Finally, the new Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventure is here!

Well, it’s been about a year since Cradle Robbers, the last Captain Arlon Stoddard novel, came out, so it’s both a thrill and a relief to get Margin Dwellers into the world.

I always love my last novel most, and I kind of feel this is the best one yet. A glorious mess of action and adventure, set on a unique world, with a unique set of problems.

Ebook available from the website right away, and on preorder, along with the paperback, from Amazon, etc. from February 28th.

Here’s the book’s blurb, and the first couple of chapters.

Margin Dwellers blurb

Mel Oaster loves her twilight room haven. Right at the edges of sunlight on tidally-locked, sun-blasted Planet Talmenica. Half-frozen, half-baked.

People like Mel inhabit the margins between light and shadow. They live unique and peaceful lives.

But when Mel’s lover Talshon vanishes, her haven takes on a whole new meaning.

Captain Arlon Stoddard and his crew plunge in to find the mystery deepening and darkening.

Talmenica holds more secrets.

Secrets it desperately holds close.


Margin Dwellers, extract

Chapter One

There was only one place to be when Mel was angry, and she didn’t know if she’d ever been this angry before.

The twilight room.

It was her favorite place anyway. Angry or not. And even if no one else really liked it. Even if coming out here sometimes meant a deal of mockery.

She could cope with that.

But she shouldn’t be angry now. Not just because Talshon was dead.

But he was–dead–and she was angry.

She was nineteen years old, standard, and she stood close to two meters tall–one ninety eight and a half centimeters!–almost a head taller than most of the people around her. Friends and family, and another source of mockery. Mostly good natured.

Maybe that was why her grandmother called her resilient. A lifetime of those little taunts and jabs had taught Mel a great deal of self-reliance.

The room was dim and small with just slits to admit whatever scant light was left in the air. More of a cabin, really, than a room–wasn’t a room within a building? Inside there was a long bench seat, stretching from the northern wall to the southern wall around three of the octagonal room’s sunward walls. Around nine meters all told. The seat had three white tatami cushions that covered it end to end.

Opposite the seat stood the book racks. Bookshelves. Whatever you wanted to call them. Mostly triple and quadruple and quintuple books in their neat translucent packets little bigger than her flat hand, and thinner. Twenty-two of them, with around a hundred books. She’d given up on more than she’d completed, but that was all right.

Titania and Andronicus and the Lion. Star-span. Little Women. A History of the Human Empire.

Mix and match. Take your pick.

There were so many books to read anyway, there was no sense in forcing your way through something dull.

Besides, her favorites were the books with paper pages that you had to turn.

The Lemontree by Snapper von Wilde. So rich with color and the sense of life that she could almost taste things in her mouth.

Closest by M. Aneith. That one still tore her heart out when she got to the end. Even though, through every moment and every page she knew it was coming.

The paper books were heavy in her hand, as if they had real substance. As if the weight of the stories was conveyed by the very physicality of the volume. Their smell was strange and old, like sweet decaying leaves–which in a way they were. The pages of the books were also called ‘leaves’, and that was also a nice pun, since when you turned the page, you were leaving that part of the story.

Mel smiled to herself. Not that she would ever say that to anyone–that would simply give more opportunity for a little mockery.

Some of the racks held trinkets and ornaments. Things that people didn’t really want, but still couldn’t bear to part with. Wind up music boxes, sensory cubes, projectors with messages from long-dead relatives, trophies, unusual stones, a little box of siltron seeds that still smelled sweet and strong.

The twilight room’s eight walls held aloft a high ceiling. Halfway up each wall–above her head-height even–slits allowed in that soft light. Each slit was two meters long and just a few centimeters high. The sunward slits were glowed with light from Parnassus, just beyond the horizon, and the nightward slits somehow brought in light from the distant, perpetual night.

The peaks of the Angelfire Mountains glowed back at her, their highest point above the horizon and catching the sun’s rays.

Farther around Talmenica’s globe, the night grew icy, deathly cold, but the darkness would be remarkable.

The twilight room stood atop a promontory high, high above the black hollows of Gardonis Gorge.

Behind the ridgeline, so Parnassus’s light only crept over. It was a half hour walk from her home, the little stone cottage a stone’s throw–joke–from her parents’ place. Here in the almost-shadows, she could gather her thoughts and think about what she would do next.

The twilight room’s walls were black, made from artificial slate slabs. Robots had constructed it decades back, milling and reconstituting the stone, installing the bench and the book rack, ensuring that the slots allowed light in the right proportions and air all the time. The door was another piece of slate, hung on brass hinges. The door wall was directly perpendicular to the sun’s rays, so that the door became neither too hot, nor too cold.

Other planets turned, and that was something it took a lot to comprehend.

So many books mentioned it as if it was nothing more intriguing than a dry biscuit or that gravity would make a stone fall if you dropped it.

Days and Nights on the Serengeti. A fascinating book that she often found herself reading again. Even just snippets.

Old Earth’s sun that moved in the sky. Moved.

Crept up from the east, chugged across the sky. It took twelve hours! And the horizon swallowed it up again. On the other side. The west.

How did people even stand up on a place like that? It would be so disconcerting. You would just feel as if the whole world was tumbling away beneath you.

Far better when the sun just did what it should and stayed in one place.

Talshon had been the one who’d explained it to her, long ago. Talmenica was tidally locked to Parnassus. Other planets weren’t. As if they were just drifting loose and randomly. As if there was no tether.

Talshon.

Gone.

Mel took a deep breath.

It wasn’t right. She needed a way to compose herself. Talshon should be right here with her. They should be able to wander through the fields and philosophize. They should be able to just… to just… just spend time together.

Mel swallowed, mouth dry.

She went to book racks and took down an old volume. The binding was leather–wasn’t that amazing?–and the pages were marbled on the edges. A Book of Days. Three hundred and sixty five articles for meditation, creativity and activities.

One a day.

An Earth year. How very quaint.

The book always cheered her. Open to any page and there was something to center on.

She sat back on the tatami and flicked through the pages, stopping on one randomly.

July 16th–Reflections upon my explorations by Luca Pastore.

In the days before powered transport, the man had walked from his home in a town called Torino in a country called Italia, north through Germania, Danimarca and right to the northern reaches of Norvegia. From the sun to the ice. Mel had read it before and it always uplifted her. It was only a few pages, but Pastore’s travels were fascinating.

The forest thickens about our party as night suddenly draws about us. From the dark depths, an owl cries out, eerie and invisible.

Talshon was gone.

It seemed impossible.

The sight of ice floes crowding into the small harbor is a wonderous thing. They jostle on the tide.

Mel took a deep breath.

The door burst open, releasing a flood of dust. The motes sparkled in the light.

“Mel?” someone said.

Crithen. He’d come to find her.

“I’m here,” she said.

He stepped in. Tall, but not as tall as her. He was wearing a light tunic, knee-length socks and black boots. Similar to her own outfit.

“You need to come. Come back home. The investigators have come. They’re looking through your things. They are not being gentle.”

 

Chapter Two

Captain Arlon Stoddard ran hard in Saphindell’s workout room. The treadmill was a tried and tested way of keeping in shape. His feet thumped on the slippery surface, microfibers twisting fast to give the illusion of running on grass and making good headway, rather than staying in one spot.

Treadmills came from the ancient days, thousands of years ago, when they were simple machines designed to lift barrels of water, or to grind grain. The idea of staying in one spot to transfer energy from your legs to a mechanism was tried and true.

Back then it had been slavery, really, or serfdom. Or poor animals harnessed to a yoke and made to walk in circles.

Arlon’s treadmill had few mechanical parts. No spinning wheels or sliding mat or gearing to adjust the angle. It was a half-grown, quasi-machine. The fibrous carpet was alive in some odd way he didn’t want to think about too much.

Saphindell didn’t want for energy. The ship was efficient and well-powered. Any time they came close to a star, the skin of her hull sucked up huge amounts of radiant energy and stored it for the leap to the next star.

Still, the energy from his running transferred back into the banks. A fraction of what the ship could collect in a moment. Ultimately inefficient. Using the chemical energy of food to drive the mechanical energy of his movement into electrical energy of the treadmill, back into chemical energy of the storage batteries.

But then, he had to work out, so might as well take a joule or two of his expended energy and send it back into something that might keep a display running for a moment. Or maybe a pump in one of the toilets.

He was aging. Working out was growing harder. Older joints and well-used muscles. Even with all the subtle modern tinkerings with cells and metabolisms, everyone still aged. Not as quickly as those serfs indentured back in the dark ages and earlier, but still. Immortality was a long way off.

Just as well, really.

The big display in front of him curved around in a kind of attempt to immerse him in an environment.

The mountains of Talmenica. An intriguing planet, and their destination.

A cluster of unexplained deaths. The local authorities were at a loss and overwhelmed and concerned about corruption and skewed investigations.

Arlon ran on, puffing and sweating. The band strap holding him to the treadmill shook and shuddered. No gravity on the leap, so tethers were required. He barely noticed it.

The mountains on the curved display were remarkable. Sun-blasted and bare on one side, dark and icy on the other.

Like Old Earth’s moon, and just about every moon just about everywhere, Talmenica was locked to its star, Parnassus. The planet completed an orbit every seventeen months and twelve days, standard, and its rotational period was identical.

It kept one hemisphere facing Parnassus, and the other facing out into the void. Permanent day and night, depending on where you stood.

At least with moons, they orbited their planet, so brought their faces around toward the star. Day and night.

Talmenica had no changing day and night.

Heck of a place.

Uninhabitable for the most part. Either it was scorching or just plain frozen. Its atmosphere seethed and roiled. Some of the storms would be remarkable. The temperature gradients were phenomenal.

Parnassus was a big old star. Plenty of energy to pound at the planet, but cool by most standards. A planet with a twenty-four hour rotational period–more or less–would be icy all over at that distance. Not really Goldilocks. Perhaps not even the equator would be inhabitable.

Selemenica’s population essentially lived in a narrow band just a few hundred kilometers across, stretching from the north pole to the south pole and back. The band that divided the sun-beaten eastern hemisphere from the frozen western hemisphere.

Arlon couldn’t wait to get down to the surface. It would have been great to have visited under better circumstances. It would be remarkable to stand in the fields or the forests with the sun low to the horizon and never, ever moving.

“Cap?” a voice said from somewhere in the mountains. “Arlon?”

Holly. His first officer. The best foil he’d ever had.

“Running,” he said. The mountain trail seemed narrow and treacherous. Cliffs dropping away off to the right, a sheer scarp rising to the left, a long, jumbled rockfall ahead. All built from survey photography and resonance. Extrapolated into a kind of fake trail. Perhaps somewhere on the planet there really was a place like this. A twilight, sheltered from the sun by the shadow of the mountains, even while the peaks of other mountains to the west showed bright and stark.

“Good. I’ve got some ideas about what we might be dealing with when we arrive.”

“Go ahead.”

“How about over a meal? With crew? We won’t even be out of the leap for another two hours.”

Leaping between stars took some pretty fine calibration. The leap drive would put them pretty close to the planet, but it still might take hours to effect a landing.

“Give me the precis,” he said.

“It’s time to eat.”

“Now you’re just baiting me. What’s on the menu?”

“Comfrey taqs.”

“Mmm, that’s great.” They’d spent a week on planet Lockley, reviewing some scandalously falsified university research and the crew had discovered comfrey taqs which were now a favorite in the mess. Tightly-rolled flatbreads filled with a complex mix of soft seeds, leafy salad and strips of vatbeet, and baked almost rock hard. They were becoming almost a staple aboard Saphindell.

“Talmenica has an awful lot of clades and divisions,” Holly said.

“I read that.”

“What wasn’t clear, to me at least, was that there is an awful lot of separation between them. Physical gaps with a lot of unoccupied and unclaimed land.”

“I imagine huge swaths of the planet are somewhat unpalatable.” The population was somewhere north of two million, but less than ten percent of the surface was uninhabitable. And plenty of that was water. An ocean just about boiling at one end, and frozen at the other, across a length of less than fifteen hundred kilometers.

“They keep themselves to themselves,” Holly said. “There are administrative relationships, of course, but little contact otherwise.”

“Clear.”

“But here’s what I’ve spotted. There are family links throughout the place.”

“One would assume so.”

“Yes. But in the four clades where the unexplained deaths occurred, there are individual high-level administrators–elected officials–who are direct family. Cousins, and a pair of sisters.”

“Interesting.”

“I thought so. The links aren’t clear just yet.”

“As always, we’ll multiply our knowledge once we land on the planet.”

“Yes we will. Now. Come eat.”

“Let me run another thousand meters and I’ll be with you.”

“Shower first.”

“Thanks for the reminder. Sometimes I forget.”

Holly laughed and the connection ended.

Arlon kept running along the virtual mountain trail. Cousins and siblings. Perhaps it was nothing. That happened from time to time. Things that looked very much like useful clues proved to be nothing more than distraction.

Ahead on the path a small building came into view. Partially lit. Octagonal, two stories high, and with a single door facing him.

He smiled. It was a nice reminder that this odd planet actually was inhabited.

It would be good to get on the ground and see some of it for himself.

He slowed as he came up to the building. There were slots in the walls halfway up, and a kind of vane sticking up from the roof. He couldn’t go inside, of course, since this was just a simulation, but the place seemed peaceful and restful.

Almost at odds with why they were here.

“Arlon,” Holly said through the comms. “Remember to finish.”

“Yes, yes,” he said, and shut off the treadmill. He slowed to a stop and stared into the display for a moment longer.

This was going to be an interesting mission.


Check out the full book available from your favorite retailer from February 28th, $5.99 for the ebook, and $16.99 for the paperback. Available directly from the website now.

As a special celebration of the launch, use the code MarginDwellersLaunch at checkout to get a 50% discount. Valid through until March 7th 2025.

Thanks for reading.

Cradle Robbers – Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventures book 11 – out now

Finally, finally, we have Cradle Robbers out in the world. Book number 11 in the series. That even surprises me, really. I have such fun writing these books, that I seem to have just continued writing more. As I post this, the 12th book – Margin Dwellers –  has already been written and will soon enter the editing-proofing-preparation machine and should be out later in the year.


Cradle Robbers

Royd Melgrave slams himself into an emergency vacuum suit as klaxons blast around him. The refinery station seems doomed.

When Authority investigators Captain Arlon Stoddard and his crew arrive, the refinery wreck follows an erratic orbit and little evidence remains.

What they do find only raises more questions. Questions that might turn things inside out.

Can they figure it out before more the destruction of more installations?

 


All of the books are space adventures, but this one might just be the most space opera of them all.

Releasing on March 20th, Cradle Robbers is available for preorder from your favorite retailer through the Universal Book Link here. ebook $5.99, print $16.99.

But, as I’m working on developing direct sales through my own store, the ebook is available right now, directly from me through Shopify/Bookfunnel for the same price – $5.99.

Catch up with the rest of the series here on the Captain Arlon Stoddard page. The first three books, Asteroid Jumpers, Ice Hunters and Ship Tracers, remain at the special price of $3.99 to help readers get started. Eventually they will show up on the Sean Monaghan store as well.

You’ll notice that there are layout changes to the covers of the last two books. I’m working back through the inventory to update the look, but with several series, numerous standalone novels, and a whole bunch of short stories and novellas, this is taking a while. I’ll get to them as the process progresses.

Thanks for reading. More news soon. Yes, soon. I’ve neglected posting here, but plans are afoot to put something up on a more regular basis. Did you say weekly? Sure, why not?

Cheers, Sean

 

 

The Blaze of Pollux – short story collection

Sometimes I write stories that are a little off beat and unusual. At least, I like to think they are – a writer being the worst judge of their own work, it may be that these are simply cookie cutter stories in the same vein as everything else I write, though somehow, I don’t think so. Take a look at the blurb:

The Blaze of Pollux

Ice cream on a space liner headed for disaster. A hike with a difference.  Strange animals on the loose. Odd solutions to trash overload. A scam artist lost in space.

Immerse yourself in another collection of offbeat science fiction stories from award winner Sean Monaghan.

Cover illustration © Eevlva | Dreamstime.com.

 

In the early days of my indie publication explorations – 2014 and 2015 – I put out four collections – Balance, Balance ii, Balance iii and Unbalanced, on the premise that they were neatly balanced collections, but the last one – Unbalanced – brought together quirky stories – a manga character on the loose in the real world, a transcript of a future NASCAR race commentary – and turned out to be a fun collection. It’s even sold a few copies – thanks if you were one of the purchasers. I hope you enjoyed that one.

With the passage of years, I hope I’m a better storyteller, so I would like to think that these ones are a little better than those. Of course, as I mention in the book’s introduction, a writer is the worst judge of their own work. I’m pretty sure that the cover and the interior look better than those early fumbling attempts.

Pick up The Blaze of Pollux from your favorite retailer: ebook $4.99, print $9.99. – Universal book link.

These ones below are still available. No universal booklink, but a search in your faborite retailer will bring them to the top. Sometimes I might even go back and redo those covers. So many covers, so little time!

Novellas in October and November

I like to have new book releases out on the 20th of the month, and for October and November, these will be novellas from two of my series. The first novellas in both. My novellas sit around a quarter the length of a novel – say around a hundred pages. I think Amazon labels them in with “90 minute reads” or something.


First up in on October 2oth is “Ortanide Steppers” from my Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventures series. Think deep space adventures with mysteries and puzzles around the galaxy. Technically a “novelette” in SF terms, but boy, keeping track of the names for the different lengths…

Ortanide. A planet with a unique geography, a rich history and a strange political system.

A political system that defies Captain Arlon Stoddard and his crew.

Restrained in a dank cell by the very people he came to help, Arlon faces the choice of violating the charters he works to uphold.

Or certain death.

A Captain Arlon Stoddard novella that pits the crew against possibly their most heinous foe yet.

 

Priced especially at $2.99 for the ebook, and $6.99 for the paperback. A bargain, right?


Next out on November 20th is “Cold Highway” from my Cole Wright Thrillers series. Pretty standard kind of thriller, adventure, gunplay stuff here. I’ve always liked those frozen highways and figured that might be a fun place to set a story. I was right, at least in writing it. I hope it’s as much fun to read.

A trip north of the border takes Cole Wright into the heart of snowbound Canada. Friendly people, vast distances, tough vehicles, isolation.

When a breakdown looms, Wright finds himself caught in the white, compacted landscape. A road thirty feet wide, hemmed in by the piled up ridges left by snowploughs. And an endless forest that could hide just about anything.

Unfriendly territory. Dangerous places.

A Cole Wright novella that focuses down on a single moment where the slightest error could be his last.

Still reasonably priced at $3.99 for the ebook, and $7.99 for the paperback.

So far all my paperbacks have come through Amazon, but I’m testing this one through Draft 2 Digital as well, in a slightly larger format, and ending up priced at $10.99. We’ll see how that goes.


As with previous months, I’ll have short stories out in the lead up to the releases. “Sea Skimmers”, which is the first Captain Arlon Stoddard short story, and followed by “Cardinals” which is a Cole Wright story with a difference – Lieutenant Ione Anders as the lead character (you’ll remember her from the first Cole Wright novel The Arrival) and Cole himself tagging along as a background character.

Details to come.

Remember you can explore the series from the pages available in the menu at the top of the page on the website here.

Thanks for reading.

Sean

SF Novellas, etc.

I have a new novella, Barrens, out at the start of May. It seemed like a good moment to mention novellas and where they sit in the scheme of things. Well, in the scheme of my writing.

First, a little about Barrens.

***

A beautiful piece of engineering, interstellar ship, Elegia Fortune should function perfectly. When the vessel falls out of warp, Lila Sansom and the crew find themselves with more problems than they can count.

Including an impossible planet in the wrong place

Deep space adventure at its finest.

Available now for preorder for release on May 1st. ebook $3.99, print $5.99


While I do write a lot of SF novels, and a lot of SF stories, I also write plenty at intermediate lengths. Most of my novels run between 300 and 450 pages, and my short stories anywhere from 5,000 to 10,000 words, or about 20 to 40 pages.

Novellas are a fun length. Now, it depends who you ask which label gets applied to which length. Some will say anything from 15,000 words to 30,000 words is a novella, and 30,000 words and up is a novel. Some will say even 50,000 words is only a short novel.

Owlcation has a definition that seems to broadly fit – flash fiction: 53 – 1,000 words, short stories: 3,500 – 7,500, novelettes: 7,500 – 17,000, novellas: 17,000 – 40,000, novels: 40,000 + words.

I like the idea the flash fiction starts from 53 words. Very specific. And Hemingway possibly wrote a six word story – see Wikipedia for better analysis than I can provide.

Still, sometimes my stories grow into little monsters, larger than short stories, but not quite novels. I think part of what is fun about them is that I can explore the worlds and the characters with more depth than in a short story, and also that the commitment of time that a novel takes isn’t there.

To blow my own trumpet, a good example is my own novella “Goldie” in this year’s January/February issue of Asimov’s. A longer tale, taking place in a wide world, with numerous characters, over the passage of weeks and months.

To the reader’s advantage here is that they can be priced a little lower than novels (well, they are quicker reads). So my novellas sit at the $3.99 mark for ebooks, and, mostly $5.99 for print. Print is a different beast, so for some of the slightly longer ones, that price creeps up toward ten bucks. Still a bargain, I think. I will keep the ebook price at $3.99 for pretty much anything under the 40,000 word mark.

Universal Book Links here:

Cami, Metta and the Cube

Fubrelli’s Ghost

Lucy Yesterday

Load Bearing Member


Also should mention that in April there are a couple of other things showing up. Book seven of the Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventures, Island Hoppers will be out on the 20th (that one’s a novel), and a twisted time travel novella Lucy Yesterday out on the 10th.

Thanks for reading.

 

 

 

 

Underworld Climbers cover reveal

Book Six of my Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventures series will be out on June 20th. Just into the final formatting, writing of a blurb and those last few bits of tidy up before it can get out into the world

Underworld Climbers might even be my personal favorite of the series, so far, but then, usually the most recent thing I’ve written is my favorite.

The cover is by the amazing Luca Oleastri, whose images appear on several of the other Captain Arlon Stoddard books.

Blurb and links and more details coming soon. Meanwhile, this is the wonderful cover. Thanks Luca.

Underworld Climbers temp

Raven Rising in a new bundle – Sci-Fi July Redux

scifireduxad
My deep space adventure novel Raven Rising will be out on July 4th in a new bundle, featuring novels by Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Kevin J. Anderson among others.

Barbara G. Tarn, the curator, has put together a cool promo video trailer here

The books in the bundle are:

Veiled Alliances
by Kevin J. Anderson

New California
by Raymund Eich

Trek This
by Robert Jeschonek

Adventurer (Star Minds Lone Wolves)
by Barbara G. Tarn

Stealing from Pirates
by Stefon Mears

Cradle of the Day
by Meyari McFarland

A Jack By Any Other Name
by Lesley L. Smith

The Runabout
by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Sector Justice
by Dean Wesley Smith

Raven Rising redoIn the meantime, I’ve updated the cover layout of the novel from its version on Bundlerabbit. I’ve had a little advice on design, and reviewed a course I did a while back, and also am working on adapting to changes (not that I’m ever a good example of someone who adapts well to change) – such as the size of my name on there.

I’ve also tinkered a little with the blurb for the novel.

“Light years from home, Starship Raven went down in a horrific blazing wreck. Crack investigator Angelie Gunnarson and her team thrive on these kinds of impossible mysteries. But the Raven might have more secrets than even Angelie can handle. An action-packed short sci-fi novel from the award-winning author.”

The bundle  is available for $7.99 from usual retailers. A pretty good bargain for all those books.

Latest novel: The City Builders – out on April 16th

City BuildersMy latest release continues the theme of strange and dangerous environments challenging the characters. I’ve always been fascinated by the idea of vast cities so it I had fun taking free rein creating the world of Mackelle. The blurb goes like this:

Desra Parker loves investigating strange planets. But when missiles shoot her ship down over Mackelle, Desra and her crew find themselves in a desperate race for survival. Battling the elements and relentless building-sized robots, Desra needs to unravel the mysteries of Mackelle’s endless city if she’s going to keep anyone alive. And figure out a way to get home.
I was lucky enough to get this wonderful cover illustration by Bertrandb (Dreamstime.com) which perfectly conveys the setting.
Available from your usual retailers, including
ebook – $5.99
Print $17.99
Amazon

Wakers – New story coming out in August Asimov’s

ASF_JUNE2016_400x580 Well, this is the cover for the June issue, but I’ll post the August cover when that issue comes out… with my story “Wakers” inside.

Here’s the blurb from the Asimov’s website:

In Sean Monaghan’s tense August 2016 novelette, unforeseen dangers have disrupted an interstellar journey. Although the work of self-sacrificing astronauts has kept the spaceship running for hundreds of years, the voyage may soon be permanently altered by fresh “Wakers.”

I’m looking forward to it. Keep an eye out for the issue. It should be out in early July.

The Wreck of the Emerald Sky – new novella in The Colored Lens

.

My novella The Wreck of The Emerald Sky has just been published in The Colored Lens.

Filled with bright, imaginative speculative fiction, The Colored Lens is a quarterly, available on Kindle for $2.99.

The Wreck of the Emerald Sky is a sci-fi adventure story set in my Barris Space universe. If you’ve read my stories “Barris Debris” in Deep Space Terror or “Eltanin Hoop Anomaly Rescue” in Will It Go Faster If I Push This?, then you might be familiar with the setting.

Here are the first couple of paragraphs as a taster
__________________________________________

Chapter one

Derel Larsen sat bolt upright in the bed as his ear-roll chimed. He was halfway to Meriam’s room before he realized that the chime wasn’t her security alert. It was just a phone call.
“Larsen,” he said, thumbing the connect. He kept going towards Meriam’s door.
“Larsen?” a voice said. One of the controllers at flight. Jamie, Larsen thought. Nice woman, even if she did have to confirm his name right after he’d said it.
“Medical leave is over, sport,” Jamie said.

_________________________________________