Cat Rambo reviews THE GOODALL MUTINY by Gretchen Rix

Cat Rambo reviews THE GOODALL MUTINY by Gretchen Rix for the The Green Man Review. http://thegreenmanreview.com/

The Goodall Mutiny, by Gretchen Rix, takes a couple of chapters to find its legs and starts with a focus on horned rhinoceros beetles that leads the reader to think the beetles will prove a bigger plot point than they do (admittedly the idiosyncrasy of that detail may be delightful enough to counterbalance it), but emerges as a decent mystery read set aboard a failing space vessel. When Lieutenant Joan Chikage of the U.S.S. Goodall is attacked by her petty officer, she finds herself caught up in a mysterious and murderous mutiny that pits the remaining crew against each other. (Rix Café Texican, 2016)

WHAT I READ THIS WEEK (actually, the last couple of weeks): Where We Belong by Catherine Ryan Hyde. The Shimmer by David Morrell. Consequences by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Extremes by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. House of Purple Cedar by Tim Tingle.

You can find my books at https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix and all the other usual spots.

Almost to the brink of the cover reveal!

My newest novel is done. Sitting waiting for the proofreader to return from vacation. Once she’s vetted it, it’s off to be formatted. They have the cover already, and I honestly hope my book is worthy of its absolutely beautiful cover.

This will be the 14th book I’ve written from start to finish. Book number one won’t see the light of day (don’t ask). And I have three or four (or even more) half-written novels in drawers around here somewhere. I do plan on finishing one of them, but the others will probably just die. Probably. Which is why I recommend finishing what you start. Always finish what you start.

This evening I’m going back to a novel I put on hold more than a year ago. I thought it important to write book two and three in my space opera series. Step one is to re-read what I have. Hopefully, it’s good enough that I pick up where I ended and move on with it. We’ll see. If not, I’ll have to follow the advice I’m setting out below.

This book I just finished has been the hardest to write. And that’s because I redrafted it from beginning to end. Thought I had enough good in the original that I could copy and paste my edits, but ninety percent of it turned out to need new material. Hope I never try this again. My advice here is to get your characters in your head, familiarize yourself with the original plot, then throw the original away (somewhere you’ll never find it) and start from scratch. Page One.  

 

 

WHAT I HAVE READ IN THE LAST FEW WEEKS: Heaven Adjacent by Catherine Ryan Hyde, A Long Way Down by Nick Hornby, This Time Around by Tawna Fenste, Outsider by Stephen King, Everybody Dies by J. A. Konrath, The Warrior’s Apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold.

The meaning of hubris, part two

HUBRIS–excessive pride, arrogance, self-importance, pomposity, and more.

Well, I’ll tell you a story about my recent, sort-of-warranted put-down.

My sister and I vacationed a couple of months ago in West Texas. Our hotel had a flyer lying around on the check-in desk for a local author reading and book-signing. Why not! we said. Let’s support the local author.

Turned out the local author didn’t need our support, he had what looked like the support of the whole tiny town we were in. He gave a great reading, we were welcomed very graciously by the other attendees, and we bought his thirty-dollar book.

The event was held in their tiny, tiny library. On the way out, while everyone else was still in with the writer and quaffing wine, eating snacks and buying books, I had the neat, self-serving (see hubris definition) idea of offering paperback copies of all my twelve novels to the library. Free. No postage charges or anything.

They hedged pretty nicely about it, but then declined. No books get added to their stock without going through a rigid gatekeeper process that requires at least one review by some publication like The New York Times. Well, that alone disqualifies me from this library, and all others, from here to eternity. Reviews are near to impossible to get for self-published, just-for-fun books like mine.

Came back home to find a review from famous science fiction writer Cat Rambo of my walking, talking, murdering macadamia tree short story collection. My sister wanted me to send it to the aforesaid library. Nah. But here it is for you.

From The Green Man Review:

Along with the furry fiction, I wanted to point to an indie humorous horror collection that is one of the most specifically themed I have yet encountered, Ill Met by Moonlight by Gretchen Rix (Rix Cafe Texican, 2016), which features evil macadamia nut trees, including “Macadamias on the Move,” “Ill Met by Moonlight,” and “The Santa Tree” in a lovely sample of how idiosyncratic a sub-sub-niche can get. The production values of this slim little book show what a nice job an indie can do with a book and include a black and white illustration for each story.

So there!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can find my books at https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix and at Smashwords, Nook, and Bookpeople. Plus downtown in beautiful Lockhart, Texas.

 

 

 

WHAT I READ THIS WEEK:  Obscura by Joe Hart. Treasure Island by Robert Lewis Stevenson. The Chronological Man: The Monster in the Mist by Andrew Mayne. Banker by Dick Francis. Jack Daniels Stories by J. A. Konrath.

Look up meaning of hubris

I meant to do another post this week (see the headline), but a lot of questions came up while I was on vacation. You might be interested in what they were. (Probably not).

Is Jimmy Dean dead? I said no, because I’d just seen a commercial where he expressed a current opinion. My sister said uh uh to the commercial content. Died a long time ago. She was right. 2010. I’m used to seeing Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kellly hawk items on TV. I guess Jimmy Dean has joined their club.

Are shingles contagious? I didn’t think so. I was half right. Turns out shingles are not contagious, but someone suffering from shingles can pass on the virus to someone else and they will get chicken pox which in turn can give them shingles later in life.

How old was Gertrude Bell when she first met T.E. Lawrence? I decided it didn’t matter. I think I have her mixed up with someone else. My question arose while watching the last three-fourths of Queen of the Desert on TV. Nicole Kidman played the title role. The film was all gloriously free of any desert travel realities (no one got dysentery, no one got sunburned, no one starved, etc), just one lovely trek from one Bedouin camp to the next while WWI was getting started. Nicole Kidman was beautiful, the camels were beautiful, and Robert Pattinson as T.E. Lawrence was about a foot too tall for the role.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interested in my books? You can find them here https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix

They are also on Audible.com.

 

 

 

WHAT I READ THIS WEEK:  Leaving Blythe River by Catherine Ryan Hyde, The Naturalist by Andrew Mayne, Looking Glass by Andrew Mayne, Bound By Your Touch by Meredith Duran.

Getting close to writing the end of a book I should have finished already

I’m getting close to writing the end of a book I should have finished already. I’m working on Chapter 27 of what probably is a 33-chapter novel.

I read too much. Watch too much TV. (The adaptation of Dan Simmons’ The Terror will be on TV real soon. I’m going to give up the end of The Alienist and the rest of The Good Doctor to watch it in “real time,” even though I’ve read it.)

Like everything I write, my most recent book is my best book. I’m thinking of trying this out in the Kindle Scout program. I’ve certainly read a lot of good books coming out of it. Got to finish it first, though.

In the meantime, go to Audible.com and listen to the sample from ILL MET BY MOONLIGHT. 

 

 

 

 

WHAT I READ THIS WEEKOne Hundred Reasons by Kelly Collins, A Beautiful Poison by Lydia Kang, The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin. Chanur’s Venture by C.J. Cherryh, Shadow Soldiers by Jim Heskett.

 

You can find my books here at https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix

The Goodall Mutiny

New blurb for THE GOODALL MUTINY.  

Wary of her youngish captain. Afraid of edges, of conflict, of having to take charge. Lieutenant Joan Chikage is soon thrust into the leadership role she has so far avoided. As the highest ranking officer left on the doomed lower decks of the deep space cargo ship Goodall, it’s up to Chikage to save her crew. Including the captain’s cat. Their portion of the ship has been jettisoned away from the rest.  And time is running out.

Murder, mutiny, action and adventure. First in a new space opera series.

WHAT I READ THIS WEEK:  Say Goodbye For Now by Catherine Ryan Hyde, Familiarity: A Winston & Ruby Collection by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Watched Too Long by Ann Voss Peterson and J. A. Konrath. Whisper of the Moon Moth by Lindsay Jayne Ashford, The Cat, the Crow, and the Grimmoire by Marilyn Rucker Norrod.

http://barnesandnoble.com/c/gretchen-rix  http://www.audible.com/pd/Sci-Fi-Fantasy/The-Goodall-Mutiny-Audiobook/B01N4GFCQ6

http://amzn.com/B01CIQD61S https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/620213

 

What have you read this week?

What have you read this week?

Since my last posting (which wasn’t last week, alas) I’ve read THE PRIDE OF CHANUR by C.J. Cherryh, WHITE RUSSIAN by J. A. Konrath, DRAGON STORM by Lindsay Buroker, THE MAZE RUNNER by James Dashner, THE PERFECT MAN by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, HARVEST HOME by Thomas Tryon, and REVELATIONS by Lindsay Buroker.

I’ve also written up to Chapter 23 in my next novel.

Here’s a link to my e-books https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix

TALKING TO THE DEAD GUYS is going to be on sale for 99 cents until March 1. Get it here http://amzn.com/B0094FBA8S 

Update

I let the first week of January slide by me without writing. Which was a mistake. But as ever, procrastination let me come up with another idea for my book. Which I wouldn’t have thought of otherwise.

At the end of the second week, I was at Chapter 17. It will probably run 33 chapters, which means I’ve lots of chapters to go. Not looking good, unless I really get cooking. And stop reading so much. Look at that list below. With Sherry Thomas not writing oodles and oodles of books right now, I found Meredith Duran to take her place. Have gotten hooked on her romances now.

And now it’s February already. Good news is that I am at Chapter 19.5. But still reading too much (if there is such a thing.) 

Happy Groundhog day, ya’ll.

 

 

 

 

 

WHAT I READ SINCE LAST POST: Luck Be A Lady by Meredith Duran, Lady Be Good by Meredith Duran, Fool Me Twice by Meredith Duran, Endurance by Scott Kelly, Gwendy’s Button Box by Stephen King and Richard Chizmar. Him by Ernie Lee. The Duke of Shadows by Meredith Duran. The Case of the Purloined Pyramid by Sean McLachlan. California Bound by Frank Kelso and John O’Melveny Woods. A Second Helping by Beverly Jenkins. Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman. The Language of Hoofbeats by Catherine Ryan Hyde. The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle.

Catch up with the books I’ve already written at https://amazon.com/author/gretchenrix