Thursday, August 18, 2022

Interview with author L.S. King

 



Jimbo: Welcome to Jimbo’s Awesome Science Fiction and Fantasy Reviews, where we’re all about promoting Science Fiction and Fantasy content creators. Seriously, if I didn’t love to tell you about  all aspects of Speculative Fiction I wouldn’t have put up over three hundred posts doing so. Today, we’re talking to author L.S. King, author of the new novel Raising the Stakes, the third installment of the Deuces Wild series. She’s very excited to share the news with all of us. Say hi, Lee. Drop a link to your author website and anywhere else you might tell the world about all of your work.


LS King: “Hi, Lee.” (Well, you said to say it!) Thanks for the interview! 


My website is https://loriendil.com


On the Contact page, all my social media, my newsletter, and my email are listed. So anyone who wishes to find me or my work can easily do so there.


I have two series at the minute. The one is space opera and the other is epic science fantasy. No magic, just forgotten ancient technology.


I do have a few stand-alone short stories in one series or the other, and a couple that are completely independent, although some of them are not currently available. That will change, eventually.


Jimbo: Great to see you Lee! So, before we get to the latest book in the series, tell us a bit about the first two, Beginner’s Luck and Stacking the Deck for those who may not have had the chance to read them yet. Try not to spoil too much for those that don’t like that kind of thing.


L.S. King: Beginners’ Luck is the story of how our two heroes meet and must work together to escape the bad guys. In the process, they end up getting in the way of more bad guys and some Very Bad Things happen. Spoiler: by the end of the novel, they have started to forge a friendship.

Stacking the Deck adds some flavor with some additional characters, some of whom cause headaches and some of whom are headaches. They are drawn unwillingly into various dangerous situations, such as attempting to break a planetary blockade with their lone ship.


Jimbo: Terrific. So tell us a little bit about each of your main characters, Slap and Tristan, and what makes them do what they do. I mean, a cowboy and a space pirate seem like a bit of an unlikely pair.


L.S. King: The two main characters are indeed complete opposites. One is altruistic despite the tragedies that have devastated him, while the other is cynical.

Slap is a rancher from a pioneer planet which uses “sustainable” ways rather than hi-tech. So when I say he’s a cowboy, I mean it. A gangster, in a drive for power, is trying for land grabs and kills his family, burns his ranch, leaving him for dead.

Tristan is a bit of a drifter from off-planet with a mysterious background. Is he a mercenary, pirate, assassin? Regardless, he proves he is a deadly adversary.

The two men discover this same gangster is after them both, and they are forced to work together to survive.

The idea for this broadly came from my favorite Western book, Shane.


Jimbo: Awesome. So I hear that the first novel, Beginners Luck, was serialized in Ray Gun Revival magazine. Tell us a little bit about how that works and what the experience of working with Ray Gun Revival was like.


L.S. King: I was involved (rather reluctantly at first, the phrase “dragged kicking and screaming” comes to mind LOL) in the creation of Ray Gun Revival. The idea was to bring back the old SF serial magazine with the fun of space ships, ray guns, and just fun science fiction stories. We had stand-alones we published every issue, but we wanted serial novels that would run a chapter a month, just like in the Old Days™.

Getting four people to do that was a bit of a problem. So my co-founder Johne Cook suggested I do one. I honestly wasn’t interested, but he hounded, er I mean, convinced me to do one of them as a proof-of-concept.

Sure. Just as a proof-of-concept. I guess I can do that. So I turned in the first three chapters and made it possible for the whole silly thing to end there if folks didn’t like it. 

And they did. So much so that when the storyline was finished a year and a half later, the publisher backing Ray Gun Revival released it as a novel.


The experience of working on Ray Gun Revival was extraordinary! I met so many talented writers and forged some amazing friendships that have lasted to this day. 


Jimbo: Thanks for that, Lee. Science Fiction owes so much of its success to the magazines that have promoted it since day one. It does my heart well to know that they’re still going strong. So, with Raising the Stakes recently released, tell me what Slap and Tristan are up to. How much trouble are they in this time? Remember not to ruin any big surprises.


L.S King: “Tell us about the novel, but no spoilers.” Oh sure, a piece of pie, as Carter would say! LOL

In this novel, several groups of bad guys are after our heroes (naturally). Some for obvious reasons, others...well, let’s just say it’s a bit of a problem when an entire galactic government is gunning for you.

An old friend of Tristan’s shows up, and causes some distractions in a manner only a woman among men can (for reference, see Heinlein’s Tunnel in the Sky), but they aren’t sure they can truly trust her.

In a strange twist, they discover that some planets are watched over by these strange beings with the ability to protect their planets. Tristan ponders if they are some sort of strange, noncorporeal aliens or something else. The natives of these planets claim these beings are not gods, but they certainly appear to have godlike powers. 


Slap and Tristan find themselves embroiled in a war between these ‘gods’ and the corrupt government that is trying to kill them.


Jimbo: That sounds like a lot of fun,but you have to picture this: I’ve read all about your books. I’m excited. I want them. But I don’t know what format they’re available in or where to get them. How about you save me from his galactic scale tragedy and fill me in on all of the relevant details.


L.S. King: All of my works can be accessed on my website, both in print and various ebook formats. From my site, you can click through to Amazon, Apple, Google, Kobo, Barnes and Noble, and also Smashwords.


https://loriendil.com

Jimbo: That’s all good to know, but here at Jimbo’s we don’t believe in letting authors off that easily. Why don’t you tell us about some of your older works? I particularly enjoyed your Sword’s Edge Trilogy. Don’t be shy, Lee. I know you can be a bit modest, but you’re a good author so feel free to go on a bit and fill us all in on what you’ve done prior to your latest series. 


L.S. King: Sword’s Edge started from a dream I had circa 1985. It simmered for years before I started writing it down. When I finally did, I ended up with a world that had thousands of years of backstory as well as what was happening in their present day. 


The series has an epic fantasy feel but with forgotten ancient technology being rediscovered instead of magic. The books have some danger and derring-do (I must get in my quota of swords and capes), but also some soul-crushing moments of internal reflection and decisions which impact their entire world.


Jimbo: Sounds amazing. Let’s get a bit personal. Why Speculative Fiction and not some other genre. Seriously, what led you to the world of rockets, ray guns, elves and trolls?


L.S. King: ahem There are no elves or trolls, thankyouverymuch! LOL I’ll leave them in Middle-earth!
I was heavily influenced by Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits as a wee lass, and then by Star Trek when it came out in 1966. I remember reading The Runaway Robot by Lester del Rey and Forgotten Door by Alexander Key while in elementary school, and then I discovered Heinlein’s juveniles. 


I read other genres too, everything from Enid Blyton to Zane Grey to Tolkien (of course) to C.S. Lewis (I’m partial to his space trilogy) to Agatha Christie to Edgar Allan Poe.

I was also heavily influenced by Zorro which I openly admit is the source of my love for capes and swords.


Jimbo: Thanks for sharing. And if I were to, say, already have all of the L.S King books and needed something else to read, what authors/series would you recommend and why?


L.S. King: I have many favorite authors in so many genres, but since your site is SF/F, I’ll stick to those. 


I know these are a given, but: Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke, Bradbury, Vonnegut, Philip K. Dick, Pohl, Sturgeon, van Vogt,  E.E. "Doc" Smith, Anne McCaffrey, Zelazny, Zahn, Cherryh, Le Guin—I could go on forever! And oh, yes, I cannot forget to mention Lois McMaster Bujold. Her Vorkosigan series is amazing! 


I have discovered some newer authors (or at least, they’re new to me, okay?):


P.A. Piatt. His Walter Bailey Misadventures are a hoot, and I love his space marine novels. I recommend starting with Honor Flight! DINLI! (Language warning, folks!)


Sarah A. Hoyt’s work is great. Her Darkship series is a delight. I think they’re only available in print right now, not ebook.


Larry Correia’s Monster Hunter series is fantastic (Language warning again!). He hooked me on the first book with his blurb about his protagonist tossing his boss out of a fourteenth story window!


Jimbo: I’ll have to check some of those out. Last question: I’m always afraid that I didn’t get to everything, so what did I forget to ask that you wish I had? Don’t forget to answer your own question, Lee.


L.S. King: I can’t really think of anything. I do have a couple of events coming up, and they can be found on my Events page for anyone local to the Mid-Atlantic area:
https://www.loriendil.com/events.php


And, thanks again, Jim, for this interview. 


Jimbo: Thank you! L.S. King, ladies and gentlemen! Don’t forget to pick up her book and show some love in the comments!

Monday, August 8, 2022

RIP Nichelle Nichols




 (Yes, I know I'm a day late and a dollar short, but I worked seventy hours last week and spent most of yesterday asleep.)

Growing up, one of the people I was closest to was my father. We fished together. We went shooting together. He coached my sports teams. (I'm afraid I may have been a bit of a disappointment there.) And we watched Star Trek: The Original Series together. It was super cool. There was one character that I shared a first name with (being Jim Kirk) and one that I shared a last name with (Dr. Leonard McCoy). Then there were Lieutenants Sulu, Chekov and Uhura. And let's not forget Scotty. 

We watched it a lot. I'll never forget the times that Star Trek was pre-empted by Detroit Red Wings games. My dad wasn't a fan until late in his life and, well, it got ugly. "THAT'S NOT EVEN A REAL SPORT!!" he'd yell. And we'd end up watching some old movie on a different channel. We didn't have cable yet and so there wasn't much choice.

Others have spoken of Nichelle Nichols and her contributions to the Civil Rights Movement, of her conversation with Martin Luther King, being a black person in an integrated crew...

And yes, she was a woman. People often compare Lieutenant Uhura to a telephone operator, as that was a common occupation for women at the time. I've often wondered if, perhaps, Gene Roddenberry didn't have a slightly different take on the situation. Women, after all, had served as auxiliary members of the Britain's Royal Air Force during World War II, and Roddenberry was a pilot in the US Air Force. 


Regardless, anyone was points to Ms. Nichols accomplishments is right. She did all of that. It's all true. I'm going to take a slightly different tack here though, and you'll see why shortly.

By the time I was born (December, 1976) Star Trek had been out for roughly a decade. Seeing black people on television was nothing new for a young Jimbo. Good Times, The Jeffersons, What's Happening, Different Strokes, Benson, I could go on. Let's just say that seeing black people on TV was no big deal for me. From the point of view of a guy born in the mid Seventies, black people have always been on TV. 

Think that through for a minute. 

They have always been there. It's no big deal. At least if you're my age or younger.

How many people said that BEFORE Nichelle Nichols popped up on screen with a speaker stuck in her ear? (I'll leave aside the fact that it was the first ever bluetooth speaker.) I mean, I'm FAR from being an expert on the subject but, realistically speaking, I am aware of precisely zero black characters in an American TV show prior to one Nyota Uhura. If they did exist, they didn't last long enough to make it as part of the black and white re-runs I used to watch. All of the shows I listed above came out AFTER Star Trek.

 And I have to wonder...

I grew up on Hip Hop. My cousin Ron threw a Run DMC's Raisin' Hell album into my tape deck one day and...


Yeah. I used to haunt the local records store on Tuesdays because that's when the new stuff came out. And before you start laughing, realize that Sean Combs, Dr. Dre and Master P have all stated for the record in live interviews that seventy percent of hip hop record sales have been to white people. 

None of that happens without Nichelle Nichols. Hip hop started in the late Seventies in Brooklyn New York, and you have to give credit to one Afrika Bambaataa because he invented it, but I honestly don't think it gets as big or lasts as long without Ms. Nichols.

And yet...

My memory of her is not the towering effect she had on civil rights and pop culture. My over-riding memory of Nichelle Nichols is and always will be as the first super-attractive woman on a television show. 

Now, don't get me wrong, there were very many beautiful ladies with acting careers before Nichelle. But, like, I wasn't around to see them. Maybe some on re-runs or whatever, but the first time I remember looking at a television set and being struck by the beauty of a woman, she was on the bridge of the Enterprise wearing a red dress. Seriously. Wow. It was a really weird experience too. Not because she was black, but because I had been watching the show for years at that point. When you can't remember a time before you started watching Star Trek you were too young to appreciate a beautiful woman when you started watching Star Trek.

And seriously...

I grew up in an era when it was NOT cool to be a geek. I was made fun of daily. There were no pretty ladies cosplaying as Power Girl in 1985. It just didn't happen. When I was a kid, the worst of the worst when it came to making fun of geeks were the pretty girls and their petty bullshit.  Seriously, they considered it some kind of status marker to dog the nerdish types and that's what I've always been.

But not Nichelle Nichols. I remember seeing commercials for Star Trek conventions when I was a kid. Sometimes they mentioned that Ms. Nichols was going to be there. At least there was one pretty lady on our side. It usually felt like she was the only one (and that may be because I never saw the other Star Trek women advertised as a kid) but one was something. It was what I needed.

So maybe I'm being selfish remembering as Civil Rights icon for what she meant to me personally. Frankly, I'm okay with that though. This is my blog and I'll write what I want to. I seriously doubt that I was the only one though. And, on a personal level, her being on the nerd side means more to me than all of her vastly more impressive accomplishments ever could.

And so, yes, Nichelle Nichols will always be what her supporters say she is. Sometimes it makes me sad that her lesser contributions go unnoticed.

So fair winds and following seas Ms. Nichols. I will see you when I get there. And if you can spare a hug for a huge nerd who has always, or at least for as long as he can remember, been a fan, it would be much appreciated.