Craig A. Munro liked an update for After Man

After some recent discussions, I felt the need to post this to the project page and send it as an update.

What this Book is NOT:

First, this is not a book meant to answer all the questions.  This world the story takes place in is a complicated place where everything has changed owing to the cataclysmic event.  As a result, everything you know about society, religion, politics, genders, gender roles, and much more has changed.  Second, this book is not "women can’t go on without men."  Having lived for 500 years without them, clearly they can.  This book is an exploration of that idea: what would it be like if you take the most basic form of diversity and remove it?  And then what might happen if you reintroduce it?  How would society react?  Third, this is not an anti-feminist diatribe.  It is also not a Complementarian manifesto.  The idea here is NOT to declare one gender is better than the other, or that they can only exist together if they exist in a specific mold.  The idea behind it is to explore what would happen if such an event were to occur, not pass judgment on you or anyone else for how they view or believe on this subject.  Finally, this book is not going to tell you what to believe or accept about it.  This will have a lot of ambiguity in it ON PURPOSE.  This is not to avoid conflict, but to avoid "leading the witness."  The narrative is going to have a lot of opportunities to make small and big statements throughout.  Places where we can hit you right in the face with something just because we want to.  We won’t be doing that.  The idea here is to create a setting where all of these preconceived notions we carry into our interactions with each other have all fundamentally been altered or vanished.  We all are going to approach this story with differing world views and beliefs.  That is fine.  The goal of this story is to take you as you are and, on the other end, leave you where you choose to be after contemplating the ideas and possibilities herein.  

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    Craig A. Munro liked an update for Cape’s Side Bay

    Happy Friday!

    Hope you’re all doing well and fine and all that. Been a busy week and looking forward to a busier weekend! Tomorrow is the "friends and family" screening party for the independent film I wrote and directed: Out There. It’s about an introvert who applies to live on Mars. It was a fun time shooting it and I’m looking forward to watching it tomorrow night!

    Back to Cape’s Side Bay, we’ve passed 70 pre-orders and that is AWESOME! 

    Tomorrow at the screening we will be giving some friends and family mugs. Do you know what goes well with a good book? A mug of coffee, or tea, or whatever you feel you want to put in it. I want to give some away to you all! 

    But I can’t, there are too many of you. So... All previous orders will be in a raffle for an OUT THERE mug, then we will do a raffle after the next 10 pre-orders, then a raffle after the next 15. 

    Please keep sharing and spreading the word of Cape’s Side Bay! Things are going very well and I’m getting genuinely excited... which is rare for me. I promise. 

    And last but definitely not least, as of this writing J.F Dubeau’s A GOD IN THE SHED is just over 100 pre-orders from FULL PUBLICATION! Any help would be great, it’s a terrific read. I ordered mine! It’s great horror/fantasy.  You will not be disappointed. 

    Enjoy your weekend!

    James

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      Craig A. Munro liked an update for The Punch Escrow

      To celebrate our 250th hour along with our Quillification (that’s a fancy word I made up that means the book is definitely getting published), I promised you guys something special today, and boy are you going to get it:

      When one is dealing with "hard science fiction" it’s particularly important to get the facts right. For example, one of the best hard science fiction writers, Larry Niven, got a very important fact wrong in his first story, "The Coldest Place" (1964). In this story, the coldest place concerned was the dark side of Mercury, which at the time the story was written was thought to be tidally locked with the Sun. However, Mercury was found to rotate in a 2:3 resonance with the Sun before the story saw the light of day, meaning it was published with known scientific errata. Oh well. It didn’t seem to hurt his career much.

      Since "The Punch Escrow" is set in the 25th century, I expect that I will have gotten a lot of things wrong. I’ve done my best to avoid such missteps, but since I am only a fan of quantum physics and not a quantum physicist myself, I leaned on my highschool friend Joe Santoro, a real life medical physicist, to vet (and sometimes invent) the science necessary to make my world scientifically plausible. Joe is one of the nicest, smartest guys in the world. He’s probably blushing reading this, but without him there probably never would have been a Punch Escrow. To celebrate our publication, I wanted to share a short interview I conducted with Joe. Consider this the first in a series of interviews with people who have been invaluable to me in making Joel Byram’s world credible.

      Tal: I guess first question would be your name and what you do for a living?

      Joe: My name is Joe Santoro and I am a medical physicist. I work in a radiation oncology clinic at a hospital on Long Island. We’re the guys that make sure the medical linear accelerator is delivering the correct radiation dose to patients undergoing radiation therapy. We also come up with the treatment plans for patients which dictates where the radiation will get delivered. We’re responsible for routine QA of most of the various components that comprise the radiation delivery chain, i.e. the CT scanners, LINAC, on-treatment imaging, etcetera.

      Tal: What was the thing that made you want to get into physics?

      Joe: Now you’re making me use my way-back machine. I guess I would have to narrow it down to 3 things at a really early age; astronomy (just looking up at the sky), magnets (which are cool at any age), and a fascination with things just crashing into each other. I subsequently became obsessed with meteorology to the point where I was making weather reports daily and posting them on the classroom door. Incidentally I didn’t end up “specializing” in either meteorology or astronomy but these early interests were springboards into studying (particle) physics and mathematics later in life. To this day I still love a great meteor shower, looking up at the moon, or a spending hours a day on Wunderground.com

      Tal: In science fiction books, scientists are often presented as characters with no sense of humor. I think that’s why The Martian is so beloved by the scientific community, because it presents hard science side by side with toilet humor. It was something I wanted to capture for the Sylvia character in the book, she’s a quantum physicist, but she’s also happy to drop a dirty joke. As a professional physicist, how much of a role does humor play into your daily work life? Can you give any examples?

      Joe: It’s funny you ask that. When I think back on the influences that shaped my personality as a scientist (and just a regular person), I think of Peter Venkman (Bill Murray’s character in Ghostbusters) and Chris Knight (Val Kilmer’s character in Real Genius). Perhaps it was just a function of watching and re-watching these movies at a really mentally malleable age, but both characters made the prospect of being a scientist seem like something really cool to aspire to.

      I think having a good sense of humor allows you to deal with the absurdity, randomness, beauty and cruelty of the universe in way that complements science’s attempt to establish some sort of framework for all that. I think taking oneself too seriously is a hazard in both scientific pursuit and life’s pursuits. After all, what’s the point if you can’t have a good laugh every now and then?

      It goes without saying that working in a radiation oncology department can be extremely stressful and tragic on an almost daily basis. I’ve been at places where joking around is discouraged and I can tell you, people don’t last too long at those places. Without being able to joke around with the people I spend the better part of my day with, I think I would want to throw myself in front of train at the end of the day.

      Tal: I’ve asked you to help me convert mosquitoes to flying steam reformers, keep self-replicating nanos in check with ecophagy cages, and make human teleportation possible with density functional theory, among other absurd requests. Your one caveat to me was to ’beware of using too deterministic language in the story’ - Can your elaborate on why you said that?

      Joe: Did I say that? It sounds quite serious. I guess what I meant is that when talking about things inherently “Quantum”, it requires us to use the language of chance and probability instead of certainty. Quantum physics describes the world of the extremely small and at these scales, familiar quantities like the position, velocity, momentum, and energy of an object become fuzzy and probabilistic. Instead of specifying these quantities as definite values like we’re used to for say a car traveling on a road, we have to instead speak of the expectation value of these quantities for an object like an electron. Quantum physics can say that the most probable location to find an electron orbiting a proton in hydrogen atom is the 1.5 times the Bohr radius but nothing more definite. This is in contrast to saying that saying that our car is at position X,Y,Z, traveling at velocity V. It’s definitely a different way of thinking about reality and I’m not sure anyone really ever gets used to it. 

      Tal: Last question before I let you go back to saving the world one patient at a time: What one quantum physics breakthrough would you like to see happen within your lifetime?

      Joe: That’s a doozie. If you’re going to make me pick just one I would have to say commercially viable quantum computing coupled with photonic data storage and transfer. The exponential increase in processing capability of a quantum computer will enable humanity to solve all sorts of currently intractable problems across dozens of disciplines. This also has to be accompanied by a completely new ways to move and store such enormously large quantities of data which means moving away from electronic data storage and busses to light speed photonic data storage and bussing. There are even some people using organic compounds like DNA as a means of storing extremely large quantities of data. The coupling of these nascent technologies can potentially change the course of humanity in unimaginably fantastic ways.  

      I can’t thank Joe enough for helping me build the world in which The Punch Escrow takes place. And I can’t thank you all enough for helping me bring that world to light. To that end, I’m unveiling the first three chapters of The Punch Escrow. Please note that these are still from the first draft of the manuscript, so there will be errors and the chapters as they appear in your books may be differently worded or organized. I hope you enjoy them.

      Lastly, for those of you participating in the t-shirt giveaway, there’s a short survey here about the color/ink options.

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        The Punch Escrow
        It’s the year 2147: a time of enduring peace on Earth. The Last War ended half a century ago. We can cure most ills, the air is pure, and teleportation is how we get around. Sounds great, right? So why does everyone suddenly want to kill Joel Byram?
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        Craig A. Munro liked the forum thread, How I got to 250 orders in 10 days
        So I’ve gotten a ton of messages about how I got The Punch Escrow to "Quill" in 10 days. Hopefully this is useful to some of you. I think it basically boils down to: Treat it like a job. It’s your job to get your book sold. If you believe in what you’ve got, if you think you know the audience you wrote it for will love it, then invest your time, energy, and money in your project.

        1. Get lucky. Luck is something you need to succeed. Luck is something you can actually control. If you don’t believe me, do the research. Having a lucky attitude makes a huge difference. 

        2. Move quickly! I learned this through a couple decades in marketing. When it comes to contests, creating a distance between you and anyone behind you pays back huge dividends. Once you’ve established yourself as the frontrunner, you gain the benefit of being perceived as the favored incumbent. It pays to burn through all of your promotional energy early. If you manage to grasp first place, trust me, you will find a second wind. If you don’t, then you’ll have a pretty good perspective of your likelihood of winning and you can make the call on how much energy to reinvest based on that analysis.

        3. I steadfastly followed the advice given by previous Inkshares contests winners. I hustled really really hard and harassed everyone I knew through multiple channels: Texts, twitter, FB, WhatsApp, Snapchat, even LinkedIn. I would say personal contacts accounted for over 50% of the pre-ordered books. I injected a sense of urgency by explaining the contest, the timeline, and the ask: "I’m in a contest to publish my first book. If sci fi is your thing, you’re going to love it. Especially if you like hard sci fi, like The Martian. I need to get 250 pre-orders to get it published. Please click here to pre-order it."

        4. Engage engage engage!  Every single time someone bought my book I acknowledge and thank them. It makes them feel good and it encourages them to engage back with you and help promote the project. They’re part of the team now.

        5. Get to know your fellow authors. Inkshares is an AMAZING community of readers and authors. I have yet to have a negative interaction with anyone here. I’ve joined three Syndicates and have interacted with countless authors. Everyone here has something valuable to pass on to you. It’s worth listening.

        6. Promote and Invest! Remember when I said treat your book like your job? Well, you should also treat is like an investment. There’s a flywheel effect when people see you investing in your own work. It makes them feel like you really believe in it. I’ve been creating a ton of world-building content, videos, as well as taking advantage of every interview opportunity, promoted tweets, Facebook boosts, and such. If publishing this book is your dream, invest in making your dream come true. 

        So, these are the six steps I followed. Hopefully it’s useful to you. If you have more specific questions about those or the book itself, I’m at your service.


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