Sunday, February 07, 2021

Who Reads my Books? Aaron J Waters



 Neal me old mucker!

Reading has always been a big thing in my family, and from a very young age I tagged along with Frodo and Sam on their journey through Middle-Earth. I watched from the side lines with my sides splitting as Mr Fox fantastically outwitted his fat and windy-legged adversaries, and shared in the horrors of Jack and his family during their stay in an isolated hotel.

The more I read, the more I knew I wanted to be a writer. My first chance came when I was in primary school when we had to write a story in our A5 workbooks, of which we would share at the end of class. Whereas others wrote of dragons, talking dogs and adventures with their grandparents, I wrote a story about a monster that came in the night to snatch up naughty children, where it would then proceed to take them back to its cave, deep underground. It would then lock them in a cage together, and whenever it got hungry, it would pick one to have for its supper, and no matter how loudly the children screamed, no grownups would ever hear them. Needless to say, I wasn't allowed to read my story at the end of class. 

It wasn't until my teen years that I really started to get into Sci-Fi literature (I was already a fan of it on screen), particularly when I started college and began to partake in...let's say "chemical experimentation", and discovered the works of Frank Herbert, Robert A. Heinlein, Philip K. Dick and the other usual suspects. 

Then, one day, I was in a charity shop in Margate, there on the bookshelf, was a large collection of Neal Asher novels. They say not to judge a book by its cover, but when I saw the fantastic artwork by Jon Sullivan, I knew I had to own these books. I snatched up the lot of them (12 books for a tenner, bargain!)

Eight years later, and I can quite happily say with confidence that 'The Technician' is easily one of my favourite novels of all time, and has been a huge influence on my writing. It was the way you never shied away from explaining the science behind the gadgets or biology of your creations, much in the vein of Peter F. Hamilton and the like. 

As I mentioned before, your work has been a big influence on my own work, and I would often find myself, whenever in a rough patch, thinking "what would Neal do?"

So, when kayaking, breaking chairs and not sleeping didn't work, I would turn to your works instead and pretty much just rip you off (lawsuit pending, I'm sure). I jest, of course, but I would always find myself in those creative rough patches thinking "oh I can't do it like this or this because of this and that" and then my lizard brain would kick in and say "Neal doesn't play by the rules, and I'm pretty sure he's done okay." and that would be it! All caution thrown to the wind and before I knew it, the words would just haemorrhage from me and onto the page.

My name is Aaron, and I read Neal Asher!

Who Reads my Books? Andrew Freudenberg



Hi, I’m Andrew Freudenberg, and I’ve been a SF fan for pretty much as long as I remember. It probably all started with watching Doctor Who and Star Trek reruns with my parents back in the early 70’s. I devoured Clarke, Heinlein and Asimov as a kid, and was just the right age to feel all the Star Wars excitement when it happened. 



These days, having had my own record label, and generally being involved with the hedonistic end of the dance scene in the 90’s, I’ve crumbled into a metal loving old git with three sons who keep me on my feet. I live in the West Country of England, which is low in excitement, but I try and escape for gigs and travel as often as possible. (That’s going really well in these plague times). 

Weirdly Neal read me before I read him, as he declared my flash fiction tale, ‘Something Akin to Despair’, to be winner of an online Space Opera group competition. I wasted no time before diving into the Transformation trilogy and the Cormac books, becoming a big fan of his visceral far future approach. Just limbering up to devour the recent Jain trilogy at the moment.


Segueing seamlessly into self promotion, that very story can be found in my debut horror collection, ‘My Dead and Blackened Heart’, published by the Sinister Horror Company at the end of 2020. I hope to lean more into the SF side of my interests writing wise in the not too distant…

Dead and Blackened Heart on Amazon UK

Dead and Blackened Heart on Amazon US

Saturday, February 06, 2021

Who Reads my Books? Mark Fenton

 Hey there Mr Idea Factory!


I fell into Sci-Fi at school at around 11 when our English teacher had a regular "buy a book" club thing. Started with The Stainless Steel Rat and from there went through Heinlein, Asimov...all the usual. I discovered your work after running out of books to read on my Kindle - Amazon recommended "Gridlinked" - and was hooked from there.

I was always against reading on a Kindle until I saw one - I promptly put over a thousand "real" books into my storage unit and went on a buying spree on Kindle. It has pros and cons - but for me, the ability to take my books with me everywhere and easily read in the bath 😃 outweigh the small cons. I don't watch TV so I probably go through 3 books a month.

Who am I? Well, studied Physics at University - well, I say "studied" - I spent more time drinking beer, chasing girls and playing guitar. An education well spent. Prior to lockdown I was in a regularly gigging band - playing 80s rock...I'll spare you the pictures of the spandex.

Work wise I used to tell computers what to do, but now I tell people to tell computers what to do. I set up my own company about 20 years ago and have been working from home mostly ever since – currently consulting as a CTO for company.  Hobbies wise, aside from the "making the world a louder place" with guitar, I ride a motorbike (or motorbikes...I've got a garage full - or, as my son calls it "The Toy Box") and I am a fencer. Took up fencing in my early 20s thinking it was a nice noble art - no. You've had a bad day at work and you've got to hit the person in front of you with 3' of steel. It is one of those sports where people either absolutely love it and it becomes all consuming or they are "meh".

For me - all consuming became the thing. I ended up represented England at the Commonwealth Games - didn't win though. Came 21st. People tell me that this is great - but no - it is the winning that matters, not the taking part!

I spend a lot of time walking my dogs - which is about the only thing we're allowed to do during these plague times. I'm not going to get political here, but I rather suspect I agree with you.

Life wise - I recently went through a difficult divorce (is there any other type?), and your books really helped me through. I became the curmudgeon in the corner of the pub with a pint and his dogs at his feet a reading a book. It was a difficult time, but things are turning around. I won custody of my son - who I raised, pretty much on my own, since he was 9 months old. He's now 13 and is my "reason".

My girlfriend and her daughter recently moved in with us - thankfully the kids have been raised together since they were toddlers so they already had a sister/brother relationship. We have become one big happy family. Well, except for her tiny (3Kg) King Charles Spaniel. He bullies my 2 giant dogs (45Kg each!) endlessly - still, they've sorted the pecking order out - the big dogs sleep by the fire and tiny dog guards the house. 🙂

I've attached a photo of me in my “winter plumage". It started a few years ago with Movember - and then it morphed into "Hobo February" - and now, and my son's behest, every year at the first hard frost I stop shaving and then don't shave again until I go away overnight on my motorbike (usually March before it is warm enough and Jnr is at my parents). Last year with the lockdown the beard got, well, hobo is the only word.

I'm gonna take this opportunity to appear a smidge sycophantic and say "thank you for your books". To many people, certainly me, they are an escape from the horrors of the real world - and they've certainly helped me through difficult times. Keep 'em coming!

Who Reads my Books? Brendon Kelly


I’m pushing 50, born and raised in New Zealand, and still live here in the capital, Wellington, with my wife and two kids - 11 and 13. I’ve lived in England twice for 4 years and I enjoyed it very much - especially the exchange rate bringing all that cash back to NZ.

I got into Sci-Fi reading at the age of 18 when I picked up Greg Bear’s Eon and couldn’t put it down.  I got back into reading when I was in my 30’s mainly on the long commutes into London from Betchworth in Surrey.


My main hobby is wood work. I tend to get grumpy if I haven’t made something in a while. My current project is a Wooden Road bike frame made from laminated American Ash and Australian Jarrah.  

I first got into your books when I found Gridlinked, I quickly bought everything you wrote on my kindle and read them, multiple times.  Gaps between your books are torture so I tend to read around with other authors during the wait...I feel dirty...

My job is a Lead Engineer, whatever that means, in the Data and Analytics area for a bank. It pays the bills but I’d rather be in my workshop building something or working some land somewhere growing food.  

That’s me.

Friday, February 05, 2021

Who Reads my Books? Richard Johnson


Hi Neal... Just getting in touch about the "Who reads my books" thing.

I started reading your books with "The Soldier" and love the universe you've created. It's WAAAYYY out there, but the characters you've created are still relatable and that draws a reader in. 

Anyway, about me... I still say I'm English although I've been living in Melbourne, Australia for twenty years and travelled the world before that. I'm a structural engineer by trade and that career choice has allowed me to support myself (and a medium to severe book addiction) in Singapore, Hong Kong, Ireland, the UK and finally Australia. Turns out physics is the same everywhere and engineering is nothing but applied physics.

Outside of work I dabble as a writer. I won the Writers of the Future contest in 2011. If you ignore the unfortunate association with Scientology, it’s still the most competitive and best-rewarded competition for amateur sci-fi short stories in the world, so I guess that's something. I also won the Jim Baen memorial award and have a handfull of small press sales and near misses with Netflix.

Since you said self-promotion is OK, I have to shill my upcoming book "The View from Infinity Beach" although its very different from your stuff and so may not appeal to your readers. Anyone who reads this is welcome to hit me up with a PM on Facebook for a free copy.

I like watches and motorcycles and have a collection of pocket knives which tends to make people nod politely while backing away to a safe distance.

Religion: atheist

Philosophy: stoicism

Favourite tipple: sake

That's me, I guess....

Who Reads my Books? Andrew Quinto Venn



Hi Neal,

I have read SciFi and fantasy since I discovered a book by Hugh Walters in the school library when I was about 11. From then on I was constantly berated by the English teacher for reading that 'Star Trek rubbish'. Seems that we had to stick to Dickens and Austen. Sod that!

I worked my way through all that I could find of Walters, then EE Doc Smith, Asimov, Clarke etc.

Then college beckoned and then a job and life got serious. I worked for a while as a soil scientist until I figured that I could earn more money elsewhere and went to work for Rank Hovis. I was a flour miller there for 30 years and am now a primary school site manager cruising to retirement. At 56 I still read, your books when they come out, Peter Hamiltons and loads of others. Lockdown has seen me buy an inordinate amount of books for my kindle. Although, I have worked all through lockdown so reading time has been limited and the reading queue is very long still.

Sometimes I try to keep up with my own blog at http://www.giant68.co.uk where I am just a grumpy old guy. I wrote a piece about SciFi novels a while back and was over the moon when you commented on it. 

4 more years till I hit 60 and the planned retirement, although if this situation carries on much longer I may retire soon!

But a few heart attacks and a quintuple bypass hasn't stopped me so why should this! 

Keep those books coming!

Regards

Andy Venn

Thursday, February 04, 2021

Who Reads my Books? David King


All right I’ll give this a go. I’m an voracious SciFi reader with Neal Asher being one of my all time favorites. I love the depth and feel of the universe and characters that he creates. 

As for myself, I am the owner-captain of a fishing boat out of San Francisco by day. http://www.warriorpoetsportfishing.com

By night I’m a dj for the longest running goth industrial club in the US. http://www.deathguild.com The tartan is registered as corporate tartan of Death Guild


Most importantly I’m happily married to my wife, who puts up with me.



Thank you David King!


Wednesday, February 03, 2021

Who Reads my Books? Ed Rybicki



Dear Neal,

I came across your books through reading a copy of Line of Polity I found in a local bookstore here in Cape Town more than twelve years ago - and I was immediately hooked. Sarky spaceships, nasty drones, seriously smart tech - it was to love.

Then more started trickling in, and I made it my mission to collect these treasures: Line War may have been the next one, because I had read that by 2010; I now have nearly all the novel offerings in print, and the rest on my iPad via the Kindle app.


You'll notice from the pic that I am also more than passing fond of Iain M Banks: I actually have a personal pantheon of modern SF authors that includes you, Banks, Reynolds, Stross, Ian McDonald, Peter Hamilton (some of the time) and Neal Stephenson in the first rank.

I am verging on 66, and I've been a professional academic virologist since 1981. I am also a lifelong SF fan, starting with Capt WE Johns (of Biggles fame) and John Wyndham in the mid-1960s, and progressing via the very excellent New Worlds in SF series and other short story collections, as well as...fuck it! ...near obligatory Heinlein and Asimov and then Poul Anderson. I've actually tried to chronicle my progress via my own (modest) blog, as in this example: https://edrybicki.wordpress.com/2014/01/12/baby-steps-in-a-spacesuit-3-in-praise-of-the-short-form/ I am in fact a published near-SF author, if you count two ultrashort stories in the Futures section of Nature magazine: one (Womanspace) illustrates just how much trouble you can get into with the unamused woke brigade if you attempt a light-hearted homage to the old-style multiverse trope.

In my virology career I have also often mused over what sorts of biological nanotech (virus=infectious von Neumann machine) would be possible, given the couple of billion years worth of evolutionary refinement viruses have had to work with. These days, it's discoveries related to defence systems against viruses - and their counter-measures - that continually amaze me. We have virus-derived tailored nanomachines (tailocins) used by bacteria to kill other bacteria; sequence-specific CRISPR/Cas DNA and now RNA editing suites used by bacteria against virus, AND by viruses against each other; molecular motors powered by ATP that spin at 2000+ rpm to pack DNA into protein shells.... Nature is smarter than we are, we need to adapt some of its creations better!

To close, it's worth noting that 55 years worth of reading SF brings one to the realisation that there is presently some subtle and not-so-subtle remining of old veins of precious metal: Adrian Tchaikovsky recently effectively redid Gene Wolfe's Shadow of the Torturer universe; Elizabeth Bear more or less wrote an update to James White's Sector General series. I suppose it's always been like that - but I've read a LOT, and I remember what I read, and I'd like folk to be more inventive and original. You, I have no such problem with.

Thanks, Neal!

Ed Rybicki

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

A Little Stroll

 

Some may wonder if I’m staying on Crete to avoid the dreaded coronavirus, but I’m not. I thought about where I would prefer to spend the next interminable lockdown and, on Crete, I figured I had beautiful mountains to walk in, bars to go to where I can sit outside in the sunshine and the Libyan Sea to kayak on. It also being so long since I spent a winter here, I wanted to see what it was like and nail down any problems in the house (as per the previous post) . As it turns out, the lockdown here is worse than in the UK. All the bars and restaurants have been closed. I have to send a text every time I go out. And masks must be worn everywhere outside the house except when alone in your car or when doing exercise. Still, I have been managing to kayak (since that’s exercise) and was even out on the sea on the 10th of January. The walking has been good too. Here are some pictures along a route I generally take.



Setting out from my house. Left of the gate my lemon tree. Bare fig tree (lovely black figs) on the right, then after that an Agnus Castus. I grew it from a single peppercorn picked up in another village. It's other name is Monk's Pepper. The peppercorns it produces taste just like the real thing but, apparently they have a male softening effect hence, presumably, monks using them. Kazani (where they make the raki) on the right under that tin roof.


View across Papagiannades to my left. Same view really as from my front terrace.


Up past my car to hit the road.


They have other lockdown madness here that is puritanical and obviously rolled out by some tight arsed bureaucrat. I learned that maybe I was being a naughty boy taking exercise at a distance from my house, but I’ve spoken about that in a previous post. When I first went out kayaking, there were fishermen along the coast – just one or two. They disappeared and I learned that fishing is not allowed under lockdown i.e. a guy drives down to the coast, sits alone catching fish, and this is a COVID DANGER.


The view once I turned the corner at the top of the road onto the paths. Not very clear on this day. Often you can see Sitia, the sea and an island off the coast as clear as glass.


A recent diversion to the path. After this huge bugger came down they just started driving round it. Would take a bulldozer to move it.


Agois Yorgos (Saint George's)

Another one is the stuff that is closed and that which is not. All over the peripteros are open and the main product they sell is cigarettes. Yet, in Sitia, the two vape shops are closed. Because isn’t it a great idea when locking down against a respiratory virus for everyone to obtain cigarettes but not the means to stop smoking?

 


Many of the olive trees have been stripped out now and the olive oil factories belching steam. I still see nets on the ground and hear the sound of the machines they use to bring down the olives - rather like long-handled strimmers but with the plastic thread protruding from a spinning bar. 


Those yellow flowers everywhere (the invasive weed in my garden - oxalis) and this is early January. Wait until the Spring.


And another little nugget: because of coronavirus the buses have been stopped. This means that lots of old people (who the lockdowns are supposed to protect) in the villages cannot get to town for shopping, or the doctor, unless they get a taxi at 20 Euros each way. Of course they can’t share the cost of a taxi because, you guessed it, coronavirus – only one passenger at a time. Anyway, they might not be able to eat, get medication or pay their power bills for heating, but they’ll be safe from the virus.

 


Excellent little valley. Earlier I saw bushes with white flowers on them down there and wonder if they were oregano. It would certainly be an interesting adventure trying to find out.



Interesting, isn’t it, but once you look past Greece as a sunny holiday destination, you start to realise it is more authoritarian than the UK, laced through with socialist bureaucratic idiocies. It’s also caught in a bit of a unionised time warp that shows up in the thinking e.g. only an electrician can do electrics and only a plumber can do pipe-work. Tad antediluvian.


These little churches are all over the place. Sometimes they are memorials to someone who died in an accident (quite often at the side of the road). Sometimes they mark village boundaries. Other times they are just because someone thought, I'm going to put a little church here.


Love the gnarly old olive trees.

 
On the road back from Armeni now. I do enjoy this stretch. I guess because it's mostly downhill!

Anyway, that's enough ranting about lockdown in this post. You can see by the pictures here that despite the silly rules it's a lovely place to be. I think I've been lucky too as thus far it has been a very mild winter. I'm constantly amazed to be sitting out in January to drink a cup of coffee, or walking in just a T-shirt and jeans and wondering if I should have worn shorts.


The remains of one of their water pumping windmills here, which can be found all over. They used to have canvas in them to catch the wind. 



Prickly Pear. I learned to my cost that you handle the fruit with gloves and a great deal of care. The spines are minescule and can leave your hands itching and painful for days.


These are popping up all over the place. A little research tells me they areoing a little research I think they are poppy anemone 'coronaria'. They come bright red in the spring, lavender pink and white through the summer and, apparently, purple right now. There are masses of them up on top of the mountains I'll be taking pictures of tomorrow, if it isn't pissing down.



Etia - Venetian house, village and churches. Apparently you can buy a house there but it must be renovated in the original style. Whether that means without power and running water I have no idea.





And on home to the village. This is an 8km walk (5 miles) and takes me abuot an hour and a half. Perfect way to wake up in the mornings!









Monday, January 11, 2021

Crete House in Winter

 

I can’t remember the precise date, maybe 2007 – more than ten years ago now – when I first spent a winter on Crete. The house was cold and damp then and it took Caroline and I a while to get a stove installed. Memories of that time arise. The roof was in three parts with the edges terminating over two-foot thick walls but not overlapping. Some attempt had been made to fill the gaps but, with expansion and contraction it hadn’t worked. We had water pouring in when it rained and running along the beams and the sound of water dripping in buckets all night. On New Year’s Eve we drove down to Makrigialos in a monsoon that didn’t let up for ten hours. After that celebration the drive back was very slow, rubble all across the roads along with the occasional car-killer boulder. In the house we found the bedroom flooded with a little waterfall pouring over the step into the kitchen. Cosy times. Drunken slumber killed the cold but did not impart sufficient unconsciousness for me not to hear the thud of a scorpion dropping on my pillow. They like the damp, see.


By and by the faults in the house have been corrected. It seemed it was going to be that kind of year what with my laptop going wrong and then the cooker.



 I had a couple of niggling leaks this year I’ve dealt with. Way back when we thought the solution to the roof problem was tiles. It wasn’t and, laid in places on uneven surfaces with blobs of tile cement, they have gaps underneath. The water got into them and then down the sides of roof windows I had installed. But now I’ve corrected that (just one of those I dealt with here).


 The stove pumps out heat burning olive wood (100+ Euros for a pickup truck full) and other wood I’ve collected.











But, it is noticeable that throughout the house the temperature can vary by as much as five degrees and, as the stove goes out during the night, the cold comes back. This is to be expected in a stone house with concrete ceilings and tile floors, and no insulation. It’s not too bad – maybe down to 16 or 17C sometimes – but being a Southern softy with instant gas central heating in the UK, I really notice it, just as I notice the lack of carpeted floors. So, this winter I decided to get central heating installed. There is no piped gas here and if I bought either gas or oil central heating I wonder how the hell it would be delivered (can’t get a vehicle near my house). Anyway, Stelios at the Gabbiano restaurant suggested heat-pump heating. This basically extracts heat from the air in the same way that a fridge works and transfers it into the house radiators. I liked that idea, since sometimes it is possible to sunbathe on the roof but be shivering inside. So I went for it.

 


Here's the heat pump. Huge thing weighing 200kg.




Radiators throughout.



I asked his name when he set to work but didn't take it in. When I asked him again later he told me, 'Vlad, like Dracula'. Many jokes to be made about a vampire plumber doing the pipework in your house.






Problems here going through a stone wall 2ft thick.


Vlad and the boss - Manolis rousakis.

It has taken me a while to get used to this heating. It is not instant, like gas or oil, and running the stove seemed to put its nose out of joint so it won’t come on until prodded to do so. The parameters for it starting up are wide. It’s climate change technology so works in that respect by dint of hiding the bullshit in the error bars, just like wind turbines etc. However, it’s in now and, even though requiring the occasional prod, is keeping the house warm throughout. I am not, however, looking forward to my next power bill, since the municipality here collects tax through your heating bill. Not only does the amount you pay go up when you use more kilowatt hours, but that tax goes up too. I guess they’re working on the principle that if you can afford not to be cold you can afford to throw money their way too.

Other work has been all the shutters around my house. I knew some of them had woodworm but, when I started investigating, I found that most of them had some woodworm or rot. The pictures here are of just a couple of them. Out of eight shutters I had to do surgery on six. All of them I took off and repainted, also rubbing down and painting the metalwork. This kept me nicely occupied for a good few weeks!




 

Okay, that’s a start. More blogging to follow!