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Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Guest Post by William A. Liggett author of Panic Peak (Spotlight and #Contest- Win a signed copy)

I want to introduce you to William A. Liggett. William is the author of Watermellon Snow and Panic Peak. Panic Peak is the second novel in the series. William has written a guest post just for my readers. Enter below to win a  signed copy of both books Thanks for stopping by.

 

 

 
 
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Book Details:
Book Title:  Panic Peak by William A. Liggett
CategoryAdult Fiction (18+), 254 pages
GenreCli-Fi Thriller 
Publisher: Consilience Press LLC
Publication Date: February, 2024
Content Rating: PG-13: Very occasional f-word and sh*t in dialog
 
Book Description:

How can a single glacier grow dramatically while hundreds are shrinking around the world?

This paradox confronts a young glaciologist Kate Landry as she looks down at her research site buried under shocking mounds of new snow. Little does she know that Mount Olympus is in the bulls-eye for a sophisticated geoengineering experiment being conducted by a scientist who has convinced a secretive international oil cartel to fund his dubious climate modification techniques. While Kate struggles to understand why the glacier is growing and begins to unravel the entire nefarious scheme, she also struggles to avoid the unraveling of her developing relationship with social psychologist Grant Poole. The more Kate uncovers on the glacier, the more her own life is at risk. Can she expose the unethical and dangerous geoengineering operation without being caught before she’s stopped? And at what risk to her life?
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Meet the Author:

Bill Liggett writes fiction that blends behavioral and earth sciences in the recent cli-fi (climate fiction) literary genre. His goal is to paint a hopeful future based on solutions to global warming.

He holds a BS in geology and an MA in education, both from Stanford University, and a PhD in applied social psychology from New York University. Among the many positions he has held over the years, he taught in high school and college, conducted behavioral science studies for IBM, and consulted with health care and educational organizations.

Wherever he lives, he loves being outdoors. Home for him has included the West Coast, East Coast, Alaska, and now Colorado, the state of his childhood. He and his wife, Cathy, live in Niwot, Colorado.

Guest Post:

The Blue Glacier is Both a Setting and a Character

What is a better place for conveying danger with every step than a mountaintop glacier? What is better to demonstrate the effects of global warming than an alpine glacier as it melts? I situated my two novels in my Warming World Adventure Series on a glacier where I lived and worked for three months as a young man. I stayed in a small research station about the size of a two-car garage (see photo) located about a thousand feet below the summit of Mount Olympus west of Seattle, Washington.

 

Blue Glacier is a perfect setting for an adventure because it is isolated without roads or any features of civilization. It is also near the center of a national park with no commercial or private buildings nearby. My characters are flown to and from the research station in small aircraft (ski-plane and helicopter).

When, in my first novel Watermelon Snow, a deadly illness infects the crew and a violent “bomb cyclone” storm hits at the same time, the two main characters, Kate and Grant, are trapped. No aircraft could safely navigate the mountains through the violent wind gusts. Their desperate hike out to safety is only the beginning of their adventure, but ironically it plants the seeds for their ultimate romance.

In the sequel, Panic Peak, Kate finds herself alone on the glacier trying to document and understand the extreme snow buildup and unusual weather conditions, while Grant tries to

support her from a distance. Soon she learns that the glacier has been the target of an illegal geoengineering operation that puts her life in danger. The theme of danger from nature compounded by human actions creates an ominous and unpredictable setting for the story.

Normally characters in a novel are people with distinct histories and personalities. I wanted Blue Glacier to have such a pervasive influence on the thoughts and actions of the human characters to be equivalent to being a character itself.

When I tried to describe concisely the personality of the glacier, I realized that it varied widely depending on the conditions at the time and the mood of the character who was interacting with it. For example, when Kate was feeling anxious and vulnerable, the once-familiar features of the glacier became ominous and foreboding. When she was looking at a gorgeous sunset from the research station, her warm feelings reminded her of the time that she had watched the sun sink into the Pacific Ocean from that very spot the year before while holding Grant’s hand. No matter the mood the glacier remains powerful. It tends to reflect and amplify the experience of the human characters in dramatic ways.

When the helicopter ices up and nearly crashes while Kate flies to the glacier, she learns that ice can form whenever the conditions are right regardless the time of year. A glacier creates its own micro-climate. The snow storms on the glacier over the previous winter dumped a deep enough layer that Kate concludes that the melting trend was replaced by growth when most glaciers around the world are shrinking.

Glaciers by their very nature present risks to travel on foot. My characters must avoid falling into the deep cracks in the ice—the crevasses. Often such falls are fatal without the proper precautions and equipment. Similarly, the huge icefall on the Blue Glacier, is much like a slow-motion waterfall where car-sized blocks of ice break free and fall thunderously hundreds of feet. My characters must know to stand clear when these are happening. Wind-blown snow can produce cornices, overhanging structures, that create a danger of breaking off and falling if someone unwittingly stands on one as does one of my characters.

At the same time that the glacier presents risks, it allows my characters to witness pristine beauty and spectacular sunsets creating feelings bordering on the spiritual, as the clouds catch the brilliant reds and oranges of the setting sun. This combination of danger and natural beauty leaves indelible memories in all of my characters who encounter them. I could not think of a better setting for a cli-fi adventure and thriller.


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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Review of the Book Sprites and Scuttlebut (Magical Mystery Book Club # 7) by Elizabeth Pantley

I want to welcome Elizabeth Pantley to Books R US. Elizabeth is the author of the Magical Mystery Book Club Series. I had to pleasure to read "Sprites and Scuttlebutt" Number 7 in the series. Let me tell you a bit about the book and my thoughts.

 

About the Book:

This book club is hooked on traveling into books to become the amateur sleuths! In this journey, the club travels to the Kingdom of Everglow.

The royal family is rocked to the core when a key staff member falls dead at a community event. In the turmoil that follows, any evidence of what happened is destroyed, so they must go by the recollection of witnesses who were too busy enjoying the celebration to offer any valuable testimony.

The royal family is further distressed when they return to the castle to see signs of a break in that somehow defied their complex security system. They wake the next day to discover that one member of the royal family has fallen into a deep, deathlike sleep.

Can the Snapdragon Inn Book Club uncover the plot behind this attack on the royal family? Can they find the antidote to wake the sleeping royal from a supernatural slumber? Can they bring peace back to the worried royal family and the frightened community?

Let’s hope they can, since they must solve the mystery and reach The End to get out of the book and back to their home in Colorado.

 

 My Thoughts:

I recently finished reading "Hexes and Hooligans," the previous book in the series, and I adored the story. The sequel, "Sprites and Scuttlebutt," continues the adventures of the magical book club as they travel into different books to solve mysteries. In this book, the club members discover Frank's backstory, which helps them unravel a plot against the Royal Family in the Kingdom of Everglow. The author's talent in creating a world of adventure, fun, friendship, and mystery has left me eagerly awaiting the next installment in the series, "Meditation and Mischief."

Connect with the Author:

https://elizabethpantley.com/

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Goodreads 

 

Thanks for Stopping By:

 


 

 

Disclaimer:

I was given a copy of the book by the author and I was not compensated for my review.

Book Blitz of Whiskey and Warfare Book One by E.M. Hamill (#Contest- Win an Amazon Gift Card)

 

Whiskey and Warfare
E.M. Hamill

 
(The Team Huntress Flights, #1)
Publication date: September 15th 2024
Genres: Adult, Science Fiction

Running on caffeine and spite with nothing left to prove.

Maryn Alessi retired from mercenary service after her last assignment went horribly sideways and settled down on a quiet planet with the love of her life. Unexpectedly widowed, Maryn must fulfill a promise to return her mate’s ashes to zer home planet for funeral rites, but a brutal civil war has destabilized space travel.

Former Artemis Corps sisters-in-arms and their sassy ship, the Golden Girl, are up to the task, counting on luck and their rather sketchy cargo business to get Maryn passage through the contested star lanes. But when the crew of the Girl rescues survivors of a ruthless war crime, Maryn and her ride-or-die friends must take up their old profession to save the lives of innocents from a genocidal dictator.

WHISKEY AND WARFARE is the first of The Team Huntress Flights.

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EXCERPT:

“We’re in position.” Scylla’s voice came over the headset. She squinted at the display as the external floodlights played over twisted metal. The ramp began to descend, letting the void in. A cold sweat broke out over Maryn’s skin at the sight of interminable space.

I’m inside, not out there, she reminded herself. She tried to train her attention on the heads-up instead, but her eyes refused to focus. “Girl, adjust the holo projector for plus three distance and magnification.”

“Setting display for granny glasses,” the ship responded.

“What did you say?” Maryn blurted.

“That’s what I call it. Girl does too, now,” Scylla said over the comm.

Her eyes finally cooperated. The blasted hull of the ship spun beneath them and she caught sight of the cylindrical life pod, projecting part way out of the tube from which it had been launched.

“I see it. Match trajectory and rotation.” She extended her arms. The hydraulic limbs reflected her movement. “There’s a piece of debris jamming the life pod into the tube. I can only see one of the retrieval cuffs on the pod. It’s twisted the wrong direction. Bring us more to port.”

“Roger. Correcting speed and rotation.” Scylla said. The stars outside spun in a dizzy arc, drawing Maryn’s gaze to them, and she blinked sweat out of her eyes. “How’s that?”

The other cuff was in view. “Good for now.” She reached for the near cuff and clamped hydraulic fingers around the handle. The other limb extended but she met unexpected resistance before she could use the claw to grab the metal rod jamming the tube. “The right arm is stuck.”

“You have to punch a little to unstick it,” Jac told her over the headset. “It’s got shoulder issues. Girl’s getting old, like us.”

“I beg your pardon,” Girl said, offended. “I’m younger than all of you. It’s not the age. It’s the shit you’ve put me through.”

Maryn carefully retracted her arm, swiveling, and extended her fist with more momentum. The joint popped and the robotic manipulator extended the rest of the way, the metal hand slamming against the lifeboat. “I probably just scared the hell out of whoever’s in there.” She wrapped the claw around the junk pinning the capsule into the tube and pulled back. The rod moved but refused to let go. “It’s not going to budge without a little force. It might just pull the wreck with us before it releases. How big of a problem is that?”

“Big,” Scylla admitted. “A huge section of the transport is drifting toward us faster than I hoped. We won’t be able to move out of the way fast enough lugging that behind us and I don’t want the Girl smashed between ‘em.”

“If we leave the life pod here, they’re going to be smashed instead of us,” Maryn snapped. “How long do we have?”

“About two minutes until we have to disengage.”

“Just like old times,” Maryn muttered. “All right. Give me a minute. Be prepared to move away as soon as it comes loose.”

She wrapped one hydraulic claw around the tow handle, the other on the obstructing debris and pulled. Both shifted in the tube and stuck again. “Come on, you bastard,” she grunted, throwing her weight against the hydraulics. The cylinder slid out another foot, not even halfway out of the launch tube.

Her thigh muscles burned with the effort as she leaned backward in the arm controls. She staggered when the cylinder suddenly slid free, and the hydraulic claw jerked the life pod forward too quickly, banging it on the ramp of the cargo bay.

“Damn it, I’m really rattling whoever is inside. I hope they’re strapped in.”

“Make it fast, Mar,” Scylla said. “That wreck’s getting too close.”

Maryn gritted her teeth and clamped the other claw on the opposite tow handle. She carefully drew the vessel into the bay and deposited it hatch side up on the deck, not as gently as she would have liked. “Got it. Go!”

Impulse engines fired, treating her to a fresh, terrifying sight of wheeling stars and drifting wreckage as the bulk of the shattered transport plowed into the remains of the smaller ship and drove it toward the Girl’s stern. “I said go, go, go!”


Author Bio:

E.M. (Elisabeth) Hamill writes adult science fiction and fantasy somewhere in the wilds of eastern suburban Kansas. A nurse by day, wordsmith by night, she is happy to give her geeky imagination free rein and has sworn never to grow up and get boring.

Frequently under the influence of caffeinated beverages, she also writes as Elisabeth Hamill for young adult readers in fantasy with the award-winning Songmaker series.

She lives with her family, where they fend off flying monkey attacks and prep for the zombie apocalypse.

Visit her website at www.elisabethhamill.com and her blog at www.emhamill.wordpress.com

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