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Dragon Ring by Lettie Prell
Dragon Ring by Lettie Prell is a science fiction novel set in the near future.
Nadine is a special young woman. She is the daughter of the man who transformed the small nation of Guatemala into the world’s largest and most powerful corporation. Nadine is an expert at virtual-reality applications, and when she goes undercover to find her father’s killers, she discovers a power within the Earth that can transform civilization — or destroy entire cities. She must face the juggernaut of corporate greed and secrecy to stop an experiment that could have cataclysmic consequences.
Although she is a skeptic, Nadine is finding that the magic claimed by mystics for centuries has real roots, and combining this mystical energy with virtual-reality control gives her the only tool that can stop the impending catastrophe … but at a great cost. She has awakened a beast within her own spirit that threatens to consume her.
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Irreconcilable Differences by James R. Strickland
In Irreconcilable Differences, James R. Strickland returns with his second cyberpunk thriller, once again giving readers a ride for their lives.
Rachel Santana is thirty-six years old. She’s an agent for Interpol Covert Services. Before that, she was an interrogator at the White Sands Reeducation Camp, following the breakup of the United States. Before that, she was a prisoner there. Before that, a Yankee, one of a group of corporate mercenaries trying to extract something like a victory in the Middle East. Before that, she was a United States Marine. She’s a survivor. A cop. A soldier. A destroyer. A killer.
Now, Robert Neil, Rachel’s boss and soon-to-be ex-husband, has implanted a digital copy of Rachel’s mind in Michelle Marie (Micki) Blake, a 16-year-old farmgirl-hacker in rural Kansas. The mission: Learn the local hacker ecology. Locate the dangerous new player prowling the rural networks. Destroy him. Take no prisoners. Leave no incriminating evidence. As covert missions go, it should be pretty simple.
There’s nothing simple, though, about being conjoined at the cortex with someone else.
There’s nothing simple about life on the farm, the life of a high school student, the life of a 16-year-old in post-United States Kansas.
And the rural hacker ecology is unraveling with new forces in play, new powers, new players. It will take all of Rachel’s experience just to survive. All of Micki’s skills as a hacker to dig for the truth. All of their combined abilities to put the pieces together, to find the real threat despite the web of deception and half-truth that surrounds both their operation and Copy-Rachel’s very existence.
And somehow, they have to avoid being grounded.
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Looking Glass by James R. Strickland
Looking Glass by James R. Strickland is a science fiction mystery novel of life in cyberspace, where America has splintered into new countries after a quick civil war, and the Internet has become a weapon of torture and murder. “Shroud,” the novel’s main character, is a network security professional who is determined to put a stop to a cyberspace serial murderer.
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Migration of the Kamishi by Gaddy Bergmann
Migration of the Kamishi by Gaddy Bergmann is the first novel in the Feral World series, a science fiction, post-apocalyptic odyssey set 3,000 years in the future. Humanity has barely survived a near-extinction-level event - the collision of a major asteroid on Earth in the middle of the Twenty-First Century, complicated by the vagaries of global warming.
In Migration of the Kamishi,, Blake, the story’s central character, must lead the last remnants of his massacred tribe across North America in search of new lands. Along the way he encounters dangers, enemies and "Rubbletowns," the millenia-old ghosts of what were once gleaming cities.
The story is unique in that it offers an optimistic view of post-apocalyptic society, which has reformed into local tribes that depend on hunting and gathering. Gaddy Bergmann (Denver) is a zoologist and microbiologist, and he carefully crafts a world where the biosphere develops naturally in the absence of Man’s misguided management of the planet.
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Of Dice and Pen by Fred Poutre
Of Dice & Pen is a collection of short stories by noted game designers, including the last Gord the Rogue story from the late E. Gary Gygax (1938-2008). The anthology is dedicated to the memory of Gary Gygax. The collection includes stories from the imaginations of these top gamers:
Gary Gygax was one of the original inventors of Dungeons & Dragons, the founder of TSR, Inc., and the first and longest-playing Dungeonmaster; he is considered by many to be the “Father of Role-Playing Games.”
K.R. Bourgoine is a creator of card, board and role-playing games.
Chris Clark is founder of Inner City Games and co-founder of Hekaforge Productions (with Gygax).
Lisa Steenson is co-founder of Gut Bustin’ Games and invented the Redneck Life boardgame.
Matt Forbeck is a full-time author and game writer, and is a 23-time nominee, 12-time winner of the Origins Award.
Carey Grayson is the designer of the game 24/7.
Andrew Looney is the Chief Creative Officer and co-founder of Looney Labs, which publishes the card games Fluxx, Chrononauts, and produces the Icehouse game system, among other games.
Graeme Thomson is the inventor of GO Mental and is the co-principal of HL Games.
James L. Cambias is the author of GURPS Space and STAR HERO, and is the co-founder of Zygote Games; seven of his stories have appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.
Thomas Rafalski is a writer of role-playing-game material.
Tim Pelzel is the inventor of the game Science Fusion, the Elements of the Sciencenauts.
Elizabeth T. Danforth is a writer, editor and artist who has contributed material for more than 100 game companies and book publishers; in 1996 she was inducted into the Academy of Gaming Arts and Design Hall of Fame.
Andy Vetromile is a freelance writer, editor and designer in the gaming industry.
Jason S. Walters is the author of numerous role-playing-game books.
David Wainio is co-founder of Three Sages Games.
Patrick Matthews is founder and game designer of Live Oak Games.
Curt Covert is the owner of Smirk and Dagger Games.
Rick Loomis is the founder and president of Flying Buffalo Inc., the longest-running adventure game company under its original management; his credits include Tunnels and Trolls role-playing game, Nuclear War card game, and the first president of the Game Manufacturers Association.
Lee Kamberos is the creator of StrikeForce 2136 RPG.
Catherine G. Thomson is a co-founder of HL Games.
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Riders of the Mapinguari by Gaddy Bergmann
Riders of the Mapinguari by Gaddy Bergmann is the final novel in The Feral World trilogy, a post-apocalyptic odyssey set 3,000 years in the future. Humanity has barely survived a near-extinction-level event – the collision of a major asteroid with Earth in the middle of the Twenty-First Century.
Riders of the Mapinguari takes The Feral World in a radically new direction. Blake and his friends have traveled through the Great Plains and are living peacefully in the Warmland, when they are attacked by an enemy quite unlike any they have ever faced before: the Terran army. Poised to conquer the Warmland, the Terrans not only greatly outnumber the natives, but they also have hundreds of mapinguari – giant beasts that can overpower anyone who would oppose them. Blake and his people must face them, though, if they hope to save not only themselves, but the entire Warmland.
The Feral World trilogy is unique in offering an optimistic view of post-apocalyptic society, which has come to consist of local tribes that depend on hunting and gathering. Gaddy Bergmann lives in Denver. He is an ecologist and zoologist, and he carefully crafted a world where the biosphere develops naturally in the absence of humanity’s misguided management of the planet.
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Seventh Daughter by Ronnie Seagren
Set primarily in the Peru of 1937, Seventh Daughter by Ronnie Seagren is a character-driven Indiana Jones-style adventure fantasy. Exploring such conflicts as the struggle between duty and choice and between good and evil, it deals with the recognition that there will always be evil in the world and always, there will always be choices to make, joy and loss, triumph and sorrow.
The main theme of Seventh Daughter explores the risk involved in letting go of what we value most to attain a higher goal, just as a trapeze artist must let go of his bar to reach his partner. Security, personal freedom, hatred, even life itself—each of the main characters is challenged to risk such a choice.
Gil Orlov is born in the shadow of a solar eclipse, the seventh daughter of a seventh daughter. Her prime purpose in life, the goal of her clan, is defeating her great-grandmother’s Vision of the world in flames, reduced to a lifeless cinder. But the power she should have is muted or lacking. To further complicate things, an identical twin is born just as totality ends. Her aunts decide the second infant must be disposed of rather than risk contaminating their mission.
Gil and her sisters decide to travel to Peru to the hidden ruins of a hidden shrine called Killichaka — “Bridge to the Moon.” There, in the shadow of the solar eclipse of 1937, Gil hopes to regain her power. But her twin sister, Miriam, has other plans, and so does an evil entity that calls itself Supay. In Peru, that is the name of the devil. Miriam will do anything to usurp Gil’s legacy, and Supay is determined to defeat and corrupt Gil and ensnare her in its own dark designs.
Following Gil is her economics professor, Galen Williams, whom she had asked to be her guardian on this hazardous trek. He has demons of his own to battle — dark memories of his brother’s death and a broken dream, that both victims of the Great Depression. He is soon caught up in the treachery and peril of the journey to witness the seeming mystical power found in the shadow of the moon.
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She Murdered Me With Science by David Boop
She Murdered Me with Science by David Boop blends detective noir with the pulp science fiction of Forties and Fifties.
It’s 1953 and disgraced scientist Noel Glass works as a P.I. to redeem himself for a deadly experiment that cost the lives of six people, including his fiancée’s. In walks a rich recluse who offers information that Glass was framed for the deadly accident. As Glass struggles to clear his name, he uncovers an evil organization bent on using his own invention for world domination. Who can Glass trust when everyone is keeping secrets? His mysterious Japanese sidekick — Wan Lee? The sultry blues singer — Merlot Sterling? The man-mountain bodyguard — Vincent Richmond? From the desolate streets of Industry City, Colorado, to a showdown in Chicago, Glass encounters death at every turn. As he’s pursued by two Mayan hit men determined to make him history, Glass must rediscover the self he lost years ago and face off against the one ghost he swore he laid to rest.
A child science prodigy, Glass uses forensics to solve crimes long before it was considered a legitimate resource for the police. He’s part Sherlock Holmes – part Mike Hammer.
Through his quest, Glass interacts with historical figures like J. Edgar Hoover, DNA Scientist James Watson and Photojournalist Art Shay. The story interweaves true events from the beginnings of the Cold War era with a fictional Armageddon. Glass also gets drawn into the growing racial tensions of the times, including the Trumple Park Riots, because of his femme fatale, the chanteuse Merlot. Cut from classic females of the era, Merlot takes no prisoners on stage or in the bedroom. She Murdered Me with Science is laced with the blues, packed with action and armed to kill.
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Space Grunts edited by Dayton Ward
Space Grunts is the third anthology of the Full-Throttle Space Tales series. Edited by Dayton Ward, Space Grunts contains 18 hard-hitting tales of soldiers in space, by established and rising-star authors.
Dispatches from the front lines contained in this volume:
“98 Hill” by Julie McGalliard: A young soldier far from home writes a letter to her mother, describing the overwhelming experience of fighting an enemy on a distant planet.
“The Thing with Private Leon’s Face” by David Boop: A mysterious entity takes on the form of a dead soldier, bringing with it a harsh message for humanity.
“Blowback” by Derek Tyler Attico: A genetically-engineered subspecies of Humanity has finally had enough of being second class citizens. Time to send in the Marines!
“Rush” by Jeff D. Jacques: In the aftermath of a devastating ground battle, a lone soldier discovers there's more to the enemy than meets the eye.
“Price of Command” by Irene Radford: Continuing the adventures of Katie Talbet, younger sister of the O’Hara brothers from the Stargods Trilogy, when she is asked to betray the outlawed family she has just found and learned to love after a twenty-year separation.
“Target Market” by James Swallow: Near-future war is big business, and big ratings!
“Unchained” by Selina Rosen: Stashes was the planet of the damned; at least that’s what it was called by the soldiers who got sent there...those who survived, anyway.
“It’s Not A Game” by Jean Johnson: For a soldier, racing through a forest is never a game.
“Truth Metric” by Geoffrey Thorne: A commanding officer faces the unpleasant duty of notifying a parent about the death of their son, and explaining how and why he died.
“Finders Keepers” by Scott Pearson: Unknown aliens attack the starship Alliance and render the entire crew unconscious...except for a lone Marine who finds herself trapped in a deadly game of cat-and-mouse with a single intruder who has friends on the way.
“Who Stand and Wait” by Bradley H. Sinor and Susan P. Sinor: A soldier returns home after a long deployment, only to find that things are most certainly not the way he left them.
“An Assessment of the Incident at Camp Righteous” by Nayad A. Monroe: A theocracy plots damage control over a political disaster within a human-run prison camp on an occupied planet.
“Flashback” by Anne Stringer and Jason McDowell: A soldier on the run for murder escapes Earth and joins a far-flung foreign legion.
“Granny’s Grunts” by Alan L. Lickiss: What happens when your daughter is captured by aliens? If you’re a retired soldier whose past exploits are the stuff of legend, then you go round up your old squad and go get her yourself.
“Shin-Gi-Tai” by Robin Wayne Bailey: See what a hardened warrior and her alien lover will do to stop a generations-long war which has all but destroyed both sides.
“Across the Endless Sea” by John Coffren: The term “lifer” takes on a whole new meaning as one soldier volunteers for a decades-long stealth mission into enemy territory; the vanguard for a massive invasion...of Earth!
“Widow’s Weeds” by Kirsten Beyer: Colleen Conway is no longer the wife of a military officer. Now, she’s a military widow, and she has a few things to say about that.
“A Fresh Perspective” by Dayton Ward: An alien race comes calling, interested in whatever resources it can take from Earth, and unimpressed with any resistance which might be offered by anyone already living there.
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Space Pirates edited by David Lee Summers
Space Pirates is the first anthology of the Full-Throttle Space Tales series. Edited by David Lee Summers, editor of Tales of the Talisman, Space Pirates contains fifteen swashbuckling tales of pirates in space, by established and rising-star authors.
The contents of this treasure chest of adventure include these swarthy tales of deep-space piracy:
Eating Vacuum, by Robert E Vardeman: An asteroid miner matches wits with a desperate pirate who is short on oxygen.
On the Even of the Last Great Ratings War, by David Boop: Genetically engineered animals battle humans for control of the space-borne airwaves.
Adrift, by Carol Hightshoe: The Flying Dutchman legend takes to outer space.
Bad Traveling, by Neal Asher: Pirates sailing the seas of a distant planet find their match in alien monsters of the deep.
Carbon Copy, by Denielle Ackley-McPhail: Recently demoted Private Alexander suspects that one of the ships of the space fleet are bearing false colors.
Space Pirate Cookies, by C.J. Henderson: Aliens are mocking humanity, and that means war.
For a Job Well Done, by David Lee Summers: A ruthless pirate finds himself rescuing a victim of human trafficking on the planet Epsilon Indi 2.
Lunacy by Anna Paradox: The moon is being taxed to death, and a teenage girl is caught in the middle…by a satellite laser weapon.
The Claims Adjustor, by David B. Riley: An insurance claims adjustor from Mars wants to ferret out the pirates who are driving up the cost of shipping from Earth.
Never Lie to Yourself, by Uncle River: When a young boy marooned in a space habitat disaster is rescued by bloodthirsty pirates, what exactly does he owe his rescuers?
Star Wench, by Daniel M. Hoyt: Captain Beech of the HMS Bounty IV must match his wits against a notorious pirate to save his spaceship’s crew.
Searching the Vastness of Space, by Alan L. Lickiss: Rory is a bureaucrat who believes he has discovered proof of interstellar piracy, but finds that pirates are not always what they seem.
Captain Barti Ddu, by M.H. Bonham: Morgan Roberts’ life is saved during an attack by Atolian Pirates…by an Eighteenth Century Buccaneer.
Earth-Saturn Transit, by W.A. Hoffman: Pirates in deep space are bound by debilitating circuits in their heads, but where there are pirates, there will be mutineers.
Ship’s Daughter, by Pamela D. Lloyd and Karl Grotegut: A pirate’s daughter must prove herself to the rest of the crew, without losing her humanity.
AHRRRR!!!
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Space Sirens edited by Carol Hightshoe
Space Sirens is the second anthology of the Full-Throttle Space Tales series. Edited by Carol Hightshoe, editor of The Lorelei Signal and Sorcerous Signals, Space Sirens contains 19 seductive tales of women in space, by established and rising-star authors.
The tales woven by our sirens include tales of adventure, intrigue and vengeance:
"Real Hero" by W.A Hoffman: Aphrodite Love is a mega-star who is kidnapped by eco-terrorists and learns what a real hero is.
"Bite the Hand" by Sarah A. Hoyt: Homo Sapiens meet their match in Homo Felis.
"Justice is Not Taken by the Storm" by David Boop: An assassin finds herself switching sides and then being outed by the group she decided to help.
"Just Another Day" by Terri Pray: Gianna hates when people judge her on her looks—now she’s been assigned to guard an actor who is just as stubborn and willful as she is.
"Field Work" by Anna Paradox: A student’s field research takes a dangerous turn when she befriends an alien no one has ever met before.
"Just Another Saturday on Outpost Nine" by Bobby Nash: For Erin Moonshadow, alert claxons and patching up battle trauma is all in a day’s work.
"Fire Mining" by M.H. Bonham: Plasma storms from the dying suns aren’t the only dangers a good pilot like Saraah faces on Taurii 6.
"High Heeled Distraction" by Alan Lickiss: Undercover work isn’t always easy—particularly when it involves high heels and exotic dancing.
"Slow Burn" by Barbara Johnson-Haddad: People with high metabolisms need not apply to travel to Earth.
"Interstellar Bitches" by Selina Rosen: When an Earth lumber salesman cuts into her business, Drewcilia Qwah hires the Interstellar Bitches to deal with the problem.
"Steel Scorned" by Calie Voorhis: When the planet Steel turned its back on Onyx after her accident, she found strength in becoming an outcast.
"Royal Duties" by Rebecca Lickiss: Station Manager Pulu finds his day interrupted by a beautiful woman seeking sanctuary.
"Rebel Moon" by Carol Hightshoe: A intelligence agent returns to the home she thought closed to her forever.
"Hijacking the Legacy" by David Lee Summers: All Suki wants to do is go home, but finds that she has a home she never realized she had.
"The Silver Snake" by Laura K Deal: An undercover agent is sent to rescue a missing woman, but finds herself dealing with a multitude of sex-crazed insects and a love-struck teenager.
"Outpost 6" by Julia Phillips: Nyssa joined a group heading out to a colony planet after her relationship ended. Now, she’s a frontier doctor with a handsome doctor looking out for her.
"Ruler" by David B. Riley: A spoiled Imperial Princess is sent to a rebellious planet to be the new governor.
"Precious Cargo" by Lindsey Duncan: Kirin’s stepfather gives her a necklace that belonged to her mother, before dumping her on her aunt and leaving her. Both the necklace and the young girl carry deadly secrets.
"Mistral’s Revenge" by Laura Kjosen: As humans move out into the galaxy, their legends travel. Perhaps there is some truth to the ancient stories of elves and sirens after all.
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Trials of the Warmland by Gaddy Bergmann
Trials of the Warmland by Gaddy Bergmann is the second novel in the Feral World series, a post-apocalyptic odyssey set 3,000 years in the future. Humanity has barely survived a near-extinction-level event - the collision of a major asteroid on Earth in the middle of the Twenty-First Century, complicated by the vagaries of global warming.
In Trials of the Warmland, Gaddy Bergmann continues the odyssey of Blake and friends, the last remnants of the Kamishi tribe. They have reached the Warmland, but now they find that the Warmland is not the paradise they thought, and making it their home is not easy. There is no respite from danger, and now a new adversary, the Lunari — descendants of those few who escaped the apocalypse by colonizing the moon — have returned to Earth with ideas of their own.
The series is unique in that it offers an optimistic view of post-apocalyptic society, which has reformed into local tribes that depend on hunting and gathering. Gaddy Bergmann (Denver) is a zoologist and microbiologist, and he carefully crafts a world where the biosphere develops naturally in the absence of Man’s misguided management of the planet.
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