From now until January 1, you can grab
five of my ebooks for free! The books in
question are Political Pies, “The Future is Coming,” “The Most Powerful Man in the World and other stories,” “Lonely Phoenix,” and “Relics.” If you’re looking for short stories, science fiction,
and essays about future technology, I have you covered.
Everybody complains about politics, but
does anyone do anything about it? My attempt to do something about it is to
collect forty of my short stories with a political element into my Political Pies anthology. My stories are
either politically neutral or equally condemning of the national parties.
Instead of trying to sway you to one ideology or another, my goal is to just
get people thinking about politics in the hopes a rose might grow out of all
the political manure.
As a science fiction writer, I’ve spent a
lot of time thinking about how technology will change the way we live. I’ve
come up with these ten short essays about science fictional elements that will
– almost certainly – one day become science fact as a way for people to start
coming to terms with them. Because I’ve spent time thinking about clones and
AIs, I feel I’ll be okay when they do finally show up whereas most people will
probably freak out. I hope these essays will get people to start thinking about
the future because, no matter what we do, the future is coming.
“The Most Powerful Man in the World and other stories” is a collection of five, short, scifi stories to provide a
sample of my writing.
A being from the distant future with
almost unlimited powers comes back to help Ian Steele make the world a better
place in “The Most Powerful Man in the World.” One bookstore customer has an
entirely different reason for wanting books in “Black Market Books.”
“Motherhood” tells the story of Thomas Gillespie, the surrogate mother for a
baby AI. “Storyteller” is about an author thinking his book into existence. And
“Deadworld” is about the alien world humans are reborn on – in alien bodies –
after we die.
In “Lonely Phoenix,” board member Geoffrey
Ames is woken from hibernation by the caretaking crew of the Lucian partway to
a new colony world. They require him to look into the matter of their fellow
crewman Morgan Heller. Morgan’s claims – such as being over 1500 years old –
would normally land him in the psychiatric ward, except he can back up some of
his other claims.
This work contains some profanity and
sexual situations. It is intended for mature audiences only.
A plague that kills men has devastated the
world’s population. Only a few thousand boys and men were able to be
quarantined. But Mike Shay is the only man known to have a natural immunity to
the plague. Therefore, he is practically the only man in a world of women. He
spends his days reading, playing video games, and making the occasional sperm
donation. Then Dr. Veronica Barrett shows up, disrupting what passes for his
life. She says she’s there to investigate his “mental wellbeing,” but is there
more to her visit?
Instead of the normal, adolescent,
heterosexual male fantasy of being the only guy on a planet of women, “Relics”
tries to give a more realistic view of Mike’s life.
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