Showing posts with label YA Science Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA Science Fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Overtaking by Victorine Lieske

Kindle Price: 
$0.99
Available from: 
B&N
Amazon
Authors Website:


High school senior Shayne Bartlet has been kidnapped, his powers disabled and his memory altered. He’s having a bad day…and he doesn’t even know it.

Shayne thinks he’s a typical teenager at a college prep boarding school on Earth. He couldn’t be more wrong. The girl he likes is keeping secrets–which doesn’t work too well when Shayne begins to hear her thoughts.

Danielle knows she can’t fall for Shayne. It would never work out between them. For one thing, she’s lying to him about who she is. She’s responsible for his kidnapping. That tends to cramp a relationship. Besides, she’s leaving his planet in a few weeks.

At least, that was the plan…

Bio: Victorine Lieske lives in the midwest with her husband and four children. She graduated from BYU Idaho and now manufactures rubber stamps in her home. Her first book, Not What She Seems, made it on the NYT's best seller list.

Excerpt 

Shayne slammed the car door and sprinted up the walkway, a gym bag slung over his shoulder. The late afternoon breeze tossed leaves across the pavement as he stepped up to his mother’s house. The larger sun had already set; the second cast long shadows across the lawn. He slipped his key into the door and turned the knob.

Mom, he telepathically called out, I’m home.

Her usual greeting didn’t come as he entered the house. The smell of something burning made him cough and he covered his nose with his arm.

“Mom!” he yelled. “What’cha doing? Are you trying to burn the house down? You don’t have another crush on a fireman, do you?”

Still no answer.

Shrugging, he threw his bag on the worn couch and stalked into the kitchen. The smell almost gagged him. He opened the oven. Smoke poured out. He grabbed a hot pad and pulled out a black, smoldering mound. Shaking his head, he tossed the pan on the stovetop and turned off the oven. If her head wasn’t attached she would leave it somewhere and then wonder why she couldn’t scratch her nose. He smiled. That was his mom.

He clicked on the holographic television, flopped down on the couch and stretched his long legs out in front of him on the coffee table. A bright yellow piece of paper caught his attention and he picked it up. In his mother’s flowery writing, it said, “Have you asked a girl to the dance yet?”

With a roll of his eyes he tossed it back on the table. Nice one. His mother should know by now that dancing wasn’t his thing. Besides, who would he ask? She meant well, but every time she tried to get involved in his love life, or lack thereof, it kind of made his skin crawl.

A soda commercial played and he put his hands behind his head, trying to relax and not think of anything in particular. The television screen went blank and a split second later a reporter standing in the street came on. The wind blew her short hair as she spoke.

“Terror is ripping through the community here in Hailsburg this afternoon with city-wide reports of sudden disappearances.”

Cold fear gripped Shayne’s stomach.

“Hundreds of people have been taken,” the reporter continued, turning to look at a vehicle behind her. “This driver was even taken while stopped at a cross walk.”

Mom!

He reached out in his mind, feeling for her thought signature. She wasn’t anywhere nearby. His hands shook and he felt sick. No, please, not his mother. With his father gone, she was all he had left.

Closing his eyes, he flexed his mental abilities. He allowed his thoughts to glide over the city. Sifting through the orchestra of voices, he tried to find hers, like picking out a single instrument. She wasn’t there. He reached farther, now noticing the distressed thoughts of others across the country. It wasn’t just in Hailsburg; people were missing across the continent. He focused, rubbing his temples, but it was no use. His mother wasn’t anywhere.

She’d vanished.

Interview with Victorine Lieske

What will readers like about your book? 
It's a clean young adult romance with some science fiction elements.

Why did you self publish? 
I was actually offered a contract with a publisher but turned it down because the royalty rates were better going it alone.

What is your writing process? 
I try to write each day. Sometimes I need to get away from the house for a while to write, so I go somewhere quiet.

How long does it take you to write your first draft? 
It usually takes me five or six months to write a first draft. But I tweak as I go, so the first draft usually is pretty tight.

What inspired you to write this particular story? 
I wondered what it would be like if we found out we weren't really from Earth, and that our memories had been erased. That thought is what started the wheels turning.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Changers' Summer (The Changers Trilogy) by Mike Lewis



Kindle Price: $2.99

Available from:Amazon, Smashwords, B&N, Diesel, Kobo and iBooks

Authors Website:www.mikelewis.info


Tom is twelve and all he's ever known is a world with acid rain and constant cloud. His world is a place where people try to scratch out a living; surrounded by the wreckage of the past.

One hundred years ago a group of mysterious scientists took charge of the Earth's weather in order to control climate change. They burned the planet and in the ensuing chaos they disappeared.

When one of the "Changers" appears on Tom’s farm, his life changes and he is forced into an adventure where he must choose between his family and helping the Changers repair the damage they have done.

But can the Changers be trusted this time?

This is a 60,000 word Young Adult/Children's science fiction novel and is the first book in the Changers Trilogy.

Bio:Mike Lewis is a writer from Woking in England; the place that the Martians first landed in H G Wells' War of the Worlds.

This might explain why he writes science fiction and fantasy.

He has had a number of SF/Fantasy short stories published in professional magazines and anthologies and is now dipping his toe into independently publishing his own fiction.

Excerpt 

Chapter One

It was raining the day it started. The thin, green, sticky rain that stuck your hair to your head in tangled strands. The kind of rain that dripped in long strings from the bottom of your coat.

Tom sat at the kitchen window looking out across the farmyard, his feet tucked under him. He half watched the rain and half watched his mother baking. Although Tom didn’t like the green rain -- he hated the way it marked your shoes and stained your clothes –- it was a welcome sight after the days of yellow rain.

You couldn’t go out in the yellow rain. It attacked your clothes, ate holes in the soles of your shoes and generally messed you up. Yellow rain meant days stuck in doors.

“What’'re you looking at?” Tom’s mother asked from behind him. He could see her reflection in the window, her features wavering in the light from the oil lamp.

“Nothing much,” he said, staring through her reflection and out into the green, wet world beyond.

“You should go out while you can,” his mother said. “It’ll be school again soon and then you’ll be stuck in doors even on green rain days.” Tom turned to face her and watched her hands kneading the large, soft ball of dough.

“I’ll go out,” he said, pushing up his glasses. He knew that his mother would soon find a chore for him to do if he didn’t leave now. Perhaps he could find Jordan?

“Good.” His mother turned back to her cooking, humming an old song quietly to herself.

Tom put on his big old black boots and the thick raincoat, which had been new that year. He pushed open the heavy back door and stepped into the porch. The patter of the rain was louder now and Tom could smell the wet stickiness of the ground.

Bess, their old collie dog, was lying across the doorstep and Tom had to step across her to reach the yard. She looked up with sad old eyes and muttered something in a deep growl before flopping back onto her paws. She didn’t speak much nowadays. Her voice-box was wearing out and Tom’s father hadn’t been able to get the parts to replace it. Tom nodded at her and stroked her head for a moment, tracing the grey hairs now showing through the black. “Just going for a walk, Bess,” he said. Bess had taught him his first few words and they used to have long conversations when he had been much younger.

He walked across the yard, the hood of his coat pulled firmly over his head. The rain still managed to seep in though, and he could feel the sticky trails it left on his face. He sheltered from the rain for a moment, by the doors of the first barn, and tried to wipe clinging droplets from his glasses. He could smell the warm, dank air that seeped through the doorway and he took a deep breath, savouring the metallic tang at the back of his throat. He wanted to go inside and look at the animals and play with their young but he could hear his father’s voice through the door. Tom had been told often enough that he should keep away from the animals -- he didn’t have a special suit like the workers wore in there.

He picked his way through the puddles, the sticky, green mud glooping around his boots, and went between the barns to the back of the farm. He glanced at the abandoned wrecks of machinery. Normally, they excited him but today he didn’t feel like pretending to drive a tractor or climbing on the back of the great bailer. The machines looked sad, their metal rusted and pitted by the yellow rain as they slowly subsided into twisted heaps.

Tom reached the end barn and stopped when he saw a scruffy figure walking round the corner. The boy looked up and shouted Tom’s name in greeting. It was Jordan; Tom recognised the patched coat with its multi-coloured squares of welded plastic. He waved in answer and walked over to the other boy.

Jordan was standing washing his boots in a puddle. The two of them stood for a moment and watched the oily water cascade in rainbow patterns across the brown leather.

“What you doing?” Tom asked.

“Nothing much. Been a boring week.”

“Yeah,” Tom agreed, there had been little to do with no school to go to. It nearly made you want to be back in the school with Mrs Finch.

“Let’s look for rats,” Jordan said. He pointed to the end barn. “We haven’t tried there for a while.”

Tom nodded. The grain barn was one of the best places to catch rats and they could get a penny a head from the farm.

The barn door was heavy and it took their combined weight to shift the lever back. Jordan was a head taller than Tom so he was able to reach the bolt and undo it. Tom always had to jump up and swing on the bolt before it would open. They slipped through the doorway and then closed the door behind them.

Tom stood for a moment, blinking as his eyes adjusted to the bright light of the barn. He waved his arms around, luxuriating in the warmth and light of the huge, open space. He let the warm air, pushed by the fans at the far end of the barn, play over his face.

Jordan was already walking away, between the tall rows of swaying corn that stretched to the other end of the barn. Tom ran after him, not wanting to be alone in this space which somehow seemed to be larger than the world outside. As he reached Jordan, the two of them stopped and then bent down. They walked slowly along the row, searching the crop tubs for signs of the rats. There were the odd tell-tale signs here and there; a broken plant stem or a track marked in the dust. Tom pointed excitedly to the end of one tub.

“See there!” he said to Jordan and pulled his discovery from the soil.
He held it up for Jordan to see. It was a crude ladder made from stalks of grass and plaited crosspieces. The rats were becoming more adept at making tools, it seemed. Tom studied the ladder, entranced by the plaiting and the intricate way it had been built.

“Give me a look,” Jordan said. He snatched it from Tom’s hands.

“Hey!” Tom tried to snatch it back and the ladder tore across the middle, leaving them holding two halves.

“I wanted to keep that,” Tom said.

“Why?” said Jordan. “It’s only a stupid rat ladder.” He dropped his half of the ladder on the floor. He turned away and moved to the back of the barn, his shadow stretching out in front of him as he passed under the overhead arc lights. “Let’s find some proper rats,” he said over his shoulder.

Tom picked up the pieces of the ladder and put them in his pocket. He might be able to repair it and add it to the other things he had collected from here -- the crude knives and bags he had found.

Tom followed him again, scuffing the ground with his feet. He was so intent on the cloud of dust his feet raised that he nearly ran into Jordan who stood in the middle of the row.

“Watch it,” Tom said.

“What’s that?” Jordan asked, pointing to something ahead of him.
Tom stepped past him and looked. At first Tom thought that Jordan was holding something, then he realised that he was actually pointing at something in front of him in mid-air.

Tom walked round to the other side of the object, which seemed to hover three feet off the ground. Jordan reached out to touch it.

“Oh,” he said and stepped back. “That’s strange!”

“What?”

“I can’t touch it,” Jordan said.

Tom reached for the object from the other side and saw what Jordan meant. As your hand reached out, it stopped short as though there was a wall in the way, and your hand tingled.

“What is it?” Jordan asked, kneeling down so he could see under the object.

Tom shrugged. “I dunno, but it looks like a finger.” Tom looked closer and realised that it was a finger. A finger that ended where it should join the hand. A finger hanging in mid-air.




Interview


What will readers like about your book?

Changers' Summer is a fast-paced Young Adult SF novel which features a talking dog, fish-powered boats and the adventures of a young teenager as he tries to protect his world from the Changers.

Why did you self publish?

Changers' Summer has been to a number of publishers, was requested a couple of times by agents but never quite sold. Publishing on the Kindle (and other ebook formats) was an experiment to see if I could sell any copies and make some money from my writing.


What is your writing process?

I write fairly quickly and then spend a lot of time revising and editing. I am lucky enough to be in two very good writers' groups of other professional, published writers and the feedback from them is invaluable.

How long does it take you to write your first draft?

Changers' Summer was written in 8 weeks but then I spent about 2 years on and off revising it.

What inspired you to write this particular story?

It was originally started as part of a writing challenge but then the adventures of Tom and his friends took on a life of their own. I was interested in writing a Time Travel story from the point of view of the people visited by the Time Travellers, instead of the usual method of following the Time Traveller.


  

Thursday, April 7, 2011

The Far Horizon - Patty Jansen

The Far HorizonKindle Price:
Of all the things ten-year-old Cory Wilson expects to do when he moves to Midway Space Station, saving aliens from humans isn't one. An important conference is about to start at the station, not usually the sort of thing kids care about, not even when the conference is between humans and aliens, and half your family is alien. However, when bullies tease Cory, he ends up in a prohibited area where he overhears some men planning to plant a bomb at the conference. Because the terrorists hide their messages in computer games, no one believes Cory, not even his father, the station director. Kids at school think he’s crazy, some even think aliens should be bombed. The conference starts, the aliens have brought a very important person, and Cory's teacher, one of the terrorists, locks Cory in the classroom. Can he get out in time? If he does, will anyone listen?

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Knowledge of Time: Second Civilization - Tim Ellis

Earth 5036: When Gracie eavesdrops on her father’s meetings with the Grammers, and learns of a library that travels through time, she must undertake a perilous journey predicted three thousand years before to save the knowledge of humanity from the Beasts. Together, with her best friend Ruan, she follows the Beasts and Grammer Raggle to Antarctica 9096 where they must escape the Mantua - a new species at the dawn of a third civilisation. Meanwhile, Haldur is leading a group from the Library to rescue Gracie because Scribe Ophelia has realised that she is the only one who can save the Library from its enemies.