Category Archives: Books

Just a quick update

I thought I’d scribble a little post about what’s going on with Spacebuckler, since that’s why I actually have this blog in the first place. And you’re dying to know, right?

We are, officially, on submission. That means my super-agent, Sara Megibow, has submitted my revised, edited, sparkling manuscript to a number of editors at publishing houses. They, in turn, will read it and decide whether or not they want to acquire it. So far, we’ve had one outright rejection and one that was not quite outright, but not a yes. Nevertheless, I’ve found the editors’ comments encouraging — apparently, I can indeed write. I get the sense that Spacebuckler is a good idea, and I’m confident it’ll end up on a bookshelf near you…eventually.

Meantime, I’m off to sunny southern California on Saturday for a week at the day job and two weekends of fun with the family. There will be beach bicycling, Kogi truck stalking and Sea World Shamu sightings. Oh, and be sure to drop by early next week. You could be in for a…Surprise.

 

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Exploration! Sponsored by…

The modern face of exploration. And marketing.

Talk about corporate synergies. Recently, an underwater archaeological team uncovered famed privateer Henry Morgan’s flagship, the Satisfaction, near Panama. Interestingly enough, this team had run out of money earlier in its survey. Riding to the rescue was…Captain Morgan. Not the three-centuries dead pirate. The rum maker, subsidiary of multinational beverage conglomerate Diageo.

We ascribe a great deal of romance to exploration, with images of sailors scanning the horizon with a glass, or a starship captain peering into the unknown on the viewscreen. But you know what really powers exploration? Profits. Columbus didn’t ship out for China due to a hankering for dim sum. He wanted to find a quicker trade route, and thus reap the rewards from the Spanish crown. Morgan was working for the English crown, which was competing with the Spanish for the spoils of the New World. And let’s remember that the East India Trading Company did plenty of exploring — and exploiting — in its 275-year, highly profitable history. Continue reading

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The long and winding narrator

A ripping good yarn...with a really chatty narrator

If something can be said in five words, trust a Spaniard to say it in five pages.

I’m half-Spanish, so I feel somewhat allowed to make such a sweeping and likely incorrect judgment about the greats of Spanish-language literature. But if you’ve read folks like Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Miguel de Unamuno or even Cervantes himself, you know what I’m talking about. The tradition of narration in Spanish literature is just very different from what English readers are used to.

I mention this because I’m reading The Map of Time by Felix J. Palma, an up-and-coming Spanish author. The Map of Time is one heck of a ride, a Victorian science-fiction work that hews closely to the traditions of Jules Verne without going headlong into steampunk territory. And one of the things that sets this book apart is the narration. Continue reading

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Hey, authors! What about traditional media?

Remember newspapers? They're still quite useful.

Authors have to do self-promotion. I get that. You’re reading some of it RIGHT NOW. (How very meta.) Yet most advice to authors on this topic has to do with electronic social media. There’s very little advice about going to traditional media outlets with your story.

Now, I may be biased, having spent many years of my youth working for Old Media. And let’s be clear: Even with all my contacts and experience, it’s unlikely I’ll be featured in The New York Times or on NPR. (At least, not right away.) But millions of people still get their news and info from smaller traditional outlets, and I know I’m planning to take advantage of that. Continue reading

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How to build a world

So I had an interesting mini-conversation on Twitter this morning with regard to world-building in science-fiction and fantasy, and I thought it worth expanding beyond 140 characters. After all, creating entire new universes is pretty exciting. But it’s also a lot of work.

I have two universes in my book: a 22nd century future extrapolated from our present day, and an alternate late-18th century universe in which sailing ships travel between the planets of our solar system. So what does the 22nd century look like? And how exactly do sailing ships in the 18th century travel between planets? I’m a writer, so the short answer is pretty much, “Because I said so.” Unfortunately, like parenting, it’s rarely that easy. Continue reading

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What an astronomer’s memoir can say about writing

Poor PlutoIt’s pretty rare for me to take a book review to task, especially if A) it’s not my book being reviewed; and B) it’s in The New York Times Book Review. I mean, seriously, it’s The New York Times. In my experience, they tend to know what they’re talking about.

But this past weekend, I saw a review that I really disagreed with — and in the interest of full disclosure, I haven’t even read the book yet (though it’s on my list). Instead, I was surprised that the reviewer didn’t quite seem to grok the kind of book he was reviewing. Continue reading

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