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Monday, May 30, 2011

A Memorial Day tribute to my father



“When they [the American soldiers] came, they found fit comrades for their courage and their devotion.... Joining hands with them, the men of America gave the greatest of all gifts, the gift of life and the gift of spirit.” ~Woodrow Wilson



Memorial Day is a time I think of my father. He served in the army for about four years during World War II. He was stationed in England, Italy, and Northern Africa. He served as a radio operator, sometimes for generals, other times in tanks during gruesome battles. He didn’t talk much about his wartime experiences, so I have few tales to share. Most in his company of nearly one hundred were not lucky enough to come home. Only a couple survived. After what he’d seen, he maintained an unyielding focus of appreciating life, grateful he survived to come home. He held so tightly to that ideal, he left it as an indelible mark on my outlook, for which I am always grateful.

Dad was a veteran and lived a long life after an honorable discharge, dying at age 79. But he also gave his life for his country. He was shipped stateside after suffering with a reaction following exposure to a war toxin. It drastically inhibited his ability to make red blood cells. He arrived home from the army hospital weighing just under 100 pounds, at a height of five-foot five…hide and bones. He suffered with severe anemia the rest of his adult life, and eventually the damages to his bone marrow turned cancerous.

Life is precious…thank you, Dad.

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

Video Saturday: How not to pick up girls in yoga class!

Keeping with the yoga theme of my past few posts, here's a fun one!




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Monday, May 23, 2011

I found this magical item. What could it be used for?

Here’s another item which I’m imparting with magical properties. How could it be used by some fantasy character?
What first came to my mind was a fancy storage case used to protect a coveted, powerful deck of tarot card. The cards, case, and magical strength were all handed down through generations of readers in elaborate coming-of-age ceremonies. The young owner would cherish his/her gift. After celebration with family, friends, and important clan or village members bearing the same mark, the reader would eagerly set about learning to channel his/her new-found abilities. 

Advancing through years of study and practice, he/she would rise to the status of a venerated seer or prophet. A familiar set of magical instruments always nearby, this item may well have been the first, prompting the augur on his/her life path. 

Tell me what magic you see in this object.

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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Welcoming Bitten Twice with her new release Marked






Today, I'm very pleased to invite author Bitten Twice back to tell about another great new publication she has just released.





 




Animal Attraction

“I love you”…

“I love you too”

Words spoken so easily… and just how hard is it to keep this new found love?

Would it mean more to suggest to a partner that you’d always be there? Do we mistake the unmistakable chemistry for love?

We are wired to be able to discern the compatibility of a potential mate. Within seconds our brains have made an assessment and determined a level of interest. Haven’t you ever wondered how corners you’ve turned and yet there’s always one or two people whose eye catches your attention. 

Now many will say that animal attraction is lust. Hot and heavy, unmistakable, make me a hot fudge sundae lust! Those same people will differentiate between love and lust claiming 35 years of marriage. But what’s the difference? Well after lust there’s commitment.

If you buy a book and it’s a best seller, how many times do you read it? If you love it you may open that book quite a few times over your lifetime cracking the bind and plunging back into that world. But as people you can’t just pop your partner on the shelf and hope they wait for you to invest yourself again. On the contrary they are a book that needs to have the pages turned daily. Does the story get old? Sometimes…

So is the answer as easy as “Keep me forever in lust…!” but how hard will most people work to keep it alive?

Marked is a story where opposites attract. While the main character has waited for what feels like an eternity to find his soul mate, the hard part he’s finding is managing to stay together. 

Have you ever met anyone that you know you’re just destined to be with?

To what extreme would you go to stay together?

Blurb:
Great legends tell of the pairing of souls. 
Two that would come together in an eternal bond yielding great power. 
Forever marked with a destiny waiting to unfold.
The wielders of light in darkness' final hour.


Demonic forces threaten to tip the balance of power for all worlds. Xan, King of the Cats, is one of many called in by the Templar organization to eliminate the source of the trouble brewing in North America. Arriving in New York Xan, a powerhouse of seduction, meets Katherine and begins to wonder whether he has met his soul mate or fallen into a trap. The war with the underworld comes topside and Xan is in the midst of fighting an unfamiliar battle - rejection. Can Katherine accept their differences?



Author Bio:
Bitten Twice is an author who primarily writes in the paranormal romance and urban fantasy genres.
She recently released the first in the Macedo Ink vampire series in October of 2010 and can be found on
the web at http://www.bitten2ice.com

Bitten Twice currently lives in Hollywood, FL with her family. Courageously in love with one man and two
children, they all take care of the family’s two dogs. Bitten is a lifetime member of the Florida Writer’s
Association and an associate member of International Thriller Writers.


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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Author Elaine Bergstrom tells about her new book Shattered Glass

Today I'm welcoming Elaine Bergstrom to talk about what inspired her new book, Shattered Glass.

One of my earliest memories was watching my great-grandmother die.

I was far too young to see beyond her age.  I just remember a white-haired old lady who had a piano I loved to play, jigsaw boxes in plain blue boxes whose images were always a surprise when finished. I’d pick her dandelions in her back yard and bring them to her in jelly jar glasses. At first, she would be outside with me. Later she was in the wheelchair in the house. Still later, my parents and I would visit her in a nursing home, breaking her out of the place that reeked of disinfectant and age to come to the house every few weeks for a home-cooked dinner.  I didn’t like those dinners, and I would try to sit so I did not have to look at her, at the bib she wore, the shaking hands raising the food to her open lips.

This was a woman who, in spite of walking with a cane almost all her life, had taken a steam engine from Ohio to Los Angeles at the turn of the last century to work as a seamstress for the movies, sewing glorious dresses for black and white films. At a time when prospects for women were limited, it was a courageous thing to do. I have that sort of spirit. I wish I had known her then.

People ask me, “Why do you write about vampires? Where did the inspiration for Stephen Austra and his cousin Elizabeth and all the Austra family of joyous immortals come from?” I can say it stems from the gothic romances I devoured when I was young, the shows about heroes who hid their strengths as the Austras do (though for quite a different reason), the fantasy I held about a man I spotted on a department store trip when I was in my early teens. And that was all part of it. But in a deeper sense, it was also about my own childhood, my own fear of age. And though I did not model the heroine of Shattered Glass after myself, there is scene that reflects my own desires perfectly.

The last few words seemed sensible but the earlier ones puzzled her. “You make yourself sound so ancient, and both of us so rare.”
“I am much ... much older than I appear. As for us, we are unusual. You especially.” After allowing her a moment of contemplation, he continued. “The night we met, you said your mother should have lived forever. ... Tell me how you felt at the moment your mother died.”
He asked the question as if he knew the answer! She began to speak, then faltered and started over in a voice that surprised her with its strength. “My parents died six months ago while I was at the hospital for therapy. They were coming to see me walk for the first time since my illness. Perhaps they were excited and drove too fast, I don’t know. I ...” She covered her face with her hands, and when she looked up, she saw him watching her, his eyes drawing the words from her. “I felt the flames touch her. I felt her pain. I felt her die, and my response was not grief but impotent rage, as if a terrible injustice had been done and it was too late to set it right.
 “If I had been alone, I might have cried out from rage and grief, but it seemed dangerous to react when I could not know for certain that what I felt was real. Later, when someone came and told me of their death, I did scream her name. I don’t believe I stopped screaming it for days. I only remember I missed the funeral, and for that I was thankful.”
“Your denial was natural. Though you had no way of knowing until tonight, you and she both knew the truth at the moment of her death. Your mother could have lived forever. So can you.” He felt her rush of anger and quickly added, “I am being serious. Trust your instincts and you will know I do not lie.”
He had always been kind and sensible, yet now he seemed so serious as he spoke of the impossible. I’ll listen, she thought, and that thought was sufficient.
“I’ve watched you starve yourself, eating barely enough to stay alive and refusing to do what is necessary to become whole and strong. Now I believe I understand this apathy. But you must name for yourself what it is you fear.”
These harsh words were spoken with such compassion, she was compelled to reply. She looked at the sculpture, the windows, her pictures on his wall. It was selfish to wish to create, to love, to question mortality, yet it seemed so perfectly right. Her hands clenched into demanding fists and she closed her eyes, considering and discarding answer after painful answer until only one, the sum of the rest, remained. When at last she spoke, her eyes were filled with tears but the words came strong and even, as they always seemed to do in the presence of this man. “Time! It will never be enough. Death had no right to my mother, and as for me, what is the difference between five years and fifty? There will never be sufficient time for what I long to do.”
 “And what is that?”
“Live.” It was a statement, but her voice held the hint of a question.
“And if I offered you eternity, Helen, would you accept it?” His words were sincere but possessed a deceptive calm. He feared she would laugh or, worse, refuse.
She bowed her head and wiped away the tears with her fingertips. When she raised her eyes to his, their smoky depths revealed the puzzling hunger she had too long endured. He had told her to trust her instincts and she obeyed. “I would accept it, Stephen. There are times I believe I would sacrifice everything to possess it.”

Helen goes through an incredible amount of trials in Glass, even more so in its sequel Blood Rites. But even if that were my fate, I would make the same decision. She is joining a family of flesh-and-blood immortals, creatures who need blood to live but who have learned there are more pleasurable emotions than fear and so they no longer need to kill to survive. I would do it, too, because I am an optimist. In spite of the problems of the world, I think human race is resilient. I’d like to be here for centuries to come to see how the world changes. As Helen says at the end of Blood Rites:

I still keep chocolate creams in the cold box. I eat two a day, at night and in the morning, letting them dissolve in my mouth before I swallow. Small luxuries are the hardest to abandon.
Other changes are wonderful. I no longer feel the nagging constraints of a human body. It is in harmony now with my mind and my soul. I think that if I had not been prepared for the sudden physical changes, I would have thought I died. Then, as now, my body hardly seems to surround my soul at all.
My skin is paler and smoother. And when the winter winds are silent, I climb to the open ridge above the cabin where I can look down on it and up to the stars. The twins are asleep, the children waiting inside me rest. I sense Stephen moving silently up the ridge looking for me. I open my mind and call him to me. The shadows of the moon turn my hair silver and our naked bodies to liquid marble. I need not will my body to feel for it feels so perfectly; his hands, his lips.
I no longer regret the human life I have lost.
I would take it from everyone I love.

I am thinking a lot about aging this week. I am writing this blog from my childhood home in Ohio where I am packing up my mother’s possessions. I am here to be mother to my mother, packing up her possessions and preparing to move her closer to my home so I can care for her for the last years of her life. Someday, my daughter will do the same for me.

That is our fate and why the ultimate fantasy is to live happily ever after in the arms of someone who loves you.  It is why I write what I write and, I suspect, why may of you read the genre you read. May we one day get what we wish for. 

Paperback: 386 pages
Publisher: Elaine Bergstrom (January 24, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0982970609
ISBN-13: 978-0982970607

Book Description:
Helen Wells, 19, is a gifted painter, struggling to create a legacy before the illness that left her crippled claims her life. Stephen Austra is a brilliant glass artist, and an immortal. When they meet, their passion is immediate and intense. But as their love grows, Dick Wells, Helen's uncle and a homicide expert on the local police department, begins investigating a series of savage murders committed, he is forced to believe, by something not human. Soon all three will be drawn into a struggle with a dark presence from Stephen's past, one that lays claim to the life of the woman he loves and one that, for all his power, he is helpless to control. This novel, first published in 1989 to critical acclain is being reissued in a special updated -- and uncut -- version, and includes 12,000 words not found in the original edition. It is the first of 6 books in the Austra series.  

To see more books in the Austra series visit: http://www.elainebergstrom.com/Ordering-Books.html

Bio:
Elaine Bergstrom was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and is the product of 16 years of Catholic education which, she is sure, has strongly affected her work. Her first novel, Shattered Glass, was among the first vampire romances and created a family of vampiric immortals -- powerful, eternal but with some odd constraints on their natures. It was set in her hometown and the church she attended as a child. It was nominated for a Stoker, received critical acclaim and has been followed by four other related novels, as well as Under the pseudonym Marie Kiraly (her grandmother's name), she has written two Dracula sequels: Mina...the Dracula Story Continues and Blood to Blood. She resides in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where she runs a novel writing workshop, freelances as a TV and film critic and writes grumpy old lady letters to her congressmen and local papers. You can get additional information on her books and upcoming appearances at elainebergstrom.com

The kindle edition of Shattered Glass is the "author's cut" version -- including 10,000 words not included in the original paperback. 



 

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Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Flower Moon rises tonight...





"The moon, like a flower
In heaven's high bower,
With silent delight
Sits and smiles on the night."
William Blake







Continuing with my observance of full moons, tonight will bring us the Flower full moon of May. Spring is in full force, abundant with flowers shimmering under the watch of this rise. This name comes from the Greek goddess Maia, a virgin often associated with the wildflowers that blanket the hills of Crete.

Another name for the May full moon, Milk Moon, has a less obvious origin. Cows, goats and other grazing animals are able to find plenty of green pastures during this time of year, which helps them produce milk for their young born in the early spring. And in far northern countries without many crops until later in the summer, milk would be a major part of their diet this time of year. The Old English name for the month of May meant "the month in which cows can be milked three times a day!”  

Enjoy the rapturous combination of flowers and moonglow tonight, a special treat.

Art credit: rustymermaid

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Monday, May 16, 2011

I found some magical items. What are they used for?

Here’s something new and fun for this week’s Magical Monday, to get your mind working inside a fantasy world.

This picture shows something unknown to me, and hopefully to you also. If you do know, forget their real use. I’d like to consider these are magical items. What do you think they're used for? Are they tools or weapons? Give them a little power or a lot. How do they operate? How does the user command them?

Here's what I think. They would be a pair of magical scorpion-like creatures, which a sorcerer could control at will. He or she could use mental focus with or without a spell to empower these wee beasties. I can imagine sparks of light flowing first in the center, the two eye holes and those along the sides of the abdomen, as the scorpion comes to life. Then, the upper claws and the lower coiled tail would open and extend, sending electrical zaps at intended victims. Composed of metal, they would be excellent conductors of electrical power. Certainly, the larger would pack a deadlier dose of power, enough to stun and dehabilitate an adult human, or possibly disorient a large dragon. The smaller would be useful when detection may pose an issue. These magical scorpions would prove useful to crawl into places the wizard could not.

What do you think? How do these magical items operate? How are they powered?
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Thursday, May 12, 2011

Author Sara Reinke tells about her new Brethren series release

Today I'm welcoming author Sara Reinke to tell us all about her new book release from the Brethren series, Dark Passages: Trystan and Karen. She's offering a cool contest--see the bottom of this post for details.




A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, a young girl gazed out of the car window as her family would drive through the heart of horseracing country. As they passed by acre after glorious, rolling acre of pristine bluegrass, marked with white fence perimeters beyond which champion Thoroughbreds stood languidly out to graze, the girl wondered about the people who owned those horses and farms. She imagined they must have been very wealthy, and that their estates were so expansive and grand that they could, in theory, spend their entire lives there. Never leaving. Without anyone outside of those stark white fences ever being any wiser.

Years later, that same girl would sit down in front of her computer and let her imagination run wild again, taking her back to those Kentucky meadows. From those humble beginnings, she began to build a new world, one where the people who lived sequestered on those farms weren’t really people at all, not like she was, not like you. They were vampires, she fancied. And she gave them a name: The Brethren.

Cut to present.

Undoubtedly you’ve figured out that young girl was me, and as whimsical as it may sound, that’s actually pretty much the gist of how the idea for The Brethren Series of vampire romance was born. Who could know that nearly twenty years from the first rough drafts, the series would encompass four books—with four more on the way, have sold tens of thousands of copies, have been translated into Portuguese and have attracted readers from all over the world?

I sure as hell couldn’t have.

The series got its big break in 2006, when I submitted a proposal for the first installment, Dark Thirst, to Kensington’s Zebra imprint. Much to my surprise and delight, that submission resulted in “the call”—the one every author dreams of, when an editor makes you an offer to buy your work. Dark Thirst was released in mass market paperback in 2007. In addition, they contracted the second book in the series, Dark Hunger, which was released in 2008. And while Kensington opted not to contract any more books, The Brethren Series continued, first with the release of Dark Passion through Double Dragon Publishing in 2009 and then most recently with the release of Dark Passages: Tristan & Karen, from my new independent publishing venture, Bloodhorse Press, LLC. I’ve taken control not only of my writing career, but my Brethren Series as well, and the enthusiastic reception I’ve received from readers so far has been positively mind-blowing. (I wish I’d done this years ago!)

Although out of print in paperback through Zebra, Dark Thirst, Book One in The Brethren Series remains available in Kindle ebook format. In it, Brandon Noble is one of the Brethren, an ancient clan of ruthless vampires. Horrified by his birthright, Brandon shuns the ritual of the first kill, earning his family's lasting wrath. When he finds love with a human woman named Angelina -- forbidden among the Brethren -- his fate is sealed. Can Brandon protect Angelina from his enemies -- and his own dark thirsts?

Dark Hunger, Book Two, is available from Kensington/Zebra in mass market paperback and multiple electronic formats, including for Kindle and the Nook. In it, Tessa Noble-Davenant will do anything to protect her brother, Brandon, even if that means traveling across the country with Rene Morin. A cynical, brooding, yet startling sexy vampire, Rene seems to take pleasure in finding fault with Tessa's every move. Despite this, a sensual attraction begins to develop between the two, one to which neither can afford to succumb. Rene and Tessa are being followed -- and a single misstep will put them at the mercy of forces more dark and powerful than they can even imagine...

Dark Passion, Book Three, is available in trade paperback and multiple e-formats through Double Dragon Publishing. In it, Augustus Noble is a man with secrets. His entire life has been built on half-truths, betrayals and lies—desperate measures to keep the woman he loves, Eleanor Trevilian-Noble, as his own. The patriarch of the Brethren, he has struggled for centuries to create an empire of wealth and prestige for her. Now all that he has fought for is in jeopardy—his grandson Brandon has risked it all in a desperate bid for independence and freedom. And just as Augustus can’t allow Brandon to escape the ages-old traditions of the Brethren race, he also can’t let the Brethren—and especially his longtime nemesis—discover a truth that, if revealed, would see them all killed.

In the fourth installment, Dark Passages: Tristan & Karen, Tristan Morin is a vampire on a mission: to not fall in love with Karen Pierce. To do so would prove that humans and Brethren were meant to be physically and emotionally bound to each other -- something he, as a full-blooded Brethren, refuses to believe. It would be so much easier if Karen wasn't beautiful. And if there wasn't something about her that draws him like a moth to a flame, damn near impossible to resist. Karen has always felt an inexplicable attraction to Tristan. More than just the fact he's strikingly handsome, it's as if being with him is something natural, comfortable and right. But soon a brash choice on his part leaves her heartbroken and confused, and a sadistic new enemy will put their tentative love -- and their lives -- to the ultimate test.

Coming up in June is Book 5, Dark Passages 2: Pilar & Elías, which will introduce readers to a whole new branch of the Brethren legend. In it, Pilar Cadana has only one thing on her mind—revenge against the vampire who murdered her father. But her plans to get close to him by working at a nightclub he owns backfire when instead, she meets Elías Velasco there. The handsome young police detective assigned to her father’s case, Elías is instantly drawn to the beautiful Pilar—and the attraction is mutual. But as the passion between them deepens, so too does the danger—because Pilar’s harboring secrets of her own that may cost her everything, including Elías’s love.

Then in November, Dark Vengeance, Book 6 in The Brethren Series reunites readers with Brandon Noble and Lina Jones, the beloved hero and heroine from Dark Thirst.

You can check out excerpts, find purchase links, watch my promotional videos and more by visiting my website: www.sarareinke.com. Plus if you sign up for my enewsletter, you’ll receive a FREE ebook copy of Dark Thirst with a special, limited edition cover. There’s no better way to discover the world of the Brethren than with the book that started it all!

I feel like I’ve come full-circle in so many ways in life, and that the girl who looked out her car window so many years ago would be both surprised and pleased by how her first simple, innocent inklings for a story have grown into something so amazing. I know I sure am. And I wouldn’t trade it for the world.


Back blurb for Dark Passages: Tristan & Karen:
Tristan Morin is a vampire on a mission: to not fall in love with Karen Pierce. To do so would prove that humans and Brethren were meant to be physically and emotionally bound to each other -- something he, as a full-blooded Brethren, refuses to believe. It would be so much easier if Karen wasn't beautiful. And if there wasn't something about her that draws him like a moth to a flame, damn near impossible to resist.



Karen has always felt an inexplicable attraction to Tristan. More than just the fact he's strikingly handsome, it's as if being with him is something natural, comfortable and right. But soon a brash choice on his part leaves her heartbroken and confused, and a sadistic new enemy will put their newfound love -- and their lives -- to the ultimate test


Learn all about the Brethren series here.


Bio:

"Definitely an author to watch." That's how Romantic Times Book Reviews magazine describes Sara Reinke. New York Times best-selling author Karen Robards calls Reinke "a new paranormal star" and Love Romances and More hails her as "a fresh new voice to a genre that has grown stale." Find out more about Reinke and her books at www.sarareinke.com.


Links:

Website:  www.sarareinke.com




Contest: 
Because my daughter made me watch Tangled for the 14,000th time this weekend, and the song “I’ve Got A Dream” made me wax rhapsodically in this blog post about my own personal fulfilled dream, it’s YOUR turn. Tell me about your dream—realized or not. What did you always want to be? What has your heart always longed for? Do you have your dream job? Did you land your dream man? Share your thoughts, share your dreams, and you’ll be eligible to win a FREE signed paperback copy of Dark Passages: Tristan & Karen, Book Four in The Brethren Series. Winner to be selected at random.


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Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Coauthors Erika Hammerschmidt & John C. Ricker talk about their book Kea's Flight




Today, I'm pleased to welcome two authors,  Erika Hammerschmidt and John C. Ricker, the coauthors of a new science fiction book, Kea's Flight.

Once, in a college creative writing class, I showed a short story to my critique group. They didn’t know that the story was almost entirely true, based on a conflict I had with a paraprofessional during my junior-high years as a kid with Asperger’s Syndrome in the special ed system. By college, I had learned to hide or work around most of the symptoms of Asperger’s, and my creative writing class had no idea that I had any psychiatric diagnosis at all.

The story didn’t use my name, referring to the protagonist instead as “The Autistic Child.” It was a clumsy attempt to make a statement about how people on the autism spectrum, including those with Asperger’s, end up getting identified with their label, to the point that they aren’t seen as individuals. Given that I was familiar with this phenomenon, I should have seen my classmates’ reaction coming: They found the story unrealistic. An autistic child wouldn’t act like the kid in the story. An autistic child wouldn’t be so smart, and someone so smart would never be so socially inept. They spent the entire critique session telling me that my experience from junior high school could never have happened.

That was when I learned that there is a certain divide in literature between realism and believability. A story that is extraordinarily true-to-life will often be hard for readers to believe, because it is so different from what they are used to seeing in books. In real life, each of us sees at least a few astonishing coincidences every year, but when we see coincidences in a book, we consider it bad writing. In real life, people are so complex that you can know them for years and still be shocked sometimes by things they do. In books, people are expected to be so simple that you can know them well enough, within the course of the book, to be certain whether or not their actions are “in character.”

And when a true-to-life story deals with a subject on which many people have misconceptions— like autism— it is the author’s responsibility to explain to the audience why the story is not unrealistic. I should have added a paragraph in my story where the protagonist thinks about being labeled and stereotyped, about her special ed workers characterizing her as Rain Man based on the diagnosis they saw on paper, without realizing that the autism spectrum is so wide that it shades into the “undiagnosible nerd” spectrum on its milder end.

In a way, I have been facing a similar challenge in Kea’s Flight, the science fiction novel I have co-authored with my husband John. We’ve created a very different world in this novel: it’s the 25th century, and global dictatorship has prevented the degree of technological advancement people were expecting, but a few big new inventions have managed to dominate society. Space travel has progressed to the point that ships can transport people to other star systems at just under the speed of light... and, more central to the plot, the technology of prenatal medicine has changed in ways that make a huge difference for those who have genes for mental disorders.

Abortion has been outlawed and replaced with “removal tech,” the extraction and cryogenic freezing of a live embryo, which can then be saved until it is no longer unwanted. At first glance, this seems like a good thing, but two factors make it a disaster. First, there are too many unwanted embryos for Earth to raise... and second, genetic screening of embryos causes many to be rejected based on predispositions to disorders.

Unwilling to destroy the extra embryos, but not wanting them on Earth either, the government sends them into space to be raised on starships and colonize other planets. The story takes place on a ship carrying away thousands of Earth’s rejects. Grown to young adulthood under constant surveillance and strict discipline, some of them find ways to rebel.

Kea is one of the rebels: a linguistically gifted, emotionally troubled young woman who invents secret languages using board games and named herself after a species of parrot. She joins forces with an awkward computer hacker who calls himself Draz, exploring the social confusion of first love while unraveling a conspiracy that threatens the safety of the ship. The complex surprise ending of the book is part linguistics and part computer science.

Writing these characters realistically was a difficult task. Kea and Draz tested positive for Asperger’s Syndrome in the genetic screening, and their resistance movement includes friends with other diagnoses. It is never completely clear, though, how much of their abnormality is genetic and how much is a result of being raised as abnormal kids. Asperger’s Syndrome does appear to have a genetic component, but it’s not as clear-cut as the chromosomal abnormality of Down’s Syndrome: there may be many environmental factors that can affect whether or not the genes actually develop into Asperger’s.

So John and I knew that basing our characters directly on ourselves, or on other autism spectrum people we know, would not necessarily be the best course of action. Their situation is unlike anything on Earth. Based on genes that might or might not imply a disability, they have been treated as disabled people since early childhood, and yet they have been constantly under pressure to become more normal. Their caretakers have mostly been robots, with a little help from exiled convicts. One can only imagine that all these factors would combine to create a strange mixture of behaviors and personality traits, some more autistic, some less. We could only guess at what they might be.

Still, in creating their world, I was able to weave in some of the same elements from that story I wrote back in college. The patronizing speech of Kea’s teachers— its sweet droning sound, the over-use of phrases like “good choice” and “poor choice,” the predominance of the phrase “you need to” as a command— is straight from my real junior-high special-ed experience. When writing about a world that doesn’t exist, we can’t always write what we know, but reality will find its way in somewhere. 

Author Bio:
Erika Hammerschmidt was born in Minnesota and graduated from Augsburg College with two language majors and an art minor. She was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome at the age of 11, and has written Born on the Wrong Planet, a memoir about her childhood. Her husband John C. Ricker was born in Hawaii, received a diagnosis of Asperger's at the age of 24, and studied computer science before working in vacuum technology. They live in Minnesota with their parrot, Rain Man. Together they have co-authored the science fiction novel Kea's Flight. 

Kea's Flight synopsis:
 It's the 25th century, and humans have learned how to end unwanted pregnancies by removing and cryogenically freezing the embryos to save for later. But they never planned for how many there would be, or how much control people would want over their offspring's genetic makeup.

Kea was an exile before she was born. Grown from an embryo that was rejected for having autism-spectrum genes, she has been raised on a starship full of Earth's unwanted children. When a sudden discovery threatens their plan to find a home, Kea must join with other rejects to save the ship from its own insane government.

Links: 

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11102806-kea-s-flight

Website: http://www.erikahammerschmidt.com/kea.php 
Places to buy the book:
 
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004QOAVW8
ebook for Kindle on Amazon, for $3.89
 
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Excerpt from Kea's Flight:

I was five years old. I grew too fast, moved too much, used up every calorie on fidgeting and running around. Every day at lunch I sucked the tube empty of nutrient fluid, poked my tongue into its tip until nothing remained of its flavor, ate my whole energy bar in four bites and licked every molecule of taste from the wrapper that it came in.

I didn’t understand the system that rationed food based on body size, or the flaws in that system that resulted in underfeeding for some students and overfeeding for others. I just knew that I was still hungry after meals.

“More,” I demanded of anyone who might be listening, one day when my stomach felt so empty that the meal only whetted my appetite. “Give me more. Now. This wasn’t enough. It wasn’t even nearly enough.” I waved the empty energy bar wrapper around at the roomful of students, none of whom seemed to care.

At that age, despite my vocabulary, I possessed only a shaky understanding of how communication worked. I’d been punished for things I said, even when I spoke in an empty restroom or re-ed room, and so I’d never developed the idea that people had to be present in order for me to talk to them. I spoke whenever I wanted, whether or not the person I addressed were anywhere nearby. I didn’t know that the surveillance was what made me audible to people I couldn’t see, and that only certain BGs could hear me through it.

“More. I want more food.” I couldn’t see any BGs right then, but I knew there were always some patrolling the lunchroom, walking up and down the aisles keeping an eye out for any problems the bots couldn’t handle. Someone had to be close enough to help.

A boy nearby was dawdling, taking forever to eat his energy bar. Two whole bites’ worth of it were just sitting there uneaten, and it had been bigger than mine to start with. The boy wasn’t skinny like me. He had extra fat on his sides and his neck that wiggled a little as he moved. It wasn’t fair.

“You. Give me that bar now.” I walked toward him, reaching out for his food. “I’m still hungry. They gave you more food than me, and you don’t need as much. So give it to me, right now.”

He made eye contact, curious, holding out the bit of energy bar as if to ask me if that were really what I wanted.

Beep. Beep. Beep. One of the cafeteria robots rolled towards the boy, taking away the morsel. I looked at the bot expectantly, wondering if it would correct the unfairness and give it to me. But it simply opened a compartment in the front of its body, inserted the food, and then grabbed the boy and held him down. A tube emerged from just above the compartment; one of the robot’s steel claws helped push the tube up the boy’s nose and down his throat, force-feeding him the now-dissolved energy bar. The high-tech lubricant-anesthetic mix that coated the tube didn’t do much to keep the boy comfortable; he thrashed horribly. Then he was back in his chair, wiping his mouth in distaste, and the robot was at rest again.

I felt my face screw up into a wrinkled knot, anger burning at my limbs like an itch. The discomfort in my empty belly exacerbated my mood toward some too-close tipping point. I was hungry, and he wasn’t, and he was the one who had been given more food. A five-year-old’s over-sensitive perception of justice was wearing hard on my control.

And then Screen Man was there, one of several BGs assigned to patrol that section of the cafeteria, and right now the most likely human authority figure to be able to help me. “Screen Man, give me more food. I’m hungry and my food was not enough.” I stared up at him, challenging him, my finger pointing at the boy who had just been force-fed. “If the robots can give him extra food that he doesn’t even want, then they have to give me enough food, don’t they? I’m hungry. My stomach is almost all empty. My food wasn’t enough, Screen Man.”

“Karrie, you need to not call me names like that,” he warned, his voice thick and smooth and sticky-sweet.


I glared. “You don’t call me names like that! I’m Karen. Not Karrie. And I’m hungry. I need more food.”

His bulbous bald head shook back and forth, the small tolerant smile on his face not changing. “What do you say?” he crooned.

I squinted my eyes. Was he asking me what I’d said? I’d spoken clearly; how could he have failed to understand me? I repeated myself, enunciating every word to perfection. “I am hungry. My food was not enough. Give me more food.”

He shook his head again. I could recognize condescension all too well, even when I didn’t know the word for it. His singsong voice vibrated at a frequency that caused my eardrums actual pain, even as it simultaneously insulted my intelligence. “No, that’s wrong, Karrie. What do you say?”

I knew what I’d said—he had no right to tell me I had quoted myself wrong. “I said my food was not enough,” I insisted, almost shouting. “And I’m hungry. And give me more food.”

Screen Man knelt down and put a hand on my shoulder. His fingers were scratchy, and he smelled like soap and sweat and robot grease mixed together. “No, Karrie. You say please.”

I clenched my teeth, finally recognizing his words as instructions instead of a request for information. “Please,” I muttered, pushing the word out against every instinct I had except hunger. “Please give me more food.”

He stood up. “No, Karrie, I’m sorry, you can’t have more food. The robots give you as much as you need. You can’t have more than you need, because then there wouldn’t be enough for other children. Those are the rules.”

I let loose a scream then, hurting my own ears, going on and on. I clawed at Screen Man, punched him with all the tiny, malnourished strength I had, until the robot came and pried me away from him.

“You’ve made a poor choice,” he droned, his voice as sweet as ever. “You’re going to have to go to the re-ed room.”

“No. No. No.” My voice ascended to a screech in the middle of each “no,” ending on a sob. I pounded on the robot as it took me away, kicked it, bit it until my teeth hurt, but I could do nothing.


My name is Kea. I was born Karen Irene Anderson, but it was a computer that chose that name. As far as I know, my parents never cared what I would be called.

This part I can only do my best to reconstruct, based on the skeleton of history we were given in class as small children, and the scraps of contraband data that Draz and I managed to collect years later. I gather that it all began in the embryonic stage, when the routine genetic and developmental tests were done to make sure I was going to be a healthy baby. For the most part, the results were good. A physically normal girl. Sandy brown hair, hazel eyes, light olive skin. Probable height and weight in the average range. Better-than-average hearing, and an excellent immune system.

Yet the test also found genes that, under certain circumstances, could be expressed as Asperger’s Syndrome.

It was a diagnosis that had been introduced in the twentieth century and re-defined several times over the years. What I had was just a predisposition, of course. The effect those genes would have on my development was uncertain, but the focus was placed on the worst-case scenario.

The disorder would not be as devastating as low-functioning autism, my expectant parents were told, but it was still on the autism spectrum. I would be slow to grasp social rules, and possibly violent. I might be unable to hold a job. I might be gifted in some extraordinary way, but I would never gain fluent skills in relating to normal humans. Even if I were able to support myself, I would always be, in effect, a nerd.

My parents, under the usual pressure from doctors, government, and society in general, made the only choice anyone ever makes anymore. They didn’t want to raise a difficult child. They didn’t want to risk having to support me for the rest of my life, an expense with which the government certainly wouldn’t help. And in any case, nobody wants to be the parent of the unpopular kid.

So, since genetic alteration is playing God, they simply ended the pregnancy. Which meant that I was removed from my mother, cryogenically preserved, and set aside to be put on a trash scow... in other words, a spaceship bound for a far-off planet that the Terrans had discovered through highly advanced telescopes, deemed livable, and given the tentative name of New Charity III.


At the age of six, I was a secular Inquisition, asking too many questions on absolutely the wrong subjects. “Screen Man!” I called out in Sunday school, looking up from the Gospel of Matthew on my hand-comp screen. “Come over here. This must be wrong.”

Quietly he approached my seat. “Calm down,” he murmured. “Don’t call me that name, Karrie. And you don’t mean ‘wrong,’ you know. You just mean that you don’t understand it.”

I shook my head. “This is wrong, Screen Man. I mean, think about it. In the other Gospel, the Luke one, it said ‘you shall not put the Lord your God to the test.’ Like, don’t jump off a cliff and expect God to send angels to catch you. It was in the part with the Devil and the temptation, remember?”

Screen Man nodded, massaging my shoulder. “Yes, I remember. But that has nothing to do with this part, Karrie. This is the part about the lilies of the field. You know better than to make a mistake like that. Now be quiet and go back to reading.”

I pushed his hand off my shoulder, my autistic senses outraged, as always, by what I considered an invasion of my personal space. “But look at this!” I said. “He’s saying don’t worry about preparing for the future. He’s saying give all your stuff away and, and, and wander the world and don’t even try to make sure you have a home—just trust that God will give you food and shelter, as if you were a bird or a lily. That’s putting the Lord your God to the test! Isn’t it?”

Screen Man grabbed my hand, pushed it down onto my lap, and very deliberately laid his own hand on my shoulder again. “Karrie, there is a difference,” he said, as slowly and clearly as if I were half deaf. “Jumping off a cliff is testing God. Trusting God to feed and clothe you is simply having faith.”

I tensed, all my muscles and organs seeming to merge together, becoming a tight, solid core. His hand’s rough skin scratched at me through the fabric of my secondhand shirt, and a faint body smell came off him that made my nose twitch. “There isn’t any difference,” I protested in a small cold voice. “Dying from jumping off a cliff isn’t any more dying than if you starve to death or freeze to death. And if you give away all your stuff, and stop preparing for the future, and just trust God to feed you and clothe you, then you will starve and freeze.”

Screen Man squeezed my shoulder one final time, patted it, and then stood up. “I’m sorry I have to do this, Karrie,” he said, “but you need to learn how to behave.”

He tapped a button on a wristband under the cuff of his shirt. The nearest robot raised its head, taking interest in its surroundings. Beeping and whirring, it headed for me.

“You’re going to the re-ed room, Karrie.”

“No!” I shouted, the injustice a physical feeling throughout my body.

“Yes. You need to be taught how to understand what you read, and think before you speak.”

“What?” I said, panic rising as the robot came nearer and nearer. “No! How can I understand what I read if I don’t get to ask questions?”

“Be quiet, Karrie,” he said, the voice still sickeningly sweet, even and calm and smooth and infuriating.

One pair of the bot’s arms hooked under my shoulders; another pair seized my legs. I kicked and struggled and shouted incoherently at Screen Man.

“You have made a poor choice, Karrie, and choices have consequences.” Screen Man was giving me a look of mild concern, an infinitely patronizing wide-eyed, tilt-headed look. “I’ll see you again after you’ve had some time to think about your choice. Goodbye, Karrie.” Then the robot turned around and I couldn’t see him anymore.

My story isn’t really about removal tech. In all my years growing up on the ship, I was never able to form a moral opinion on it. For me, and for all rems, it was simply a non-issue.

Along with our psychiatric meds, contraceptives had been in our food ever since puberty. Boys got the male version of the drug, as well, to drive the odds even lower. The BGs were taking no chances with the possibility of having more disabled mouths to feed while we were still confined to the limited space of a ship. Even if the total lack of privacy and the constant abstinence education didn’t stop us from getting knocked up, the meds would.

Nobody liked the thought of kids on birth control. It wasn’t even allowed on Earth, for fear it would encourage underage sex. But on the Flying Dustbin (one of my many snide names for this vessel) none of the rems were told what was in their food, so the only ones who found out were hackers like Draz, and hacker allies like me.

For that and many other reasons, I had never thought of abortion or removal as choices I’d ever have to make. That controversial old question had always been just a concept to me. I had come up with arguments, most notably the one that was still on my disciplinary record from the age of twelve, but mostly I had just let the two sides of it rest on opposite shores of my mind. On one side the gross inefficiency (and, one could say, cruelty) of removal tech and the garbage ships; on the other side the indisputable fact that, given Earth’s intolerance for mental disorders, I wouldn’t be alive if removal hadn’t replaced abortion.

The point was moot; I was alive. Earth was millions of kilometers away, and over a thousand years older than when we’d left, thanks to our relativistic speed of travel. Someday, when we all turned twenty-one, we would supposedly reach a little planet called New Charity III and have to build a home there. Then, if I ever had to manage my own birth control, I was confident that I’d be organized enough to do it right... if they would ever let me lose my virginity in the first place.

My objections were all ideological, abstract. I didn’t want the descendants of the rems to keep being ruled by the descendants of the BGs for generations. Whatever laws our planet colony ended up having about reproductive rights, or anything else, I wanted those laws to be chosen by all the people—not just forced by the ruling class because they were the tradition on Earth. The issue in my mind throughout life had not been abortion, removal tech, birth control or any specific moral or religious question—it had been nothing but a caged creature’s urge to get free.
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