To the Moon!

February 23, 2024

It’s always pretty cool to write posts about my stories and books appearing in new and exciting places, but this one is special because I can now report that my fiction has made it to the frickin’ Moon. Literally.

I was privileged to be included in The Lunar Codex, a project by author and editor Samuel Peralta who collected a variety of fiction and art on flash drives and paid to send them up as part of the payload in various lunar missions.

Odysseus, the Nova-C lunar lander that successfully reached the surface of the Moon on February 22, 2024 contained, among other works, a copy of the Oceans anthology edited by Daniel Arthur Smith. It includes my Coffee Corps cycle story “The Hunt for the Vigilant” alongside works by Ken Liu, Caroline Yoachim, and others.

So, another weird and supremely cool achievement unlocked. It’s these sorts of things that make my writerly journey delightful.

NASA coverage of the Odysseus launch:
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/intuitive-machines-launches-to-the-moon/

More details about The Lunar Codex:
https://www.lunarcodex.com/story


Two new anthology stories coming out in September

September 17, 2017

I have two very different short stories releasing in exciting anthologies this month.

First up is “Ambassador to the Meek” in The Sum of Us anthology from Laksa Press, edited by Susan Forest and Lucas K. Law. This anthology celebrates caregivers and a portion of the proceeds will be donated to charity. The editors have done a great job promoting this book, with blog posts recently appearing on John Scalzi’s blog, Mary Robinette Kowal’s blog, and many other places. There are some excellent writers involved, and the book is available currently.

 

“Ambassador to the Meek” is a dystopian story set in the world where instantaneous transportation has become available (think Star Trek teleporter), but while scientists initially discovered no ill effects, it was later discovered that any living being that used such a teleporter was going to die from the damage to their cells after about twenty years from initial use. And since these were phased in over time, this creates a sort of gradual apocalypse with most of the Earth’s population doomed to die over the course of several years.

The story follows a woman whose job it is to find homes for the orphaned children born after the discovery and thus bound to survive. She’s reaching out to communities that have never used the teleporter for religious or other reasons — the Amish, the orthodox, and various groups mistrustful of modern technology. In this story, she must return to the compound of the cult her mother and her had escaped from when she was a child.

 

My other story is very different. It will appear in OCEANS: The Anthology, edited by Jessica West and published by Daniel Arthur Smith, releasing late this month. You can pre-order it on Amazon for only $0.99 prior to release! “The Hunt for the Vigilant” is a Lovecraftian humor story with a twist. Here’s the marketing blurb for it from the book:

Magic is real and its programmable. Eldritch gods exist but can be held at bay by consuming coffee and playing YouTube videos of warding chants. And now the whole world knows this.

An eccentric billionaire sees this as a business opportunity. He recruits the man responsible for revealing the existence of magic to the public for a mission to the bottom of the South Pacific that is more dangerous than either of them realize.

#SFWApro