Showing posts with label shadow of a dead star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shadow of a dead star. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Good Book Alert Review: Shadow of a Dead Star
Over at Good Book Alert, I review indie author Michael Shean's cyberpunk mystery, Shadow of a Dead Star.
Labels:
cyberpunk,
good book alert,
michael shean,
sci-fi,
shadow of a dead star
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Author Interview: Michael Shean, Shadow of a Dead Star

1) Tell us a little bit about your novel.
Shadow of a Dead Star is at its core a story about a man who finds himself caught between the world he knows, the world he wishes it could be, and the world that it truly is. Thomas Walken is an agent of the Industrial Security Bureau in late 21st century Seattle; his job is to keep illegal technology out of the hands of American citizens. Most of that technology comes out of Wonderland, the nickname of a future Thailand who allows criminal laboratories to operate within its borders.At the start of the book, Walken’s job is to intercept a trio of ‘Princess Dolls’, which are little girls who have been kidnapped and transformed into sexual toys for the wealthy and corrupt. The interception is successful, but when the girls are forcibly taken from federal custody things go very badly very fast. Suddenly he is on the defensive as everyone connected to the girls starts coming up dead and all his leads dry up. And that’s only the beginning; as Walken attempts to find the truth, he will find not only his career in jeopardy but his mind and even his soul as well.
2) What inspired your novel?
3) Cyberpunk is a subgenre that has seen its relative popularity wax and wane since its inception, particularly with the more recent influence of extreme transhumanist concepts such as the Singularity. What drew you to this subgenre? Did you have any concern about modern science-fiction fans accepting a new cyberpunk setting that meditates more on the dark side of transhumanism?
4) Dystopic technologically advanced industrial settings filled with moral decay are hardly unknown in science-fiction. What sets your book apart from others?
5) This book is part of a trilogy. When you started writing it, was that your intention?
6) As a native of Washington state I was intrigued by your choice of Seattle over places like LA, NY (or even Tokyo). Why Seattle? The cyberpunk/urban fantasy role-playing game Shadowrun made Seattle as the basis of its setting. Any influence from that?
Well, it’s true that when I was a kid I did read some of the RPG material, but that wasn’t the reason for my selection. My fiancee hails from the Seattle area, as do several of my friends, and it’s such a strange and interesting place; it seems a garden of the bizarre, and it just captured me that it’s someplace that the ultimate antagonists of the Cycle might take root.
7) There is a lot of gritty subject matter in this book. Although it seems vital for exploring the thematic issues you raised, were you ever worried that you were making your story too dark?
-----
His book, Shadow of a Dead Star, is available for purchase as an e-book at Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
Labels:
author interview,
cyberpunk,
future noir,
michael shean,
Science Fiction,
shadow of a dead star
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)