September 19

Preacher: Gone to Texas by Garth Ennis

ISBN: 1563892618

I bought this book.

Preacher graphic novel #1

You’d think it wouldn’t get much weirder than a faithless Texas preacher possessed by a half-angel, half-demon. Or his friend, who happens to be a hardcore Irish vampire. And his girlfriend, Tulip? Well, let’s just say she can keep up.

I don’t remember who recommended this series to me, or when, but I remember picking the first two up through the Science Fiction Book Club and to this day I look at that as one of the indicators that I’d become an adult. The series starts hard, with Tulip failing a hit and landing in Cassidy’s car in a nearly-failed getaway. But readers figure out something is up right away when Cassidy takes a bullet to the head and doesn’t even flinch. The pair flee until the sun rises and Cassidy has to take refuse in the back of his truck. Meanwhile Tulip borrows his vehicle to investigate an explosion in the distance. In the shattered remains of a church she finds one survivor—the man who left her, Jesse Custer.

Freshly possessed by Genesis (the spawn of an affair between an angel and a demon, and inheritor of both race’s power) Jesse discovers he now has—literally–the Word of God at his disposal, and the angels responsible for recapturing Genesis have unleashed the Saint of Killers to take him down.

Jesse, always being one for the impossible, decides to take the fight right up to God’s door and hold him responsible for all the everything in the world.

This volume also includes the hilarious and killer side quest wherein the gang lands in New York. Cassidy runs into an old friend and some seriously bloody hijinks ensue.

Preacher: Gone to Texas, is definitely adults only, and only gore lovers (or toleraters) at that. It’s batter dipped violence deep fried in a spicy version of Christian mythology and utterly unique. And no matter how wild the ride is, if you keep reading it’ll get even crazier, straight into “Who thinks of this?” territory.

Category: Personal | Comments Off on Preacher: Gone to Texas by Garth Ennis
September 15

What are you buying when you buy digital?

One more complication in the print versus digital debate. A judge ruled that people who buy from iTunes aren’t actually buying a copy of the song, but are buying rights to listen to the song on whatever device the site allows.

One can assume this applies to electronic copies of books too. So why, then, would it be okay to charge more than print price for just the right to read the book? All you print people can cheer because this is a step toward keeping print books around (not that this wasn’t always true, but now you have legal proof.)

Category: Business | Comments Off on What are you buying when you buy digital?
September 14

Email change

I’m phasing out my insightbb.com email. If you’re emailing me at leatherzebra@insightbb.com or sicacaelestas@insightbb.com please be aware of this change. My new email address for all personal matters is leatherzebra@gmail.com and for professional matters is theothermichelelee@gmail.com

My insightbb addresses will still be active for as long as it takes to transfer everyone over.

Category: Business | Comments Off on Email change
September 14

Tip Jars and Rant Space

The fabulous Jim Hines blogged about author “tip jars” today and I find myself in perfect agreement with him. I’ve come across my fair share of online tip jars and every time it seemed to me like the author was begging for money. I’ve run across a few online magazines with tip jars as well, but I think this is a little different. Take Apex Magazine (which I just read and reviewed, so it’s fresh in my mind). Donations go to cover the operating costs of the magazine, which pays five cents a word to authors. The site is also bereft of annoying ads, isn’t hosted on a free webs site and they go very far to meet the needs of readers (offering ebook forms, audio forms, quality fiction etc).

There’s a number of other sites that do this, Clarkesworld has their Citizenship drive, Fantasy Magazine has a donate button, you get the point. There’s a difference in my mind between keeping a market going and tipping an author. Maybe it’s because as an author I feel it’s wrong to ask people to just give me money. I’ll sell you a book or an article or story, but it’s not your job to support me just because you enjoyed one of my stories.

If you do want to help support me (and honestly unlike Jim, I have to admit I could really use it) then buy a copy of Rot (if you really want to support me, you can buy a print copy instead of an ebook copy), or a copy of Private Lessons (which isn’t horror), write a review of one of my books, or recommend it to a friend, or pick up any of the anthologies and magazines I’ve been in.

But I’m not here to be supported by you, the reader, I’m here to entertain you (hopefully). And I’m here specifically, as in blogging despite a really low comment margin, because I have something to say and I enjoy having my own little space in the vastness of the web where I can say it without being jumped on, or censored or trolled.

I know you readers are out there (my webpage prove there are a lot of you) and that’s enough for me, though sometimes it does feel a little lonely around here. *cricket*

Category: Business | Comments Off on Tip Jars and Rant Space
September 14

Killbox by Ann Aguirre

ISBN: 9780441019410

I purchased this book.

Sirantha Jax, book 4

This review contains spoilers for previous books in the series.

When last we left Sirantha Jax, one of the elite jumpers born with the gene that allows navigators to travel through the subspace area known as grimspace, she’d escaped an alien planet she was sent to as an ambassador after breaking her love and captain, March, out of the alien jail.

Killbox starts fast and remains very hard to put down. What was hinted at in the last books, the increasing invasions of the flesh-eating monstrous aliens known as the Morgut, has become a full on, planned attacks as the Morgut are clearly declaring war on their favorite tasty snacks. However Farwan, the mafia/Empire-like organization that had been protecting the human worlds, have been exposed for their corrupt actions, namely the sabotage and destruction of a ship carrying beloved political emissaries (and the subsequent brainwashing attempting to set Jax herself up for the crash that killed everyone but her). Now that Farwan has fallen there is no one else to step up and protect human space from pirates, the Syndicate and the Morgut. The Conglomerate has been too dependent on others for too long and lacks the force to fight the coming war.

So it does the next best thing, and hires March to build an Armada to stave off the attacks while plan B formulates. Meanwhile other members of March’s crew (all becoming increasingly more important) are at work at a variety of projects. Jax is training the first non-Farwan trained jumper. Doc is working on tech that will turn Jax’s ability to heal from grimspace damage into a strength rather than a random mutation and Dina is hard at work trying to hash out the secrets of the Morgut ability to jump anywhere, not just from hot spots.

The truth is that they know very little about the Morgut other than they have a 97% kill rate against humans. So now Jax and March and the crew find themselves on the front lines of a war against an nearly unknown, but very deadly enemy with the clock ticking until the major invasion begins.

Killbox is a fabulous book. It’s complex, and exposes more background of grimspace and human space travel and how the world came to be where it is in this series. Furthermore Jax has changed as well, into a solid, determined woman willing to face down ultimate evils to help the people she loves.

This series is far too complex to ever fit into a single book, or a trilogy and nearly impossible to put down. Fans of the big SF flicks out there, from Serenity to Star Wars, will find everything they love about those stories in this one. Princesses, space ship battles, monsters, lasers and aliens, Killbox has it all and is poised to thrust this series into a strong, tight spin to its (I hope) victorious end.

Category: Personal | Comments Off on Killbox by Ann Aguirre