Just a quick note to announce that my first in the Leah Mason series, A Girl Apart, is now live on all platforms, its exclusive run with Amazon having run its course. I appreciate the patience of those who have waited for its release on non-Zon platforms. Simply go to your favorite ebook purveyor and tap in the title, and enjoy what many of called one of my best books in years.
My techno-thriller epic, Quantum Synapse, is finally live and available on Amazon! It’s a big book, nearly 100K words, and is the first in a series of novels set in the near future, in a society where tech and urban decay’s run amok. It features a cast of heroic and loathsome characters, and should delight those who enjoy my storytelling and prose, even if not huge fans of techno-thrillers.
If you require a better description, think if Michael Crichton and Dan Brown had a love child (with a splash of Blade Runner and Total Recall thrown into the mix for fun). It’s a fast moving saga, and features everything from speculative physics to an origin story that explains mankind’s ascent to dominance on Earth. If you like the pacing, plotting, and action of JET or The Day After Never, this should be up your alley, and I encourage you to give it a try.
It will be out on other platforms after my exclusive with Amazon expires in 90 days, and is in Kindle Unlimited for those who are part of that program. Here’s the cover, along with a hot link to the Amazon U.S. sales page.
“It was seven years ago today…”
Seven years is a long time.
Over half many dogs’ lives.
Little over 2500 days.
During which time I’ve written something like…five million published words. Not counting blogs, or Facebook posts, which probably total a few million more (note to new authors – stay the hell off social media if you want to be productive).
Never at any point when I started this amazing journey did I see into the future where I’d have sixty-something novels in the can, have co-authored with a living legend, been on the front page of the WSJ and been featured in a trove of international pubs, landed a top agent, been republished in a bunch of different languages, interviewed more than one literary idol, hung out on boats in Cuba and beaches in Mexico and vineyards in Argentina, and had some astoundingly prosperous years. Truly an embarrassment of riches.
But most importantly, I’ve been fortunate enough to make good friends along the way, and to have been able to help some climb the mountain with me – because any peak is kind of lonely if you’re the only one there.
Each day I’ve tried to improve at my craft, but I don’t feel like I’ve reached my potential yet. Not sure when I will, but it gives me something to wake up for each morning, and that’s a good thing. When I go back and reread parts of my first novels, Fatal Exchange and The Geronimo Breach, I smile – they weren’t as terrible as they could have been, for which I’m thankful. I always open them on my publishing anniversary as a humbling reminder of where I started, and they serve their purpose well.
I’ve also been fortunate to have worked with a pro team – Dorothy Zemach editing, Pauline Nolet proofreading, Stef Mcdaid formatting and editing my first several dozen tomes, Ares Jun and Elizabeth Mackey on covers (with Jason Gurley having done the Assassin covers). These folks tolerated my peccadilloes and eccentricities and I’m a better author for it. I count them all as friends, even if they won’t pick up the phone when I call (they aren’t stupid, after all, and know I’m given to drink).
But, you ask, what have you done for me lately? Well, I’ll be releasing a techno-thriller I’m quite proud of, titled Quantum Synapse (cover below), which is the first book in a series set a few decades in the future that pushes the envelope on the genres I’ve mined (think Da Vinci Code crossed with Crichton, seasoned with Blade Runner and Total Recall and you might be close). I’m currently working on the fourth Drake Ramsey adventure, set in the Philippines. After that I see another JET, a cooperative project with one of the top sellers on Amazon, and two or three more novels to finish out the year. All while delivering some amazing custom homes I’ve designed and built in the Los Cabos area – work I’m exceedingly proud of.
And of course, still holding my breath on Hollywood making me an offer I can’t refuse.
So a full plate, which has kept things interesting.
I began this writing journey after turning fifty. For some, that marks the autumn of a career. For me it marked the start of a new one, and the continuation of another.
I just wish there were more hours. There are never enough. But I don’t want to be lying on my death bed thinking “I wish I’d tried that.” Part of what I’ve learned, if I’ve learned anything, is that trying is half the battle and almost all the reason – that creating meaning by taking on challenges, whatever they are, fills one’s cup and keeps one in the harness instead of dwelling on the past. That will be for when I’m 90. For now, I’ve got a lot to do before I sleep, and I hope I get the chance to give everything I’ve imagined a try.
To you, dear reader, consider this a kind of love letter. You’ve been a blessing, and your support of my work has been gratifying at countless levels. I realize how fortunate I am to have been accepted by you as one of your reading choices, and I’ll continue to try to get it more right than wrong – maybe for at least another seven years, although probably not another sixty-something novels.
That would be kinda nuts.