Splinter. Stellar Flash Prequel II by Neil A. Hogan. Science Fiction Weekly #26. Short Reads Series

Available from Amazon

When Raj Kumar investigates Pluto for possible life signs – standard procedure before adding a manned space station – he is surprised to find them. He’s even more surprised that they want to communicate with him.

What do they want? 
Why him?
And what does Doctor John Patel of Space Station X-1a have to do with all this?

Find out more in Splinter. #26 in the Science Fiction Short Reads Series, and a prequel to the introduction of a character at the end of the Stellar Flash novel The Andromeda Effect. Splinter is a short story of about 4600 words.

Stellar Flash update

Apologies that I haven’t posted in a while. I’ve been working on Temporal Incursion: Stellar Flash Book Three. I’ve finally finished the first draft. The next thing to do is to start work on fixing the sentences, plot holes, fleshing out the characters and environment and correcting some of the science. (Set mainly on Proxibee, I’m going to have to make allowances for the slightly heavier gravity.)

I’m hoping that it will be finished by February 2019, but I’m very excited to tell you that I have put a cover together already. There’s nothing like a cover to spur you on to completing a story. It’s quite a simple one, just to set the scene. I might change it later. Not sure yet. But as a reader of the Stellar Flash series, you’re the first to see it.

I’ll post more soon!

Cheers

Neil A. Hogan

The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two. Chapters 1-10. Read online!

The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two. Chapters 1-10. Read online!

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Chapter 1 by Neil A. Hogan (2018)

Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 | Chapter 5 | Chapter 6 | Chapter 7 | Chapter 8 | Chapter 9 | Chapter 10


The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two by Neil A. Hogan

Now Available in Digital and Print

Sent back 2.5 million years in time to the Andromeda Galaxy to investigate why there’s a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash crew encounter a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone.

With most of the crew unconscious, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133.

But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense.

How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy?

Who has the technology to transmit the creature’s power from the past to the present?

And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies?

Available now at –

  

Amazon Digital  Amazon Print

Barnes and Noble Digital

Rakuten Kobo Digital

The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two is now available!

The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two by Neil A. Hogan

Now Available in Digital and Print

Sent back 2.5 million years in time to the Andromeda Galaxy to investigate why there’s a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash crew encounter a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone.

With most of the crew unconscious, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133.

But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense.

How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy?

Who has the technology to transmit the creature’s power from the past to the present?

And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies?

Available now at –

  

Amazon Digital  Amazon Print

Barnes and Noble Digital

Rakuten Kobo Digital

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Delayed

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Delayed

For the past six months or so, I’ve been madly working on the second volume whenever the muse hits.

Unfortunately, I hit a snag when I realized I really needed to better understand the Higgs Field. What I thought I could boil down to a couple of simple concepts actually ended up having far reaching consequences for the environment I’d dropped all my characters in.

And so, I’m going to have to go back and read through some more physics papers to a) make sure I’m using it as correctly as I can with my limited knowledge or b) decide that it isn’t possible to be used in the context and drop it.

In any case, either way, it means another major rewrite. Maybe this is number 30. Not sure yet.

I’d rather delay the novel and be happier with it, than rush it through just to get a book out.

And so, I’m going to take a break from it for awhile, and focus on Alien Dimensions for a bit.

In other news, I’ve also started a new blog with a new domain. I’m going to consolidate all my blogs there. This will be my last post on this page for awhile so, for other news you can visit this one: Neil A. Hogan

I post irregularly, but more often there than here.

If you’ve wondered what the Center of the Stellar Flash ship looks like, you can check out a rough draft here: Stellar Flash Center

I’ve also posted a sneak peak of the first draft of the first section of The Andromeda Effect here: Excerpt from The Andromeda Effect

Many thanks for reading.

Strong Female Characters in the Andromeda Effect

Strong Female Characters in The Andromeda Effect

While I still like the old science fiction space opera series of the 20th century, I always felt that the female characters were a little too one-dimensional for it to be completely believable, so I make sure all my female characters are well-rounded and have various, albeit a bit macho, backstories.

My main issue though is needing to forego some of the story I want to tell, just to introduce some populist notions to make it more appealing. For years my female friends have told me I must always include some kind of romance, some sort of emotional attachment, some little flirtatious interaction, to make it more interesting. I avoided this idea, believing that the style that writers like Isaac Asimov employed, namely epic scientific ideas with far reaching consequences, pushed along by two dimensional characters, was a lot more appealing than creating a story focused on emotional interactions that may or may not lead to romance, leaving the discoveries in the background.

Several years ago, I finally decided to employ this idea of including a romance in my young adult book Gabriel and the Resurrection of Maldek, after seeing the phenomenal interest in the TV series Doctor Who after the main character started having a romance with his companion (1000 year old alien that looked 35, and a 25 year old human. Hmm!) As soon that Doctor Who romance was over (she got trapped in a parallel universe, and he changed into an even younger but different persona) ratings began a decline that haven’t risen again. TV shows want romance! Romance sells. Most people watching are between 13 and 25 so it’s the main focus of their existence.

But, I finally came to my senses, and realized that writing romance has never been my market, never been my tribe, and even though Alien Frequency has a suggestion of a possible romantic connection between Captain Jonathan Hogart (approx 46yo) and Admiral Victoria Heartness (Approx 55yo) there is no intention to continue this with these important characters. After speaking with a female friend of mine who pointed out that I probably weaken my strong female characters by giving them a romance, I’ve completely thrown this trope out the window. It may mean less interest from readers, publishers and less sales, but at the end of the day we should write what we enjoy writing, and including a romance in something I write feels like selling out. (The same feeling I had when the Doctor fell in love with his assistant. Like WTF?)

So, my latest novella The Andromeda Effect, is going through another rewrite. Probably my 20th so far. I realize that is nothing. Some writers go through 200 rewrites as a normal process of ‘getting it close to right’ but my main rewrite is to add a new character to the Stellar Flash series. A fun, friendly, and hard working individual who is in charge of the State of North Australia’s Space Port, and will be called upon whenever both Admiral Victoria Heartness and Doctor John Patel are taken away from their duties on Space Station X-1a. Welcome Admiral Wei Zhou to the Stellar Flash Universe. I hope you surprise me, and everyone else.

(Yes, Wei Zhou is a popular English transliteration, which I why I chose it. Apologies to the millions of Chinese writers who might already have an Admiral Wei Zhou in their stories. On the plus side, as far as I know, this will be the first female Admiral Wei Zhou in fiction. Chinese written characters of the name would likely to mean either ‘small’ or ‘fern’ and, using the plant theme, I’m thinking of the ferns of Australia that grow 1 meter every 40 years, and there are some that are hundreds of years old. Small, but tough!)

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash: Book Two coming soon!

The Andromeda Effect

Stellar Flash: Book Two

The latest news is that I’m working on the next Stellar Flash story. I’m hoping to have it ready by May, but we’ll see how we go. It features Hogart, Heartness, Patel, Watanabe, many of our favorite non-anthropomorphic aliens, a few new aliens, and a conflict with the Florans. Set 2.5 million years in the past within the Andromeda Galaxy, the story follows the Stellar Flash as it investigates the reason why light records show that it is back there in deep time!

I’ve included some temporal craziness and galactic domination ideas, so this is definitely in the space opera vein. If it is your thing, please check it out. I’ll post again when it’s released.

If you’d like to be one of the first to receive an email when the novella is available, please subscribe.

Thank you for your interest in the Stellar Flash series.

Neil A.

 

Thank you for your interest in the Stellar Flash series

Thank you for your interest in the Stellar Flash series.

WARNING: SPOILERS

I was originally planning to release the first novel in September but with the launch of both The Orville and Star Trek: Discovery featuring a couple of situations and characters that were quite similar, I’ve done some rewriting to make it a little bit more unique. While there are some scenes to help ground human readers in alien situations, I’m pretty sure no one has ever written a series with this kind of technology before, (well, I haven’t found it so please let me know if someone has) though I think you might find some vague similarities to early Andromeda and Farscape.

Like Discovery, the first story in the Stellar Flash series is set in a system with binary suns. I’d already established that in Stellar Flash: The Pilot, a short story which was released in August, so that wasn’t going to change. However, unlike the suns in Discovery which were backdrop, these play a major part in the plot.

Like The Orville, Captain Hogart has a scene introducing all the crew members, though this piece was more to convey the relationship between Hogart and Heartness, and the alienness of the situation, rather than a simple intro.

Like Discovery, the crew of the Stellar Flash end up in conflict with some black and brown aliens. Though, mine aren’t Kiingons. They don’t have a name and are simply referred to as ‘mushroom bugs’

Stellar Flash also has an amorous blob on board interested in some of the crew, though my amorous blob is female, and she is the doctor, and one of eight main characters.

I was surprised there were toilet jokes in The Orville. I thought I was being original having a few scenes resulting in some alien embarrassment, but no, The Orville beat me to that one, too. *sigh*

So, I just wanted to connect with you here in the blog and say, hey, yeah, we came up with the same ideas at the same time. Isn’t that great! Sci fi writers thinking along the same lines, knowing what viewers want.

Actually, it was more like this:

Stellar Flash The Orville Star Trek Discovery

Thanks for reading. Alien Frequency will be out next week.

And then I’ll start writing book number 2.