridges between literary fiction and science fiction, bringing it into the realm of Slipstream, although perhaps maybe not as surreal in feel as that label would imply.

One Hundred Years of Vicissitude is not an action-packed adventure you can race through in a single evening (at least, not easily). The story reads slowly, like classic literary fiction. Much like Charles DickensA Christmas Carol, readers follow along with what is basically a conversation between two people remembering long lives passed. In this book, though, Kohana plays something of a dual role, both the Ghost of Christmas Past and Scrooge at once, and Deaps is Scrooge as well. The characters themselves reference the tale a number of times, bringing a touch of humor to a dark story of war, murder and lost loves.

Bergen has taken the short time between his two novels to really hone his writing. The pace of One Hundred Years of Vicissitude may be slow, but it is consistent, and the writing is always clear and concise. Even when characters are jumping from one point in time to another, the flow of the story never falters, and readers are treated to a lot of little-known facts about Japanese history set in fictional tone. This, friends, is what good literary fiction reads like.

As in his previous novel, Bergen continues to drop little things for readers familiar with his life and work to find – a book here, a character there, an allusion to his recording company. Much like Stephen King’s many cameo appearances, discovering one of these little nuggets always adds a little fun to the story, even if it isn’t really part of the story itself.

The most important message One Hundred Years of Vicissitude delivers is one of change. No matter how much or how often we think our lives will never improve or change, change is the one thing that is inevitable. We are born, we grow, we experience the world around us as we age. We form and lose relationships. We experience joys and pains, and we die. Nothing ever stays the same. This is the very nature of being human, and being part of this world. Nothing lasts forever, and the longer you live, the more you go out and experience life, the more changes you will see in your lifetime. Here, too, lies the admonition to value our elders, not just for who they are in and of themselves, but for what they’ve experienced in their own lifetimes, the things they’ve seen and done that we may have never known about.

All in all, One Hundred Years of Vicissitude is a wonderful tale of the lives of two people, intersecting and intertwining in unexpected places. It is a tale of the things they’ve seen and done in their lives, and their attempts at growth and understanding. I would recommend it to anyone who enjoys literary fiction, particularly of the Dickensian slant; fans of A Christmas Carol and A Tale of Two Cities will find much to love here.

Angry Robot Clonefiles … BRILLIANT!

Posted in Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Science Fiction with tags , , , , on July 3, 2012 by Jessica Nelson

If you’re anything like me, you’ve probably wondered why the book industry has yet to catch up with the movie industry by including a digital file with each physical purchase. Ladies and gents, at long last, that time is here. Beginning July 4, 2012, if you buy a physical Angry Robot title at Mostly Books of Abington, Oxfordshire, you will be emailed a digital copy of the book in the format of your choice.

After the beginning trial at Mostly Books, Angry Robot plans to continue the program, dubbed Clonefiles, at additional independant bookstores. If you run an indie bookstore and wish to be added to the Clonefiles program, contact Roland Briscoe at indie@angryrobotbooks.com.

As a reviewer, my experiences with Angry Robot have been nothing but fantastic, and it thrills me to see them leading the charge at this end of the digital revolution. I can’t wait for the rest of the industry to catch up.

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