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  • - The Sigurdsen Incident
    av Stephanie Osborn
    170,-

  • - The Problem With Bliss
    av Richard F Weyand
    160,-

    JAN CHILDERS IS BACK! Senior Captain William Campbell and Rear Admiral Jan Childers are on the Grand Tour. Eight planets in two years. While Childers' heavy cruiser squadron trains up and drills local CSF forces, Campbell assesses the local intelligence group. Bliss is their fifth stop. They arrive on Bliss just after a hostile incursion occurred at a particularly inopportune time, indicating there may be an espionage ring informing the enemy of the CSF's plans well in advance. Campbell sets out to find and neutralize that espionage ring. They've killed already, and they aren't about to let Bill Campbell put them out of business. But they don't know who and what Bill Campbell really is. For that matter, neither does Jan Childers! INTERVIEW WITH RICH WEYAND So Jan Childers is back. We thought her story was finished. Well, in its larger scope, the story was finished with the trilogy, in the first two volumes. This is an episode in her life that the trilogy swept past. This entire book fits between the chapters "The Grand Tour" and "Commanding Officer, Task Force 32" of Childers, the first book in the series. Bill Campbell is the primary character? Yes, the action here centers around Bill Campbell, although Jan Childers is also here for much of it and they have some good scenes together. Tien Jessen, Pavel Nimsky, and Sammy Heyerdahl are all here, too, along with a bunch of new characters. What's the primary thrust? We finally find out what Bill Campbell does for a living. All we've really known until now is that he's in the Intelligence Division, and he has a role in counter-espionage, at least after Kodu. He never talks about his work in the trilogy, and Jan doesn't ask. They both have clearances that do not allow them to tell each other everything. They joke about it in the trilogy. This is on the Grand Tour? Yes. After the Feirman payback, Admiral Stepic sends Jan Childers out on a training mission, to bring a lot of Commonwealth planets up to speed on the Fleet Book of Maneuvers. Birken and Durand, afraid Bill Campbell will take half-retirement rather than endure a two-year separation from Jan, send Campbell out to assess the intelligence operations on whatever planets Jan visits. And there's a problem with Bliss. Yes, hence the title. There's a major problem on Bliss. and Campbell is going to 'fix' it. The need to replace the head of intelligence on Bliss after the Grand Tour is mentioned in the trilogy, and that he retires, but no more than that. Did this write as fast as the other books? Not quite. It took 29 days to write once I had the plot elements sorted out in my head. For 48000+ words, that's a little long. But there's a lot of timing issues here, because you have flight times to take into account, and the timing of Jan's planet leave was already set in Childers. I didn't want any discrepancies between the trilogy and this book. I also had to think about how forensic tools, with which I am very familiar, might work in virtual reality. That was cool, but took time. What about the cover? A friend of mine, Matt Shute, posted a selfie on Facebook a couple years back. It was just such a compelling picture. It has its issues, of focus and lighting, but in a night shot, I thought it would work out, especially in a thumbnail version, which is what sells ebooks. Softening the background keeps the foreground more sharply focused than the background. So it's sort of a night-time selfie of Campbell in Joy. The model is a little young for the character, but it worked for me. The background is a portion of a larger picture of part of Hong Kong. I didn't want a recognizable US city, obviously. I think the result conveys the espionage/counter-espionage nature of the book.

  • av Richard F Weyand
    246,-

    This is the fourth book in the Childers Universe. It is the prequel to Childers. THE COLONIES ARE REVOLTING Earth's oldest colonies are no longer struggling outposts, they are vibrant, productive economies. They have become huge sources of income for Earth's plutocratic ruling families. But Jablonka Planetary Governor James Allen Westlake VI and his childhood friend, mining magnate Georgy Orlov, see a brighter future down a different path. They recruit two eccentric academics, Gerald Ansen and Mineko Kusunoki, to create a new government for the colonies, that the colonies can split from Earth and seek their own destiny. They know Earth will fight the split. What will they do when the Earth Space Navy comes calling? AN INTERVIEW WITH RICH WEYAND You wrote "Charter" after the Childers trilogy. Did that cause problems? It was constantly on my mind while writing this book. Every tradition of the CSF starts here. The drafters and signers of the Charter, who have heavy cruisers named after them in "Childers," are here in the flesh. Gerald Ansen, who is mentioned on page 3 of "Childers," is here. The monument to the signing of the Charter that Miriam Desai mentions on page 266 of "Childers: Absurd Proposals" is here. The destruction of Doma, a major plot point in "Childers: Absurd Proposals," is here. The War of Independence. The use of beam weapons. Communicating in hyperspace. Sigurdsen Fleet Base. The three houses for the commanders at Sigurdsen. It's all here. How long did it take you to write "Charter"? I spent a month banging around plot elements in my head. The biggest thing was to figure out who the sponsors were, and why they did what they did. A revolution, to be successful, needs money behind it. Once I had the half dozen major plot elements decided, I just started writing. From that point it was 31 writing days -- about 43 calendar days -- to write it all out. You did something different with character names in "Charter." I asked my Facebook friends to volunteer their names for character names, then I just used them in order. So if the next name was female, that was a female character, if the next name was male, that was a male character. The only exception was Arlan Andrews. He's an author friend, and a hell of a nice guy. He asked to be the arch villain of the piece, and so he became the head of the ruling families on Earth. Oh, and Jennifer Lowenthal, who asked to be killed in the most spectacular and grotesque way possible. I think I accomplished that. The rest was all coincidence. The gunnery officer named Shell Scott? Luck of the draw. Admiral Bruneau's lawyer being Jewish? Luck of the draw. Lots of coincidences. Do the people whose names you used like their characters? I posted snippets of their characters on Facebook, and everybody was happy with them. And it was a lot easier than deciding on a character's sex and name every time I introduced a new character. What order should people read the books in now? Publication order -- 1, 2, 3, 4 -- or in their internal time order, which would put "Charter" first. Either way works, I think. I can see advantages either way. I would probably read them 4-1-2-3. You're pretty critical of the United States government in the Westlake Conference debates in "Charter." The delegates to the conference use the current -- that is, the 2018 -- US government several times as a bad example of how government always interprets its powers broadly. I don't think there's much doubt that the current US government has expanded its powers far beyond the intent of the framers of the Constitution. That's something the delegates to the Westlake Conference were consciously trying to avoid in drafting the Charter.

  • - Revolution!
    av Richard F Weyand
    170,-

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