Sunday, September 11, 2022

The High House



Francesca, a climate scientist, and her husband secretly prepare their home, high on a protected bluff, to shelter against the coming environmental crisis, a significant flooding event. Called overseas to help with the global policy effort, they enlist the help of neighbours, Grandy and his granddaughter, Sally, to maintain the 'high house', and care for their teen daughter, Caro, and young son, Pauly.

Deservedly shortlisted for the 2021 Costa Novel Awards, The author, Jessie Greengrass, takes the reader on a family's intimate journey through the coming climate disaster. Told from alternating first-person POVs of Sally, Caro, and Pauly as they face the impending floods from the vantage point of their home, safely perched high above the rising ocean.


I connected with their unfolding distress, having faced the impact of flooding, albeit less deadly. I remember feeling helpless as the swelling river banks engulfed many homes while I watched from a high-rise unit with a birdseye view of the emergency. It is a surreal feeling. On the one hand, my immediate area was unaffected. Yet below, an emergency unfolded under the ever-present news choppers, bringing constant television updates.


The narrative is told mainly in chronological order. Still, occasionally the characters' fate is mentioned early in the story, but that never softens the tension as they all realise that the irreversible climate crisis worsens. The High House is a powerful story that reminded me of Cormack McCarthy's The Road. A must-read for climate deniers. 5 STARS

Friday, September 2, 2022

A Climate of Revenge

 


Sarah and JanetM, are a human/Artificial Intelligence pair who do private investigations in the near future where our climate crisis has hit and hit hard.  A man with a long dark history tries to hire them but is then killed.  His family hires the team to find who killed this man with a thousand enemies in a land with a million problems.  


The United Nations IPCC report, “Climate Change 2022, Impacts, Adaption and Vulnerability contains:  


C5.3 Enhancing knowledge

A wide range of … processes … can deepen climate knowledge and sharing, including … using the arts … (high confidence).


This can only be read as a clarion call for writers to produce the works that will help our people cope.  



My Review


A Climate of Revenge by Tom Riley is a Cli-Fi novel that follows a human/AI pair, Sarah and JanetM, as they go about solving a murder investigation - one that the police initially believe Sarah is a suspect.


Riley is a career scientist who has switched to writing climate fiction novels, a genre dealing with life on Earth ravaged by climate change. Like most authors in this emergent genre, Riley recognises the dangers of the climate crisis and wants to change readers' (and writers') attitudes. His work is a response to the IPCC's clarion call for others, particularly writers, to join the scientists and policymakers in deepening everyone's knowledge about global warming.


His background and experience shone through. The climate science described in A Climate of Revenge was fascinating, from the everyday responses, community gardening, to loftier strategies such as Cloud Brightening to protect the Earth's permafrost from melting. The reader is right there with Sarah as she navigates an increasingly depleted world. The technology is also seamlessly layered into this future world, highlighting its crucial role in monitoring the unfolding crisis. AI technology, ranging from personal assistants (JanetM) to boats and houses, was imaginative and believable. The interplay between AIs added layers to the many tech-driven characters. For example, an AI purgatory where the unwanted old models went was a unique and believable idea.


These elements alone enabled me to forgive the weaknesses within the storytelling. The investigation remained the secondary side story to the creative world-building. I read the draft PDF version, so I anticipate the author will tighten some of the sub-plots, address stilted dialogue and check the frequent grammatical errors before publishing.


That said, readers and writers with a genuine interest in the 'challenge of our time' will appreciate this book. A helpful appendix provides a scientist's perspective on what is or is not believable science of the future.  


Climate fiction is an emergent genre that, at its core, presents credible natural science. Significantly, Cli-Fi can help us imagine these experiences more vividly than endless scientific graphs of temperature variations. The choice between one, two or three degrees change in global temperature is actively messaged on mainstream and social media. Yet rational messaging is still not effectively cutting through, where perhaps the emotion and poetry of fiction could: 

"The whole complicated system of modernity which had held us up, away from the earth, was crumbling....and we were becoming again what we used to be: cold and frightened of the weather, and frightened of the dark." (Jessie Greengrass's The High House.)


For those not yet swayed by the climate crisis, start by reading A Climate of Revenge. It might just make you decide to become part of the movement for change. 4 STARS



Excerpt 


Chapter 1.  A Long Night


Sarah walked out of the restaurant past the taxi lane and into the dark parking lot.  The charging kiosks threw patches of dim light barely enough to walk by, but they lit up when anyone approached.  If anyone was sneaking around in the lot, the kiosks would surely have given them away.  There was no moon, the stars were just coming out, but the heat of the day was hanging on for a while.


The dinner appointment had been a waste of time, the ex-executive who had booked the table was only interested in hiring her to promote his I’m-a-good-guy-now agenda by getting the dirt on his enemies one way or another.  Sarah had no patience with such greenwashing.


What did he call himself, Winestead?  She knew she had heard that name before, but where?  JanetM would have a complete dossier by morning.  Anyway his story did not make much sense; he was hiding something.  Only god knew what sins against the Earth this man had already committed.


Sarah was not interested in his building a new facade; he could keep his money.  To make matters worse, the dinner was one of those little-food-and-fancy-plates affairs.  The whole experience left Sarah feeling still hungry and irritable.  The interview had gone on for much too long.



AUTHOR Bio and Links


After an extensive career at NASA as an Instrument Engineer, Tom Riley started a people-based space program, The Big Moon Dig, compatible with the needs of our climate crisis. Our climate crisis clearly must now come first, and that effort needed positive stories of people in action. 


Amazon

iUniverse








GIVEAWAY 


Tom Riley will be awarding a PDF file of "Writer's Guide to Our Climate Crisis" (International) to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.


Enter to win a writer's guide on climate change - a Rafflecopter giveaway HERE









Sunday, August 7, 2022

Last Star Standing

 


Blurb


Aiden has always felt like an outsider. After the rebel assassin is captured and imprisoned by the world’s galactic overlords, he awaits execution. Then a mole working for the occupying regime alerts him to a plot that could destroy the entire resistance...


Engineering a daring escape, Aiden’s growing feud with the new rebel leader leaves him out in the cold and smouldering with resentment. Faced with deceit and betrayals on every side, he recruits a group of overlooked outcasts and stakes everything on one last mission.


Can the restless, reckless Aiden take a stand long enough to save humanity from enslavement?



My Review


Last Star Standing by Spaulding Taylor is a dystopian thriller with sci-fi elements.


Earth's invaded by aliens, the Xirfell, in 2084. Naturally, a rebel alliance formed, and a decade on, one of its rebels, the protagonist Aiden Tenten is a prisoner. 


The story begins with Aiden's captivity in a high-tech Xirfell cell. Past events blur with the grisly present, jumbling Aiden's perceptions. His distorted memories intertwine with the action in the first half of this novel, providing many details about Aiden's back story. The lengthy introduction had a ‘tell not show’ style, unnecessarily slowing the pace, before Aiden's call to action.


The second half builds suspense and intrigue with Aiden's escape. Taylor introduces a myriad of characters, human and alien, shining a light on their divergent cultures. Aiden enlists a group of outcasts, Bully and Gromeline, who I found the most interesting characters in the story. Told in the First Person's POV, the reader gets a clear picture of Aiden's mindset as he grapples with his dire situation, often with irony and humour.


It took me a while to settle into Taylor's storytelling style, perhaps because the cover gave me the impression the story would be a space opera. However, despite the presence of many aliens, the action takes place on Earth. Hence the setting and world-building didn't soar as high as the unique and imaginative characters. 


Overall, Last Star Standing is a well-written and enjoyable read. If you're looking for a story that mixes Ian M Banks's Culture Series and Douglas Adams's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, you will enjoy this novel. 



Excerpt


Lips parted, the woman pressed eagerly forward. The target smiled at her but instead selected a pudgy lad of about six. He passed a skinny guy – who looked, the poor sap, practically broken-hearted. He was almost upon us. My heart sped until it seemed ready to jerk straight out of my chest. Choose me. Choose me. CHOOSE ME.


The Enlightened One seemed – or was it only my imagination? – to be gazing directly at me. Pushing swiftly past Petra I extended my hand. He turned, made a strange gesture, almost of benediction, then wired the back of my hand with that thick blackened stump. An instant surge of heat pulsed up my arm and throughout my torso. Then a wild swirl of fuchsia-slashed-with-orange flashed beneath my eyelids, as if the same stars, fiery and spot-lit against the black, had been injected into my brain. My every corpuscle felt fired, an almost intoxicating sensation, especially after the chill of the poison. I half-stumbled, almost squashing a smallish alien, and only saved myself from falling at the last second. 


Through a haze – my eyeballs felt as if they were swimming in flaming waterfalls – I saw Petra and moved towards her. Of course. She couldn’t risk being stamped, in case the creature died too fast. As we walked the ornate brand began to swell on my hand – a warming, tightening feeling. The sense of strangeness accelerated, though this might have been from my borrowed DNA, the chilled poison in my blood, or the fiery stamp. But nothing could dent my happiness, because – I’d done it. I’d assassinated The Enlightened One.



Author Bio 


Alice (Spaulding Taylor) McVeigh has been published by Orion/Hachette in contemporary fiction, by Unbound Publishing in action/adventure and by Warleigh Hall Press in Austenesque fiction. Her novels have won Gold Medal/First Place is the Global, eLit and Pencraft Book Awards, been runner-up in the Independent Press Awards, finalists in the Eric Hoffer, Rone and Wishing Shelf Book Awards and selected by Shelf Unbound as one of the "top indies" of 2021. Two of her novels are currently finalists in the CIBA Book Awards (the Cygnus and Goethe Awards). Her most recent novel (Harriet: A Jane Austen Variation) was just selected as Editors’ Pick “outstanding” on Publishers Weekly.


A professional London cellist, Alice lives in London and Crete with her professor husband: their only child is completing her Masters in Chinese Literature. They also share two miniature long-haired dachshunds and an incurable addiction to tennis.


Facebook

Instagram 

Twitter                 

Amazon

Goodreads

Pinterest 

TikTok

Video



Giveaway


One randomly chosen winner via rafflecopter will win a $50 Amazon/BN.com gift card. ENTER HERE



Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Consider Phlebas

 


On the surface, Consider Phlebas is a story about an inconsequential event that occurred during a period of the Galactic war between two major parties. The Culture, a loose federation of humans and intelligent machines, and the Idirans, a religious people, fighting for their faith.

The protagonist, Horza, a ‘shapeshifter’, is a spy working for the Idirans. He is assigned to retrieve a ‘Mind’, one of the Culture’s most advanced machines, stranded on a remote planet.

The story is a slow burn, immersing the reader in the political and social structures of the two warring parties as Horza journeys to the Planet of the Dead. Iain M. Banks’ considerable writing skills are on show as he develops a myriad of characters and AI machines inhabiting the Idiran and Culture universe. The richly detailed worldbuilding is also a delight as Banks describes the massive scale of technology developed in space.

He doesn’t shy away from the behavioural extremities of the character’s that they encounter, including cannibalism and a form of high-stakes gambling that illustrates how war leads to an inevitable devaluation of life.

Banks ups the pacing in the final chapters, where Horza and his assembled crew arrive at the Planet of the Dead and confront hostile Idiran agents, with each of the many characters carefully developed in the story facing bleak futures in a war-ravaged galaxy.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Chandelier Review Tour

 


Latest Review


Chandelier (Book Two of the Phantoms trilogy)

I am a Phantom of the Opera junkie. I loved book one of this series, and I absolutely couldn’t wait to read this one! Think The Phantom only...technology has advanced, and it’s a much different kind of opera ghost roaming around. With all the advances in AI it’s absolutely not hard to imagine our world advancing into a state where The Matrix has become much more real. Benny was absolutely fascinating, and well developed. I got so lost in this story, with the vivid descriptions and the brilliant way Leon plays with your emotions as you follow the story’s path, that the real world felt a little less real for a short time after I came back to it. A great genre-crossing book!

5 STARS

Review by The Faerie Review


Phantoms (Book One of the Phantoms trilogy)

This was a brilliant new take on the Phantom of the Opera. As a fan of the original story, I’m absolutely thrilled at how well Leon and Anthony brought new life to a classic story. The characters had beautiful depth, and I felt like I was stepping straight into the story. The story moved along smoothly, with plenty of twists to keep the reader engaged. The intertwining of Macbeth above with the Phantom below was wonderful. Highly recommended for fans of the original phantom! 

5 STARS 

Review by The Faerie Review


Other Reviews

The Faerie Review

Fabulous and Brunette

The Avid Reader

Long and Short Reviews

Our Town Book Reviews


Follow the rest of the tour HERE


Chandelier (Book Two of the Phantoms trilogy)


CHANDELIER: The legendary Phantom of the Opera reimagined.


CHANDELIER, Book Two of the PHANTOMS trilogy, returns to where Book One ended, Erik's dramatic escape from the Garnier as Paris police attempt to arrest him. So what became of Erik and the famous divas who crossed his path? Did Erik miraculously survive, or had his terrifying reign ended in the river Seine's murky depths as rumours claimed?


The truth remains hidden, seemingly lost in time, before a humanoid, Benny, is drawn into the Phantom's dark world. Here, 22nd-century super-intelligence collides with 20th-century malevolence, revealing dangerous secrets in this tale of time travel, love lost, grand opera theatres and the ghosts that inhabit them.


Benny, a talented musician, is delighted to be contracted by Diva (Madame D'Arenberg) to help deliver her final performance at the Paris opera house. However, his satisfaction turns to alarm as he is swept up in the Phantom's world, exposed to Diva's past enemies. Ultimately he learns deadly secrets about Diva's tragic life that threaten his existence, yet ironically reveals the truth about his mysterious origins.


Phantoms (Book One of the Phantoms trilogy)


Phantoms is an adult fiction novel that tells the story of Erik Destler, a latter day Phantom of the Opera. Erik sets out to take over and rule the Palais Garnier, with La Divina - the diva Carlotta Caccini, as his queen, but at each turn, is seemingly thwarted by his nemesis - the original Phantom of the Opera, now the Opera Ghost. Phantoms is set in that same famous Paris opera house, amidst the staging of Verdi’s Macbeth, one hundred years on from the first appearance of Le Fantôme de l'Opéra in 1910.




Author and Links


Michael Leon is an explorer, writer and author of the new novel, Chandelier. Professionally trained in international trade, Michael has spent the last decade reading, reviewing and writing SFF novels that explore new and future worlds. His latest work, Chandelier, is a genre-bending tale of time travel, love lost, grand opera houses and the ghosts that inhabit them. Michael has travelled extensively around Europe, walking the paths of his characters, from the famous European opera houses in Phantoms to the mountain tops of Switzerland in Emissary.


Website: https://www.michaelleon.com.au

Twitter: https://twitter.com/michaelleon0433

Blogger: https://michaelleoncommentspage.blogspot.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5369984.Michael_Leon

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Michael-Leon/e/B01LNQALBW%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share


Friday, April 1, 2022

Solaris

 

Having watched and enjoyed Tarkovsky's film version of Stanislaw Lem's book, Solaris, many times, I finally got around to reading the book. Although I preferred the film, Lem's work didn't disappoint. Solaris, written in the 1960s, has not dated. Most impressive is how Lem develops an alien on a planetary scale, too complex for the best scientists to unravel its secrets, even after a century of trying. 


The novel turned out the ideal companion to the movie, helping me better understand Tarkovsky's artistic representations of Solaris. Mildly annoying, Lem includes too many chapters describing the research in detail, perhaps slowing the story's pace. That said, I rate Solaris, both book and film, 5 Stars, for its uniquely bold journey into alien worlds and its impact on humans as they attempt to make contact.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Phantoms: Latest Review

 



Latest Review


This was a brilliant new take on the Phantom of the Opera. As a fan of the original story, I’m absolutely thrilled at how well Leon and Anthony brought new life to a classic story. The characters had beautiful depth, and I felt like I was stepping straight into the story. The story moved along smoothly, with plenty of twists to keep the reader engaged. The intertwining of Macbeth above with the Phantom below was wonderful. Highly recommended for fans of the original phantom! 

5 STARS 

Review by The Faerie Review


Other Reviews

The Avid Reader

Kit ‘N Kabookle

Gina Rae Mitchell

Our Town Book Reviews

Eye-Rolling Demigod’s Book Blog


Follow the rest of the tour HERE

Other sites worth checking

Dankoboldt.com



Phantoms (Book One of the Phantoms Trilogy)


Phantoms is an adult fiction novel that tells the story of Erik Destler, a latter day Phantom of the Opera. Erik sets out to take over and rule the Palais Garnier, with La Divina - the diva Carlotta Caccini, as his queen, but at each turn, is seemingly thwarted by his nemesis - the original Phantom of the Opera, now the Opera Ghost. Phantoms is set in that same famous Paris opera house, amidst the staging of Verdi’s Macbeth, one hundred years on from the first appearance of Le Fantôme de l'Opéra in 1910. 

Click the cover to see Goodreads reviews.



Chandelier (Book Two of the Phantoms Trilogy)

CHANDELIER is the genre-bending sci-fi/fantasy-romance novel follow up of Michael Leon’s 2019 fantasy-romance book, PHANTOMS. A century has passed since the fabled Phantom ruled the Garnier Opera House. Technology has advanced, and AI has evolved beyond human knowledge. They reside in a virtual Earth, free from the ravages of an environmentally damaged Earth where humans and post-humans live under AI’s qualified governance. CHANDELIER follows one AI sentient’s journey, Benny, whose loyalty for a famous opera singer, Madame D’Arenberg, sets him on a dangerous course, entangling him in The Phantom of the Opera’s deadly web.

Click the cover to see Goodreads

Tour Stops
Follow the rest of the tour HERE

Author and Links

Michael Leon is an explorer, writer and author of the new novel, Sentient. Professionally trained in international trade, Michael has spent the last decade reading and writing SFF novels about new worlds to be explored in the future. His latest work, Sentient, imagines Earth in the year 2120. His next novel, Chandelier, will be released in 2022. Michael has travelled extensively around Europe, walking the paths of his characters, from the famous European opera houses in Phantoms to the mountain tops of Switzerland in Emissary.


Website: https://www.michaelleon.com.au

Twitter: https://twitter.com/michaelleon0433

Blogger: https://michaelleoncommentspage.blogspot.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5369984.Michael_Leon

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Michael-Leon/e/B01LNQALBW%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share