Booking Through Thursday: Fantasy & Sci-Fi

Filed Under (Booking Through Thursday) by Morbid Romantic on 18-06-2009
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One of my favorite sci-fi authors (Sharon Lee) has declared June 23rd Fantasy and Science Fiction Writers Day.

As she puts it:

So! In my Official Capacity as a writer of science fiction and fantasy, I hereby proclaim June 23 Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Day! A day of celebration and wonder! A day for all of us readers of science fiction and fantasy to reach out and say thank you to our favorite writers. A day, perhaps, to blog about our favorite sf/f writers. A day to reflect upon how written science fiction and fantasy has changed your life.

So … what might you do on the 23rd to celebrate? Do you even read fantasy/sci-fi? Why? Why not?

I can’t imagine that I would do something special to celebrate the 23rd, but I wish that I had a lot of book loving friends to have some sort of book party with. We could share and discuss books and eat yummy things. Alas, I am veritably friendless! I am not even a member of any local book club. Maybe I will take the suggestion of above and just blog about some of my favorite fantasy/sci-fi writers and books.

I am not a big fan of fantasy or sci-fi, but I have read a books in the genre and am not adverse to selecting a good sounding one to read. In fact, I started out my love of books thanks to a fantasy series. I have said this before on my blog, but my mother used to read to me Piers Anthony’s Xanth series when I was a kid of 7. She read me the first eight or so books, and I always remembered them fondly. So, later on when I was around 13, I picked up the books again and it just took off from there. I have nothing but respect and love for the fantasy genre. Sci-Fi, though, I am more selective about because I tend not to like stuff that is technical and ‘spacey.’

In the Mail (06.18)

Filed Under (New Books) by Morbid Romantic on 18-06-2009
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Free Food For Millionaires by Min Jim Lee
In her noteworthy debut, Lee filters through a lively postfeminist perspective a tale of first-generation immigrants stuck between stodgy parents and the hip new world. Lee’s heroine, 22-year-old Casey Han, graduates magna cum laude in economics from Princeton with a taste for expensive clothes and an “enviable golf handicap,” but hasn’t found a “real” job yet, so her father kicks her out of his house. She heads to her white boyfriend’s apartment only to find him in bed with two sorority girls. Next stop: running up her credit card at the Carlyle Hotel in New York City. Casey’s luck turns after a chance encounter with Ella Shim, an old acquaintance. Ella gives Casey a place to stay, while Ella’s fiancé gets Casey a “low pay, high abuse” job at his investment firm and Ella’s cousin Unu becomes Casey’s new romance. Lee creates a large canvas, following Casey as she shifts between jobs, careers, friends, mentors and lovers; Ella and Ted as they hit a blazingly rocky patch; and Casey’s mother, Leah, as she belatedly discovers her own talents and desires. Though a first-novel timidity sometimes weakens the narrative, Lee’s take on contemporary intergenerational cultural friction is wide-ranging, sympathetic and well worth reading.


Transparency by Frances Hwang
A largely unlovable cast of hard-nosed Chinese-Americans search for their rightful places in the 10 carefully wrought tales of Hwang’s debut. “The Old Gentleman,” which opens the collection, finds a Taiwanese émigré widower remarryinig for love, ironically scandalizing his divorced, thoroughly Americanized daughter. The complicated relations between two family branches of émigrés drives “A Visit to the Suns”: young women home from college feel “blunted” by their parents’ strictness, while the coddling of the boy cousin leads him to sloth and rudeness. “Garden City” follows the aging, fallen-out-of-love Chens, whose tragic loss of their young son from a brain tumor leaves them at the mercy of an unreliable tenant (“the Christian lady”) in the throes of her own private misery. Several stories resonate with youthful pangs of heartache and rebellion: “Blue Hour” finds a group of mid-20s friends unsure how to behave among themselves on a New Year’s Eve trek into New York City, while “Sonata for the Left Hand” delineates a young woman’s disappointing love affair with an exciting, coldhearted fellow teacher at an upstate New York boarding school. More panorama than thematic set, Hwang’s debut is brisk and direct.


Strangers From a Different Shore by Ronald Takaki
This popular history of Asian Americans–Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Vietnamese, Filipinos, and Indians–based frequently on primary sources, shows how they have made their presence felt in America from the early 1800s. Their immigration has been marked by the cruelty of forced labor, poverty, and intense prejudice. Many had come searching for a better life after hearing tales of gold nuggets on city streets, money on trees, and the famed “gold mountain.” Instead, they found the endless chopping of sugar cane, the sweat of laundries, the backache of building railroads. Later generations discovered the lack of opportunity despite prestigious university degrees. This is fascinating reading, highly recommended.


The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food by Jennifer 8. Lee
Readers will take an unexpected and entertaining journey—through culinary, social and cultural history—in this delightful first book on the origins of the customary after-Chinese-dinner treat by New York Times reporter Lee. When a large number of Powerball winners in a 2005 drawing revealed that mass-printed paper fortunes were to blame, the author (whose middle initial is Chinese for prosperity) went in search of the backstory. She tracked the winners down to Chinese restaurants all over America, and the paper slips the fortunes are written on back to a Brooklyn company. This travellike narrative serves as the spine of her cultural history—not a book on Chinese cuisine, but the Chinese food of take-out-and-delivery—and permits her to frequently but safely wander off into various tangents related to the cookie. There are satisfying minihistories on the relationship between Jews and Chinese food and a biography of the real General Tso, but Lee also pries open factoids and tidbits of American culture that eventually touch on large social and cultural subjects such as identity, immigration and nutrition. Copious research backs her many lively anecdotes, and being American-born Chinese yet willing to scrutinize herself as much as her objectives, she wins the reader over. Like the numbers on those lottery fortunes, the book’s a winner.


Trail of Crumbs: Hunger, Love, and the Search for Home by Kim Sunee
On making Sunee’s acquaintance in the introduction to this charming memoir, it’s hard not to envy the young woman swimming laps in the pool overlooking the orchard of her petit ami’s vast compound in the High Alps of Provence, but below the surface of this portrait is a turbulent quest for identity. Abandoned at age three in a Korean marketplace, Sunee is adopted by an American couple who raise her in New Orleans. In the 1990s she settles, after a fashion, in France with Olivier Baussan, a multimillionaire of epicurean tastes and—at least in her depiction—controlling disposition. She struggles to create a home for herself in the kitchen, cooking gargantuan meals for their large circle of friends, until her restive nature and Baussan’s impatience with her literary ambitions compel her to move on. The gutsy Cajun and ethereal French recipes that serve as chapter codas are matched by engaging storytelling. Alas, for all Sunee’s preoccupation with the geography of home, her insights on the topic are disappointingly slight, and the facile wrapup offered in the form of resolution seems a shortcut in a book that traverses so much rocky terrain.

ThrillerFest 2009

Filed Under (Entertainment) by Morbid Romantic on 18-06-2009
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From June 8th to June 11th in New York City, New York, thriller writers, lovers, and agents will participate in the International Thriller Writers’ ThrillerFest 2009. ThrillerFest is in its 4th year, and this one promises to be exciting. I just looked at their panel and workshop grid and there are a lot of great sounding things on the program: How to Pitch Your Book, Plotting Evil, Love is Murder, Should Women Be on Top, and R Thrillers 4 Kids just to name a few. The four days of the convention are packed with things to do. There is also going to be a cocktail party, a lunch, a reception, and an awards ceremony, which will present the ThrillerMaster and Silver Bullet Awards. Who are some of the guests in attendance? There are some big and great names on board such as R.L. Stein, Shane Briant, and M.J. Rose.

Check out all of the ThrillerFest 2009 packages and prices and register to attend. Registration closes on July 7th and you don’t have to be a member of the International Thriller Writers to register and attend.

My Bitten by Books Swag

Filed Under (Won) by Morbid Romantic on 17-06-2009
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I won a bunch of goodies from Bitten by Books during their Birthday Bash, and I got my box in the mail today! It was like Christmas opening up the box and taking out everything sent to me. I do so love a big prize, especially when most of it is a surprise. I wanted to show everyone what I got so that you would all know what an awesome site Bitten by Books is, and what wonderful contests they have.

bittenbybooksswag1

In the Mail (06.17)

Filed Under (New Books) by Morbid Romantic on 17-06-2009
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Dead to Me by Anton Strout
Psychometry-the power to touch an object and divine information about its history-has meant a life of petty crime for Simon Canderous, but now he’s gone over to the good side. At New York’s underfunded and (mostly) secret Department of Extraordinary Affairs, he’s learning about red tape, office politics, and the basics of paranormal investigation. But it’s not the paperwork that has him breathless. After Simon spills his coffee on (okay, through) the ghost of a beautiful woman- who doesn’t know she’s dead-he and his mentor plan to find her killers. But Simon’s not prepared for the nefarious plot that unfolds before him, involving politically correct cultists, a large wooden fish, a homicidal bookcase, and the forces of Darkness, which kind of have a crush on him.


Deader Still by Anton Strout
It’s been 737 days since the Department of Extraordinary Affairs’ last vampire incursion, but that streak appears to have ended when a boat full of dead lawyers is found in the Hudson River. Using the power of psychometry—the ability to divine the history of an object by touching it—agent Simon Canderous discovers that the booze cruise was crashed by something that sucked all the blood out of the litigators. Now, his workday may never end—until his life does.


A Drop of Red by Chris Marie Green
Hollywood stuntwoman-turned-vampire-hunter Dawn Madison, along with her comrades, managed to wipe out the Los Angeles Vampire Underground—and uncovered not only her own dark family heritage but also a terrible truth about the man she loves. Now she’s determined to find the next vampire lair, hoping it will help her to make more sense out of her life. When a new Underground is found in England, Dawn and a vampire-fighting team are dispatched to carry the fight to the enemy in London. Dawn knows by now how deceiving appearances can be—and she is about to find out that it’s not only the beautiful people of Hollywood who are willing to bargain with evil…

Blog Tour: Gauntlet by Richard Aaron

Filed Under (Blog Tour, Interview, Library, Review) by Morbid Romantic on 17-06-2009
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About Richard Aaron

RICHARD AARON lives in a cold, northwestern city with his wife, four children, and various dogs and cats. He has a university degree in mathematics and a masters in law. Neither have anything to do with his burgeoning career as a writer. He worked in the real world for two decades before realizing that he was actually meant to be a writer. Gauntlet was produced soon thereafter.
Official Website

About Gauntlet

A terrorist threat is looming; an attack that would dwarf any other. This time, the government knows it’s coming, but doesn’t know where … or how.
From a stunning new voice in international intrigue comes a dramatic story of a shadowy underworld, high-stakes missions, treachery, honor, unlikely heroes, and the ultimate attack…

Six hundred sixty tons of Semtex is detonated in a massive explosion in Libya – the last of a deadly stockpile. The operation seems to have gone smoothly, but within minutes of the explosion, CIA agent Richard Lawrence discovers that one shipment of the explosive was hijacked en route to the destruction point. Days later, a glory-seeking “Emir” broadcasts to the world that he is planning a massive terrorist strike against a major U.S. landmark. And he gives a timeline of one month.

Now a desperate chase covers four continents, as the men bent on attacking the United States use every weapon at their disposal to evade the American authorities. Time and again they prove willing to destroy anything – and anyone – standing in their way. But Hamilton Turbee, an autistic computer mastermind at the secretive and newly created TTIC agency, discovers a way to follow their tracks. His flawed genius gives the nation its only chance at stopping the attack … if the American leadership will listen. As the enemies near their destination, and an attack becomes imminent, it is up to the TTIC team, still without a true leader, to stop the massive explosion that could destroy the lives of millions.

As the world watches in horror, the President asks TTIC two questions …
Where will the attack be?
And can it be stopped…

My Review of


In Richard Aaron’s Gauntlet, about 4.5 tons of a highly explosive plastic material known as semtex has gone missing and is in the hands of Afghanistan terrorists plotting against America. Authorities don’t know where the attack will take place and have only a month to find out and stop it from killing a lot of innocent people. The terrorists, skilled at what they do, evade detection and catch at every turn. A major hub of the action is a group known as the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, or TTIC. One of their most vital employees turns out to be an autistic math genius named Hamilton Turbee who is good at cracking codes and doing quick calculations in his head.

The plot will take you everywhere from the caves of Afghanistan where terrorists hide and plot, the deserts of the Middle East, the Canadian border where a cop is investigating drugs, and to Washington and back. While reading, you will jump around the world, and this constant movement gives a sense of scope to the plot such that you realize how widespread and serious an issue like the one in the book really is, and of all the work that goes into cracking the plots of and stopping terrorists.

Everything is fast paced, jumping from one character to the next, and there are A LOT of characters. Each character is distinct, though, even the terrorists that you come to understand the motives of. Gauntlet is a book to read when you don’t have anything else to do because you will not want to put it down. With each page, the suspense builds until you feel like it is going to crack. What makes the book even more immediate and hard to put down is that everything within it feels real, as if it is happening or has happened. After all, we are living in a world aware and fearful of terrorist attacks. The thought that something like this could happen, or could be happening behind the scenes, is quite frankly very terrifying.

This is really the first time that I have read a book like this and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I love a complex plot that twists and connects all over the place, and this book certainly delivered a well thought out and wonderfully written series of events. I don’t want to give too much away, but suffice to say that you will be on the edge of your seat.

Interview With Richard Aaron

What do you do to prepare to write? What is the process that gets you ready to sit down a lay out a story?

I try to get to my office very early, as I did this morning, at 5:30 AM. The rest of the crew doesn’t start to filter in until 8 or 8:30. In the quiet of the morning, I have research from books and the internet prepared. I have a detailed outline prepared. If a new character is introduced, I put his traits or description into my data base. If I am using established characters I go to that database to make sure that the character remains internally consistent. Working on a plot this complicated takes a certain mind frame, and getting into the characters is the easiest way for me to enter the “Gauntlet/Counterplay world.” Then I can get huge amounts of work done. I do the same on weekends, and in the evenings.

How much of yourself do you put in your characters? Are they extensions of you, or are they independent creations that take on a life of their own after coming from your imagination?

My nature is to like structure. On the book I am now working on I have literally, on very large sheets of roll paper, diagrammed out the story from beginning to end. From that I create a more detailed, written outline, and from that, outlines of the scenes in each chapter. When I’m finally ready to write, I have all the major bones in place, and I can motor along at 10 pages a day.

As we are all aware, the issues of terrorist attacks, weapon stockpiles, and international instability are very prominent today. How influenced are you by modern events?

A smidgen here and a little bit there. I’m actually a boring person, when you consider the spectrum of personalities that exist out there. If I put too much of me into it, the book would flop. The characters come from the vast number of people I have met as a lawyer. I take a bit from one person, a chunk from another, and I put them together. They become vital and interesting.

Influence by present events?

Totally. I am a news junky. I read I don’t know how many newspapers and magazines in a day. I look at each issue from different angles, everything from the stodgy CNN view to the crazy anarchist one-worlders out there. We live in fascinating and dangerous times. Counterplay, the sequel to Gauntlet, is set largely in Iran for this reason. Current events point to the fact that it’s a fertile background for terrorism and nuclear hooliganism, which played perfectly along with my plot.

I imagine there are many complexities in the plot with international relations, domestic politics, weaponry, culture, and computer technology. What sort of research did you have to do to write this book?

I can say that for every page of the book, there are a good two or three pages of research. I researched endlessly – everything from the flight characteristics of an F22 to the nature of vegetation in the great Garagum Desert. My novels have that type of detail to keep them realistic.

Do you feel that your book addresses some of the issues that we face today? When you wrote it, did you have any hope that readers would learn something from the events in your book?

Yes. But it does not provide answers. The book has issues of drug addiction, illicit border crossing, and the interplay between terrorist and heroin dealers, leading to what today could fairly be called narco-terrorists. It shows that the USA is exposed to terrorist attacks that we cannot even begin to imagine. But then again, it’s a novel. It’s fiction. I shine a spotlight on these potential problems, but I don’t offer any answers or suggestions about how to handle the real world. Thanks goodness.

Because I have to know: who is your favorite US President and why?

Kennedy, because he had balls. I know a lot of people blame him for a lot of things (including dying before he could take responsibility), but I mean really… becoming President at such a young age, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and dating Marilyn Monroe? You have to respect the guy for that.

What is the most valuable piece of knowledge that you’ve picked up after becoming a published author that you wish you knew from the start?

It’s like graduation from high school. It’s a step, but only that. A long, long journey follows, involving publicists, expensive trips, signings, time away from home, and endless and expensive PR. When you get published, you soon find out that you are at the start of yet another difficult and challenging journey. I certainly didn’t realize this, and I think most authors are probably as shocked as I was to find that writing the book is just the start of it.

What is one thing you’ve never done but would love to do?

Spend a week inside and outside the Great Pyramid of Giza.

What would your ‘theme’ song be on the soundtrack of your life?

Bob Seeger, “Against the Wind.”