Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Interview With Pauline Baird Jones

I just recommended Steamrolled and Steam Time by Pauline Baird Jones and I had some questions I wanted to ask so I emailed Pauline and asked if she would be willing to do a short interview.  Here are my questions and her reply.

Pauline:  I'd love to do a short interview! Thank you so much and glad you liked the book and short story enough to recommend them! :-) Hope you're having a great summer. All the best, Pauline

Jo:  The Key and Girl Gone Nova were both Science Fiction Romance. What gave you the idea to combine Steampunk with SFR in Tangled in Time and Steamrolled?

Pauline:  That is a most convoluted story. Or a slightly convoluted one. It feels convoluted now, but at the time, it was a process that was sometimes painful but ultimately fun. <g>

It started when I read my first steampunk novel: Soulless by Gail
Carriger. I don't write historical, but it was so fun, I put it down
thinking, "I'd like to write something steampunk. That was really fun."

Fast forward a couple of months to my writing chapter's anthology
deadline. My assignment that I'd avoided thinking about: write a short story of 7,000 words or less using a Texas Landmark or historical site (I chose Big Bend National Park). I wanted to tie it into my PROJECT UNIVERSE connected series, so that meant some type of alien thing and a character from the series who hadn't been featured yet. (I even had some cave drawings that looked a bit alien that the hubby found online.) After several false starts (okay, a bunch) I wanted to give up, and then I found myself wondering if this was my chance to write something steampunk-ish. I didn't think I could write a whole, historical type novel, but a short story? Hmmmm.

And just like that, Olivia from TANGLED IN TIME popped into my head. She seemed perfect for Colonel Carey, a lonely man who didn't know he was in need of a good woman. And I'd already been playing with time travel, so that was no problem. So I started writing. And writing. And writing. I blew past 7,000 words and told myself, maybe I can have "two" stories in the anthology. When I hit 14,000 words and the story wasn't done, I knew I had at least a novella, if not a novel in the making. Thankfully (for me and my editor) the story wound to a close at around 28,000 words.

I heard from some sources that the mashup of science fiction romance and steampunk was risky, but I've been mashing genres and breaking rules since I started writing. <g>

And the introduction of the transmogrification machine to the story set up the plot for STEAMROLLED in this amazing way that I did not see coming. So overall, very fun, and yeah, pretty whacky. <g>

Jo:  Where did you find all the steampunk terms you used in both stories?  Is there a steampunk dictionary or did you make them up?

Pauline:  There actually IS a steampunk dictionary, or should I say, there is an app for that. <vbg> But I got most of my vintage language from researching the Victorian Era. I can state with some confidence that I did MORE research for that little novella than for any full length novel. I even bought Victorian paper dolls in my search for Olivia's perfect outfit for her meeting with Carey. I was so amazed by what I needed to find out, that I posted the research books and links to the book page on my website. I also commissioned an artist to sketch my transmogrification machine. A graphic of the drawing is available on my website, but it also makes guest appearances in both books' cover art.

Jo:  I am fascinated by the craft of writing and the different approaches Authors take.  How do you structure your stories and what is you typical writing day like?

Pauline:  I am an into-the-mist-seat-of-the-pants writer. I have no clue where the story is going until I write it down. For instance, with TANGLED IN TIME, I had two characters and a location: Big Bend National Park. That was all. I knew Carey already had a way to travel through time, but Olivia needed transport. Because steampunk is fun and a bit whacky, I started there in creating her machine. It was fun to make it as crazy as possible (and I did make up the names of the goofy inventions, well, sort of. I looked for goofy names and gave them a bit of a spin.)  And then I kept asking myself, "What if?" and "What could go more wrong?" (I was really shocked when the nefarious Dr. Smith showed up. Did not see that coming.) So I just tell people I commit random acts of writing. And then I do a LOT of editing. <g>

My writing day? Oh wow, can I make something up that makes me sound really serious and dedicated? No? Okay, my writing day is a random as my plotting. I wander through it. I write a little, think a LOT, and whine like a two year old when it doesn't go well (or play Angry Birds like that will jump start my Muse who prefers Solitaire). I also apply Diet Dr. Pepper to my brain and feed chocolate to the Muse. It likes pastries, too. It's painful until the Muse settles down and then its lovely. Like flying (dream flying with crashes. <g>). There are days when I'm sure I will fail, that I should quit and then suddenly the story comes unstuck, my characters quit fighting me and get with the story and it just flows. I
like those days the best. <g>

Many thanks for the great questions and for letting me type to you and your blog visitors. :-)

Jo:  You can read more about Pauline and her writing at her web site Perils of Pauline and you can buy her books at Amazon, Borders, Barnes and Noble and Fictionwise.  A big thanks to Pauline for taking the time off from writing to do the interview.


Monday, July 11, 2011

Dreamspell Steampunk Volume 1 by Heather Massey, Pauline Baird Jones, Chris Damson and Linda Houle

Dreamspell Steampunk Volume 1 (Dreamspell Steampunk Anthology)
Steampunk

I left a comment at Galaxy Express and received a free copy of Dreamspell Steampunk Volume 1 from Heather Massey.  I enjoyed all the stories in Dreamspell but I did have a favorite.

I had just finished Steamrolled by Pauline Baird Jones when I read her story in Dreamspell.  Steam Time is a side story in the Steamrolled Universe.  The story tells what happened to one of the major characters when he chooses to stay in the past instead of returning to the future. 

Angelina by Linda Houle appears to be a side story based on characters from The Cat, The Canary and The Vampire her romantic suspense novel.  I have not read the novel so I know the story has no trouble as a stand-alone.

Steambot Rampage by Heather Massey and The Prometheus Engine by Chris Samson are both delightful short stories. 

Pick Dreamspell up, I think you will enjoy all the stories.

L&L Dreamspell published Dreamspell Steampunk Volume 1 by Heather Massey, Pauline Baird Jones, Chris Samson and Linda Houle in 2011.

Dreamspell is an ebook.


Look for an interview with Pauline on July 13, 2011.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

More Free eBooks



5 Free Books To Kickstart Your Weekend!   
 Sourcebooks is offering five free reads for a very limited time. The best part? Each one of these authors has another book coming soon. So when you fall in love with these titles you won't have to wait long for more! All are full length novels so download and read, read, read.

Follow this link to find the books. http://www.sourcebooks.com/store/ebook-specials.html

Friday, July 8, 2011

Steamrolled by Pauline Baird Jones

Steamrolled
Steampunk/Science Fiction Romance

Steamrolled is set in the same universe as The Key, Girl Gone Nova and Tangled in Time.  Some books in a series can stand-alone.   I don’t think Steamrolled is one that can.  At the very least I recommend you read Girl Gone Nova and Tangled in Time before you start Steamrolled.   I know if I had not read both of those I would have been really confused.  Since I had finished the other books I dived right in and was never lost.

Steamrolled is a very complex book and I decided that the best way to explain it was to quote from the book blurb.

With all of time at risk, it’s a bad time to fall in love…unless it’s the only time…
Robert Clementyne is going on a transmogrification machine hunt. He fears finding the machine will be as difficult as pronouncing the name. How can the steam-powered device perform as advertised, and how useful can any information be, coming from a steampunk themed bowling alley/museum?
It’s pretty crazy, but he’s been there, done that, and thinks he can handle it.
And then he meets the proprietor/curator…Emily Babcock.
Emily grew up in crazy, still lives in it—hey, it’s her freaking zip code. So no worries when Robert and his team walk into her bowling alley. The first visitors ever to her museum.
But neither of them is prepared for what happens when they open the door to the past…and the future. With a side trip through Roswell…and a face-to-face meeting with an evil genius/wannabe—who is on his way to becoming evil overlord-of-everything…”

I never knew time could be so much fun or hold so much peril.  Steamrolled is packed with adventure, romance, and danger.  I loved the nanites.  They were full of personality and added a real touch of humor to even the most deadly situation.  In Steamrolled Pauline has produced the perfect blend of Science Fiction Romance and Steampunk making fans of both happy.

L&L Dreamspell published Steamrolled by Pauline Baird Jones in 2011.

I purchased Steamrolled an ebook.


Look for an interview with Pauline on July 13, 2011.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

The Necklace Affair and A Body in Berkley Square by Ashley Gardner



The Necklace Affair (Captain Lacey Regency Mysteries)Historical Mystery

I purchased The Necklace Affair when it came out in June and have been saving it until A Body in Berkley Square came out so I could read two Captain Lacey books in a row.  Now I have finished both and have to wait for another month for my next fix.

This is a character driven series and it just keeps getting better.  Each book has a mystery that gives additional clues to the makeup of the major characters.  In addition the mystery in each book has clues that lead both Captain Lacey and the reader on a merry chase.  I keep recommending this series because I really love it.  If you are a historical mystery fan the series is a must read. 

Jennifer Ashley using the pen name of Ashley Gardner writes the Captain Lacey books.  The series went out of print and the rights reverted to the author.  She is self-publishing the series and all of the titles are being re-released as ebooks.  In the future there will also be new books in the series released.  Another great thing about the series is the price.  The first book in the series is .99 and all the others are 1.99.  It does make me wonder.  If she can make money at these prices why are so many ebooks prices the same as hard copies?

To learn more about the Captain Lacey books go to http://www.gardnermysteries.com/.

I read both books on my Nook.


There is a great tease for A Covent Garden Mystery at the end of A Body in Berkley Square.  Reading it made me long for August when A Covent Garden Mystery will be released.  

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Return of Captain John Emmett by Elizabeth Speller



The Return of Captain John EmmettMystery

Elizabeth Speller has published two previous books but The Return of Captain John Emmett is her first mystery novel.  Set in England after the First World War the story draws on the events of the war and the damage done to the young men of England in the war.

Laurence Bartram is one of the men who has come home and is lost. His wife and son died while he was fighting and he has no other family.  He has turned his back on life and does not care about anything.   Then he gets a letter from Mary Emmett asking Laurence to find out why her brother John killed himself while being treated in a hospital for veterans.  As Laurence finds more questions than answers he begins to embrace life again.

The Return of Captain John Emmett is a beautifully written book.  The descriptions are superb, the characters are well drawn and the plot moves at just the right pace.  The mystery is there but what set the book apart is how events from yesterday are shown to be so reverent to today.  War and the toll it takes on those who fight and those who stay home are the same today as they were in 1920.  

Laurence Bartram will return in a new book The Strange Fate of Kitty Easton.  

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt published The Return of Captain John Emmett by Elizabeth Speller in 2011.

I received a free ARC of The Return of Captain John Emmett from the Amazon Vine program.

A free copy does not guarantee a recommendation.  I only recommend a book if I like it.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

City of Ruins by Kristine Kathryn Rusch


City of RuinsScience Fiction

Once I started reading I could not put City of Ruins down. Wonderful, amazing, marvelous, fabulous, riveting, thrilling, and exciting, are just a few of the adjectives that come to mind when I think about the Science Fiction stories Kristine Kathryn Rusch writes and I could use every one to describe City of Ruins.

I first meet Boss in Diving Into the Wreck.  (See my post on 11/10/09)  Boss has expanded her operation and is on the planet Vaycehn.  Boss hates planets but there is something happening here that points to stealth technology and she wants to find the source.  The story starts out as a straightforward exploration but then there is an unexpected twist.   Looking for stealth technology is always dangerous but what they find must be handled correctly or there will be untold damage.

In the Acknowledgements at the beginning of City of Ruins Rusch says:

Thanks on this one go to the reader of Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine who have consistently supported this series.” 

I recommend that you read Becalmed, a prequel to City of Ruins, which was published in Asimov’s March 2011 issue.  I do not subscribe to Asimov’s or Analog but each month I look at the new issues at Fictionwise to see what authors have published stories.  If there is one of my favorite authors I purchase that issue.    Becalmed by Rusch was the reason I purchased the March issue.  

You can read City of Ruin as a standalone but like any series reading the others stories adds to the enjoyment. 

I think there is a lot more to tell about Boss and her crew and I am hoping for future stories set in this Universe.

PYR published City of Ruins by Kristine Kathryn Rusch in 2011.

I purchased City of Ruins.


Look for an interview with Kristine Kathryn Rusch on July 18th.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Borealis Book Two by Stephanie Burkhart, Esther Mitchell and Shea McMaster



Science Fiction Romance

Borealis Space Station “ is a hive of villainy where anything can be bought or sold –anything or anyone – if the price is right.”  That makes it a great setting for stories.  Borealis is under the control of the Trans Planetary Protectorate (TTP) and The Rebellion is active on and around the station. Borealis Book Two contains three more SFR novellas set on the station.  Each story can stand-alone but there are characters and events that repeat.  I would read the stories in order for maximum enjoyment.  

All of the stories are well written, have action, romance and additional world building.  My favorite in Borealis II was the last story, Bleu Lies by Shea McMaster.  Commander Kal Rains has begun to question his work for the TTP.  Then he meets Summer Merriweather and he must choose between Summer and the Rebellion or TTP.  Blue Lies is also the longest story in Borealis II. 

I mentioned this when I recommended Borealis I and I just thought it was worth pointing out again.   While there is romance in all the stories there is very little sex.  I don’t know about anyone else but I am tired of pages and pages of sex that do not add to the story.  I just skim those sections so having everything written so it relates to the story is great.

On a Yahoo group I belong to someone asked for recommendation for good SFR books and I recommended the Borealis books.  It turns out the person who asked is the author of one of the stories in Borealis I.  She got a good laugh and mentioned that she had just turned in a story for Borealis III

Desert Breeze published Borealis Book Two by Stephanie Burkhart, Esther Mitchell and Shea McMaster in 2011.

I purchased Borealis Book Two.