Showing posts with label HCI Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HCI Books. Show all posts

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Author Interview: J. Gabriel Gates previews Blood Zero Sky

For my spotlight on upcoming dystopian/post apocalyptic fiction series, I interview authors with novels coming out in the genre in 2012/13. These are exclusive first looks at exciting new works. Enjoy!



Today I have J. Gabriel Gates whose novel BLOOD ZERO SKY comes out with HCI Books on October 1, 2012.


Here's the summary:

A new revolutionary war brews in what once was America. 
Unprofitables are banished to work camps to pay off their credit. Other tie-men and women look on apathetically. Fair is fair. Everyone knows you shouldn’t use more credit than you are worth to the Company. They turn their attention to the next repackaged but highly coveted N-Corp product on the market, creatively advertised on the imager screens that adorn virtually every available flat surface. All the while, their mandatory cross-implants and wrist-worn “ICs” keep them focused on the endless cycle of work and consumption to which they are enslaved. 
May Fields—the CEO’s daughter—would like to believe she is above all that. Head of N-Corp’s marketing team, the young woman who has almost everything anyone could want spends her days dreaming up ingenious ways to make workers buy more of what they already have and don’t need. Even before May discovers that the Company is headed for its first financial loss in thirty years, she is feeling the stirrings of dissatisfaction with the system that has given her everything she’s ever wanted . . . except the freedom to be herself. 
When she is kidnapped by a member of the Protectorate—a secret order dating back to the American Revolution—May is suddenly faced with the frightening truth of what the Company’s greed has done to our most basic human rights. Will she embrace who she is and join the battle to restore America’s democratic freedom, or put her blinders back on and return to her safe and passionless life. 
More prediction than fiction, Blood Zero Sky is a riveting, nonstop, and suspenseful gaze into the looking glass, destined to rise with the zeitgeist of our times to become the anthem of a generation.

The cover:



And the interview:

Why do you think people are drawn to "dark" stories?
I think some of it has to do with the fact that most of us in the Western world live unnaturally easy lives. Evolutionarily speaking, humans are supposed to be out hunting for wild game, scrounging for berries, planting and harvesting crops, defending ourselves against warlike tribes. Fast forward to today, where we live in a world of unprecedented safety and abundance. Somewhere deep inside ourselves, we still sense that life is just as urgent as it was for our ancestors, but it’s harder for us to put our finger on the meaning of it all on a day to day basis. I think dark stories remind us of the urgency of our existence: no matter how far we come, humanity is still a force of order, reason and love facing off against a void of chaos, disorder and anarchy. Dark stories remind us of the stakes of a battle most of us have forgotten we’re fighting.

If your book had a theme song, what would it be and why?
Ooh, tough question. I’m going to have to go with Bombtrack by Rage Against the Machine. They’re hardcore revolutionaries with some thought-provoking lyrics and that would fit pretty well with the themes of the book. Plus it’s hard to listen to Rage without getting fired up. I hope Blood Zero Sky will get people fired up, too!

What fictional character from another book would your main character chose as his/her best friend and why?
This one might be counter-intuitive, but I’m going to say that May from “Blood Zero Sky” would buddy up with Dagny Taggart from “Atlas Shrugged.” A lot of people think of that book as a right-wing manifesto, but I see it as a repudiation of the corporate cronyism that left wingers like myself and other folks from the Occupy movement are also fighting against. When you really get down to it, I think that when you get past the divisive rhetoric, people on the political right and the left are both concerned with the same thing: returning power to the people, as opposed to keeping it in the hands of a government that has become a blatantly corrupt oligarchy. Whether you blame the government that’s been corrupted, or the wealthy corporations and individuals that corrupted them, the problem is the same. As for May and Dagny, the two characters really have a lot in common; they’re both hard-ass, no-nonsense women who get stuff done and don’t take ‘no’ for an answer, and they’re both fighting to restore proper equilibrium in a society that’s fundamentally out of whack. You can see the world of “Atlas Shrugged” eventually winding up like the world of “Blood Zero Sky” – so I think the two books are similar.

What are your top 5 Dystopian lit recs and why?

In no particular order:
I like “Atlas Shrugged” for the reasons I mentioned above, (although as a Christian, I don’t subscribe to all its views.)

“Brave New World” and “1984” – they’re classics! And whenever a book remains relevant for as long as these have – and becomes even more relevant with time, you know the author hit something special.

“Hunger Games.” Yeah, I know—a pretty typical answer at the moment. But I just read them and I liked them, okay?

Finally – and this is probably my favorite – “The Road” by Cormac McCarthy. This book is incredible. The stark, sharp simplicity of the writing is stunning, and the story itself seems to call up from one’s collective unconscious a time when humans lived in a terrifying state of anarchy. The book seems to confirm a dread I never knew I felt: that humankind arose from this chaos, and is destined one day to descend into it again. It’s amazing. One of the best compliments I ever got was when someone compared my writing to McCarthy’s.

What's on the top of your to-do list before the world ends?
Well, I’d like to get married and have a baby or two. The best things in life are the simplest, right? I think on my deathbed, I’ll be more concerned with the love I exchanged with those around me than the boxes I stamped on my passport or the objects I accumulated with my money.

Oh, and it would be fun to go skydiving, too.

How does your novel stand out from others in the genre?
One way is that it features a gay female protagonist, which is a character that I felt strongly about portraying.

The other way it is different is that it deals very directly with major questions that our society is grappling with right now: how do we reform a corporate system that is basically organized greed, in the context that Capitalism is the best financial system humankind has come up with so far? How do we take our government back from special interests which don’t have the will of the people at heart? A lot of dystopian books deal in a symbolic or tangential way with things that may come to pass fifty or a hundred years from now, whereas Blood Zero Sky deals with things that are happening now, at this moment, all around us; it poses questions that we urgently need to answer NOW. For that reason, it’s going to be really interesting to see how people react to it. I’m pretty sure some will love it and probably just as many will despise it. But either way, if it gets people to think, then I’ll have done my job.

Thanks J!

Add BLOOD ZERO SKY to Goodreads
Check out J. Gabriel's website: www.jgabrielgates.com
Follow him on twitter @JGabrielGates

Monday, August 31, 2009

Book Review: Everything Sucks by Hannah Friedman

Hannah Friedman’s life has been stranger than fiction. Raised by a struggling musician and a monkey trainer and with an actual monkey as an older “sister”, Hannah felt she was destined to be a freak. Instead of embracing the unconventional though, Hannah enrolls in one of the most prestigious high schools in the US and tries her best to fit in, falling in with the popular crowd, running for class president, and setting her sights on Yale. But fitting in comes at a price: a drug habit, an eating disorder, and an attitude that alienates her from her family.

The best thing about this teen memoir is Hannah’s fresh, funny, and brutally honest voice. Whether she’s writing about a mother-daughter confrontation she witnesses worthy of an episode of “My Super Sweet 16”, her romance with a rich boy, or her struggles with binging and purging, Hannah manages to find just the right tone.

I have to admit though, that I found her highly unique family stories way more interesting than her rather clichéd life at boarding school. Thanks to Gossip Girl and the like, teens aren’t really shocked anymore by the excesses of the rich and snobby. It is no major revelation to read that teens pop prescription drugs to study for tests, drop hundreds of dollars on a pair of glasses on a whim, or even overdose and die far before their time.

Hannah repeatedly bemoans being upstaged by the monkey, but the monkey is also her biggest hook. I feel a little bad for saying this, but give us more monkey Hannah!

EVERYTHING SUCKS is out in paperback now. Find out more about the book at the author’s website. Or watch the trailer I’ve embedded below. You can also check out other reviews that were part of this TLC book tour.


Friday, December 5, 2008

Book Review: The Green Beauty Guide by Julie Gabriel

I have a friend here in Germany who is extremely “green”. Most people I know here recycle (it’s pretty hard to get around so that’s no surprise), shop for organic vegetables and fruit, and try to minimize their impact on the environment by taking public transport or riding a bicycle through the city. I even have several friends who mostly buy organic food and who use mainly organic cosmetics and other products. But this friend, who just had a baby, would rather take the time to puree her own baby food than let her baby eat even organic processed food. I thought of her when I heard about the Green Beauty Guide, a book that provides recipes for making your own organic cosmetics.

I invited her and another friend, Jay, for a girls’ night to try out the recipes. Unfortunately, she couldn’t get a babysitter (and she’s allergic to Emmy). So it was just Jay and me. We decided on the only two recipes that didn’t look too complicated, didn’t need fancy kitchen appliances (which I don’t own), and had ingredients that were easy to find in the organic food stores near my apartment (that excluded any recipe that called for an essential oil other than rose oil).

The Sugar Mommy Scrub all mixed up and ready to use:


The first one we tried was the Sugar Mommy Scrub. The only thing I needed to buy was the rose oil, which set me back 4 Euro. We put the ingredients in a glass bowl and whisked them together. Then we massaged the mixture all over our faces for a couple of minutes and washed it off. Jay didn’t like the oily feel of the scrub but we were both pleased with the results – I don’t think my face has ever been so soft.

1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon olive oil
3 drops rose oil
1 drop vanilla extract

Degree of difficulty: very easy
Feel of mixture: a bit too oily
Scent of mixture: ok
Results: Excellent – very soft skin and no breakouts, even days later.
Likelihood of repeat session: High

Jay and me after massaging in the scrub (we sparkle like vampires from Twilight!):


We also tried the Lemon Cheesecake Whitening Mask. I had all the ingredients already for this one, but our manual whisking didn’t thicken the mixture, so you probably need an electric hand mixer (which I don’t have). This one smelled heavenly, but felt tight on our faces. We were directed to leave it on for 15 minutes, but Jay said it started to burn her skin so she washed it off earlier.

2 tablespoons honey
4 teaspoons lemon juice
3 teaspoons plain yogurt
1 egg white

Degree of difficulty: medium (if you don’t have an electric mixer)
Feel of mixture: very runny and sticky
Scent of mixture: Excellent
Results: Ok, but nothing special
Likelihood of repeat session: Low

Jay enjoys putting on her Lemon Cheesecake Whitening mask (before the burn set in):


The Green Beauty Guide is more than just recipes however. Author Julie Gabriel also suggests store bought products that are good for your skin and helps you understand the nature of your skin and the beauty industry. I have an ARC of the book, which means I am missing chapters 10-16 and a list of toxic ingredients that help you weed out products in your bathroom that are doing you more harm than good. I’d definitely like to get the full version.

This review is part of the TLC Blog tour. Click here to find out more about author Julie Gabriel and to check out other reviews of this book.