Tag Archives: the travelers’ club – Fire and Ash

First Edition of Steampunk Airship Crew Hiring

Ok, you have your brand new Steam-powered dirigible.  You can fight for honor and country, you can smuggle goods, you can commit air piracy, you can explore, or you can put into place your plans for world domination.  (I plan to do a series of these, I hope you like them.)  Yes, you are the Captain, or more accurately, the Admiral.  Your first ship is ready, one of many to come.  These are the first group of 22 pictures for people applying as crew.  You cannot take them all.  Who would YOU pick?  What will be the name of your first ship?

Lord Reginald Harcourt, one of the main characters in The Travelers’ Club series (written by yours truly) named his air yacht Jenny after his young niece.

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Cyber Monday SPECIALS!!

THREE CYBER MONDAY SPECIALS!!

1) For a limited time, you can purchase The Travelers’ Club and the Ghost Ship for just 99 cents, which is a 93% discount off the bookstore price on Kindle, Smashwords, and other online ebook vendors:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2)  You can purchase Twisted History for just 99 cents, which is an 87% discount from retail bookstore prices on Kindle, Smashwords, and other ebook vendors:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3)  You can get the Brand New – The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash (2nd in the Series) for just $4.99 cents, which is a 66% discount off the bookstore price on Kindle, Smashwords, and other online ebook vendors:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EVEN BETTER – IF YOU LIKE OR SHARE THIS POST – YOU WILL AUTOMATICALLY ENTER A CONTEST TO HAVE A CHANCE TO WIN A FREE SIGNED COPY OF THE PRINT VERSION, MAILED DIRECTLY TO YOU AT NO COST!!

Thank you all for your ongoing support!

Michael Bradley

Author

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Steampunk/Clockwork Bugs! (Part One)

These are all Steampunk/Clockpunk/Clockwork Bugs.  I have too many for one post, so maybe next week I will post part two.  Until then, please enjoy these wonderfully crafted items from people at various places with much more talent than I have.  I must also put in a small plug, that clockwork bugs, much larger and deadlier than these, play an important role in The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, on sale now on Kindle, Smashwords, local bookstores, and on this site, under STORE tab.  I hear the author is very creative…  🙂

 

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The Travelers’ Club Sequel is Released! For a Limited Time Book One on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

The Travelers’ Club Sequel is Released!  For a Limited Time Book One on Kindle for just 99 Cents!

The sequel to the highly rated, The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship is now on Kindle, available in book format on this site under the Store page, and can also be purchased in local bookstores.  The first book starts with a ghost ship drifting in the Mediterranean Sea.  Our intrepid members of Her Majesty’s Travelers’ Club go to find out why in early 1880.  In the new second book, The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, our explorers are sent from London, across the pond to the United States in late 1880, an expedition that takes them across the nation to a fiery conclusion near Phoenix, Arizona.  While they can be read in any order, the first book has been dropped in price on Kindle to just 99 cents!  That is right, the entire full length adventure for less than a dollar.  This has been done so readers can catch up on this adventure from the very start.  You won’t want to miss the excitement!


 

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I Will Be Signing Books at Steampunk Second Friday In Mesa!

Thanks to Bob Leeper at Evermore Nevermore and the other folks who put together the Mesa Second Fridays!  This Friday, November 9th, from 6pm to 10pm I will be signing copies of my three books, The Travelers’ Club and the Ghost Ship, Twisted History – and the freshly released The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, which is book two of the Steampunk series.  Come by and say hello.  In bookstores The Travelers’ Club novels are $14.95 each, and Twisted History $7.95.  You can buy them for $10 and $5 tomorrow night, respectively, signed and personalized with your name.  There will also be other Steampunk vendors, food, fun, and one of my favorite Steampunk bands, local favorite Jellied Brainz.

 

 

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What is Steampunk?

I write across several genres of both fiction and non-fiction, but many of my novels and stories are Steampunk.  The biggest question we Steampunk enthusiasts get is, “What IS Steampunk?”  At the Wild Western Festival I manned the booth for the Arizona Steampunk Society, where we handed out brochures and event descriptions and I answered that question around 300 times.  I conducted an entire seminar/panel at the LepreCon Convention in Tempe on the topic, powerpoint presentation is here:

Why is Steampunk Picking up Steam

The most basic answer is that you already know what Steampunk is and probably like it, you just don’t know the term.  Steampunk is science fiction adventure set between 1830 to 1900.  It is the Victorian Era in England when Brittania grew and the British Empire never had the sun set upon it.  During this period of colonialization, most of South America, Africa and Asia were annexed by the “major powers” of Europe.  In America, it was the pre-Civil War era, through the Civil War, the Indian Wars, and the Wild West.  It encompassed most of our traditional movies and literature about westerns and the Civil War.

Examples of Steampunk begin with writers who wrote during that time – HG Wells, Jules Verne, Arthur Conan Doyle, and even some Kipling.  20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Around the World in 80 Days, Journey to the Center of the Earth, The Land that Time Forgot, The Mysterious Island, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Dorian Grey, Sherlock Holmes and other stories are ALL steampunk.  Science fiction and adventure, set during that time.

More modern examples include The Wild Wild West TV series and movies, the movie versions of stories listed above, Cowboys and Aliens, the recent Sherlock Holmes movies, Abraham Lincoln Vampire Slayer and so on.  That is the literary and movie answer.

However, there is a world-wide movement, complete with millions of fans and thousands of conventions in which people dress up and play out parts in Steampunk.  This includes Steampunk music, indie films, events (my wife is at a Steampunk Masquerade Party tonight, I am at home, just able to walk after surgeries, can’t dance) and even a life-style.  Those familiar with goth, punk, manga, hipsters and cosplay will understand more what these movements are like.  The people of Steampunk have a blast and are among the nicest people around.

So what then is the allure of Steampunk?  It is simply fun, naivete and adventure.  In the nineteenth century, Steam powered engines such as railroads, factories and other sciences made dramatic changes in the world.  Electricity, steel, oil, transportation all changed society from an agrarian world with no lights but candles and ships which relied on the wind, to a modern world.  This allowed war to change from what it had been for nearly a thousand years to a suddenly dangerous and brutal occurrence.  It allowed us to see at night, to move around, to transport over distances, to build skyscrapers, to travel the world reliably.  At the time, large parts of the globe were unexplored.  Africa was considered “the Dark Continent” because there were no maps except the coast.  The source of the Nile was discovered by Stanley and Livingston.  It would not be before 1922 that King Tut’s tomb was found.  The world was mysterious, and for the first time we could explore it.

Nine Kings Gather in Windsor Castle in 1910

This was an era of industrial magic, robber barons, monarchies, creation of huge cities with slums, conquering of weaker nations, exploration and excitement and fear of the future.  The United States and France were the only democracies, and neither were working out too well.  America had a major Civil War with over 700,000 casualties.  France had starvation, then the Terror, then Napoleon, then stupid wars like the Franco-Prussian War.  It was a simple existence gone wild through industrialization and science.  New fighting old.

That is Steampunk.  From 1900 or so to 1940s is referred to as ‘Dieselpunk’.  These include such favorites as Indiana Jones and Sky Raiders of the Universe, Tin Tin and Captain America.  Future sci-fi was originally called ‘Cyber-punk’ when computers were new in the 70s and 80s.  We have computers all over now, but when they first came out, they created a hopeful and scary future for us, just as steam power and science did for the Victorian Era.

Here are some Steampunk pictures to show you some variations in the genre and the community:

 

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You Don’t Have to Be Rich to Be a Fan!

Just a reminder to all you great blog readers that I am in fact a full time author.  The great news for you is that if you bought EVERYTHING I produce each year, it will cost you less than a movie.  For a movie, you get around 90 minutes of possible fun.  Each of my novels is about ten hours of solid fun, what a value.  Right now, Twisted History is just 99 cents on Kindle!  Twisted History includes stories from several local authors who got into it through an anonymous submission process.  I was lucky enough to have five stories selected.  Or, you can buy the full length novel The Travelers’ Club and The Ghost Ship for just $3.99 on Kindle today!  That is right, as an author, I can only produce three or four books per year.  You can be my best friend for only around $20 a year.  I promise I will give my heart and soul to making each book enjoyable for you.  What a bargain?  My next book is due out soon, delayed by my recent surgeries.  It will be The Travelers’ Club – Fire and Ash, Book 2 of the series.  Please remember to check out the store once in awhile, or look for me on Kindle.  I promise you will enjoy yourself and I will never cost you much in return.  🙂

Please remember that if you like what you read, taking the time to post a review on Kindle, Amazon, Goodreads, or even your own Facebook page is most appreciated.  If you hate what you read, feel free to keep that to yourself.  🙂

 

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My Next Book Out Soon

The second book of the Travelers’ Club series is scheduled to come out in early September.  It is in the final editing process now.  Here is the bookcover:

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Time to Do Edits on My Third Book – Sigh

There are two things that a novelist hates the most.  First, the editing process.  Second, and the worst, is a negative review of your book, which I have not faced yet, thank God.  Since the first of May, I have had my hip and part of my leg replaced due to an adverse drug reaction, then rehab, physical therapy, and so forth.  After that, I developed an infection and fluid in my lungs which has left me breathless for over five weeks because they can’t give me what they used to, because it caused the bone death.  All of this has set me back from my original planned release date of The Travelers’ Club – Flame and Ash (Book 2 of 5 in the Travelers’ Club series).  It is written, and has been for awhile, but now I face the editing…sigh.

The book as it stands is about 430 pages long in 6″ x 9″ trade paperback format.  I have four sets of edits, which means basically rewriting the around 1,700 pages.  I pay a professional editor, Jacob Shaver to provide edits.  I find from him, that like some coffee is decaffeinated, apparently my writing is de-hyphenated.  I have to add around 100 missing hyphens.  Along with that, he speaks four languages and corrects my poor French and Spanish.  (I get the conjugations and gender messed up as I speak only English and German).  He points out my use of collective language that I need to squelch, those times I leave out setting during action or dialogue, and many other things.  He is nice enough to put little exclamation marks on the parts that are good, which keeps me going through all the mark-ups.

The second editor is my wife.  She owns half of everything, including being a 50% partner in my S-Corporation through which my book sales flow.  She was once my “silent partner” but now that I am semi-retired and a full time novelist, she is a very vocal partner.  She tells me all my spelling mistakes and areas where characters are “out of character.”

The third editor(s) is my weekly fellow authors at the Central Phoenix Writer’s Workshop.  I must credit them with teaching me 90% of what I know about writing.  I thought I knew writing until my first piece was critiqued.  I’ve learned a lot.  About half of  my chapters have been reviewed by this august body of boon companions.  They give me not only writer hints, but also reader hints.  The most helpful to me is if there is any scene where they do not know what is happening.  I write in a visual style, and I don’t want the reader to ever be confused or skip over parts.

The fourth editor is the toughest – me.  I can’t help but go back while making the first three edits and find myself adding and altering.  Perhaps the first three edits are symbiotic in my creative portion of my mind and form new ways to express the story.  Or, maybe you can always change things in your book, every time you edit it.  My first book, I was a rookie, and had my editors and edits finish in three days.  As a result, the first edition had errors.  I put out a second edition with a better cover after going back and re-editing it again.  This time, as with the second book which was an anthology with lots of help, I will be thorough in the edits.

My health improved, events and book signings scheduled, there is nothing for it but to slog through and get it done.  My fourth book is due out in December, the fifth next Spring, and this baby needs to be put to bed.

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