Dual Memory ebook only $2.99!

On Sunday, August 13, the ebook version of Dual Memory will be only $2.99 everyplace where ebooks are sold.

Dual Memory will also be part of Kindle Editor’s Pick Goldbox.

Here’s an excerpt from Chapter 2:

When I was a little boy, one day the camp held an art class for children, what I later learned was supposed to be art therapy. An aid worker in much nicer clothing than ours asked us to express our greatest fears. Paper and boxes of old crayons had been set out on the tables. I had a lot of fears, but even then I was smart enough to know it wouldn’t make me feel better to draw them. I wanted to make beautiful art like a real artist, but I also knew I should obey, so I drew stick-thin people standing in a line. They were waiting for rations, and we never had enough to eat.

The aid workers had brought their own food, nice food. I’d overheard grown-ups grumble. When the aid workers saw my drawing, they told me what a great little artist I was. They liked the picture so much that they kept it, so to get even, I stole some crayons. I could make more art, real art, and I did, as beautiful as I could, even if I was surrounded by ugliness and disaster, even if I wasn’t supposed to.

I’ll be at FanExpo Chicago on Saturday

How do science fiction authors predict the future? Do you want to write a book but don’t know where to start? Cat Rambo, J.S. Dewes, and I will try to answer these and other questions for you at two panels at FanExpo Chicago on Saturday, August 12, at the Douglas E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont. You can also enjoy cosplay, celebrities, comics, anime, shopping, fan meet-ups, workshops, artists, tattoo alley, family-centered events, and gaming..

Writing the Future with Sci-fi Authors, 12:30 p.m. in Fandom Panels Room 11. Join authors Cat Rambo (You Sexy Thing, Devil’s Gun), J.S. Dewes (Divide series, Rubicon), and Sue Burke (Semiosis, Dual Memory) with moderator Meg Bonney as we chat about our books, inspirations, and building strange new worlds in science fiction. Plus, bring your books and stay after the panel for a free signing.

Sci-fi Authors Signing, 1:30 p.m. in Fandom Panels Room 11. Cat Rambo, J.S. Dewes, and Sue Burke.

Ask Me Anything: Writing Advice from Science Fiction Authors, 4:00 p.m. in Workshops Room 4. Want to write a book but don’t know where to start? Have a question about the age-old debate of plotting vs. pantsing? Or maybe you just want to know more about where inspiration comes from. Then this panel is for you. Join authors Cat Rambo, J.S. Dewes, and Sue Burke with moderator Meg Bonney and get your burning questions answered.

My Goodreads review of “Arrokoth” by Mia Dalia

Arrokoth

Arrokoth by Mia Dalia
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Full disclosure: The author sent me this novella to see if I’d give a blurb for its cover — with the understanding that I’d only say what I really thought, and if I didn’t like it, she’d get nothing from me. But I couldn’t put it down. Here’s my blurb:

A story of hope, betrayal, and love with the intensity only science fiction can deliver.

I want to explain what I mean by “only science fiction can deliver.” Only science fiction can deal with enormous questions such as the survival of humankind, which this story is about, but that’s not the core of the story. At its core are a father and son. By an accident of science fictional fate, the father is pretty average and the son is a super-genius. They struggle to respect and love each other despite the divide between them. At times they can barely speak simply because they aren’t on the same level and have little in common, which they understand, yet they never give up trying to connect with each other.

Add to that, the Earth is in deep ecological trouble, and the son might be able to save humanity — another big strain on their relationship. In the face of adversity and betrayal, they are there for each other, aware of how little they can truly share besides mutual honest respect.

Arrayed against a life-and-death science fiction struggle, this is a story about abiding hope and love.

View all my reviews

Fifty years later, we’re getting together again

My high school graduating class, 1973 South Milwaukee Senior High School, will hold its 50th class reunion on July 29. A half-century!

How much has time changed us? Here’s an article I wrote for Reunions Magazine about our 20th reunion. Even then, some of us had already become unexpectedly different.…

(Photo: From the 1973 Bay Mist yearbook: Salutatorian Ron Wadley and valedictorian Marilyn Stroik lead the graduation ceremony march.)

***

We came out of curiosity. Two decades earlier, in caps and gowns, we had marched 435 strong out of our high school graduation ceremony, heading into a hot, muggy June evening and into our separate, uncertain destinies as adults.

On an equally hot, muggy July evening two decades later, in suits and cocktail dresses, we walked into a hotel banquet hall to see what had happened to us. A committee had worked for almost a year and had located all but 30 of our classmates. Of those, about a third came to the reunion. With spouses, that made a sea of 280 faces at dinner. We could have drowned.

We were rescued by name tags. After a score of years, we had forgotten too many names. Some of us had studied our yearbooks to prepare for this reconnection, but those old books piqued our curiosity more than they jogged our memories.

Beyond that, even in 1973, no one knew every one of our classmates. With so many students, we fell into separate circles, even cliques. We had jocks, greasers, freaks, and “status” (the high achiever, class leader types). Some of these cliques and circles had no use for each other.

Those feelings faded away over the years. Animosities were forgotten as we reacquainted ourselves. Every familiar face, no matter how vague the recollection, had become a friend. We all shared the same long, intense years during the creep toward maturity, and although our paths had diverged, we met with more in common than ever.

“What do you do? Where do you live? Are you married? Any kids?” — simple questions became the start of renewed bonds. We found common ground both from the old days and from the intervening years, and talked and talked and talked. Husbands and wives talked of the happiness of their marriages. Parents talked of their children in terms of joy and amazement.

We talked of careers. We had become pilots, pathologists, housewives, factory workers, police officers, artists, and office workers. There were surprises. Lighthearted teens had heard the calling to God’s work, class clowns and scholars alike were writing plays, and tiny threads of interest had grown into devoted vocations or avocations.

The amazed talk behind the backs of fellow classmates, however, centered on one thing: looks. A few people looked almost exactly as they had in school. Some others had changed beyond recognition.

In fact, many had blossomed. There were men with strong, sculpted faces, and gorgeous women in glamorous dresses who turned heads and confounded old friends who remembered them as — well, not like that.

We saw that our classmates — close friends and former rivals alike — had journeyed to their own place in the world, and on that hot, long July evening, we were reassured. Some had traveled farther away than we ever expected, but not out of reach from one another.

The scene after the end of ‘Dual Memory’

If you’ve read the novel Dual Memory, you know how it ends — and then what happens? For fun, I wrote what might be the next scene. You can read it here.

If there’s a next scene, is there a next book? Honestly, that depends on sales of the first book, and bigger sales are always more encouraging when it comes time to make a hard business calculation. If you enjoyed the novel and want a sequel, recommend Dual Memory to your friends and leave a review wherever you can.

The best sales technique is word of mouth: person-to-person buzz. You can accomplish what no one else can.