Sunday, 19 January 2025

Release Day and coming soon!

A new year, a new release day. Yay!

My new release, Memory's Ghosts is a bit of a surprise follow up to Palace Ghosts - which was intended as a standalone and now has this sequel and a third one in the works. This (and the third one) focus on different characters, but there are guest appearances from the characters from Palace Ghosts.

Memory's Ghosts (Ghosts Book 2)

Months after the liberation of the Red Palace, freed prisoner Max Murphy is still there, hoping for the return of his stolen ship and trying to forget the day he lost everything. Meanwhile, ex-Li pilot Jiang Tai is keeping his head down and wishing he could forget the secrets he carries. Or just forget anything at all. When the station is blockaded Max and Tai are sent off on a desperate mission to end the siege.

Spending weeks on an awkwardly small ship with a weird, sleep-obsessed, former pirate of the most fanatical sort is not Max’s idea of a good time—even if Tai is kind of cute. Tai never reckoned on a long trip with a hot mess like Max, who doesn’t even maintain a regular bed time. But the time they spend together helps both of them start to put their bad memories in the past. In the end they’ll lay the ghosts of their memories by doing something worth remembering together.

M/M Science Fiction Novella
Available Now from JMS Books

JMS Books

More Links (More will appear there over the next few days.)

Coming Soon!

Yes, there's more! Next week, I will have a short story in a charity anthology, Love is Free, from JMS Books. And my backlist title Ganymede Tilt will be released to all retailers after initial release on Kindle Unlimited.

There's been a bit of a pause on the backlist bonanza, but normal service should now resume. Chrysalis Cage, the last of the Travellers series should be out in February, and will go wide to all retailers straight away. Watch this space for the rest of the backlist books over the next few months. 










Sunday, 1 December 2024

Guess who’s bock? Bock again.

Looks like goat’s back on the menu, boys! Goaty McGoatface returns for another GoatWatch.

Wot? 

Okay, a primer.

The Gävle Goat is a 13 meter straw Yule Goat erected every year in the town of Gävle in Sweden, in the run up to Christmas. And sometimes it’s burned down or otherwise destroyed. Security has become tighter around the goat every year, especially in these days of live streaming - and clout chasing.

Read more about the goat:

Gävlebocken | Visit Gävle - includes a live feed of the goat.

Gävle goat - Wikipedia

I first heard about it on the Hypnogoria podcast, and back in December 2022 I started keeping an eye on the goat, as I got a bit emotionally invested in it surviving to Christmas without burning down. I blogged about that here. The next year I began doing the same in December, and what a strange year for the goat it was! It didn’t burn, but due to there being an unusual amount of seed still in the goat’s straw, it was gradually eaten by local birds over the month.

So this year I’ll be doing GoatWatch again on my Mastodon account either until 31st of December, or until the goat burns down, whichever comes first! I usually just post a quick toot in the morning with a screen grab of the live feed to show if the goat remains unburned. If you’re on Masto, feel free to follow the #GoatWatch2024 hashtag. If you’re still on the hellsite, the goat itself has an X account you can keep tabs on.

It’s the first day of Advent today and the goat has been up a couple of days, but will be officially inaugurated today, with a concert and other fun winter and Christmas themed events. Gävle loves their goat.

May he be safe this year from fire and birds!

My own homemade crochet Julbock, who I call Lumpy.



Saturday, 2 November 2024

Release Day - Entanglement

 Happy release days to me! Out now, Entanglement, m/m sci-fi romance novella. 

Entanglement

Two-hundred years ago the captain of a plague-ravaged spaceship set course for deep space. Elliot Stoll, an ambitious pilot, with a ship equipped with a hyperspace Tangle drive, is assigned to secure the derelict Iredoi, only to find salvager Kass Tyczkowski has reached it first. Arguments about authority and legitimate salvage are interrupted by an attack by rival salvagers, which ends with Kass rescuing Elliot from his destroyed ship, and jumping away with the Iredoi in tow, back to his home base - the Tumble. Elliot soon learns he’s landed in the middle of a family feud, but now the stakes are higher than the salvage value of an old derelict. A flotilla of pirate ships is heading for the Tumble to snatch the Iredoi, and whatever secrets it holds about the deadly virus that wiped out its crew.

Kass’s mother Dominika—the boss of the salvage company and the station—assigns Kass to guard Elliot, telling him that if he’s going to bring strays home, he has to take care of them. Even if it means the stray has to sleep in his quarters. Despite the stark differences between the button-down and disciplined Elliot and the scofflaw, hedonistic Kass, they make a good team as they prepare for a battle, explore the derelict Iredoi, and then give in to the intense attraction they’ve come to feel for each other. After exploring the Iredoi, Elliot becomes determined to destroy it to keep it from being taken by the pirates. But Kass has his orders too, and Elliot knows his work is cut out if he wants to persuade Kass to defy his mother and help Elliot to do the right thing.


Out now at JMS Books and will show up on all good ebook retailers over the next few days. Find more buy links here: Books2Read

Sunday, 27 October 2024

Newest releases and coming soon

I'm back with the latest news, after briefly breaking up with Blogger, for reasons.

Cover of a book called Entanglement by Becky Black

Entanglement - NEW!

Coming on 2nd of November from JMS Books - Entanglement, a new m/m sci-fi novella

Pilot Elliot Stoll is assigned to secure a long-lost spaceship, only to find salvager Kass Tyczkowski got there first. A pirate attack ends with Kass rescuing Elliot and taking him and the derelict, Iredoi, home. Stranded on a station run by salvagers hip deep in a family feud, Elliot’s forced to work with Kass to keep the Iredoi and its secrets out of the hands of pirates. Why is life so complicated?

Available for pre-order at JMS Books


Higher Ground - backlist re-release

Now on wide release

Zach is impatient and likes to hurry. Adam likes to take it slow and to tease. But, they’d have worked it all out – if only the end of the world hadn’t gotten in the way.


Ganymede Tilt - backlist re release
Currently exclusive to Amazon, and available on Kindle Unlimited

Union man Sean Morgan is a big fish outgrowing his small pond. He’s got plans for the future. Falling for mining company executive Alex Jackson is a complication he doesn’t need.


Tuesday, 10 September 2024

Out Now - Fool's Gold

My next book is now available from JMS Books. It's a M/M novel with a near-future setting.

Fool's Gold

Seven years ago as the economy collapsed amidst ever more serious climate disasters, Ethan Casey went into a billionaire’s survival bunker in the wilds of Alberta. Now suspecting his boss is not telling the bunker’s staff the truth, Ethan sneaks out to learn if the world is really in chaos. He meets forest ranger Jules Martell, who tells him the world is changed but is rebuilding, and that he and everyone in the bunker would be welcome in the nearby town of Goose Lodge.

Ethan returns to the bunker to tell the others the truth, prompting many of them to leave with him. Ethan had to go back to bring the others out, but he had to return to Goose Lodge to find Jules again. This time, he knows he will never return to that hole in the ground. Jules becomes Ethan’s guide to the town, and the way they live there, introducing him to strange ideas Ethan must learn to embrace. As they grow closer Ethan also becomes a forest ranger, and he and Jules act as liaisons to the bunker, tasked with persuading the last holdouts to leave. Soon only Ethan’s old boss, Sinclair, remains stubbornly locked in, with a vault of gold and gems, and dwindling food supplies.

Spending time alone in the forest with Jules feels like all Ethan needs to make him happy. But the forest holds secrets and sadness for Jules, and the town is not the perfect utopia Ethan thought at first. And Sinclair, alone in the bunker, is growing ever more afraid and bitter, and determined to ruin the happiness Ethan has found with Jules.

Available on JMS Books and all good ebook retailers.
Check the buy links page for your favourite store.

Wednesday, 4 September 2024

NaNoWriMo loses the plot

Well it’s come to this, National Novel Writing Month has been enshittified. The whole organisation had been a bit dodgy for a few years, but they’ve finally fully lost the plot with a bizarre defence of the use of A.I. tools, claiming that to decry the use of A.I. in writing is “classist and ableist.” Despite the very real issue of large language models being trained on the work of authors who never gave consent for that. Despite the threat generative A.I. poses to writers, especially freelancers. In what I’m sure is an entirely unrelated matter, they currently have a sponsorship deal with a company, ProWritingAid, that sells A.I. tools to writers. Various writers have stepped down from the board of the non-profit and lots of writers are deleting their NaNoWriMo accounts from the website.

There are plenty of articles if you want to get into the weeds about it. 

NaNoWriMo is in disarray -The Verge

NaNoWriMo Shits the Bed on Artificial Intelligence - Chuck Wendig

NaNoWriMo gets AI sponsor, says not writing your novel with AI is ‘classist and ableist’ - Pivot to A.I.

NaNoWriMo Organizers Said It Was Classist and Ableist to Condemn AI. All Hell Broke Loose - Wired



Cover of a novel called Shoot the Humans First by Becky Black. The image shows a soldier in futuristic armour standing on a hilltop with a spaceship in the sky above them.
My History with NaNoWriMo

I first did NaNoWriMo in 2006, to write my first original novel, Shoot the Humans First. (I’d done a couple of novel length fanfics by then.) And although I haven’t done it every single year since, between the main November event and the April and July Camp events, I’ve done a NaNoWriMo event 21 times.

To give you an idea of how long that really is, let me just say, I wrote quite a lot of my 2006 book on a Palm Pilot, using a portable infrared keyboard. (Yes, I said infrared.) By the next year I had a netbook. La di da! Of course I’ve also used various PCs and laptops, and right now, my tools are a Chromebook and a tablet and folding Bluetooth keyboard, which is sort of circling back to my roots with that PalmPilot!

I’ve sold 13 of the stories first drafted in a NaNo event to publishers and self-published three others. A couple of others are still in stages of being worked on. Only once did I write a fanfic, which is up on my fanfic site.

So it’s been a really important part of my writing life. I am, shall we say, a wee bit competitive, so the deadline and friendly competition aspect was always a great motivation for me. And it was always a good way to do a sort of writing reset, and just get out of my own way and focus hard on writing for a month and re-establish habits that had maybe started to slip. I encouraged others to do the event. I used to participate on the forums quite a lot. I considered the event a generally good thing. And really, I still do. The event that is, not so much the organisation that runs the official site these days.

A dialog box from NaNoWriMo website, confirming account deletion. It includes the text "You're account has been deleted."
But all good things come to an end. I’m one of the writers who has deleted my account. Hilariously, the page you see after the deletion hasn’t apparently been run through even that most basic of A.I. tools, a spellcheck.



So what now?


I wasn’t actually planning on doing the event this November. The next draft I’m planning is probably only going to be about 40,000 words, and the timing wasn’t quite right for when I wanted to start writing it anyway. But now lots of people are organising alternative events, some of them with the same parameters, some not, so I will likely take part in one of those, to show support and to get back to the core of the idea of NaNoWriMo the event, which has been lost along the way by NaNoWriMo organisation. Which I think has become more about writing as a product, than about writing as personal expression.

The one I will likely be doing is Writing Month, which is being organised by a Fedizen, since I’m active on the Fediverse through Mastodon these days.


But there are others. Here’s a thread compiling alternatives you might want to check out.


NaNoWriMo alternatives

The NaNoWriMo subreddit is also discussing the whole thing, obviously, and alternative events may be found there.