Showing posts with label cyberpunk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cyberpunk. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2018

Meet the Author Monday: Lauren C. Teffeau




This week for Meet the Author Monday we're introducing debut SFR author Lauren C. Teffeau, who has an exciting new book out from publisher Angry Robot. Welcome, Lauren!


How or why did you first start writing SFR? Any particular inspirations?

I’ve always loved science fiction, and I’ve always loved romance, so I try to combine them whenever I can! Over the years, I’ve written a number of short stories that have been published in a variety of professional and semipro speculative fiction magazines and anthologies, but found that I couldn't really do justice to all the nuances of a romantic relationship in 2,000 to 7,500 words. So when I do write short and include romantic elements, I’m usually dealing with already established relationships.

With my novel length work, I have a lot more room to develop the characters and their emotional arcs but not at the cost of world building and story action—at least that's what I was going for with my debut novel Implanted. In the book, I’m dealing with some of my favorite tropes: (neural implant mediated) telepathy, forced proximity, and partners both in and out of the relationship context.


Can you give a quick blurb on your most recent SFR title?

Sure! Implanted was released August 7th from Angry Robot. It mashes up cyberpunk with solarpunk, and includes a mix of high-tech gadgets, light espionage, romance, and hard questions about the future.

When college student Emery Driscoll is blackmailed into being a courier for a clandestine organisation, she’s cut off from the neural implant community which binds the domed city of New Worth together. Her new employer exploits her rare condition which allows her to carry encoded data in her blood, and train her to transport secrets throughout the troubled city. New Worth is on the brink of Emergence – freedom from the dome – but not everyone wants to leave. Then a data drop goes bad, and Emery is caught between factions: those who want her blood, and those who just want her dead. To survive she'll have to confront her old life and the people she left behind. So long as she can convince them she’s still alive.


When writing, which comes first for you – the romance or the other elements of the story?

Usually—though not always—the story world will come to me first, but almost immediately on the heels of that, I’m looking for two characters whose romantic arc can run parallel with the larger story. Once the world is built, it’s a lot easier for me to just focus on the romantic pairings in subsequent books, whether it’s a prequel, sequel, or standalone set in the same milieu.


Give us a brief snippet of a favorite scene or passage from your work.

Rik simply lets the silence build, the connection between us alive with feeling. Synching can be surprisingly intimate, depending on how a user customizes their implant settings. The length of delay between thought and message. Whether or not nonverbals should be broadcasted. The priority of the interaction over other tasks and contacts. We’ve become so attuned to one another over the years, now our connection practically vibrates with what’s left unsaid. My doubts, his certainty, yes, but also a desire for more – a strange sort of friction as we run up against the limitations of our current configuration, like a snail that’s outgrown its shell.

“This. This is why we have to meet.”


Have any of your books received any special recognition? What and Where?

Not yet! The book has only been out since August of this year, but hope springs eternal that people will love it. Though it was featured at the 2018 European Speed Reading Championship, and the winner said he couldn’t wait to read it more slowly so he could better savor it the second time through. ;)


Where’s your favorite place to write? Do you have a dedicated writer’s cave?

While I do a lot of stuff in my home office, it tends to be more administrative work instead of creative work. There, I’m writing blog posts or sending emails or critiquing manuscripts. Real writing gets done at my favorite coffee shop—I have a couple I rotate through—where I draft by hand in my journal or mark-up printouts of my latest WIP. There’s something about the white noise of the espresso machines that sets my mind to whirling. Plus the caffeine certainly doesn’t hurt!


What are your favorite SFR movies or television series and why?

While the worlds of Star Wars and Star Trek are pretty much obligatory, I also love The Fifth Element with Milla Jovovich and Bruce Willis. I’m also a sucker for the first Matrix movie.


About the Author

Photo credit Kim Jew Photography
Studios
Lauren C. Teffeau was born and raised on the East Coast, educated in the South, and employed in the Midwest. Lauren now lives and dreams in the Southwest. When she was younger, she poked around in the back of wardrobes, tried to walk through mirrors, and always kept an eye out for secret passages, fairy rings, and messages from aliens. Now, she writes to cope with her ordinary existence. Besides the obligatory bachelor’s degree in English, she also holds a master’s degree in Mass Communication and spent a few years toiling as a researcher in academia. Her short fiction can be found in a variety of speculative fiction magazines and anthologies. She is also an active member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA), a PAN member of the Romance Writers of America (RWA), and a member of the Land of Enchantment Romance Authors (LERA). Implanted from Angry Robot Books is her first novel.

To learn more, please visit laurencteffeau.com.


You can find Implanted here:




Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Worldbuilding Gets Punk’d @j_c_hay


by JC Hay

For me, cyberpunk has always been the genre of rebellion. It eschewed the shiny futures and far frontiers that other science fiction genres promised. More importantly, it focused on the rebels and runners who made their living in the cracks where society had left them – thriving like weeds in the neon-soaked concrete. When I started the Corporate Services books, I knew I wanted to keep that rebellious cyberpunk ethos. That meant I needed something to be rebelling towards – an end state for the world that would level the playing field between the haves and the have-nots in my stories.

For me, that meant the Singularity. Or at least some version of the singularity.

For the unfamiliar – the Singularity is considered to be the moment when technological growth of artificial intelligence exponentially increases and bypasses human ability. I could talk at length about how we’re already seeing hints of what that could look like (look at what AlphaGo is doing to our perceptions of how Go is played, for example), but for the Corporate Services world I needed to create a over-arching story point that would usher in the end of the anthropocene. And, more importantly, that all of that would be set-up for the next arc in the series.

To do that, I had to come up with my idea of how the Singularity would arrive, and then build backwards from there, laying out the foundations that would allow an artificial intelligence to begin quickly iterating itself and surpass our own capabilities. Once I knew where it was going, the rest of the world building dropped into place quickly, pieces I could build into the individual plots of each book as the AI begins its quest to free itself.

For this first arc, which began with Dubai Double-Cross, I knew that multiple organizations in the world I was building were doing their own research into Artificial Intelligence. I also knew that their researchers were smart enough not to allow their work to have access to the whole of humanity in the ‘Net. Something that the AI ultimately needs. Setting up that moment of choice was the point I wanted the series to drive towards.

As a result, the first three books in the series can be seen as a prequel of sorts, or eve like the first season of a TV series, where the final episode sets up new changes for the season to come. Certainly things in the Corporate Services world will be very different when we return. Both old and new characters will find themselves dealing with the repercussions of the choices made in this first series, and antagonists from old books may become newfound allies as a communal enemy begins to make itself known.

And that means more rebellion, in a classic cyberpunk fashion, as everyone tries to level the playing field once more.




Dubai Double Cross

Elise is looking for an exit. Too many years as a top-talent thief in the digital shadows have whittled away her patience and her humanity. She’s not looking for complications, but with one more job, she’ll finally have enough money to leave the life for good.

Na’im does what he must to survive. Whether it’s selling his body to the corporate glitterati, or going on the run when things get bad – but even a survivor can be caught off guard, and his boss’s murder has left him with no one to trust but a thief with her own agenda.

Together, they’re on the run trying to figure out who framed them both and stay one step ahead of the murderer who’s close behind. Trust is a rare commodity for accidental lovers, but in a dark future where everything can be upgraded and emotions can be programmed, sometimes all that can keep you human is your heart.


 












Author Bio: 
SFR Galaxy Award Winner JC Hay has never seen the distinction between science fiction and romance, having been raised on a steady diet of Robotech, Babylon 5, and Farscape. A proud resident of the Pacific Northwest, he writes science fiction and cyberpunk romances where the relationships matter as much as the shiny tech. After all, the coolest gadgets in the world are no fun without someone to share them.
Website: http://jchay.com
Follow my Amazon Author Page: http://amazon.com/author/jchay
Like my Facebook Author Page https://www.facebook.com/AuthorJCHay/
Follow me on Twitter @j_c_hay: https://twitter.com/j_c_hay
Newsletter Sign-Up (Get a free copy of Hearts and Minds): https://dl.bookfunnel.com/xe6v3q4u1a


Thursday, January 30, 2014

SFRB Recommends #9: Eroma by Piers Anthony #scifi #romance #scifirom

Eroma - Piers Anthony

From the book description:
In the futuristic multi-player Virtual Reality game of erotic romance (EROtic ROMAnce), sight, sound, and touch all work, and sexual climaxes are immediate and mutual. The audience of millions watches in 3D-TV every interaction, down to the most intimate and sometimes transparent detail. As players conquer difficult sexual tests, they are challenged to see what they are willing to do in order to win.

Not for the sexually faint of heart.
Piers, in his inimitable style, writes a vivid book that, in this case in particular, leaves very little to the imagination. Or rather, it sucks the reader right in to the world he creates until they live, breathe and feel just about all the characters do. Focussing on the sexual interactions of the main characters and the VR game challenges they face, the romance comes to the fore. However, it (the romance, that is) would not exist without the underlying technology that makes a multi-player realistic VR game possible.

This book is recommended for adults only, and you gotta like reading sex. And LOTS of it.

Author site: Piers Anthony Official Website

Thursday, December 1, 2011

25 Word Pitch to Laurie McLean of Larsen Pomada Literary Agency

*** PERMISSION TO FORWARD GRANTED AND ENCOURAGED ***

25 Word Pitch to Laurie McLean of Larsen Pomada Literary Agency   

Laurie McLean will be on the Savvy blog on Friday, December 2nd taking 25 word pitches.

Laurie is eager to find excellent steampunk, new weird fantasy, cyberpunk, space opera science fiction, dark fantasy, urban fantasy, post-apocalyptic fiction, non-traditional westerns that are more like the television show The Wild Wild West than Zane Grey, and anything with zombies in it.

She is also looking for romance manuscripts in the following subgenres: Regency historicals, Scottish historicals, medieval historicals, paranormal (especially vampires and shape-shifters with a new twist), futuristic and military (especially yummy special-ops heroes).

And for the YA and middle-grade markets I am searching high and low for YA romance, anything post-apocalyptic or vampiric, dark fantasy (no sweet fairy tales), dark reality (dealing with contemporary issues) and anything interesting. "YA is super hot right now and I love the teen voice!"

WHEN: Dec 2, 2011

COST: FREE for ALL PREMIUM Members!
$0 for Basic Members

REGISTRATION: This event does not require registration.

INSTRUCTOR:
Laurie McLean joined the two agency founders in 2005 following a 20-year stint as the CEO of a successful Silicon Valley public relations agency. Laurie was able to switch gears in 2002 to immerse herself in writing. She has penned three manuscripts to date, and if that wasn't enough, she decided that the life of a literary agent would be the perfect complement to her duties as a writer of genre fiction.

Tags: Query/Pitch, Editor/Agent, Contests

## If you're not in the USA (aka the same time zone), check the Savvy Authors blog for more details or query them.

SFR Brigade Bases of Operation