Today I celebrate the publication of Milo's novel. I've been following Captain Quasar's adventures for a few years, now. If you like your SF big and bold, give Quasar a try.
CAPTAIN
BARTHOLOMEW QUASAR
and the Space-Time Displacement Conundrum
Every Day Novels is proud to announce the release of Milo James Fowler's first
serialized novel:
16 weeks of serial chapters every weekday – that's 80
exciting episodes of adventure aboard the Effervescent Magnitude for
only $5 USD (includes an eBook edition following serialization).
Don't delay – Subscribe today!
Captain
Quasar is out of time.
Pursued by vengeful Goobalob toll
collectors, savage Arachnoid bounty hunters, and formidable Amazonians, Captain
Bartholomew Quasar must do whatever he can to keep the crew of the Effervescent
Magnitude out of harm's way. All in a day's work—except time is not on his
side.
Torn from the present to relive his
past, he vows to keep mistakes from occurring the second time around. But is he
doomed to repeat history? Or can he erase his regrets?
Villains will be vanquished. Lives
will be lost. Bonds will be betrayed. Heroes will be heroic.
Join the crew of the Effervescent
Magnitude for a hilarious time-travel space adventure the likes of which
you've never seen!
Now
Available from Every Day
Novels
Add
Captain Quasar to your Goodreads
bookshelf
Prologue:
Jaw muscle twitching at
untimed intervals, Captain Bartholomew Quasar gripped the armrests of his
deluxe-model captain's chair and narrowed his heroic gaze. The main viewscreen
on the bridge of the Effervescent Magnitude radiated with white-hot
streaks blurring in elongated trajectories as his star cruiser plunged into
the depths of space at something near the speed of light.
Quasar could feel the
tension in the air. It was palpable and tasted like sweat—mostly his own. The
members of his bridge crew remained silent, standing at their stations and
staring at the viewscreen. Many forgot to blink as their insides trembled,
recoiling with a nameless fear.
They had never
moved so fast in their lives.
This was the Magnitude's
maiden voyage into deep space utilizing the recently installed cold fusion
near-lightspeed reactor—an experimental propulsion system they'd picked up
on the planet Carpethria. One thing was readily apparent: it worked. But
how long could the ship could maintain this incredible velocity without
compromising hull integrity?
Already, the ship
was creaking and groaning in protest, and the helmsman—a very hairy, four-armed
Carpethrian who resembled something between a sloth and an overweight
orangutan—had begun to grumble that the reactor really should have been tested
before this full-speed leap into the black.
But there had been no
other choice. Their options at the time were either flight (and survival) or
fight (and undoubtedly be destroyed). Vicious Arachnoid bounty hunters
were on their tail, and Arachnoids tended to be a very hungry lot—often
foregoing payment for their illicit services in favor of a fresh kill.
The Magnitude's
first officer, Commander Selene Wan, wasn't keen on the idea of allowing a
Carpethrian to man the helm of their freshly minted star cruiser. But no one
else on board knew how to navigate at near-lightspeed, and it
took all four of the alien's hands to do the job—something two humans
would have had to coordinate in tandem. And that could have gotten awkward.
"Steady as she
goes." Quasar smoothed down his close-cropped blond hair and cringed as
the ship released a moan that didn't sound good at all—something akin to a
whale giving birth. "How are we doing, Hank?"
"Haven't run into
anything yet," grunted the very hairy helmsman, hands flying across the
controls.
"Status report?"
Quasar half-turned to regard his first officer with a confidently raised
eyebrow.
Commander Wan, a tall,
slim Eurasian with impeccable posture, kept her attention riveted on her
console. "Proximity scanners are offline." She swayed on her feet
with the rocking movements of the ship, her sleek black hair swinging across
her shoulders. "Artificial gravity is holding. Life support remains
functional." A sudden frown creased her usually furrow-free forehead. "But
the reactor, sir… We may have a serious problem."
"Elaborate."
"It's overheating,
Captain. If we don't decelerate, it may—" She swallowed. "Explode."
That wouldn't be good at
all. The folks back home were depending on Captain Quasar and company to bring
back loads of quartz necessary for virtually every form of technology and
transportation on Earth, not to mention haute vintage time pieces. The Magnitude
could not possibly be allowed to blow up.
"Hank?" Quasar
faced the shaggy helmsman. "Could we possibly slow down a bit?"
The Carpethrian grunted
something intelligible, followed by, "Commencing deceleration sequence."
"Very good."
The captain nodded, glancing over his shoulder at his first officer.
Everything was under control. "Status?"
She shook her head
without a word. Quasar checked the console on his armrest. The Arachnoid
ship was nowhere in sight, and the Magnitude had begun to slow
down, but only by an infinitesimal fraction of its near-lightspeed
velocity.
"Uh-Hank? About
that deceleration sequence…" Quasar cleared his throat.
"It will take
thirty minutes, Captain. Any sudden downshift in speed would tear the ship
apart."
Quasar maintained a
brave façade for the sake of his crew. Such was expected from starship
captains, after all. Clenching his jaw, he leaned toward Wan and whispered, "Do
we have thirty minutes?"
She met his gaze, and he
didn't like what he saw in her eyes—something she hadn't shown before when they'd
dealt with the horrible Goobalobs or the savage Arachnoids:
Terror.
Get
to know the man behind the book:
1. When did you
start seriously pursuing writing as a career?
I've been writing since I was 12, but I started
submitting my work for publication in the summer of 2009. I'd always thought I
would pursue publication at some point—probably after I retired from
teaching or turned 40. My first story was published in January 2010, and
I've had over a hundred others accepted for publication since then. I won't
turn 40 for another year, and I'm still teaching full-time. Doesn't look like
I'll be retiring anytime soon!
2. How did you
create the character Bartholomew Quasar?
When I came up with Captain Bartholomew Quasar back
in the spring of 2010, I was going for a mash-up between William Shatner's
James T. Kirk and Dudley Do-Right from the Rocky and Bullwinkle Show
(but in Quasar's case, things seldom ever go right). He's one of those
classic pulp heroes with a heart of gold whose narcissistic tendencies often
land him in hot water. I hope readers can laugh at Bartholomew Quasar and root
for him at the same time. He's ridiculous, but there's something about his
fallible nature that most of us can relate to on some level.
3. Are you working
on more Captain Quasar stories?
I've written over 20 Captain
Quasar tales so far, many of which are out on the submission circuit, looking
for good homes. "Captain Quasar and the Ghosts of Space Command" will
be published in the next issue of Perihelion
Science Fiction. "Captain Quasar and the Carpethrian Call of the
Wild" will be included in the B is
for Broken anthology, and "Captain Quasar and the Devious Powers of
Persuasion" will be in the Geminid Press space opera anthology. I'm in the
middle of edits on a novella-length adventure I plan to submit for publication
soon. My collection of 15 Quasar tales Starfaring
Adentures…in SPACE is available everywhere eBooks are sold—and free for the
taking, last time I checked.
Author Bio:
Milo
James Fowler is a teacher by day, speculative
fictioneer by night, and an active SFWA member. When he's not grading papers,
he's imagining what the world might be like in a dozen alternate realities. In
the past 5 years, his short fiction has appeared in more than 100 publications,
including AE SciFi, Cosmos, Daily Science Fiction, Nature,
Shimmer, and the Wastelands 2 anthology.
Visit www.milojamesfowler.com and join The
Crew for updates about new releases.
Thanks for the signal boost, Debs!
ReplyDeleteThanks for that Debs, and the best of luck to Milo with the novel.
ReplyDelete