Pages

Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Razi Imam -The IAN Interview

 Razi Imam

Razi Imam's debut novel MASTERS OF THE BROKEN WATCHES has won the 2021 IAN Book of the Year Award, 2021 Readers' Favorite Bronze Medal Award, and the 2020 American Fiction Book Award. In addition, his book is also listed as a finalist in The Wishing Shelf Book Award.

He has an uncanny knack of creating stories that are a cross-section of global cultures, mysterious science, human ingenuity and hard-hitting action adventure. His dream has always been to write books that would inspire readers to get involved in solving some of the greatest challenges faced by humanity such as hunger, poverty, illiteracy and disease. 

He is also the CEO of 113 Industries, an Artificial Intelligence company where his work in understanding human behavior inspire his stories.

IAN: Please tell us about your latest book.

Razi Imam: Master of the Broken Watches. An action adventure like Indiana Jones, a science adventure like Jurassic Park and a human feel-good story like Slumdog Millionaire.

Masters of the Broken Watches is a must-read.

Sebastian Miles and his team of marine biologists stare at their watches. Time outside their lab has jumped forward by twenty-two hours. Minutes before this illogical space-time event, they were analyzing a mysterious glowing nodule extracted from an unknown marine specimen.


News of this marine life reaches powerful governments, inadvertently triggering a race to hunt, capture and control it. But these governments and their nationalist leaders have never faced a team of scientists known as the Paramarines. They have no idea to what lengths Sebastian and his Paramarines will go in order to protect the species from capture and exploitation.

The first of a multi-book series, this genre-bending novel leaves readers on the edge of their seats. Thrilling like Blake Crouch and science-driven like Ted Chang, all approached in ways you’ve never seen before. A captivating adventure, a heartbreaking story of love, and a true display of human ingenuity and bravery in the face of overwhelming odds.

IAN: Is Master of the Broken Watches published in print, e-book or both?

Razi Imam: Both

IAN: Where can we go to buy Master of the Broken Watches?

Razi Imam: Amazon

IAN: What do you hope your readers come away with after reading Master of the Broken Watches?

Razi Imam: I hope my readers would want the book to be true. I wish to inspire them to get involved in solving some our great challenges humanity faces today through the art of storytelling.

IAN: How much of the book is realistic?

Razi Imam: All the locations, such coffee shops, buildings, towns and villages are actual places one can visit. And the scientific research is real.

IAN: How is Master of the Broken Watches different from others in your genre?

Razi Imam: My book is multi-genre, it fits action adventure, science fiction and socio-political challenges. 

IAN: What books have most influenced your life most?

Razi Imam: Roots, Great Expectations, Oliver Twist.

IAN: If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

Razi Imam: Kazuo Ishiguro

IAN: What book are you reading now?

Razi Imam: Klara and the Sun

IAN: Is there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?

Razi Imam: Everything. I am not a trained writer. I failed most of my grammar and English classes. Not sure how and when I developed the desire to write and now I love it.

IAN: What was the hardest part of writing your book?

Razi Imam: Balancing the time with my fulltime business. I feel strong sense of guilt if I ignore either of my passions.

IAN: Do you have any advice for other writers?

Razi Imam: Relax and write. Do not be in a hurry. Enjoy the process. Let your mind go to places and experiences. It is a gift you have and don’t question your ability.

IAN: Tell us about your next book or a work in progress. Is it a sequel or a stand-alone?

Razi Imam: The next book I am writing is book two in the series. It is called Masters of the Vanishing Walls. The story picks up from book one and the adventurer continues.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Lia London: The IAN Interview

Lia London began her writing career composing on-demand scripts for non-profit educational and religious organizations.  In 2011, she published her first novel, and has since then published four more books.  She hosts a book blog called Clean Indie Reads dedicated to bringing “Flinch-Free Fiction” to readers who are just discovering the independent author movement.  Many authors featured there also collaborate in marketing through a Facebook group of the same name.  London also has a writing coach blog which, until recently, also hosted collaborative fiction projects.  She enjoys spending time with her family, practicing taekwondo, and—of course—reading indie books.

IAN. Please tell us about your latest book.
LL. THE GYPSY PEARL, released December 6th, 2013, debuted at the top of the Amazon Best-Seller list for “Children’s Action & Adventure Sci-Fi”.  Caz has spent her whole life on an interplanetary city station.  More than anything, she longs to explore the planets below her.  When one of her bursts of temper results in a sentence on the Surface of Caren, she sees the punishment as an adventure.  But an encounter with gypsies and their strange pet changes her destiny forever.  She is no longer just in search of some fun.  She is on a dangerous quest to seek out three worlds, three gifts, and three powers.  Finding them means finding interplanetary peace—and finding herself.

IAN. Is The Gypsy Pearl published in print, e-book or both?    
LL. It is currently only available in Kindle, but the paperback version will be out my March 2014 (along with the paperback versions of all my books).

IAN. Where can we go to buy The Gypsy Pearl?
LL. At Amazon http://amzn.to/1crKdRb

IAN. What inspired you to write The Gypsy Pearl?
LL. I actually dreamed the entire premise of the story, except that in my dream it was the more historical version of gypsies in a horse-drawn caravan instead of being set in outer space.  I woke up and told my son about it.  “Sounds like a good book idea, Mom!”  Boom.  When a member of the target audience speaks, I write.

IAN. Did you use an outline or do you just wing the first draft?  
LL.  Both.  I had the overall arc of the story with some key points defined, but the chapters came piecemeal based on input from my collaborative fiction website.  When participation died out, I retook the reins, switched out the POV from 3rd person to 1st person, and opted to break the story into a trilogy instead of a long stand-alone.

IAN. What do you hope your readers come away with after reading The Gypsy Pearl?
LL. A feeling that everyone can fit if we just make room.  There are many different cultures and belief systems, but they don’t have to be at odds with each other if we can look at a bigger picture.

IAN. How much of the book is realistic?    
LL. The space science is probably a little sketchy, but the people are real.  My key characters should resonate with readers as having genuine motives and personalities.  That’s always what matters most to me: the characters.

IAN. If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor? 
LL. He’s gone now, I believe, but John Christopher.  He’s a sci-fi/fantasy author from England most famous for his White Mountains Trilogy.  He had great depth and world building skills.

IAN. Are there any new authors that have caught your interest?
LL. Michelle Isenhoff, author of Song of the Mountain and The Quill Pen, and Elise Stokes, author of the Cassidy Jones Adventures series are two that captured my reader’s heart this year.  They are both very gifted in their respective genres.  I also think Ford Forkum has a great talent for satire with his Alien Invasion of the Zombie Apocalypse short story.  All three are indies.

IAN. Name one entity that you feel supported you outside of family members.
LL. The members of my Clean Indie Reads group on Facebook were fantastic.  Some acted as beta readers, others helped swarm Twitter with promos or gave me cover design feedback.  They are great and talented cheerleaders.

IAN. Do you see writing as a career?       
LL. Oh, if only… I’d love that, but I’m not banking on it.  Like most writers I know, I do it because I can’t sleep at night if I don’t get the story down “on paper”.

IAN. Who designed the cover(s)?   
LL. I did.  The model on the front was a girl from my daughter’s taekwondo class.  She looked perfect for the part of Caz, so I asked her if I could take her picture and use it.  A few hours of putzing with PicMonkey resulted in the covers for the whole trilogy.

IAN. What was the hardest part of writing The Gypsy Pearl?     
LL. Caz has to experience life on a planet for the first time. Because of that, basic things like wind, dirt, or sunlight are freaky experiences for her.  The real trick was trying to explain the Surface life from her perspective in such a way that the reader could recognize each new thing as something familiar.  I wanted the readers to feel the newness she felt even when they were commonplace things like stairs, bugs, or rain.

IAN. Do you have any advice for other writers?   
LL. Don’t be afraid (or too stubborn) to revise your manuscript many, many times.  Editing is so much more than proofreading.  It’s choosing better verbs, and slicing the blah blah blah.  It’s catching those overused phrases and crafting that image just right.

IAN. Do you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers?      
LL. You have it in you to do great things, even if that hasn’t been your track record so far.  Keep looking for the ways you can make the best impact in the lives of others, not always the flashiest, but the most enduring for good.

IAN. Tell us about your next book or a work in progress. Is it a sequel or a stand-alone?  
LL. The next book in line is the sequel to The Gypsy Pearl.  Book 2: Craggy will see Caz on a new, much less hospitable planet.  The feel will be much like the lawless days of the Wild West, except set in arid mountain tops.  Caz will have to disguise herself as a young mining boy as she searches out timberline trees to extract a special syrup.  Along the way, she will discover what freedom means something different to different people, and she’ll have to reconcile her own conflicting opinions before she can rise to lead others.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Space Orville by Jeff Whelan




Science Fiction, Young Adult, Humorous, Adventure 

The universe is restless. A brilliant inventor has been kidnapped by a group of diseased refugees seeking a cure for their malady. Meanwhile, two agents are in pursuit of a dangerously powerful and deranged scientist who has escaped from prison with a device that can alter reality and enslave every living mind. When an innocent young man just discovering the freedoms and responsibilities of his teenage years is thrown into the mix, the plots collide with thrilling and often surreal results.

Meet Space Orville and his band of intergalactic misfits, monsters and mutants. Dare to see if one teenage rebel can hold a bunch of grown-ups together long enough to save the universe and rejoice in the merry chaos that is his world.  Amazon





Jeff Whelan was born near Chicago and did his growing up in the smallish town of DeKalb, Illinois. Taking time to travel up and down the east coast with a carnival in his teens and spending a good part of his 20s living and working in San Francisco, Jeff returned to DeKalb and, to his surprise, found himself settling down and starting a family. Jeff worked 20 happy and fulfilling years in the field of special education. Then, thanks to the high cost of day care, he became a happy and fulfilled stay-at-home parent. Now that his children are both full-time schoolers, he has made his triumphant return to work by day as a special education paraprofessional and remains, by night, a home-based medical transcriptionist.

From an idea born in 1982, Jeff's first full-length novel was finally completed in 2001. Ten years later, he discovered the wonders of e-book self-publishing and is delighted to have a way to share his story with readers hungry for a departure from adolescent wizards and teenage vampires. Matters of life and death, it turns out, don't have to be so serious all the time.

Jeff hopes you will enjoy his work and ask for more. He'll be happy to oblige. 







Space Orville and two hundred other indie published ebooks are included in the IAN Christmas Kindle Fire Giveaway! For contest info and to enter to win a Kindle Fire HD 8.9 CLICK HERE



IAN Christmas Kindle Fire contest is sponsored by 
The Wardstone Trilogy

Friday, July 6, 2012

Jeff Whelan: the IAN Interview


Jeff Whelan was born near Chicago and did his growing up in the smallish town of DeKalb, Illinois.  Taking time to travel up and down the east coast with a carnival in his teens and spending a good part of his 20s living and working in San Francisco, Jeff returned to DeKalb and, to his surprise, found himself settling down and starting a family.  Jeff worked 20 happy and fulfilling years in the field of special education.  Then, thanks to the high cost of day care, he became a happy and fulfilled stay-at-home parent.  Now that his children are both full-time schoolers, he has made his triumphant return to work by day as a special education paraprofessional and remains, by night, a home-based medical transcriptionist.

From an idea born in 1982, Jeff's first full-length novel was finally completed in 2001.  Ten years later, he discovered the wonders of e-book self-publishing and is delighted to have a way to share his story with readers hungry for a departure from adolescent wizards and teenage vampires.  Matters of life and death, it turns out, don't have to be so serious all the time.

IAN. Please tell us about your latest book. 

JW. Space Orville, a young Earthman of 16, is relishing his new life as an independent "grown-up".  He has just been accepted as an apprentice with Morphean Gaming Systems and has moved into an Earth-orbiting apartment with his companion, NeutroFuzz, to test holographic video games.  As a result of a questionnaire he answered in the back of a magazine, Space Orville finds himself recruited by the Universal Protection Service to rescue a brilliant inventor who has been kidnapped by a group of diseased refugees seeking a cure for their malady.  But these exiled aliens may have more nefarious plans for this inventor's device.  Initially perplexed, Space Orville becomes thrilled at being recruited for this dangerous mission.  He is therefore bummed to find himself partnered with a warrior dwarf.

Meanwhile, two agents from the OmniCosmic Alliance are in pursuit of a dangerously powerful and deranged scientist, one Bizmo the Inconceivable, who has escaped from prison with a device that can alter reality and enslave every living mind.  When these two missions collide, Space Orville must find a way to work with this new team of real "grown-ups" while maintaining a hold on his newfound independence. 

"Space Orville" is not only a rollicking, interstellar adventure loaded with mind-altering concepts and wordplay, but an exploration of how learning to work with others is a large part of learning to be one's self.


IAN. How long did it take to write the Space Orville?

JW. About 18 years. A very early version was started in high school, back in 1982.  The story continued to grow in the back of my mind until, around 1999, I decided to take a crack at finishing it. Two years later, there it was.


IAN. What inspired you to write the Space Orville?

JW. I was originally inspired by the brilliant writings of Douglas Adams, most notably his "Hitchhiker's Guide" series. I also found inspiration in the sci-fi concepts of Doctor Who and the zany comedy of Monty Python. I was inspired to polish up and finish the book by my beautiful wife, who always believed I could do it.

IAN. Talk about the writing process. Do you write at night or in the morning?
JW. Oh, I am most definitely a night writer. That seems to be when my mind turns on. I don't work well at the computer, though. First drafts are done in longhand. Revisions begin at the keyboard. 

IAN. Did you use an outline or do you just wing the first draft? 

JW. A little of both. What passes for an outline is usually a page or two of incoherent notes and non-sequiturs scrawled down as they occur to me in notebooks or on whatever scraps of paper I have handy in my back pocket. Mostly, however, after staring at those notes for a minute or two, I put them away, pick up the pen and let the story take over.

IAN. How is Space Orville different from others in your genre?

JW. I think that the humor, the inventive language and philosophical concepts and, especially, the young adult protagonist help to set it apart from traditional science fiction.

IAN. Is Space Orville published in print, e-book or both?
JW. Currently it is only available as an e-book.

IAN. What do you hope your readers come away with after reading Space Orville?

JW. My biggest hope is that they come away with a smile on their face, a new idea or two and a desire to read more.

IAN. Where can we go to buy your book?

JW. Space Orville is available through Amazon US (http://amzn.to/GP7Eps), and UK (http://amzn.to/QRN75H), Barnes & Noble (http://bit.ly/H95HR4), Smashwords (http://bit.ly/GSUSVJ) and Lulu (http://bit.ly/KVEVkX). 

IAN. Tell us about your next book or a work in progress. Is it a sequel or a stand alone?

JW. There is definitely a "Space Orville" sequel in the works with the working title "Methuselah's Cradle". I have also been asked to expand on an autobiographical short story I wrote called "Greyhound", which concerns the year I left home and found myself travelling with a carnival for 8 months. "Greyhound" is about the night I left. People who have read the story on my blog have been asking what happened next.

IAN. Any other links or info you'd like to share?

JW. I do have a Wordpress blog at http://bit.ly/H2U4cH which has many excerpts from Space Orville as well as some of my short stories and poetry. I have a Facebook page at http://on.fb.me/H435Ia and Space Orville has one at http://on.fb.me/HIgvVB (visits and likes are appreciated). My Twitter profile can be found at http://bit.ly/LQUTON and I have a page at Goodreads at http://bit.ly/K7qF4F.  Also, Lia London recently asked me to guest blog on the use of nonces and inventive language at http://bit.ly/Nc4pG3. Finally, I have had two other author interviews, one with Joey Pinkney at http://h1t.it/MwLb10  and one with Kevin Rau at http://bit.ly/Hhw3Pu. Reviews of "Space Orville" can be found at Amazon or on Goodreads.


SPACE ORVILLE by Jeff Whelan
About 237 pages (Kindle edition)
Humorous, young adult, science fiction adventure


       A sudden chirping whistle from behind him on his right made him whirl around in surprise.  It was the VisoPhone.  Not a sound he actually heard very often.  Contact with the outside had been mostly limited to reports to Morphean on his gaming research and the obligatory calls home.  But rarely did the VisoPhone ever ring on his end.
Hmm, thought Space Orville.
“Hello?” he said, his voice silencing the ring and activating the screen.
A wholly unfamiliar face came slowly into view.  It was a man; quite possibly what one might call a gentleman.  His face was rather dark and hawkish with a sharp, angular nose beneath unusually large, widely set eyes.  A pencil-thin moustache traced his thin upper lip and his jet-black hair lay plastered back on his round skull.  His clean chin came to a severe point.
Space Orville thought: Now who on Earth is this?
“Space Orville,” the man addressed him in a neat, British tone.  “And NeutroFuzz.”
NeutroFuzz zippled quizzically.
“My name is Dr. Lunchwrap.”
Well, Space Orville thought, that explains everything.
“Dr. Who?”  Space Orville asked.
“No, no.  Dr. Lunchwrap,” the man replied, peering from the VisoPhone into Space Orville’s Digimatic kitchen.
“I’m terribly sorry to interrupt your breakfast, but we must speak at once.  It’s a matter of universal security.”
Space Orville looked at NeutroFuzz.  “Am I still dreaming?  Why am I feeling less and less coherent about all this?”
Dr. Lunchwrap continued.  “If you’ll allow me, Space Orville, I can explain.  But I must do so quickly.  The clock is watching.  First, I’ll have to secure this line.”
The image of Dr. Lunchwrap faded for a moment.  Then, there was a bright flash from the VisoPhone screen accompanied by an ear-splitting, eye-flinching snap.  Dr. Lunchwrap now appeared nearly three-dimensional, a quality standard VisoPhones didn’t normally allow.
“Now then,” the doctor began.  “You have no idea who I am, do you?”
“I’m really trying to get there,” Space Orville said.
“I am Preeminent Yoo-Hoo of the Universal Protection Service.  We are a covert agency whose sworn duty is to keep the universe safe for all life forms.  We have agents in every layer, most acting as emissaries to promote peaceful conflict resolution.  Sometimes, however, we do encounter crises.  That’s where you come in.”
“Oh I do, do I?”
“Based on your more remarkable attributes, you have been selected as our newest agent.  Your first assignment involves considerable risk and concerns nothing less than the safety of the entire universe.”
The doctor paused for dramatic effect while Space Orville stood slack-jawed and frowning at the screen.
Dr. Lunchwrap went on.  “The Candy-Apple Weezle Bums have kidnapped the noted Novean inventor and philanthropist, Miles O’Teeth.  O’Teeth is the owner and inventor of the universe’s only Irreplaceable Fog Napkin, a device capable of stopping whatever it comes into contact with.  These Weezle Bums are afflicted with Mylorrhea and have been exiled from their home planet, Brox.  Our sources indicate that the Weezle Bums have kidnapped Miles O’Teeth, along with his Fog Napkin, in an attempt to halt their own decrepitude.  However, should the Weezle Bums misuse the Fog Napkin, the results could be catastrophic.  And, if their minds have already begun to rot, they may have more nefarious plans in mind.
“Space Orville, will you rescue Miles O’Teeth and retrieve the Irreplaceable Fog Napkin from the sticky and uncertain clutches of the Candy-Apple Weezle Bums?”
Space Orville’s jaw now hung closer to the floor and his brow was one huge knot over his wide, unblinking eyes.  Even NeutroFuzz could only hover silently in the air.
Dr. Lunchwrap politely cleared his throat.  This got Space Orville’s eyelids working again.
“Waitaminute,” he said, pushing up his glasses.  “Is this some new Morphean game?”
“It is no game, Space Orville.  We recently received . . .”
“You’re spouting off about candy coated fruit and some guy with big teeth who has a magic hankie.  I’m supposed to take this seriously?”
“It is very serious, Space Orville,” Dr. Lunchwrap said.  And then something quite odd began to happen to the VisoPhone.  A solid square of iridescent purple slowly replaced the doctor’s image.  Odder still, the bright purple color began to ooze from the screen in a luminous blob.  It spilled down off the counter and onto the floor, where it made a beeline for Space Orville’s G-boots.  Behind the purple came a layer of pink, followed by orange and then green.  The colors began to form translucent bands that proceeded to crawl up Space Orville’s legs.  He scooted and danced around the kitchen, but the liquid light followed, enveloping Space Orville from the boots up.  Dr. Lunchwrap’s now disembodied voice continued.
“As I was saying, we recently received your application and we found you to possess many ideal qualities.  You have volunteered for duty, Space Orville.  The universe now depends on you.”
As the liquid light, now in bands of brilliant yellow and white, crept up toward Space Orville’s neck and shoulders, the doctor concluded.
“We’ll discuss further details of your assignment at Morova.  The Lethelight coming from your VisoPhone will see you safely there.”
Lethelight, Space Orville thought.  Why not?  He felt tingly and strange all over; ticklish pins and needles vibrated along his entire body and his head began to feel hollow and floaty.  And what about my breakfast, he thought, sleepily.
NeutroFuzz was slowly spinning in place, also wrapped in the Lethelight’s seeping glow.  The numbing bands soon closed over them both and, as the voice of Dr. Lunchwrap had vanished, so too did Space Orville and NeutroFuzz.



Thursday, December 22, 2011

Mark Tufo is the Author of the Bestselling Zombie Fallout Series


The Zombie Fallout Series:

Zombie Fallout

It was a flu season like no other. With fears of contracting the H1N1 virus running rampant throughout the country, people lined up in droves to try an attain one of the coveted vaccines. What was not known, was the effect this largely untested, rushed to market, inoculation was to have on the unsuspecting throngs. Within days, feverish folk throughout the country, convulsed, collapsed and died, only to be re-born. With a taste for brains, blood and bodies, these modern day zombies scoured the lands for their next meal. Overnight the country became a killing ground for the hordes of zombies that ravaged the land. This is the story of Michael Talbot, his family and his friends. This is their story a band of ordinary people just trying to get by in these extra-ordinary times. When disaster strikes, Mike a self-proclaimed survivalist, does his best to ensure the safety and security of those he cares for. Book 1 - Of the Zombie Fall-Out Trilogy, follows our lead character in his self-deprecating, sarcastic best. What he encounters along the way leads him down a long dark road always skirting on the edge of insanity. Can he keep his family safe? Can he discover the secret behind Tommy's powers? Can he save anyone from the zombie Queen? - A zombie that seems by all accounts to have some sort of hold over the zombies and Mike himself. Encircled in a seemingly safe haven called Little Turtle, Mike and his family together with the remnants of a tattered community while not fighting each other, fight against a relentless, ruthless, unstoppable force. This last bastion of civilization has made its final stand. God help them all.

Zombie Fallout 2: A Plague Upon Your Family

This story picks up exactly where book one left off. The Talbot family is evacuating their home amidst a zombie apocalypse. Mankind is on the edge of extinction as a new dominant, mindless opponent scours in search of food, which happens to be non-infected humans.
In these pages are the journal entries of Michael Talbot, his wife Tracy, their kids Nicole, Justin and Travis. With them are Brendon, Nicole's Fiancee and Tommy previously a Wal-Mart door greeter who may be more than he seems. Together they struggle against a ruthless, relentless enemy that has singled them out above all others.

Zombie Fallout 3: The End.

Continues Michael Talbot's quest to be rid of the evil named Eliza that hunts him and his family across the country. As the world spirals even further down into the abyss of apocalypse one man struggles to keep those around him safe. Side by side Michael stands with his wife, their children, his friends and the wonder Bulldog along with the Wal-Mart greeter Tommy who is infinitely more than he appears and whether he is leading them to salvation or death is only a measure of degrees.

Zombie Fallout 4: The End Has Come and Gone
  
She is coming for you....


Amazon’s bestselling horror author Mark Tufo will be wishing ebook readers a Happy Holiday season with a free copy of his Zombie Fallout novel from 12/24/2011 to 12/31/2011.

Zombie Fallout has been on Amazons top 100 in horror since its release. It is followed up with Zombie Fallout 2: A Plague Upon Your Family, Zombie Fallout 3: The End and Zombie Fallout 4: The End Has Come and Gone, which are all on the top 100 in horror list. 

All of Marks books are available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Apple, Sony, Kobo and Diesel.

Visit Mark Tufo at http://www.marktufo.com

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

M R Mathias Releases The Confliction–The Dragoneer Saga Book III and Confliction Compendium


M. R. Mathias is proud to announce the official release date of The ConflictionThe Dragoneer Saga Book III –AND– Confliction Compendium, an omnibus edition of the full Confliction cycle of books that will be an Amazon Kindle exclusive, and free to borrow from the Amazon lending library for members of Amazon Prime on December 23rd.

The Confliction will be released in paperback just before Christmas. The eBook version is already available at your favorite eBook store, as are all of the other bestselling Dragoneer Saga books.

Confliction Compendium including The First Dragoneer, The Royal Dragoneers, Cold Hearted Son of a Witch, and The Confliction, as well as the first two Crimzon & Clover short stories, will be available for free borrowing and for purchase at Amazon the week before Christmas.

The Confliction - Dragoneer Saga III is the thrilling conclusion to the full Confliction cycle of Dragoneer Saga books. In this episode, The Dragoneers face the Sarax that were loosed in Book II - Cold Hearted Son of a Witch, as well as the rogue Druids of Dou, and something else that no one, not even the remaining Hazeltine Witches, expect.

Wild aerial antics, powerful magical attacks, a bit of love/romance, and a final conflict that ends in a breathtaking climax are just some of the thrills that await readers in this installment of the international bestselling Dragoneer Saga.

Don't blink your eyes, watch your back, and no matter what you do: HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAGON!

Praise for the Dragoneers Saga:

Mathias is an absolute pleasure to read. Unique storyline, fascinating characters and a fast paced novel that practically reads itself. The Royal Dragoneers easily lived up to the promise shown in the prequel. Lovers of fantasy everywhere this is a fresh, new talent with plenty of truly original ideas. Do yourself a favour and treat yourself to this book. -GoodReads Reviewer

Genuine, gritty, well-imagined, with pleasing reality and humor seasoning fantasy and fear, this second book fulfills all the promise of the first, and more, leaving me eager to move on to book three and glad I've had the chance to revisit the series. Amazon Reviewer

Praise for The Dragoneers Saga "The action is fast and furious, and the novel has the author's trademark twists on the traditional storyline and keeps one guessing where it will go. It is a fun book that I heartily recommend." Fantasy Book Critic

Mathias is a master at characterization. The dragons are magnificent in the story. The Royal Dragoneers is book one in the The Dragoneers Saga. The plot is action is fast, furious and never ending. The plot is intricately woven with twists and turns that will keep the reader guessing. The story has a mythical quality. Fans of fantasy will not want to miss this one. -Reader’s Favorite Book Reviews

M. R. Mathias is the author of the bestselling Wardstone Trilogy, The Dragoneers Saga, and the Crimzon & Clover Short Story Series. He lives in the Big Easy with his tweeting dog, Mr. Stubby Freckle Butt.  You can follow M.R.'s tweets @DahgMahn

Saturday, November 19, 2011

MR Mathias Reveals The Cover Design For The Wizard And The Warlord The Wardstone Trilogy Book Three

M.R. Mathias is proud to reveal the cover design for The Wizard and the WarlordThe Wardstone Trilogy Book Three. Book One - The Sword and the Dragon, has been in the Amazon Kindle Fantasy/Mythology charts for over 18 months and counting, and Book Two - Kings, Queens, Heroes, & Fools, has been in those same charts since its release in July 2011. The Wizard and the Warlord will bring Gerard and Hyden’s story to a climactic conclusion. This final installment of the trilogy is scheduled for paperback release in July 2012. The eBook version should be available a little sooner.

Sandara of DeviantArt.com rendered the image of the baby red dragon sitting in its mother’s lap, while Gary V. Tenuta of www.BookCoversAndVideos.webs.com turned the work into the wonderful cover you see here.

If you are familiar with the story then you will know who the young hatchling in the image is. If not, maybe you should pick up The Sword and the Dragon and find out for yourself.

Accolades for The Wardstone Trilogy:

5 stars - By Dr. Jamal

I have read many a dragon novel in my time. But none compare to Mathias' The Sword and the Dragon. The personal character development and attention to detail are so rich, that you are literally sucked into this novel. This massive work of a masterpiece will be glued to your hands and mind. One of the greatest novels I have read in a long time. A must read for any and all interested in the lives and times of dragons.

5 stars - Great Read

I enjoyed this one so much that I purchased the author's 'Dragoneer' series. I honestly don't know which I enjoyed more. I am eagerly awaiting the next one.

5 stars - Loved it!

This book is intense. It has suspense, romance, heartache, action, and magic. It's an incredible story that will keep you on your toes. :) I can't wait for the next one!

5 stars - Phenomenal!!!

The next epic adventure of our time! If you like The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings trilogy you are gonna flip for this! M.R. Mathias's storytelling prowess is on full display here taking you on an adventure into a land you will not soon forget or want to leave. I am chomping at the bit for part two! Thank you, thank you, thank you, for allowing us to be part of yours and their world!

***A note to all fantasy fans:

Book One – The Sword and the Dragon (eBook version only) is available at Amazon and B&N for just $1 until Thanksgiving. That’s 700+ pages of pure epic fantasy for just a buck.

MR Mathias.com

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Keith McArdle: The IAN Interview

My name’s Keith, I love writing, always have, and probably always will I suspect. I’m Australian born, but both my parents are British immigrants, so whilst I’m an avid patriot of Australia, I also have a healthy respect for the UK. I have spent 3 years in the Royal Australian Air Force where I worked with the C-130 Hercules aircraft and in 2004 saw service in the Middle Eastern Area of Operations. Transferring to the Army in 2006 I saw Active Service in East Timor with the 5th Aviation Regiment’s Black Hawk squadron. In 2008 I saw active service in Afghanistan with the 5th Aviation Regiment’s Chinook squadron. I really enjoyed that deployment, it was certainly a once in a lifetime experience that brought my life back in Australia into perspective. Afghanistan showed me just how tough some people in the world really have it, and that I live in a very lucky country indeed. I’m currently a Paramedic with Queensland Ambulance Service and live with my wife in Queensland, Australia. Keith McArdle


IAN. Please tell us about The Forgotten Land.

KM. The Forgotten Land is an action/adventure fiction novel that casts a patrol of Australian SAS soldiers into the desert of Iraq. During their mission they stumble upon a time portal and unwittingly activate it. They find themselves in cold, wet, windswept 10th century Viking Denmark. The story throws the reader in amongst the Australians as they struggle not only for survival but to find their way home.

IAN. How long did it take to write the book?

KM. The book took 4 years to write. 3 years to complete a first draft I was happy with and a further year where I ended up writing a total of 5 drafts (as a result of some very helpful, but tough, critical readers, and I am indebted to them for their help). The 5th draft was then submitted to my editor (Anna Kassulke of Word Story).

IAN. What inspired you to write The Forgotten Land?

KM. I have always had two great passions, the Australian Special Air Service Regiment (SASR), and the Vikings.

The Vikings are a severely misunderstood race of people. Yes, some were violent, yes, some of them did undertake lightning raids on all and sundry. But that time of history was a violent time, a time where tribes, clans and countries were often at war with one another. The Vikings’ mark on our history is tainted mainly by the biased, literate Christian scholars that remember them in their writings. Today, modern historians and archaeologists are working very hard to shed light upon who the Vikings actually were. We know, for instance, that a Viking woman had the right to divorce her husband if she had grounds. We also know that the advice of a warrior’s wife was usually heeded and often sought. Women in some areas of the world in 2011 do not enjoy that level of respect! The Vikings were also very cunning and intelligent traders, so much so, that present day York, which in Viking times was called Jorvik (pronounced Yorvik (from which the present day name is derived)) was, during the Viking reign, the trade centre of the world. The Vikings were a very colourful, sophisticated and rich culture.

The Australian SASR (Special Air Service Regiment) are an elite group of Australian soldiers. When the war in Afghanistan started, people might remember an offensive called Operation Anaconda. When that operation commenced, the American hierarchy had specifically requested the assistance of the Australian SASR. The Aussie SAS moved well forward of the advancing allied troops and set up hides or observation posts (OPs) underneath the noses of the Taliban. They fed back all sorts of information to the American head sheds, including enemy number, weapons, level of morale, locations and so on. When the fighting began, the Australian SASR were in a position to guide in airstrikes and give grid references for artillery and mortar fire missions. In another instance in Afghanistan an Australian SAS soldier was shot by Taliban fire. Rather then bother his mates who were still in heavy contact with the enemy, he managed to make his way to the closest vehicle and knowing that he was losing enough blood that he may lose consciousness, wedged himself between the bulbar and the vehicle’s radiator. He tied himself to the bulbar and then continued to fire at the enemy.

There is something about these incredible soldiers that has always intrigued me. Every country in the world has a small elite group like the Australian SAS. They are for the most part, quiet, easy going, never consider themselves any better than the next bloke, but have the courage of a rabid lion. To date two Australian SAS soldiers have been awarded the Victoria Cross (the VC, which is the Commonwealth’s highest military award) for actions in combat. Both lived to tell the tale.

So in The Forgotten Land, I bring together the Australian SASR and the Vikings, my two greatest interests.

IAN. Talk about the writing process. Do you write at night or in the morning?

MK. I often listen to music while I write (a huge range, anything from Enya to Metallica or Tool). Music helps me delve into my own world. There is no specific time I like to write.

IAN. Did you use an outline or do you just wing the first draft?

MK. I definitely have an outline overall of where I want to go with the story as a whole. This outline is wedged firm and remains unchanged. The characters, however, are fluid and flexible as they negotiate their way through that outline. As long as the characters don’t stray too far from the path and into elements where their actions or dialogue detract from the progression of the story, I tend to just follow them on their merry way.

IAN. How is The Forgotten Land different from others in your genre?

MK. My book is different in some ways from the others in the genre. My soldiers are Australian, which is usually not the norm. I have tried to respect both the SASR and the Vikings, so in saying that, I have attempted to portray them in the most realistic way possible. They carry the actual weapons that today’s SASR carry (although that is in the process of change at the moment as a new weapon system is being brought in to replace the M4). I have tried to remain as parallel as possible to what we know today about the Vikings. I am not, however, a professional historian, so there will be elements where I may have deviated, but not by far I think.

IAN. Is your The Forgotten Land published in print, e-book or both?

MK. The Forgotten Land is currently in e-book format, but will be in paperback format before Christmas 2011.

IAN. What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?

MK. I won’t give too much away, but an important element of the book is that family is everything.

IAN. Where can we go to buy your The Forgotten Land?

MK. Amazon (.com, .co.uk, .fr, .de), Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, Diesel E-books, Apple iBooks. It will also be available on Kobo shortly.

IAN. Tell us about your next book or a work in progress. Is it a sequel or a stand alone?

MK. The Reckoning is a stand-alone novel unrelated to The Forgotten Land. Indonesia’s airlines (Garuda) is a government owned company, and having said that, it would be very easy for them to fly in Kapassus (Indonesia’s special forces) soldiers into every Australian capital city at the same time. This allows Indonesia to gain a foothold on Australian soil, where they can very quickly fly in more troops and equipment to begin the invasion proper. The Reckoning is about the struggle for survival of every day Australians and it may well see a fight to the death for the Australian Defence Force.

IAN. Any other links or info you'd like to share?

MK. If you’d like to keep up to date with The Forgotten Land or how The Reckoning is coming along, please feel free to visit either my website, or The Forgotten Land’s Facebook page, listed below respectively:


http://www.forgottenland.com.au/

https://www.facebook.com/theforgottenland

An Australian SAS patrol find themselves in 10th century Viking Denmark

The Forgotten Land by Keith McArdle

352 pages

Fiction (action & adventure)

A Sample of The Forgotten Land Amazon.com



Prologue


It was a disaster! An utter shambles that served only to tear a country apart. Following the terrorist attacks on America on that fateful day in September 2001, the United States military was determined to capture the mastermind behind it all. A man whose name the world would never forget. Osama Bin Laden.

Somalia, Afghanistan and Pakistan saw large numbers of U.S. troops deployed in search of the rogue. The President’s advisers had under their employ a veritable army of faceless, nameless men and women who fed them information and advice from around the world. Within ten days of the atrocity at the Twin Towers, the President’s advisers were convinced that it was possible Bin Laden may have fled to Iraq. Seven hours later Iraq was under increasing scrutiny and within twelve, the President had given the go ahead to begin operations.

Rather than send more troops into Iraq, the American Department of Defense began injecting enormous funds into the Kurdish community, asking them to hunt for Bin Laden. If they ceased their search, even for a day, the funds would be cut off. Kurdish Peshmerga Forces began purchasing high-tech weapons from America in large quantities. That was when the trouble started.

The Kurds had been persecuted by the Iraqi government ever since Iraq had become a country in its own right. Saddam Hussein was unrelenting in keeping with this historical “tradition”. During the Iran-Iraq war thousands of Kurds, including women and children, had been gassed under Hussein’s orders. The Kurdish people wanted revenge and it came in the form of US greenbacks.

Fierce urban warfare erupted in the streets of every major town and city. The Iraqi Army fought well, but was on the back foot from the beginning. In almost every fire fight they were forced to withdraw from the ceaseless Kurdish onslaught. Within four weeks the Iraqi Army was no longer a cohesive force. Pockets of Iraqi soldiers continued to fight doggedly, but they were quickly overwhelmed. Iraqi civilians were persistently slaughtered and that was when the fleeing began. Tens of thousands of people streamed from the cities, piled onto trucks, walking, travelling any way they could to escape the new threat. Some of these convoys were ambushed and people were slaughtered without mercy.

The country was beginning to fall apart. The UN announced it would restore peace and stability (or the little peace and stability Iraq had before the fighting), but they knew if they moved in they would not be a peace-keeping force. They would be a peace-making force and that went against everything for which the United Nations had been created.

However it was the only way to regain some semblance of order in Iraq.

Chapter 1

Geneva

“What can America offer this peace-keeping force?” the chairman of the UN spat, looking at the representative for the United States of America. The chairman’s voice was easily identified, with its heavy French accent.

“Unfortunately, we have our carrier groups tied up in support of our troops in Afghanistan and Somalia. 130,000 regular troops, 80,000 support personnel, 27 land based helicopter squadrons and 9,000 Special Forces soldiers are involved in the effort. We are way beyond our budget as it is, so unfortunately we cannot offer any assistance in this matter.”

The American representative leaned back in her chair. It was obvious America did not want to help, however they wanted Bin Laden and by stopping the Kurdish uprising, they would be working against themselves. After all, the Kurds had promised they would be on constant lookout for him.

Cameron Eves, a well-spoken Australian, almost smirked as he watched the chairman hold back a rebuttal. A tall, stocky man, Eves was clean shaven with dark curly hair, his eyes glinted with intelligence but his face gave away nothing. He wore a black business suit, a mobile phone resting near his left hand and a glass full of water stood by his right. In plain clothes, enjoying his weekend with his wife, he looked like a typical surfie. Very few people picked up on the fact that he frequently attended United Nations meetings, representing a well-established western country. Even fewer would think that someone who preferred to wear board shorts and old shirts on his days off could have that many letters after his name. Cameron knew as well as any of the representatives there, that America’s military budget was a bottomless pit. To them, 290,000 defense personnel, a carrier task group and 27 helicopter squadrons was a Sunday stroll in the park.

The Americans had managed to put half a million defense personnel and thousands of strike planes and attack helicopters into Iraq in the early 90s. The cost was probably somewhere in the vicinity of several hundred billion dollars.

“So far we have several very generous contributions, but we need more ground troops, specifically specialist soldiers,” the chairman turned towards a mahogany lectern. A well-built soldier was making his way up the dais as the chairman continued, “I shall leave that up to General Billiar to explain.”

“Good morning,” the General began, his accent one of a well-educated Englishman. What was also immediately recognizable, however, were the medals worn on his jacket, there was enough of them to sink a small battle ship.

“My name is General Billiar. Now, we have a situation here in Iraq and a very serious one I might add. A minority group, the Kurds, heavily persecuted for many generations have been given state-of-the-art weaponry… a lot of it.” The General’s eyes rested on the American representative for a moment before he looked away. “The Iraqi Army has been annihilated, and the Kurds, who are being trained and led by the Kurdish Peshmerga Forces, are now killing or shooting at any Iraqi person they come across. Not a good situation, the whole country has become destabilized and the civilian death toll has been estimated at 50,000 and rising by the day, in fact by the hour.”