BTF066: Nathan Lowell and Michael Anderle discuss Trader’s Tales From The Golden Age of the Solar Clipper Series

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In today’s episode of Behind The Fiction: The Book Lover’s Podcast, Steve and Michael interview Nathan Lowell, incredibly gifted science fiction author of the Trader’s Tales from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper series and the almost everyday podcaster.
In this episode Steve, Michael and Nathan discuss the unconventional way that Nathan began writing, how he and Michael Anderle met, and discussing the fascinating details of the Trader’s Tales from The Golden Age Of The Solar Clipper series (coffee, food, killing fan’s favorite characters, etc).
This episode is available as a podcast available through your favorite podcast app and through LMBPN’s YouTube channel. If you’d like to subscribe through your favorite podcast apps you can search on Behind The Fiction.
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Exciting Wild Wednesday Deals for June 10, 2020

Wild Wednesday Deals For June 10, 2020
So many exciting deals for today! Which ones will tempt you?
Maybe all of them? LOL
Each week we bring you a list of books from not only LMBPN authors, but also friends of ours, that are on sale! Here’s a fantastic opportunity to discover some new authors or some exciting books you may not have seen yet.
Most of these books are FREE in Kindle Unlimited, but all are on sale today.
Please remember to double-check the price before you one-click.
And be sure to scroll all the way down for something extra special!
The Exceptional S. Beaufont Boxed Set 1
Reprobates – Kindle Countdown in US/UK
End Days: Complete Series
Deliver or Die – FREE
Don’t miss out on these other fantastic promotions! Just click the banner and go to the web page.
And for the something extra special!
Michael Anderle has started a new series! Check out the first 2 snippets from Too Young To Die!
Snippet #1
Snippet #2
The Unbelievable 2nd Snippet for Too Young To Die!
Snippet #2 – Too Young To Die
What do you do with an immersive gaming pod that’s too expensive for gamers? Find out what just might work!
Nick’s smoothie, which had seemed like a good idea when he ordered the box of mixes delivered to his house, had now begun to separate into two distinct and equally unappealing sections at the bottom of his Nalgene bottle. For some reason, he couldn’t stop watching it.
With a sigh, Amber picked it up and lobbed it at the sink. It missed and bounced off the floor on the other side of the counter. After she’d stared at it for a moment, she shrugged as if to say, “Good enough”, and looked at him.
“Can we focus now?” she asked.
“I don’t know.” He slouched in his chair. “Will you keep saying depressing things?”
“If by ‘depressing things’ you mean the numbers in our financial reports, then yes.” She gave him a smile that showed her teeth. “Let me put it this way, Mr. Ryan. Neither of us will leave this office until we have a plan in place.”
“That’s not fair,” Nick complained. “Jacob doesn’t have to be here. Why do I?” He picked at his sleeve. “Lucky bastard, having his grandmother in the ICU.”
Amber’s kick, when it came, was direct and to a particularly sensitive part of his shin. She jabbed a finger at him. “You never say things like that,” she told him severely.
He nodded, chastened. Put her in front of a problem and she would do whatever it took to solve it. It was one of the things that made her an incredible engineer—and one of the reasons he hoped she would never decide to take up politics. Or a military career.
Nick shuddered. The thought of Amber in charge of high-grade explosives was terrifying. read more…
An Exciting New Series by Michael Anderle! Check it out!
First Look at a brand new series by Michael Anderle!
Ever wonder if living in a video game was a viable option? Justin is about to find out! Check out this exciting, and dangerous, version of a new MMORPG story about a boy who needs a place to live while his body is fixed. Too Young To Die!
_______________
Jacob’s favorite part of MMORPGs by far was that you could be another you. Not someone else entirely because you could never be that, but you could find out who you were if you were dropped into the middle of, say, a fantasy world with a rusty sword and nothing else.
He liked to think he was the same in either world. A straight talker, he liked to give people the benefit of the doubt until they blew it and once they did, he immediately leapt to conclusions about their character.
It was why he wasn’t part of the public relations part of the PIVOT team, generally speaking. As Amber liked to say, no part of that cycle was helpful in PR.
She, meanwhile, took her opportunity in the game world to be a—mostly—more “woohoo” version of herself. In real life, she was five feet two inches of terrifying muscle, with a head of curls that could put Medusa to shame. She had studied engineering with Jacob and Nick at MIT, and she managed to meld creativity and an intuitive grasp of design with one of the most coldly analytical minds Jacob had ever seen.
Which made her druids both fascinating and pants-pissingly frightening. You never knew if she would preach about the harmony of the natural world, slit someone’s throat…or both. read more…
Fan-Freaking Tastic Week In Review May 31 – June 6, 2020
Fan-Freaking Tastic Week in Review May 31 – June 6, 2020
Did you see all of the exciting books we launched this week? Check out the list here: Week in Review
Steel Dragon 4:
The mages push Earth closer to a war that no one can win. Kristen and her team are all that stands between them and the utter annihilation of everyone she loves.
Death of the Mind:
A weapon to end the war? That’s what Vardis, the strange alien from another dimension, is offering the Riders. A weapon strong enough to kill the Dark One. But can he be trusted?
The Last Dance:
It’s time for Cali’s Last Dance. What battles lay ahead? Resolutions are at hand, above and below the waves.
Ghosts on a Plane:
Some things are far scarier than flying! Will Bonnie survive the ghost storm headed her way?
Rectify Injustice:
Who can turn an enemy into an ally? Sophia Beaufont hopes that she can. She just has to track down the steampunk cyborg.
Helldorado:
They left a man behind. 100,000 years behind.
WOW! With 6 new releases this week, you are going to be very busy! LOL I hope you have picked up all of these exciting reads! If not, don’t miss them! This week’s Week in Review
Exceptional Fan’s Pricing Saturday June 6 2020

Note: We requested the price changes from Amazon on Thursday afternoon. Unfortunately, they don’t change all of the prices at one time. Please double-check the price before clicking “Buy”.)
All of these new releases are 99c for one day only!
However, most are also available for FREE in Kindle Unlimited!
Grab them today before the prices go up!
Maelstrom of Treason
Backlash Rising
Steel Dragon 4
Death of the Mind
The Last Dance
Ghosts on a Plane
Lost Camelot
The Witch Next Door Complete Series
Don’t miss out on this other fantastic promotion! Just click the banner and go to the web page.
If you see this message after June 6th and want to be notified of future price promotions, please sign up for our email list at www.lmbpn.com/email
Exceptionally Wild Wednesday Deals for June 3 2020

Wild Wednesday Deals For June 3, 2020
So many exceptional deals for today! Which ones will tempt you?
Each week we bring you a list of books from not only LMBPN authors, but also friends of ours, that are on sale! Here’s a fantastic opportunity to discover some new authors or some exciting books you may not have seen yet.
Most of these books are FREE in Kindle Unlimited, but all are on sale today.
Please remember to double-check the price before you one-click.
The Witch Next Door Complete Series Omnibus
Lost Camelot
Forest of Depravity – FREE
Conscientious Objector
Sleepwater Static
Daedalus Job
Don’t miss out on these other fantastic promotions! Just click the banner and go to the web page.
If you see this message after June 3rd and want to be notified of future price promotions, please sign up for our email list at www.lmbpn.com/email
Out of this World Week in Review May 24 – 29
Out of this World Week in Review May 24 – 29, 2020
Did you see all of the books we launched this week? Check out the list here: Week in Review
Warmage: Undeniable:
Raven Alby is finally getting the chance to be an ordinary first-year mage at Fowler Academy. Until her dragon familiar sees a dark shadow in the sky that neither of them can explain.
Wings of the Valkyrie:
Being a Valkyrie was hard enough, but throw in an oversized dwarf and things get down right complicated. Mila is quickly heading toward a final battle with Azoth that could determine the fate of the universe.
Backlash Rising:
After narrowly escaping her enemy, Ali reels back from the edge of death. She finds herself surrounded by a strange subterranean species who hide from the enslavement she just fled.
Maelstrom of Treason:
There is a new definition of danger when your enemy is in the military. It’s one thing when you go up against crooks, gangsters and businesses. It’s a completely different situation when your enemy can send black-ops teams to end your existence.
So, did you miss any of these fantastic reads this week? If so, then check out the books here: Week in Review
Undeniable Exciting Fan’s Pricing Saturday May 30 2020

Note: We requested the price changes from Amazon on Thursday afternoon. Unfortunately, they don’t change all of the prices at one time. Please double-check the price before clicking “Buy”.)
All of these new releases are 99c for one day only!
However, all are also available for FREE in Kindle Unlimited!
Grab them today before the prices go up!
Warmage: Undeniable
Wings of the Valkyrie
Agents, Agreements, and Aggravations
Animus Omnibus #1
The Complete Braintrust Omnibus
Avenging Angels
If you see this message after May 30th and want to be notified of future price promotions, please sign up for our email list at www.lmbpn.com/email
Phenomenal Final Snippet for Maelstrom of Treason!
Snippet #3 for Maelstrom of Treason
This is it! The final snippet before Maelstrom of Treason launches tomorrow!
An annoying beep kept repeating. Red lights flashed in the cockpit. A half-dozen data windows spat out a litany of complaints about system damage, oxygen leaks, and proximity warnings.
Combined sensor readouts, including lidar and radar, displayed scores of small pieces of debris near the ship, the remnants of the earlier collision.
The ship shuddered violently, shaking Jia against her restraints. She might have survived another ship sideswiping her transport, but if she didn’t figure things out soon, she wouldn’t survive the aftermath.
“Fun,” Jia muttered.
Sweat trickled down the side of her face. It didn’t matter if everything she was experiencing was a simulation; she couldn’t treat it like one.
When she practiced in the tactical center, she tried to trick herself into believing it was real. Her body needed to learn how to react without much thought. She wouldn’t have a lot of time in a real emergency to think things through, just like she didn’t have a lot of time in a firefight to consider every last option.
Sometimes a woman could only choose between awful and less awful.
“Spaceport docking control, this is transport MLT11915,” Jia reported. “We have suffered a collision and have heavy damage. Our reactor is stable, but our escape pod was destroyed in the crash. Request emergency landing.”
“MLT11915,” responded Docking Control, “please stand by.”
“We’re not having a fun time here,” Jia snapped. “We’ve already broken atmo. We have massive damage to thrusters and grav emitters.”
“Understood, MLT11915, but you will hold. Contacting emergency crews now. Standby for further instru—”
“Oh, great, no comm.” Jia lifted a hand away from the control panel to squeeze it into a fist.
Another flashing data window popped up to mock her.
WARNING: MULTIPLE THRUSTER FAILURE. SHIP MANEUVERABILITY WILL BE COMPROMISED.
A list of subsystems, along with a diagram highlighting several portside lateral thrusters, appeared. If she were flying in deep space, a little trip outside with a suit and some equipment might help, but right now, she was trying to keep her transport from smashing into the ground with her inside it.
“I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised that a portside hit took out the portside thrusters, but this is still annoying.”
A far more worrisome window popped up on the other side.
WARNING: REACTOR CORE MAGNETIC CONTAINMENT FLUCTUATIONS EXCEED RECOMMENDED IN-FLIGHT VARIANCE.
“Of course. This can’t be too easy.” Jia took deep breaths as her fingers danced across the controls. Even without half her thrusters, she could keep the ship airborne and circling the spaceport until they agreed to an emergency landing. If she lost reactor containment, the resulting hole and loss of both primary and reserve power would doom her. At least her reserve power could keep her airborne for a few more desperate minutes.
A shrill alarm sounded, and the reactor core warning window started flashing obnoxious shades of yellow and red. She hadn’t even gotten ten seconds since the last warning.
“Warning, reactor core magnetic containment fluctuations exceed maximum emergency variance levels,” reported the soft female voice of the ship’s AI. “Containment failure is imminent. Core purge is recommended.”
A pilot knew she was in trouble when the computer shifted to verbal warnings. Jia whipped her hand to the other side of the control panel and tapped in a quick code she’d memorized during the preflight briefing. A groan sounded from deeper within the ship, and yet another data window appeared.
“Warning,” the AI continued. “Core purge containment protocol has been initiated. Please enter core disconnect code for next step.”
“If you insist.” Jia entered the code.
Another groan sounded. More data windows popped up, most focusing on systems shutdown and emergency power implementation. She didn’t understand how all of this wasn’t supposed to be distracting, but at least she couldn’t complain about not knowing everything relevant to the current condition of the ship.
“Second-stage core containment protocol has been implemented,” the system AI announced. “Please enter core purge code for final step. There will be a momentary loss of power prior to reserve power activation.”
“Yes, because what I need is any power loss when I’m spiraling to my doom.”
Jia was grateful the limited ship’s AI didn’t have the wit to snark back like Emma as her hand hovered over the emergency purge controls.
They were nothing but a hologram covering an adaptative haptic feedback panel. That annoyed her.
She would have preferred something she could at least tighten her hands around for a false sense of control, but she wouldn’t get that in the kind of craft she was going to fly with a Class D license.
A sickening crunch followed a loud grinding noise. Jia didn’t bother to look at the damage report. From the new vibrations afflicting the ship, she could tell she’d lost another piece of the hull. It was a funny thing, space travel. Living beings put all their hope in ultimately fragile craft to protect them in a hostile environment. The very idea was absurd, but for now, it wasn’t simulated deep space that was going to end her run.
Jia entered the final purge code. Now all that remained was for her to submit it and eject the reactor core. If she were lucky, it wouldn’t lose containment. Mere seconds of high residual temperatures could hurt the already deeply wounded ship. After the purge, she would have a few minutes of reserve power to land
A new warning appeared. Jia’s stomach knotted. Several technical codes popped up, along with maintenance diagrams. About everything short of the ship exploding had now gone wrong.
WARNING: RESERVE POWER INTERFACE FAILURE.
Jia snatched her hand back from the purge controls and gritted her teeth. No. She was an idiot. She hadn’t thought through the entire situation. Without her reserve power, there would be nothing to protect her. An already damaged reinforced hull wouldn’t do much without a grav field backup. Her thrusters would cut out, and she’d tumble to the ground like a drunken duck.
Her gaze shifted to a local map display. She’d been circling the spaceport for several minutes. It sat in the center of the fictional metroplex of Copez. High mountains curved around the northern edge of the urban zone. There was no way she could gain altitude, given the state of the ship. It had been taking all her efforts to maintain her current altitude. Countless sensor contacts from a cove extending from the west side of the metroplex would make a water landing chancy. Even if she survived the splashdown, she stood a decent chance of killing someone else.
Jia didn’t have much time to decide. She could try to force her way into an emergency landing, or she could eject the core without reserve power and do her best meteor impression. Best-case scenario ended with her ship smashed to pieces and her dead, which meant she would fail the exercise.
“There has to be a solution,” she muttered, her jaw clenched. “Something I’m missing. Did I fail to perform an earlier step? No. Everything was by the book.”
Jia closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She knew what she had to do. After reopening her eyes, she cut power to her lateral thrusters and poured what remained of power into the main thrusters. The ship shook and shimmied as it accelerated, barreling away from the spaceport and heading straight toward the mountains.
“MLT11915, you are breaking your holding pattern,” shouted Docking Control. “You need to immediately return to your previous position. We can’t get you down here safely, but emergency flitters are being dispatched for an aerial retrieval. Stay in position for just a couple more minutes, and we’ll extract you.”
“Negative, Docking Control,” Jia replied. “I’m losing core containment, and there’s a problem with my reserve power. There’s only one option left.”
The mountains loomed large in front of her, growing closer by the second. Her ship continued its burn, the thrusters propelling it toward an immovable mass of rock unimpressed by a speck of a human ship. There was only one question left: would the ship crash into the mountain before there was a loss of core containment?
Jia smiled. “This is probably close to how I’ll eventually die. That or get eaten by mutants.”
A bright flash blinded her, and she squinted. The light faded, replaced by darkness. A moment later, a quiet grinding sounded, and soft light infiltrated the darkened cockpit simulator. The side door fully parted, revealing her frowning instructor, Idrin.
He narrowed his eyes. “Congratulations, Jia. You just died. You didn’t even try to purge the core, and you did what, a petulant final burn against the mountain? I don’t care what you’ve seen in movies. That’s not what you do in this kind of situation.”
Jia scoffed. “You want me to do a core purge over a major area?”
“It’s not a bomb. The danger from the reactor comes from the initial breach and damage to the ship. The reactor is self-terminating once you lose containment. You should know that. You answered it correctly on your last test.” Idrin shook his head, looking disappointed. “By the time the core hit the ground, it would have just been a piece of junk.”
Jia locked eyes with her instructor. “A flitter isn’t a bomb either, but I wouldn’t want to randomly drop one into a city and hope no one got hurt. Plus, I wasn’t going to have reserve power. No reserve power and no primary power from the reactor means I’d lose maneuverability, and that means I would have been dropping something a lot larger than my core into the spaceport. It doesn’t need to be a bomb when it’s large and falls from the sky. Even with deflection, there was a good chance I’d hit someone or more than a few someones. Bouncing a meteor away from a building isn’t safe.”
Idrin stepped back and folded his arms. “So, what, you’re saying you had no solution but to crash your ship into the mountain and go out in a self-serving blaze of glory?”
“Exactly.” Jia punctuated her sentence with a firm nod. “Except for the self-serving part.”
“Again, you just killed yourself,” Idrin insisted. “It doesn’t matter if you did it fancier than slamming into the ground. Running into a mountain finishes you off well enough.”
Jia shook her head. “And if this were a real scenario, I would have probably saved dozens, if not hundreds of people, and all I had to do was sacrifice one: me. Easy math there.”
“You could have—”
“No, I couldn’t,” Jia interrupted. “And we both know it. This ship was going down no matter what I did, and if I’m going to die, I’m not going to take innocent people with me. I don’t even want to practice doing that. Now, if we want to do the scenario again where there’s a syndicate headquarters beneath me, we can talk about where I’m crashing, but I doubt I’ll be that lucky in real life.”
Idrin lowered his arms. A grin took over his face. “I’m surprised.”
Jia frowned. “By what?”
“You’re a by-the-book kind of woman.” Idrin inclined his head toward the simulator. “I assumed when I gave you this scenario that you’d just go through the core purge protocol since that’s what is the recommended emergency procedure in a situation like this, but instead, you did what I’d hoped you do. It just wasn’t what I expected.”
“I’m confused.” Jia released her restraints and crept out of the simulator. “You wanted me to crash into the mountain?”
“What I wanted to do was subject you to a no-win situation.” Idrin shrugged with a satisfied smile. “Life’s not fair, and you can have crap luck, not that I have to tell you that with your job and all. But it’s not the easy ninety-nine percent of the time that requires good piloting and training. It’s those few minutes of terror.”
“I’m beginning to get it.” She thought it through. “It’s still annoying.”
“Emotional stability is part of the consideration for getting your license, and I’ll have to sign an affidavit to my belief that you demonstrated emotional stability and a lack of antisocialness when you go for your license.” Idrin inclined his head toward the simulator. “I agree, deciding to barrel right into the spaceport with a heavily damaged transport isn’t the preferred outcome.”
Jia stretched her arms above her head before lowering them and shaking out her cramped hands. “I half-wondered if I was supposed to figure out some ridiculous out-of-the-box solution where I happened to have a super-AI with me to hack the system in some strange way or pull off some insane aerobatic maneuver that would save me.”
Given her normal experiences, the idea wasn’t impossible.
“We train you for the most likely scenarios, and there’s only so much fancy flying you’re going to do in a transport. It’s not a fighter.” Idrin walked over to the simulator. From the outside, it looked rather unglamorous, just a featureless squat black trapezoidal structure. He patted the side. “I have to admit something.”
“What?”
Idrin locked eyes with Jia. “The thing is, you kind of scare me.”
“I thought you liked what I just did. It’s simple math. I’m not suicidal. If I could have survived any other way, I would have taken it.”
“You don’t understand,” Idrin replied. “You’ve only been training here for a couple of weeks. You’re not even observing another pilot full-time, let alone training full-time. And not only are you in the simulator at this stage, but you’ve also mastered most of the basic procedures and several of the practical skills already. You’re one of the best natural pilots I’ve ever seen.” He squinted. “You’re not screwing with me, are you? This isn’t a joke, and you already knew how to fly? Because it’s hard for me to believe you’ve made this much progress in a few weeks.”
“Why would I spend money to come to a pilot training school if I already knew how to fly?” Jia asked. It’d never occurred to her that her rapid progress was unusual. She was putting in the required pre-study time and wanted it more than most.
“I don’t know. I’ve had a lot of strange students in my time, so I wouldn’t put it past someone to try that.” Idrin nodded toward the door leading out of the simulator chamber. “But if you really are new, you’re one of the best I’ve ever seen. You never knew you had this in you?”
“I never tried to fly a ship before by myself.” Jia headed toward the door. “I don’t even like flying my flitter that much, but a ship’s a different thing. I feel a lot more…alive trying to fly one.”
“You ever think about quitting the police force and becoming a full-time pilot?” Idrin smiled. “I bet within a year, you could become a top instructor here. You’d be wasted on a passenger transport moon run route, and unfortunately, it’s all about seniority, not talent for most big commercial positions.”
“I am leaving the police force.” Jia stepped through the door, following Idrin. “But I’ve got something else lined up, more private security than piloting.”
“Too bad. A gift like yours should be used.” Idrin frowned. “A hell of a waste.”
Jia spared one last glance at the simulator before the door closed. “Don’t worry. I’m confident that flying half-destroyed ships is a skill that will serve me well in the future.”
______________
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