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Showing posts with label Mark Iles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Iles. Show all posts

Monday, 4 July 2022

GARDENS OF EARTH - Book review

 

Book One of The Sundering Chronicles by Mark Iles (2021) is an excellent speculative fiction novel. It begins as if it’s sci-fi but evolves into a cross-genre conflation of fantasy, sci-fi and horror. Most definitely horror.

It begins on the ill-fated planet of Halloween where space troopers are combating the planet’s inhabitants. Steff Philips is with his members of the flight wing enjoying a meal when it all goes wrong, horribly wrong. Steff retreats to his room – but he isn’t safe there. ‘A rotting hand, with ribbons of flesh hanging from exposed bone, reached up from underneath his bed and snatched at his ankle.” The stuff of nightmares. 

However, Steff isn’t the hero of this novel. That’s Seethan Bodell, a space fleet commander. When he’s not on duty and working overtime at the base, he lives in the boarding house of Mrs Maskill, a lady who has become his adoptive mother. Seethan is coping well even though he occasionally suffers from PTSD brought on by previous conflicts where he has lost men. Guilt is never far from the surface. But he employs his coping strategies to defeat the darkness.

Because the humans felt forced to retaliate with devastating effect, Halloween became a wasteland and the indigenous inhabitants – nicknamed the Spooks – escaped to form a massive fleet capable of attacking Earth in dreadful reprisal. And they seem unbeatable. Onboard one of the Earth space carriers is Admiral Woodward – a nod by Iles to Sandy Woodward who was the British task force commander in the Falklands War. 

Yet there is one slim chance for humanity. Seethan is tasked with embarking on the mission that would alter history and even right the wrongs of the past in one fell swoop. He is accompanied by the fetching android Rose who was built in Bradbury City on Mars. ‘Her hair’s like spun gold, and her skin’s… well, porcelain. She has these wonderful deep-green eyes, ones you could drown in…’ (p95) Androids are not particularly liked by many humans; people feel threatened, despite the Asimov Laws of Robotics. Seethan’s is not one of those; he’s in love with Rose.

A rather distasteful suitor of Mrs Maskill is Alan. Seethan doesn’t like him: ‘he smells like Portsmouth Harbour when the tide’s gone out.’ There are plenty of humorous asides, but they’re never there merely for jokey effect. 

Up to this point it is clear that Iles had experience in the armed forces and he clearly evokes the dangers and sheer horror of war, and the psychological damage suffered by many combatants.

Sadly, the event that Seethan triggers is not what had been planned. Instead, the result is the Sundering. ‘The Sundering left Earth’s reality torn.’ (p172) 

Then, Iles really gets inventive. What had been a space military scenario is transformed into a quest for the sake of love, with a colourful environment, fascinating characters and beasts, and an overshadowing threat.

There are a good number of fine descriptions. I particularly liked ‘a shower of brilliant sparks to scatter like panicked fairies.’ (p116) And a saying from Seethan’s mother, which has resonance even today: ‘Don’t look back, you’re not going that way.’ (p137) And: Dragonflies as long as Seethan’s arms buzzed about like military drones as they snatched the butterflies in mid-air.’ (p174) 

Did I mention horror? Yes, I did: ‘The thing … sat into the chair, it creaked as he sat back… one foot slowly tapping against the bare wooden floor. With each tap, small things fell to the floor and squirmed, wriggling their way towards the bed…’ (p125) Iles can do horror, sci-fi wonder, compassion, poignancy and full-blooded action.

No spoilers here, but there is a neat twist or two at the end, which several players did not see coming. While never preachy, the book says something about nature, conservation, aspects of love and hubris, as well as survival. 

Although it’s Book One, Gardens of Earth tells a complete story, so the reader is not left hanging.

Excellent stuff!

Sunday, 13 July 2014

Blog guest - Mark Iles

Seems fitting today, following on from yesterday's sci-fi short story, to feature Mark Iles, a popular sci-fi writer who is doing a blog tour for his latest book, The Cull of Lions.

Over to you, Mark.

Thanks! I’m lucky to have known Nik for a great many years, back to when he used to run the magazine Auguries. His Write a Western in 30 Days is simply superb and filled with all manner of advice that’s helpful from the beginner to the most advanced writer, of all genres. I’d like to take this chance to say thanks to Nik for hosting this blog and to pass on my best wishes for the continuing success of his books.

[Thanks, Mark…NM]

Author Bio

Mark works for Southampton University, and also as a freelance writer in many fields including copywriting. His short stories have been published in Back Brain Recluse, Dream, New Moon, Auguries, Haunts, Kalkion, Screaming Dreams, and the anthologies Right To Fight, Escape Velocity, and Monk Punk. With an 8th Degree Black Belt in Taekwondo he’s also written non-fiction for Combat, Taekwondo & Korean Martial Arts, Fighters, Junk, Martial Arts Illustrated, profwritingacademy.com and calmzone.net. Nik illustrated his articles for Fighters magazine.

His first full length work was Kwak’s Competition Taekwondo, and he also has a short story collection available entitled Distant Shores. His debut novel A Pride of Lions was published by Solstice in September 2013, followed shortly afterwards by four novellas: A Connoisseur of the Bizarre, Sally Jane, Nightshade and Santa Claws is Coming.  The Cull of Lions is Book II in The Darkening Stars series. He’s now focusing on the third book in this series, The Roar of Lions.

Blurb:

Selena Dillon and her team return to Loreen after their attack on Mantis, only to find the myriad worlds of Mankind once again plunged into war. As the Penal Regiments are betrayed by the Federation of Man, and fighting spills throughout the galaxy, the dreaded Manta raise their heads once again.

Selena soon finds herself trying to track down her friends’ daughter, Hope, from the rabbit holes of Loreen and then fights to free her home planet from alien invaders.

While a general amnesty means previous sins are forgiven, the Queen has not forgotten Selena’s attempt on her life. Selena is torn between obeying orders to protect the monarch, and her ravening thirst for revenge. But strange forces are stirring amidst the stars and Mankind gains surprising new allies, while a terrifying enemy that’s manipulated events from behind the scenes finally reveals itself for the very first time.

The Cull of Lions - excerpt

The soldiers slowed their breathing, picked themselves up and patrolled back and forth, searching. Their guns barked occasionally, as they found enemy survivors.

Then, with the perimeters secured, Selena finally counted her men.

“Thirty, is that all?” she asked. “Where’s Harding?

“He got minced,” Braxis replied, wincing. “He was standing right next to me one minute and was a cloud of blood the next. He couldn’t have felt a thing, it was so damn quick.”

Blood and bits of human flesh adhered to Braxis’s uniform, and she noted a few shudders from those around her. To her relief Singh, Kes and Arthur made it, although Kes had a large tear in his chest that Singh was patching with a battle dressing and Arthur had a rip in his cheek they could see his teeth through.

She left her men under Singh’s command, as he in turn sat in the dirt having a shrapnel wound in his arm tended by a medic. With Kes, Braxis and a couple of heavies in tow Selena went to a meeting called by Colonel Matthews, in the central chamber of the nest.

Above them were the platforms that once housed the alien crops, but were now filled with nothing but drifting ash.

“Hello, Dillon,” the colonel said, holding out his hand. “Glad you made it. That was fine work back there. Your prompt action with the grenades broke the enemy’s back.”

            His genuine smile relaxed Selena. She was quite taken by the man’s warmth. His round face was framed by silvery hair. At five foot eight, he was short, stocky, spoke in brusque tones and was the typical image of an army officer.

“Thank you, Colonel,” she replied. “Do you know how the other attacks went?”

His smile faltered. “We succeeded at two of the other nests, but one of the regular army units was over-run and destroyed. I’m told there are no survivors at all. Luckily for us, the enemy chose to stay and defend the nest rather than send reinforcements to this one.” He paused and looked around, before saying even more loudly, “Now you’re all here, come with me. There’s something I want to show you, but I warn you it’s not pretty.”

            The colonel led them down several floors, and as they went a horrible stench began to assail them.

“God, what’s that?” Selena asked.

Colonel Matthews neither answered nor looked at her as they turned a last corner.

The officers stopped mid-step and stared.

In the wide open space there were hundreds of pens, all filled with transparent maggots of some kind that were as long as Selena’s leg. They had thick leather-like skin and countless cilia, which writhed constantly. Their little dark mouths took chunks out of the pieces of plant trundling through the pens on conveyor belts. As the huge maggots chewed and gulped the food, it could easily be seen entering their bodies, bunching up in what could be termed a series of stomachs, before finally being ejected from their bodies in a dirty, watery stream.
 

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Thursday, 5 September 2013

Guest blog - Mark Iles - A pride of Lions


Today, my blog guest is Mark Iles. He’s on a blog tour, so it’s probably a flying visit – maybe even in a spaceship (which my grandson would definitely like for his birthday in a few days’ time). I digress. I’ve known Mark for many years, having published two of his stories in my magazine Auguries – ‘Robins’ in #4 (1986) and ‘The Magician’s Assistant’ in #10 (1989), alongside such sci-fi luminaries as Charles Stross, Steve Lockley, Nick Daws, Michael Cobley, Steve Bowkett, D.F. Lewis, and Sydney J. Bounds to name a few. He also reviewed books for the magazine. That association continued and I illustrated move-by-Taekwondo move in his series of articles in Fighters magazine. So I’m particularly pleased that he has finally achieved his dream of getting his science fiction novel A Pride of Lions accepted and published. I hasten to add that I’d ceased being EIC of Solstice before Mark submitted his book and I didn’t see it until after it was accepted.

 

Mark is particularly pleased that A Pride of Lions was released on Friday 30th August and over that weekend it hit two notable highs on Amazon Kindle:

 #1: books, Science Fiction, Colonists

#4: books, Science Fiction, military #4

An SF novel with a difference, A Pride of Lions looks at criminals in the future and how they might be dealt with. Thrown into the pot is a craving for revenge, a love interest, a psychopathic killer and the desperate battle for the very survival of humanity.

 

A Pride of Lions – Blurb

When Selena Dillon is caught in an assassination attempt on her planets ruler, she finds herself sentenced to 25 years servitude in mankind’s most feared military force, the Penal Regiments. Much to her surprise she enjoys the harsh military life and is quickly selected for officer training.

But something’s wrong, worlds are falling silent. There’s no cry for help and no warning, just a sudden eerie silence. When a flotilla of ships is despatched to investigate they exit hyperspace to find themselves facing a massive alien armada. Outnumbered and outgunned the flotilla fight a rearguard action, allowing one of their number to slip away and warn mankind.

As worlds fall in battle, and man’s fleets are decimated, Selena is selected to lead a team of the Penal Regiments most battle-hardened veterans, in a last ditch attempt to destroy the aliens’ home world. If she fails then mankind is doomed. But little does Selena know what fate has in store for her, that one of her crew is a psychopathic killer and a second the husband of one of his victims.

Can she hold her team together, get them to their target and succeed in the attack? Selena knows that if she fails then there will be nothing at all left to go home to.

A Pride of Lions - excerpt

In this scene Bryn Clayton, and his friend Singh Lacy, are involved in the counter-invasion to retake Bryn’s homeworld:

“All gone,” Singh said happily, eying his monitors. “They’re down; now let’s get the hell out of here.”

Even as Bryn hit the accelerator there was a deafening explosion and the little vessel slewed sideways. A shower of sparks exploded into Bryn’s face, momentarily blinding him, and he let go of the controls and grabbed at the sharp burns with a yell.

“Damn it,” Singh said, struggling with the dual controls as his friend cursed and rubbed frantically at his face, trying to clear his vision.

But it was too late. With a high-pitched two-tone warble the ship slewed towards the ground and ploughed into the side of a hill.

Flames erupted as the two men shook their heads in an effort to clear them and unstrapped themselves. Grabbing weapons and backpacks from the stowage under their seats, they leapt from the emergency exit and ran frantically over the grass to the safety of a rain-filled ditch a short distance away. Crouching in the stagnant water, they covered their heads with folded arms, expecting the ship to explode at any moment.

It didn’t.
 
For a while the silence was broken only by the slow tick of cooling metal. Bryn breathed a sigh of relief and ran his fingers over the burns on his face, deciding that despite the stinging it was all still there and that there was nothing serious.

“Well,” Singh said matter-of-factly, checking Bryn’s burns and then spraying a fine cool mist of honey-smelling healing gel over them from the first aid kit in his pack, “at least the water’s warm.”

Bryn gazed at his friend. “Yeah but it stinks; a bit like your sense of humour.”

“Quiet, isn’t it? Listen. No birds, nothing at all. Not like before the invasion. It’s kind of eerie.”

“Personally, I’m just thankful we’re alive. The bugs must have seen us come down; we need to get the hell out of here.”

Bryn recognised the ruined city and bridge over the river that lay about a mile or so away. He’d arranged to operate in this area and no one had begrudged him that, given that this was his home world. If he was right then his town was about fifteen miles from their current position. He was about to impart this knowledge to Singh when, with a deafening roar, another landing craft appeared above them. Hovering, it disgorged its troops but remained overhead protectively for a moment, before shooting skyward once more. It was soon lost in the low-lying clouds, as she returned to her mother ship for more human cargo.

A small, thin sergeant strode up to the two friends. He planted both feet in the mire and, with hands on his hips, looked down at them and said loudly, “Hello chaps, tracked you in, of course. Thought it would be jolly nice of us to come and look after you. After all, we don’t want you wandering around aimlessly and getting yourselves killed, now do we? We’ll need you to give us a lift back out again when this is all over.”

“Rather decent of you, old boy,” Singh retorted, getting a dig in the ribs for his efforts from Bryn as he stared at the man’s greying goatee.

Just then the sergeant touched his ear-piece, twisted his head towards the city and said quite calmly, “Better take cover lads, there’s some beasties coming.”

“I don’t believe this guy,” Singh said quietly, looking up at Bryn, as they cocked their machine pistols.

“If I was you, I’d shut up and take cover,” Bryn replied from the side of his mouth, moving to the edge of the ditch and following the other men’s gaze as they too flung themselves into the trench and other concealments about them.

A few seconds later, the Manta came into view…

7 Questions

I’ve posed seven questions for Mark:

1.  How far are you down the road for the sequel, The Cull of Lions?


I'm at around 24,000 words and the target is 60-80,000. I'm hoping to finish this early in the New-year.

2.  You seem drawn to militaristic sci-fi, which has a big following. Has your naval career had a bearing on this, or have you always liked that sub-genre?


I've always been drawn to it and drew on my experience in the British armed forces. I'm also an avid fan of Babylon 5, Star Trek and such like. I'm a firm believer that someday we will indeed travel to other planets and stars, and if we do and those worlds are inhabited it will make us the invaders. Will we give up and go away? Of course not, we'll just land anyway and imagine what we'd do if the boot was on the other foot. Even if we don't meet other races mankind has always been plagued by war, and I can't see the future as any different.

3.   What prompted you to write about a female protagonist?

The book kind of wrote itself. I had no intention of a female protagonist, it just happened that way. It's certainly unusual. My two youngest children are girls and you always worry about what will happen to them if both parents are no longer around, so maybe that had something to do with it.

4.   Will The Darkening Stars series be a trilogy – or open-ended?

It's designed to be a trilogy but you never know. Once these books are finished another twist might occur to me and draw me back. The trouble with writing is that once you have an idea in your mind for a tale it haunts you until you write it down; and that, of course, is only the beginning.

5.   Research is important for a writer. What kind of research do you do for sci-fi?

I read extensively, particularly technology news and anything at all about space – such as the

Martian colony projects, space engine development, and the many Earthlike worlds that are being discovered by telescopes.

I also research weaponry. It’s common knowledge now that the Royal Navy carried Laser weapons during the Falklands War, although these were designed to blind the pilots. The Americans have recently shot down target aircraft with beam weapons fitted to the phalanx point defense system and they’ve been working on a microwave laser called the Active Denial System, as a form of crowd dispersal. It’s claimed that within a few years such weapons will become standard. Although I foresee handheld lasers and so forth becoming commonplace I believe we will always have projectile weapons – although the ammunition is bound to change, perhaps becoming smaller and yet more lethal. This, of course, will allow us to load more ammunition.

Another area of interest is ancient civilizations, how empires rise and fall, and of course health issues. All of these can be transposed into the future. Likewise crime, which has always been with us and always will, but what kind of crime could there be then?

6.   Okay, you're in a small café on an asteroid, huddling with three of your favourite writers (living or dead). One specializes in Sci-fi; another in Thrillers; the third in Short Stories. Who would they be, and what one – and different – question would you ask each of them?

For Scifi it would be Kevin J Anderson, his ‘Saga of 7 Suns’ is excellent. I’d ask how on earth he keeps track of so many characters and their traits.

Thrillers I’d choose Dan Brown. I really enjoyed The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons. I’d love to know how he researches.

Stephen King is a great short story writer. His tale ‘The Boogey Man’ stayed with me for a long time and is about a man whose sleep is broken by his child screaming. When he investigates he finds his boy being attacked by a monster from out of the wardrobe [the rest excised, spoiler alert – Nik]. I’d like to know whether it haunts him as much as it does me.

7.   How would you finish this statement: "I bet my readers didn't know (this about me) …”?

I’m often inspired by nightmares. I’ll wake up sweating and write it all down, then go downstairs to make some tea and toast and start to craft the tale.

Many thanks, Mark.

Mark’s bio

Mark works for Southampton University, and also as a freelance writer. His short stories have been published in Back Brain Recluse, Dream, New Moon, Auguries, Haunts, Kalkion, Screaming Dreams, and the anthologies Right To Fight, Escape Velocity and Monk Punk. With an 8th Degree Black Belt in Taekwondo he’s also written non-fiction for Combat, Taekwondo & Korean Martial Arts, Fighters, Junk, Martial Arts Illustrated, profwritingacademy.com and calmzone.net.

His first full length work was Kwak’s Competition Taekwondo, and he also has a short story collection entitled Distant Shores. A Pride of Lions is the first in The Darkening Stars series. Having written features and fiction for over 30 years Mark applied to do an MA in Professional Writing. A Pride of Lions had been bouncing around in his head for some time, and he seized the opportunity of the MA to produce this first novel as part of the course. Mark says it’s without doubt the best choice he’s ever made, as it really focused him, and that getting this novel accepted is the perfect conclusion to a wonderful experience. He’s now focusing on the second book in this series, The Cull of Lions.


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