Category: Science Fiction
A Loss in the Family and This Week at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
A Loss At Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words has lost one of its wonderful reviewers. Paul Berg, known through his reviews here as Paul B, died suddenly in late March, leaving a void for us, his many other friends everywhere and especially his grieving family.
Paul was one of the reviewers that had been with Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words almost from the beginning, he and I laughingly “fighting” over our love of the same science fiction stories and wolf shifters. When Kendall McKenna’s series popped up and we both began to read it, yep, the emails flew between us as we compared notes on characters and stories (not the first author or series we did this with). Our thoughts were almost always on the same wavelength.
When I thought that he might want to write a blog for STRW, he already had one that he had been meaning to suggest. That blog became Paul’s Paranormal Portfolio, a column he intended to enlarge in the coming months to include graphic novels and serial stories. I can’t begin to tell you how saddened I am that he will never share his excitement for those formats and the LGBTQIA science fiction/fantasy/supernatural stories they represent with everyone, myself included.
Beside his love of books, Paul loved Backgammon and he was great at it. When he wasn’t writing or reading, he was playing (“yes, Melanie, I’m writing that review right now at the tournament”). He died at a tournament playing a game he loved.
I have included more information about Paul today on a separate post. His backgammon team, Flint Area Backgammon Club, has a Go Fund Me link to help pay for the rest of his funeral costs which were larger than expected. Any assistance will be appreciated.
I will be running one of Paul’s Paranormal Portfolios today. I’m still so shocked and saddened. Paul leaves a void here at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words, in the LGBTQIA book review community and everywhere that cannot be filled. How I will miss him.
♥︎
This Week At Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Sunday, April 9:
- A Loss in the Family and This Week at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
- In Memoriam: Paul Berg
- Paul’s Paranormal Portfolio Revisited
Monday, April 10:
- DSP GUEST POST Andrew Grey on Heart Unseen
- Review Tour – My Name Was Karl by Daniel Mitton
- Riptide Tour & Giveaway: For a Good Time, Call (Bluewater Bay) by Anne Tenino and EJ Russell
- An Ali Review Embers by Kate Sherwood
- A MelanieM Review: At Attention (Out of Uniform #2) by Annabeth Albert
- An Ali Review: My Name Was Karl by Daniel Mitton
- An Alisa Release Day Review: Seashores of Old Mexico by BA Tortuga
Tuesday, April 11:
- Blog Tour: Saved by KL Roman
- Blog Tour: Tyler Buckspan by Jere M Fishback
- DSP GUEST POST Nic Starr on Runaway
- A Alisa Review: An Unexpected Shot by Caitlin Ricci & A.J. Marcus
- A Caryn Review: The Star of Versailles by Catherine Curzon & Willow Winsham
- A Jeri Review: Embrace The Fire by Felice Stevens
- A VVivacious Review: Who I am When I’m with You by Tamryn Eradani
Wednesday, April 12:
- 1 Week Tour for At Attention by Annabeth Albert
- Release Blitz: Starting From Scratch (Housemates #5) by Jay Northcote
- Release Blitz Tour and Giveaway – Moments by RJ Scott
- The Necromancer’s Dance by S J Himes Audiobook Tour and Giveaway
- A Julia Release Day Review: New Lease by B. G. Thomas
- A MelanieM Release Day Review: Mild to Wild in Massachusetts by Paul Walkingsky
- A MelanieM Release Day Review: Runaway (World of Love) by Nic Starr
Thursday, April 13:
- DSP GUEST POST BA Tortuga on Seashores of Old Mexico
- DSP GUEST POST Shira Anthony on Forgotten Paradise
- RIPTIDE TOUR Hopeless Romantic by Francis Gideon
- Book Blitz: Take a Chance by Megs Pritchard
- A Jeri Review: Golden Dancer by Tara Lain
- A Julia Review: Certainly, Possibly, You (Sucre Coeur #2) by Lissa Reed
- A Lila Review: Hopeless Romantic by Francis Gideon
Friday, April 14:
- Cover Reveal Blitz: Brush with Catastrophe by Tara Lain
- BLOG TOUR: An Officer’s Submission by Christa Tomlinson
- DSP GUEST POST Laura Lascarso on The Bravest Thing
- INTERLUDE PRESS TOUR: Huntsmen by Michelle Osgood
- A Free Dreamer Recent Release Review: The Android and the Thief by Wendy Rathbone
- An Alisa Release Day Review: Brush with Catastrophe (The Aloysius Tales #2) by Tara Lain
- An Alisa Review: The Things We Do by J.D. Walker
Saturday, April 15:
- A MelanieM Release Day Review: Forgotten Paradise by Shira Anthony
- A Paul B Review (Paul’s last review): Sealed With Acceptance (Signed, Sealed, Delivered #5) by Caitlin Ricci and A.J. Marcus
- A Jeri Review: At Attention by Annabelle Albert
Hello April! New Beginnings and Reviewers at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Hello April
April has arrived and with it new arrivals at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words. We have been looking to add new reviewers here and have been very lucky to have two new people recently join us. What a great way to sail into April! In addition, we have a preview of a reviewer blog from Free Dreamer and two giveaway announcements too. And no, there’s no April’s Fools Jokes to be found anywhere! Far too busy for such sass!
New Beginnings Announcements ~ New Reviewers!
We have another new reviewer starting at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words. Please welcome Kai, another international member of our family. You’ll be hearing from Kai in a couple of weeks. In the meantime, here’s a short bio from Kai herself:
Meet Kai
Our Reviewer Adventures!
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words Giveaway Announcements
📚Free Dreamer Book Fair Adventures Blog Giveaway.
Broken in Silence by Katze Snow
Beta Test by Annabeth Albert
Connection Error by Annabeth Albert
Grayson by Morgan Campbell
This Week at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Sunday, April 2:
- Hello April! New Beginnings and Reviewers at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
- This Week at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
- Alina Popescu’s Free Books for Five Days Giveaway Announcement!
Monday, April 3:
- Release Blitz for Lillian Francis’ Renaissance
- Release Blitz and Giveaway: An Unexpected Shot by Caitlin Ricci
- Release Blitz for Who I am When I’m with You by Tamryn Eradani
- A Barb the Zany Old Lady Review: Plaid Versus Paisley by KC Burn
- A Free Dreamer Release Day Review: The Android and the Thief by Wendy Rathbone
Tuesday, April 4:
- DSP GUEST POST Julia Talbot on Just a Cowboy
- RIPTIDE TOUR and Giveaway: Home Fires (Common Law #4) by Kate Sherwood
- An Ali Review: Home Fires (Common Law #4) by Kate Sherwood
- A Free Dreamer Release Day Review: Witches For Hire by Sam Argent
- A Paul B Release Day Review: Micah Johnson Goes West (Get Out #2) by Sean Kennedy
Wednesday, April 5:
- DSP GUEST POST Bru Baker on Tall, Dark, and Deported
- Book Blitz: Broken Bastard by A.L. Simpson
- A Lila Release Day Review: Leap of Faith by Jackie Keswick
- An Alisa Review: Broken Bastard (Broken #1) by A.L. Simpson
- A Melanie Release Day Review: Joy (States of Love) by C.S. Poe
Thursday, April 6:
- RIPTIDE TOUR & Giveaway: Don’t Feed the Trolls by Erica Kudisch
- DSP GUEST POST: Wendy Rathbone on The Android and the Thief
- Blog Tour for The Rainbow Clause by Beth Bolden
- Review Tour: Lillian Francis’ Renaissance
- A Stella Review: Renaissance by Lillian Francis
- A Free Dreamer Review: Don’t Feed the Trolls by Erica Kudisch
- A VVivacious Review: Norwegian Woody (Let it Beatle #4) by J.D. Walker (
Friday, April 7:
- Release Blitz and Giveaway for Snap Shot by V.L Locey
- DSP GUEST POST Jackie Keswick on Leap of Faith
- Release Blitz and Giveaway: Stories From Sapphire Cay Vol 2 – RJ Scott & Meredith Russell
- Release Blitz and Giveaway: Take a Chance by Megs Pritchard
- Review Tour – Annabelle Jacobs – Bitten By Design
- A MelanieM Review: Bitten by Design by Annabelle Jacobs
- A Stella Review: Forged in Trust (Bay Area Professionals #4) by Mickie B. Ashling
Saturday, April 8:
- A MelanieM Review:Skim Blood and Savage Verse (Offbeat Crimes #3) by Angel Martinez
A Lila Release Day Review: Falling Into the Black (A Planet Called Wish #3) by Caitlin Ricci
Rate: 4 stars out of 5
Sometimes there’s a difference between duty and doing what’s right. And sometimes doing what’s right comes with a high price.
Every aspasian at Asiq adores the handsome peacekeeper Resan—all except for Arin. While the other workers vie for Resan’s attention, Arin avoids him at all costs, which rouses Resan’s suspicion. When he discovers Arin is a runaway slave, Resan is bound by law to return him to his master. It is only later that Resan realizes what he’s done.
Arin’s owner bought him at twelve, married him, and not only violated Arin himself, but loaned him out to his friends. Resan has returned him to a life of rape and abuse, and now he must make a decision: free Arin and abandon the oaths he swore as a peacekeeper, or leave him to languish and abandon his own conscience and heart.
Falling Into the Black has a different feel than the previous books in the series. Perhaps because it takes place on different planets in the galaxy, and Corbin & Thierry are just secondary characters with a limited participation in the story. Even when they do play an important role, and we get updates on their relationships.
Arin and Resan are interesting characters. As a peacekeeper, Resan sees everything as black or white, good or bad. On the other hand, Arin’s life experiences have shown him the diversity found in-between those places. It takes time, and many rough moments for them to see beyond their own perceptions and into a future together.
The first part of the story moves fast and gets into the main issues right away. I’m glad that Arin’s experiences weren’t too graphic even when they were heartbreaking. I did have trouble putting the book down because I wanted to know how everything would be resolved. It does slow down toward the middle before it picks up again.
There are several twists and turns, and when you think the story is almost over, it’s just halfway there. Some things are a bit gut wrenching but don’t take away from the story. I enjoyed learning about the rest of the planets, the species, and all their characteristics. The world-build makes sense and enhances the scenes instead of being intrusive.
I’m not too sure about the ending and that’s why the story isn’t five stars for me. It’s more of an HFN than anything else, but not exactly what I was expecting. I love this series and I hope another one comes out soon. I definitely want to read more about this world and the couples we have met.
The cover by Brooke Albrecht goes well with others in the series. But, Arin’s representation seems too human.
Sale Links: Dreamspinner | Amazon | Kobo
Book Details:
ebook, 145 pages
Published: March 17, 2017, by Dreamspinner Press
ISBN: 9781635334890
Edition Language: English
Series: A Planet Called Wish
Book #1: To the Highest Bidder
Book #2: Fantasy for a Gentleman
Book #3: Falling into the Black
An Alisa Review: Falling Hard: Stories of Men in Love by Dale Cameron Lowry
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Nine of Dale Cameron Lowry’s best short romance stories, available for the first time in one book.
Part 1: Falling Fast
Warm up with whirlwind romances that last.
Mi Alma — Ex-Mormon Alma Larsen doesn’t know the first thing about alcohol, so he hires bartender Damian Banks to help out at his winter holiday party. They build a friendship that simmers with sexual tension—and possibly something much deeper. Will this Christmas bring them both a love that lasts?
Loggerhead — Soon after they fall in love, Jake makes Eric a promise inspired by an old track uniform. But demanding work schedules at Jake’s four-star restaurant and Eric’s newspaper keep them from following through. Six years later, they take the honeymoon they never had, heading to the Florida coast in search of sea turtles—and rekindling their passion for each other in the process.
Reading the Signs — The only thing twenty-three-year-old Theo De Jong expects when he enrolls in a summer school for linguists in New Mexico is to get more ideas for his master’s thesis in Dutch Sign Language. But then he meets the American sign language expert Alfonso Grossman, and sparks fly.
Part 2: Falling Fantastically
Because reality is overrated, these stories have elements of the fantastical.
Born of Fire — The fairies on Ireland’s north coast are notorious for kidnapping, and Aodhán of County Donegal has the scars to prove it. When the fairies abduct the handsome youth Cainnech, Aodhán seeks to free him—but risks losing his health and Cainnech in the process.
Ghost of a Chance — When shy Jeremy Anderson meets mysterious and dapper Frank at his spooky old university library, their connection is instant. Their romance waxes with the full moon—but just as quickly, Frank’s interest seems to wane. He insists that he loves spending time with Jeremy, but then why does he keep Jeremy at arm’s length?
Far From Home — Rajiv met and fell in love with his husband, Mateo, when they were both members of the scientific team responsible for transforming Mars into a home suitable for humans. But years into their shared mission, Rajiv is ordered back to Earth to restore the barren lands of the American Midwest. With a little help from technology, the two men find innovative ways to nurture their long-distance relationship while they wait to reunite.
Sweeter Than Blood — Keith was a vegan before a hot encounter with a stranger turned him into a vampire. In the year since, his sire, John, has tried to make up for the mistake by teaching Keith everything he knows about being a non-murderous bloodsucker. But temptation is strong in the form of Andres, a regular customer at the barbershop where Keith works. When Andres finally asks Keith on a date, the real danger begins.
Part 3: Falling Deep
The deeper the love, the hotter the intimacy.
Rough Love — Blake thinks new boyfriend Michael doesn’t like French kissing. Michael thinks Blake doesn’t like rough sex. Neither are virgins, except in the art of conversation. Can they set things straight before the honeymoon’s over?
Pacific Rimming — On Mike’s fortieth birthday, his husband, Ken, takes him on vacation to Vancouver Island in Western Canada to celebrate. While Mike mourns his loss of youth, Ken encourages him to recapture it by bedding a gorgeous twenty-something man they encounter while hiking in Pacific Rim National Park. A night of no-holds-barred passion among the three men reveals a sizzling chemistry, and when Mike and Ken return home they find themselves longing to reconnect with the young Jason. Can what started as a one-night stand transform into a threesome that lasts?
This is a great collection of stories. The men are all looking for love or are enjoying the love they already have which was a nice variety. They all ended great but took a bunch of different ways to get there, just like in real life. Most of the stories are only told from one character’s point of view, but the author does a wonderful job of showing the other characters emotions and feelings through their eyes.
In Mi Alma Damian and Alma aren’t quite sure how to approach the other with their growing feelings but their tension works wonderfully in building their friendship, I thought both of these characters played well off each other. In Loggerhead Jake and Eric show that it is easy to put yourselves and your relationship on the back burner a bit, but I loved seeing them make their relationship even stronger during their trip. Theo and Alfonso begin a wonderful friendship at the beginning of Reading the Signs and keep it going via skype when their course is over for the summer and seeing Theo learn what love really is, even at a distance, is great.
Born of Fire was an interesting concept; Aodhán becomes abducted by fairies and realizes this and how much Cainnech could mean to him if they were free, but they have to support each other once they are free from the fairies. Ghost of a Chance was one of the sweetest stories in this collection; Jeremy and Frank build a great friendship that turns into a strong relationship even though they are somewhat separated on the physical plane, but their love is what can keep Frank solidly in Jeremy’s life. Rajiv and Mateo miss each other so much in Far From Home, but have figured out the next best thing to having the other with them. In Sweeter than Blood Keith has not been very welcoming to the vampire lifestyle and when he finally takes a chance on Andres he realizes that maybe John is the one he needs.
In Rough Love Blake and Michael are trying to start their relationship off well, but don’t know how to talk to each other. When they finally do we can see what they have been holding back and how much more perfect they are for each other. Pacific Rimming show how there is always room in people hearts for more people to love if they want and Ken and Mike know that if they give it a chance Jason could easily fit into their lives. Seeing Jason realize that he can have the love he has wanted is wonderful.
Cover art by Dale Cameron Lowry is great and eye catching.
Sales Links: Terrestrial Press | Amazon | Books2Read
Book Details:
ebook, 233 pages
Published: February 20, 2017 by Terrestrial Press
ISBN: 9781508058670
Edition Language: English
Fickle, Fickle March ~ Its Snowing? This Week At Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Fickle, Fickle March Part II ~ Its Snowing?
So remember all that lovely warm weather I was talking about? Well, out the window it went and here’s comes the first Nor’easter of our winter season. The meteorologists are calling from anywhere from 6 to 12 inches of accumulated snow here in the metro area, possibly more. Oh those poor cherry blossoms, to say nothing of the annual Cherry Blossom Festival that draws visitors from around the world. Yep, those blossoms will be history, taken down by nature’s blast this week!
And what will that do to our St. Patricks Day parades? Will they be marching in the snow? Most likely.
Oh, this mercurial March. Much like love and romance, it blows hot and cold. It heats up and then quickly can become ice cold. Then flare up when you least expect it. I’m hoping for the more heat to melt this coming snow away quickly.
Lucky In Love – A St. Patrick’s Day Giveaway!
So new giveaway for our readers. With it being St. Patrick’s Day this week, what are your favorite books with Irish settings, or Irish men and romance in them? Lists please and we will post a special St. Patrick’s Day Romance Book List of Love. Random reader will receive gift card of $10 from Dreamspinner Press. Please leave a name and email address with your recs! I will start you off with one that still makes me cry and grabs at my heart every time I read it:
Where the Grass is Greener (Seeds of Tyrone #2) by Debbie McGowan and Raine O’Tierney
And don’t get me started on those magnificent Morgan men of Rhys Ford’s Sinners series. I’ll add in more when list time comes. Our giveaway ends Saturday, March 18th at midnight. Slainte’! D’fhéadfadh grá i gcónaí a bheith mise! May love always be yours, in life and in our stories. I can’t wait to see what books your lists may bring us.
This Week’s Announcements at Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
📚~ Reviewers ~We have a new reviewer coming on. Her name is Julia. And we’re thrilled to have her here. Let Julia tell you something about herself:
Hey, there!
I’m Julia, a mid-twenties gay language student from Austria. I love travelling, Japanese curry, Scotland, the sea and anything and all fiction-related. My current passions are writing (mainly short stories and flash fiction) and playing Dungeons & Dragons with friends (where I play as a half-mermaid cleric with a pet pufferfish named Huffl-Puffington Supreme Conqueror of the Northern Seas).
When it comes to literature, I’m basically open for anything that catches my interest in some way. I love books that make me cry, books that make me laugh, books that make me want to ram my head against a wall with spikes protruding from it – as long as a story can get any kind of emotional response out of me, I’m happily along for the ride. That being said, my most-read genre right now would probably be Fantasy and my favourite author Terry Pratchett with his glorious Discworld-series.
Well, I think that should give you a pretty decent picture of myself. Have a lovely day and as a friend of mine once said: Don’t get eaten by a dragon! (Unless they ask nicely and all around seem like a pretty ok-person.^^)
Say hi to Julia and be on the lookout for her reviews to start appearing soon! We are still looking for reviewers. So contact us at scatteredthoughtsandroguewords@gmail.com if you love books and want to tell other about them too!
📚~Last Week’s Giveaway ~ He Turned Out To Be What? Contest and the Winners: Purple Reader (Stella will be in contact with you)
This Week At Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Sunday, March 12:
- Fickle, Fickle March Part II ~ Its Snowing?
- This Week At Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Monday, March 13:
- DSP GUEST POST BA Tortuga on Two Cowboys and a Baby
- DSP GUEST POST Ethan Stone on Wild Instincts (Seaside Shifters: Book Two)
- Release Day Blitz Shaper by Christine Danse
- RIPTIDE TOUR BLOG Sons of Devils by Alex Beecroft
- A Barb the Zany Old Lady Release Day Review: Lickety Split by Damon Suede
- A Lila Release Day Review: Step by Step by K.C. Wells
- An Alisa Release Day Review: Dinner at the Blue Moon Cafe by Rick R. Reed
Tuesday, March 14:
- DSP GUEST POST Andrew Grey on Cleansing Flame (Rekindled Flame #2) by Andrew Grey
- Release Blitz – Rick R Reed’s Dinner at the Blue Moon Cafe
- In the Paranormal Spotlight: Insight by Santino Hassell (Riptide Publishing Tour and Giveaway)
- A Jeri Review: Danced Close by Annabeth Albert
- A Stella Review: Momo, My Everything by Posy Roberts
- A Stella Review: Beneath the Stars by Lynn Charles
- An Alisa Review: Falling Hard: Stories of Men in Love by Dale Cameron Lowry
Wednesday, March 15:
- DSP GUEST POST Sarah Madison on Unspeakable Words (The Sixth Sense: Book One)
- Release Blitz & Review Tour – K.C. Wells’s Step By Step
- Who We Are by Nicola Haken Tour and Review
- A MelanieM Release Day Review: Two Cowboys and A Baby by BA Tortuga
- An Ali Release Day Review: Sophie by JP Barnaby
- An Alisa Release Day Review: Running with the Moon by Kiernan Kelly
- An Alisa Review: Love by Design by Sam B. Morgan
Thursday, March 16:
- Release Blitz Tour – The Case Of The Guilty Ghost (End Street Book #6) by RJ Scott and Amber Kell
- RELEASE BLITZ Between the Secrets by S. Ferguson
- Release Day Blitz An Officer’s Submission by Christa Tomlinson
- Release tour Who We Are by Nicola Haken
- A MelanieM Review: Who We Are by Nicola Haken
- Step by Step by KC Wells Release Tour
- A Barb the Zany Old Lady Review: Fallen Angel by Eden Winters
- A Stella Review Spark to the Heart (Parkerburg series #4) by Lee Brazil & Havan Fellows
Friday, March 17 – Happy Ēostre or Ostara:
- Blog Tour for Leaning into the Fall by Lane Hayes
- Book Blitz Here For Us by AM Arthur
- A Caryn Review : Bedside Manner by DJ Jamison
- A Caryn Review: Drinker of Blood (SPECTR Series 2, #3) by Jordan L Hawk
- A Lila Release Day Review: Falling Into the Black by Caitlin Ricci
- A Melanie Releases Day Review: There’s this Guy by Rhys Ford
Saturday, March 18:
- A MelanieM Audiobook Review: Drama Muscle by Joe Cosentino and Narrator Chip Hurley
- Blog for the audiobook of DRAMA MUSCLE, the second Nicky and Noah mystery, by Joe Cosentino, performed by Chip Hurley
INTERLUDE PRESS TOUR: Ghosts & Ashes (Broken Moon #2) by F.T. Lukens (author interview, special excerpt and giveaway)
Ghosts & Ashes (Broken Moon #2) by F.T. Lukens
Interlude Press
Cover art
Available for Sale at
Other Purchase Links: Google | Book Depository | Indiebound
✒︎
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words is happy to have F.T. Lukens here today to talk about her latest novel, Ghost & Ashes. Welcome, F.T., thank you for stopping by on your tour today. Hi FT, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself, your background, and your current book.
- Do you buy a book because of the cover, the blurb, or something else?
I’m such a sucker for a pretty cover. It’s not the sole reason I buy a book, but I do love a nice cover. I’m very lucky to have the beautiful covers I’ve had for my Broken Moon Series.
It also helps if the book is in my genre of choice. A good blurb that’s interesting can get me too.
Probably needless to say but I do end up purchasing a lot of books.
- What does ‘romance’ mean to you?
This is a tricky question. I think romance can mean the whole sweep- someone-off-their-feet thing. But I tend to think of it as person meeting another person where they are and going from there. I think that’s romantic. But I love slow-burn romances and pining and those kinds of tropes.
- What are your current projects?
I’m happily working on several different projects right now. This current book, Ghosts & Ashes, is the second of a trilogy. I’m busy plotting out the third and final installment. I also just finished another YA book about myths and cryptids. I’m also hoping to write a steampunk fantasy novel this year as well. It’s a lot to squeeze in.
- What is the most difficult part of writing for you?
It’s the motivation. I’m a driven person. I recently had to take a strengths finding test for my day job and my top was called “Achiever.” Which basically means I’m here to get things done. But sometimes, after working a full day, and tending to three kids, and putting everyone to bed and I’m sitting at the keyboard and I’m drained… Those nights are difficult. But I surround myself with people who will push me. I have friends who will send me emails asking me if I’ve made my goals. And I have a goal tracking spreadsheet that keeps me on track.
- Tell us something about yourself that would surprise people.
I don’t know if this is ‘surprising’ but it’s funny/sweet. My penname is of course, not my real name. But it is a combination of an inside joke plus the name of the person who nicknamed me FT. The name ‘Lukens’ is the last name of a friend of mine who passed away. She loved nicknaming people and she loved to joke around. The FT part is the joke that I share with her and a few others and the Lukens in her last name. When I was coming up with the penname, I thought of her, and I knew she would’ve loved it. I’m sure where she is that she’s smiling and probably laughing at me. 😉
GHOSTS & ASHES ~ Summary
Three months have passed since the events of The Star Host, and Ren is living aboard the Star Stream under the watchful eyes of the Phoenix Corps. Plagued by vivid nightmares that ravage the ship in his sleep, he struggles to prove he isn’t a threat and fears he has traded one captor for another. His relationship with Asher, whose efforts to balance his personal loyalty to Ren with his professional duties to the Corps are failing, fractures.
Adrift without an anchor, Ren must return to his home planet of Erden if he has any chance of reversing his dangerous descent into madness. There, he hopes search for his missing brother and salvage his relationship with Asher. What he nds is knowledge that puts everyone’s allegiance to the test.
GHOSTS & ASHES ~ EXCERPT
“There you are!” Asher said, striding toward him, wrapping him in an embrace. “Stars, you’re freezing.” Asher rubbed Ren’s arms; his palms swept over the chilled skin. “Where have you been? You left and never came back. Jakob and I have been looking all over for you.”
Ren pitched forward, planted his face in Asher’s chest, and shook. The terror at being taken again mixed with the crushing truths from his parents overwhelmed him.
“Hey, hey, you’re okay.” Asher pulled Ren close. “What happened? Was it a dream? Sleepwalking?”
Ren stilled. Pressed close to Asher’s body, it would be easy to give into the urge to tell him everything, to spill the truth about what his parents had said about the Corps and the star hosts and the history his life was mired in. But his mother’s words lingered in the back of his mind, and Ren remembered how Asher had sided with VanMeerten so many times since the debacle on the drift. Asher was Phoenix Corps, through and through. His allegiance was split, torn between Ren and his duty as a soldier. And how much did he know? Was Asher aware that the first mission of the Corps was to hunt down the scattered remnants of the star hosts? Or did he only know what he had been told, like the rest of them?
* * *
Ren poured his power outward. The force field created a partial wall between the captives and the Corps. The comms shrieked. The pulse guns spat electricity, came alive in the hands of those who wielded them, and sparked and sputtered, shocking the Corpsmen with forks and tangles of electricity. They fell, writhing on the ground, even Zag. Ren vibrated with their screams, tasted the burn of skin and hair, but it wasn’t enough.
They had destroyed his home. They had made it so Ren could never return to what he was before. They had scared Ezzy, who was only a girl with a crush, who wanted to prove herself capable in a warzone when she should’ve been learning at school, playing in the woods, swimming in the lake, or blushing around boys. They had threatened them, frightened them, and they would burn, as Ren did, blaze in misery and despair, and thrash in pain until their veins blackened and peeled like wires, until their bones glowed like circuits.
The power flowed from him in a torrent, and he pushed it, and pushed it. He ensured those responsible were filled until they burst, until their souls were scorched out of them, until their humanity had crumbled to dust as his had.
* * *
Ren sighed. Asher wanted to talk, and Ren’s insides ached with a fierce loneliness he hadn’t experienced since the first night in the cell of the Baron’s citadel. He didn’t want Asher’s words or his pity. And he didn’t want to relive the details of the nightmare, which had sent him twisting in his sheets and crawling across the floor. The sense memories clung to him, like cobwebs whose phantom threads, fluttery and strange and stubborn, brushed against his skin. The strands were infinite; they touched the deep places of Ren’s consciousness and burrowed down to his marrow to pull out the things that terrified him most.
He didn’t want to share the nightmare, but Asher’s flat countenance and sure gaze couldn’t hide his worry. It flashed in his eyes and ran in shaky tremors down the length of his crossed arms, as if he hugged himself to keep in his concerns and not as a defense to reflect whatever Ren had to throw at him.
Ren bent his knees, propped his arm up, and allowed his fingertips to dangle. Sweat flattened his hair against his temples. He regarded Asher coolly as Asher sat on the edge of Ren’s bunk.
“Do you remember when we went dancing?”
Asher blinked at the non-sequitur. “On Mykonos?”
Rowan had taken them dancing in a place with loud music and rotating lights. The beat had vibrated through Ren’s boots. “I had never been dancing like that before.”
Asher raised an eyebrow. “You weren’t bad. Well, not as bad as Jakob.”
“I liked the slow dance.” Asher had grabbed Ren in his arms and pulled him to the dance floor. They’d laughed and moved and all Ren’s worries had dissolved in happiness and the rhythm of the music. “I liked being with you. With the crew. I miss that.”
“We’re here now, Ren.”
He shook his head. “No. You’re not. It’s different now.”
“It doesn’t have to be.”
Ren looked away.
“Ren, you’re not okay,” he said flatly.
“No. I’m not, but I didn’t feel like broadcasting it.”
“It’s a little late for that,” Asher said softly. Ren’s stomach twisted. Asher had all but confirmed his latest nightmare had played on the vid screens. The crew had seen what Ren couldn’t remember, didn’t want to remember. “You’re getting worse. And they know it.”
Ren twisted his lips. “I’m aware the crew already knows. Pen can’t lie for anything.”
“Not them. The Corps.”
Ren rested his head on his knees. “You told her. You threw me to the wolves.”
“I had to.”
“Why? Do you want me to leave? Be locked away?”
“Stars, Ren. You know I don’t want that.”
“I don’t know what you want, to be honest. I don’t understand why you hold allegiance to them at all.”
“Because I have to. I promised five years.”
“You and your promises,” Ren said bitterly. That was loyalty Ren couldn’t understand, not after what the Corps had done to Asher, not after having left him for a year to rot in a cell on what they called a backwater planet. But Ren was beginning to realize there were things he would never understand and maybe wasn’t meant to.
“And I promised I’d keep you safe. Any way I could. This is the only way. Don’t you understand that?”
Ren felt the slight touch of Asher’s fingertips across the back of his hand. His star sparked and sought out the mechanism in Asher’s shoulder instinctually.
Asher shivered.
“There’s a fine line between safety and captivity.”
* * *
Connect with F.T. at authorftlukens.wordpress.com on Twitter @ftlukens, on Tumblr at ftlukens.tumblr.com and on Goodreads at goodreads.com/ftlukens.
About the Author
F.T. Lukens is an author of Young Adult ction who got her start by placing second out of ten thousand entries in a fan community writing contest. A sci- enthusiast, F.T. loves Star Trek and Fire y and is a longtime member of her college’s science- fiction club. She holds degrees in Psychology and English Literature and has a love of cheesy television shows, superhero movies, and writing. F.T. lives in North Carolina with her husband, three kids, and three cats.
Her 1st novel in the Broken Moon series, The Star Host, was published by Duet Books in 2016.
Connect with F.T. at authorftlukens.wordpress.com on Twitter @ftlukens, on Tumblr at ftlukens.tumblr.com and on Goodreads at goodreads.com/ftlukens.
Giveaway
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A VVivacious Release Day Review: Shaper by Christine Danse
I woke up running through the abandoned streets of Shapertown. I didn’t know who I was, where I had come from or even who I was running from. It was like I had come into this world running with the nebulous command of “Run” ringing through my brain. I hid myself only to be found by a pair of brown boots with red laces and I didn’t know if I should run or not. After all, where do you run when you have nowhere to go?Expected publication: March 13th 2017 by NineStar Press
ISBN139781945952715
Edition LanguageEnglish
A Paul B Review: The Chain of Their Sins (Taking Shield #4) by Anna Butler
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
I have really enjoyed the Taking Shield series. Each book draws me in further into Shield Captain Bennet’s world. While Albion is fighting its hundred year war against the Maess, and struggling to hold on, Bennet tries to live his life as best as he can. But sometimes the horrors of war interfere with his plans.
During his last year of rotation out of his mandated three years out of Shield, Bennet is assigned to the Gyrfalcon, his father’s ship. That only would cause headaches for Bennet. But his assignment as Flight Captain of the ship would mean he is now in the line of command of Flynn, his lover from the ship. As a result, he must now spend the next year (10 months or 400 days in Albion terms) being able to look but not touch when it comes to Flynn. Add in the fact that Flynn has probably had a fling with his sister and his father suspects that he and Flynn are more than just friends makes life even more difficult for him.
As if the romantic entanglements aren’t enough to make Bennet irritable, the fallout from the Makepeace continues to haunt him. The president is on the verge of being ousted from office, either through impeachment or the next election. Some members of the intelligence committee believe that while his theories might be correct, there is no proof that the Maess are getting help. The man behind the political scenes wants to groom Bennet for a political career, much to Bennet’s chagrin. And the topping of the cake is the treatment of the rescued humans from Makepeace are being kept on a former penal colony with his partner Felix leading the scientific team seeing what the Maess have actually done to them. Bennet is counting down the days until he can return to his form of normalcy and back in the Shield fold.
Bennet has become a favorite character of mine. He is trying the best he can for the war effort in a variety of ways. While he could have taken a desk job at the Strategic unit doing analysis of data for the war, he is out there sometimes behind enemy lines doing what he feels needs to be done. What really gets to Bennet’s soul is the consequences of those actions that sometimes are unknown to him until two or three years later. This goes for not only the militaristic side of his life but the personal. Flynn notes that he and Bennet have spent sixty-four days out of the past five years (2000 days) together. Yet somehow Bennet keeps going on. As his year on the Gyrfalcon is finishing, he must once again go home, away from Flynn, and deal with the ramifications of the fallout from Makepeace with the new president. I wait impatiently for the next book in this saga.
Cover art again is terrific. Lush and dark, just perfect.
Sales Link
Book Details
EBook, 283 pages
Edition Language: English
Published: February 13, 2016 by Glass Hat Press
ASIN: B01MZ9QQYQ
Gyrfalcon (Taking Shield #1)
Heart Scarab (Taking Shield #2)
Makepeace (Taking Shield #3)
The Chains of Their Sins (Taking Shield #4)
Adrian Randall on Writing, Characters and his latest novel ‘Countermind’ (author interview and excerpt)
Countermind by Adrian Randall
DSP Publications
Cover art by L.C. Chase
Available for Purchase from
✒︎
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words is happy to host Adrian Randall here today. Thank you, Adrian, for sitting in our Interview chair and answering a few questions for us:
- How much of yourself goes into a character?
It’s not really a question of how much as it is which parts. In the case of Countermind, Alan Izaki is a fugitive psychic, hacker, and thief on the run. Jack Smith, a government agent trained in a classified school of “counter-psychic” techniques, is trying to arrest him. The two of them run at very different temperatures: Alan is angry and indignant, whereas Smith is cool and conniving. I’m a pretty mild-mannered guy myself, so both of these characters represent very different extremes from me. But the nice thing about fiction is that you get to engage in behaviors that are a bit more outrageous than anything you’d do in real life.
- Does research play a role into choosing which genre you write? Do you enjoy research or prefer making up your worlds and cultures?
Writers should write what they know, which isn’t to mean that they should play it safe. Rather, they should go out and learn. The benefit of setting your story in this universe (or one close to it) is that you end up learning lots of cool stuff. Writing Countermind meant learning about topics ranging from hacking to spies to quantum physics and even video games. The risk is that you’ll get some details wrong, and actual experts will catch your mistakes and call you out on them, but it’s a risk worth taking.
- Has your choice of childhood or teenage reading genres carried into your own choices for writing?
Probably, but I was a well-read kid so it’s hard to know which books influenced my writing and how. It doesn’t help that Countermind is a pretty adult novel, so it’s hard to say it was influenced by anything I read as a kid. I’ll say that one of the most formative books I read early in my life was A Wrinkle in Time. What that book taught me was that science fiction may be crammed full of big, cosmic ideas, but it can still be about the characters and their journeys. It taught me that genre fiction should still be character-driven. So I tried to make sure Countermind’s crazy plot also had a human heart pumping at its center. This weird little paranormal cyberpunk thriller is still, at bottom, a drama.
- Have you ever had to put an ‘in progress’ story aside because of the emotional ties with it? You were hurting with the characters or didn’t know how to proceed?
I had a couple works in progress that I’ve had trouble revisiting lately, just due to the current political climate. I started Countermind at a time when things were, if not perfect, at least more optimistic. It was easier to write dystopian literature without getting too bummed out. When I revisit these other projects, I’m going to try to make them a bit more hopeful, even if just because that’s what I need right now. (I’m also getting interested in the current “solarpunk” fad, for the same reasons.)
- Do you like HFN or HEA? And why?
At the end of Stardust, Neil Gaiman writes that though the heroes were happy together, it wasn’t ever-after, “for Time, the thief, eventually takes all things into his dusty storehouse, but they were happy, as these things go, for a long while.”
But my own opinion is a little less certain. Without spoiling anything, I’ll say that one of Countermind’s characters doesn’t believe in happy endings, either for-now or ever-after, and is very surprised to end up getting both.
- How do you feel about the ebook format and where do you see it going?
I haven’t been publishing long enough to have an informed opinion from a business standpoint, but, as a consumer of books, it’s been a godsend. You can read anything anywhere at any time without lugging pounds of paper bricks around with you. That’s revolutionary. But for those particular books that have special sentimental value to me, I do like to buy and display “analog” editions. (On that note, if you order Countermind from DSP Publications’ web site, you can get a free digital copy with the physical version, so it’s the best of both worlds!)
- How do you choose your covers? (curious on my part)
Like I said, I haven’t been publishing long enough to have much perspective on this process. I had lots of ideas about what Countermind’s cover look like, and I passed these along to the cover artist, but I mostly wanted them to have the freedom to surprise me with their own vision. And I’m so glad they did. I fell in love with L.C. Chase’s cover as soon as I saw it. The cool tones give the whole thing a very noir feel. Alan’s fixing the viewer with a guarded, wary look that really captures the character’s personality. And the arrangement of the cover’s elements, with Alan’s face, the Hong Kong skyline, and the text all at right angles to each other, puts the reader off-balance before they even open the book. It’s perfect.
- What’s next for you as an author?
I’m not sure. I have a few ideas in mind, and a few projects in progress, but it’s a matter of deciding which of them needs to be written. We’ll see!
Blurb
In a postprivacy future, secrets are illegal and all communication is supervised. Telepaths are registered and recruited by a government with no qualms about invading the minds of its citizens. Fugitive psychics are hunted by the Bureau of Counterpsychic Affairs, or Countermind.
Alan Izaki is one such fugitive, as well as a hacker, grifter, and thief.
Countermind agent Jack Smith is hunting him through the twisted underbelly of Hong Kong.
But Alan possesses a secret so dangerous and profound it will not only shake Smith’s loyalties, but the foundations of their society.
And Alan isn’t the only one on the run. Rogue psychic Arissa binti Noor escapes Countermind, in search of brilliant game designer Feng Huang. She hopes that together, they can destroy the government’s intrusive Senex monitoring system.
Their goals seem at odds, and their lives are destined to collide. When they do, three very different people must question their alliances and their future, because everything is about to change.
Excerpt
It was past midnight, and some parts of Hong Kong actually did sleep at this hour. The pawnshop was near Kwai Chung, its customer base mostly local workers pawning valuables just to squander their money on the races, men who wouldn’t have the resources to track down the goods they’d put up as collateral. Alan had chosen the shop for its proximity to a body of water, and it was just a minute’s hard sprint to the nearest container yard, then through that to the channel.
Alan charged downhill on roads still slick from the afternoon’s rain, gleaming with the reflected glow of the city. No neon signs or electronic billboards, just streetlamps and a few lit office windows. Droplets ran in steady trickling streams off the buildings, canopies, streetlights, AC units. Steel shutters of closed storefronts shimmered wet, and Alan’s skin glistened in the damp air. He didn’t hear any pursuing footsteps, didn’t bother turning his head to check.
He’d only gotten a brief glimpse of the attacker in the pawnshop, but that had been plenty. The man looked just a few years older than Alan, Eurasian, tall and lean, hale, clean-cut, clean-shaven. His attire had been dark but utterly nondescript. There was an impression of a black suit jacket, black slacks, and a black button-down shirt (but no tie, and open at the neck). Alan hadn’t the time for more lingering impressions, but the man would’ve been attractive under more civil circumstances.
The man wasn’t the shop owner, and was too well-dressed to be another crook or a triad member. That probably meant law enforcement, ample reason for Alan to make the quickest possible escape without sparing even a backward glance.
Alan vaulted from the sidewalk over a steel railing, dashed across the street, leapt another rail, and charged down a covered stairway, letting gravity lead his charge toward the water, angling toward the red lights atop the cargo-loading cranes just visible over a row of gently swaying palm trees. He hit the next street with such speed he lost some momentum to a brief stumble. A red-and-silver taxicab blared its horn at him, and Alan ducked under the canopy of a shuttered dim-sum shop to get his bearings. He glanced up at the building corners in the nearest intersection and spotted the closed-circuit cameras. He couldn’t see which way they pivoted in their housings, but didn’t think they’d have a clear look at him where he stood. Just to be safe, he’d have to circle around, keeping shy of major streets if he was to stay clear of any more traffic cams, though his pursuer couldn’t be far behind.
Or was it pursuers? The man had attacked Alan alone, not a standard practice for an officer of one of the world’s most famous police forces. If he was a government agent, he had to know what Alan was, right? And what such agent would be so reckless as to challenge a rogue telepath completely solo? Alan doubted even a state psychic would risk such a confrontation, and this man had given no sign of being a psychic himself, had not attempted any telepathic attacks, relying entirely on physical force. Who was he?
Whatever he was, if he caught Alan, it would mean death or worse. He had no need to know who this man was, only to escape him.
Alan pulled his jacket tight around him and popped the collar up. He turned a corner for a side street with fewer cameras and fewer lights and strolled a leisurely path into the shadow of an elevated highway, traffic rumbling above him. From there, he made his way through a hole in a chain-link fence he’d prepared earlier tonight with the help of his bolt cutters, slipping into the container yard, and then he sprinted across the yard toward freedom.
He ran straight into the agent.
The man stepped around the corner of a container and flashed Alan a razor smile as he kneed him in the stomach, allowing Alan’s own momentum to double him over. Then the man threw Alan into the side of the steel container with a clang that echoed inside his head as his arm was twisted behind his back. Alan was strong for his size, but the agent was using some sort of judo leverage shit. Alan tried to wrench free, nearly succeeded, and then the man compensated for his strength by spinning him into the side of another container.
The man tightened his hold and hissed into Alan’s ear.
“How many counts of resisting arrest?”
Alan gasped, gulped, and tried to talk his way out, forcing the words. “Come on, man. You never said you were arresting me.”
“I thought it was implied. You did flee.”
“After you shot me!”
“With a government-issue ranged electroshock device. Pay attention.”
The agent tripped Alan roughly to the ground and buried his knees in Alan’s back. His hand forced Alan’s face against the concrete, and Alan wheezed as the air was squeezed out of his lungs.
Alan screwed his eyes to the edges of their sockets, trying to see up through the corner of his eye. The light of a passing ship winked between the container towers and slid over the man’s features: dark eyed, dark haired, darkly smiling.
“Resist some more,” the agent said. “I don’t need to excuse brutality, but it helps with the paperwork.”
Alan realized—a bit belatedly and with scant sense of relief—that he was now very much in danger of physical harm.
He expanded his thoughts outward and upward, seeking out the luminescent glow of his assailant’s mind as if reaching for a firefly in the night. He found it, wrapped telepathic fingers around it, and squeezed tight.
There you are, Alan thought at him.
Fleeting impressions of the man’s surface cognitions filtered through the permeable membrane of Alan’s consciousness: mild surprise, then recognition, and then a strange kind of resigned satisfaction.
“And there you are,” the man whispered
.
About the Author
Adrian Randall is a PhD and a dual-class bureaucrat/scientist. A native Floridian, he lives in Alexandria with the love of his life and their many beautiful board games. He has a tenuous grasp on reality, owing to a steady diet of novels, comics, and other distractions. All his ideas start as character backstory for MMOs and RPGs, and he does all his writing while listening to video game soundtracks. So if he’s gaming instead of working on a book, it’s not procrastination, it’s workshopping. He usually spends his free time geeking out about some damn thing or another. You can geek out with him through any of his social media channels. If he doesn’t respond, it means he broke his phone again.
Twitter: @cyberpreppy
Tumblr: cyberpreppy.tumblr.com
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/cyberpreppy


















































