Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

Transilience is rounding the corner for the homestretch.

If you visit its site on Unbound, you might think to yourself, "He’ll never reach his goal." I say in the politest of terms, you’re wrong to think that. It will happen. And it will super happen with your help. I can sweeten the pot.

Between now and July 22, you can enter the promo code july2016 and save 5 pounds on your order. That means for as little as five pounds (~$6.50) you can get an eCopy of Transilience and your name listed amongst a distinguished few. Want to be a Super Patron, you can be so at the crazy price of about 13 bucks. Think how much the Medici family had to spend to garner such a distinction!

Also, once Transilience hits 25% funding, I’m giving away a signed copy of Noir (giant image to follow below). I’ll ship it at no extra cost anywhere on the planet.

Lastly, more than ever, Transilience matters. It is a story about the lengths people will go to promote an ideology of intolerance. It is a story about how little life can matter when stock options are on the table. It’s a story about choices and consequences.

Here’s the link to Transilience’s site: https://unbound.co.uk/books/transilience

If you are worried about allegiances, don’t be. Inkshares very own Jeremy Thomas ordered a copy. In fact, he’s been one of the earliest supporters of the novel. He’s pretty awesome.

Now, as promised, an image of my wife and I playing Noir last night (Friday). She won the best of three. The beer is of my own creation. A Rye IPA featuring a fairly new English hop variety: Boadicea.


Cheers!
Kev
like

People who have liked this reader update

    Matt Dho followed Kevin Bragg
    Kevin Bragg
    Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
    Follow
    Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

    As of today, my novel, Transilience, has only 4 weeks left in its funding campaign. 

    I need a lot of help to make this a reality. 

    So please help. 

    Order a copy today. 

     Something happened on Friday that made one of the themes in Transilience become very relevant. Britain voted to leave the EU. 

    I’ve covered themes in Transilience before; however, I’d like to do it again. I promise these themes will not be couched in the same terms (or all of them anyway) as the last time. It might be worth reading this post - even if you have read every other Update I’ve posted. 

    Science Fiction has a strong tradition of being a platform for social commentary. This is no secret. I bring it up because Transilience fits within that tradition and it’s important that we all know that factoid.

    There are two plots, covering two themes in Transilience. 

    The themes: Greed and Idealism. 

     Greed is the B Plot. 

    Social commentary on greed is nothing new. 

    Greed, that old chestnut! 

    However, it doesn’t mean it isn’t any less relevant. The divide between rich and poor is growing exponentially each year. The quest for higher profit margins - and satisfied stockowners - continues to impact the world around us. The environment is compromised. Ecosystems decimated. Towns ruined. All because something can be made cheaper elsewhere. Or the price is too high to not destroy our planet. Or not replace city services when they are killing the citizenry. 

    More than ever, the cost of greed needs to be a theme explored through fiction and non-fiction alike. 

    Idealism is the A Plot. The main story. The one that will prove the most difficult for the protagonist.

    The idealism of which I speak is the dialogue of racism. Anti-immigration. The belief that a country is better off without an influx of men, women and children looking to make a start somewhere else.

    In Transilience, horrible acts of terrorism happen because some believe the Western world is better off without these people who want to make a better life somewhere else. Somewhere safe. Free from war. Free from tyranny.

    "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free..."

    On Friday the UK voted to leave the EU. You can say it was about this or it was about that. However, UKIP made immigration the defining issue and I agree with the BBC on this one.  

    In the US, the presumptive nominee for the GOP’s bid for the presidency has thus far only one clearly defined platform in his candidacy: Exclusion. Build a wall and start deporting whoever you don’t happen to like at the time.

    At the heart of these issues - and the same one that features in Transilience - is the idea of a loss of national and cultural identity. What does that even mean?

    For a country (England) which has as many regional traditions as it does dialects, can you claim a national identity? Is language? Is it Sunday roast? Is it being white?

    For a country with 50 different states, each with a history that predates their joining the Union and their history once them became a state. 50 little countries really with their own customs. Their own cultural traditions that separate them from the 49 other states in the Union. Here’s the kicker. Most of those traditions were brought to the US from elsewhere. That’s right. By immigrants. Men, women and children looking for a land of opportunity. 

    "Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

    How can a country so large and so varied claim a national identity or culture? Is it language? Is it baseball? Is it being white?

    Over these past few weeks, it has felt like characters from my novel have quite literally walked off the pages and into reality. I find it all rather unsettling.

    The connection between the A and the B Plot are the protagonist, Daniel Helmqvist. A Private Investigator in Mars’s only city, New London. In the novel he must evaluate his moral compass against the commitments he makes to his clients. Having done that, he must then face the consequences of those decisions (for good and ill) and try to make a living.

    What happens, I will leave safely tucked away in the pages of the novel.

    I am very sad to say that if you want to find out, you have to buy the book. Thanks for reading. Again, time is running out on the campaign.

    Your support will be greatly appreciated and you will be immortalized in print for your kindness. Here’s the link: https://unbound.co.uk/books/transilience

    Cheers,

    Kevin 

    like · liked by Jason and 1 other

    People who have liked this reader update

      Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

      Through an incredible act of generosity by my in-laws, Transilience has surpassed 20% on Unbound.

      I’m not setting any crowd-funding records, that’s for certain. But I believe support will increase as the percentage numbers do. I’m excited. And very optimistic.

      At 25%,  I am giving away a copy of Level 99 Games’s brilliant deduction card game, Noir. It’s the Black Box edition and I’ll sign it with a gold marker pen, which might devalue the game but it’s a risk we should all be willing to take.

      So please, order a copy today.

      Inkshares is replete with first-time authors and it times it feels a bit like a Dickens story. We beg and we plead for support. We put our futures in the hands of others and hope for the best. And the recipient of these entreaties must shoulder through these lines of digital beggars to surf the net undisturbed.

      In all of this, I wonder if the fact that a good story is the end result. That we loose sight of that fact. That one donation. One preorder. One simple transaction. One simple click of the "Order" button brings to life a story. Validates hundreds of hours of work. Reserves a copy of that effort for you, the buyer.

      ...charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence, were, all, my business.


      Again, here’s the link to Transilience’s Unbound campaign. 

      https://unbound.co.uk/books/transilience

      Appreciate is too small a word to describe my reaction to an order. Nevertheless, it is a word that I will shout from the rooftops and hope to do it justice.

      Cheers,
      Kevin
      like · liked by Thomas

      People who have liked this reader update

        Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

        In all the power of the Dunning-Kruger effect, I will assume I have not overstayed my welcome on Inkshares. That despite taking my novel elsewhere to be crowd-funded, you all want to know what’s happening in my tiny world.

        I am certain you do...

        I have good news!

        At this very moment, the ultimate answer to the universe is: Order a copy of Transilience today. https://unbound.co.uk/books/transilience

        Fun fact: I originally had Order a copy of Transilience today in quotes but I changed it to italics because it looked sexier.

        The number of days left in Transilience’s campaign: 42.

        See where I’m going with this??

        If it helps, I’m not sure I do. This seemed funnier in my head.

        Seriously though, please take a look at the site. Many of you support Transilience during its run on Inkshares. Some of you said very flattering things about it. Some of you have supported it on Unbound, and I am eternally grateful. I’m hoping for the more of the same...even if its on another site.

        It’s a bit like when a friend transfers schools because a parent got a new job in a different city. You don’t have to stop being friends with them. Maybe you get to hang out on the weekends. Go see a show. Hang out at the mall. The situation has changed, a little, that’s all.

        Oh! And! And! I am giving away a painting. It’s a painting I did on a noir theme. It’s original and it’s unique (in that it’s the only one I’ve painted like it).

        And!! Regardless of your contribution level, you get your name placed lovingly in my novel. For a mere 10 pounds (~15 bucks) you receive an eBook with your name immortalized within its pages.

        (Deep breath) And!! You get to do an incredibly noble thing for a guy trying to be a writer.

        One more time. The link: https://unbound.co.uk/books/transilience

        Oh! I also wrote a piece on why I write. You can find it on my blog. A place where I am the Hobo King and a wooden nickel will buy you a tin cup and an endless supply of gin.

        https://braggkevin.wordpress.com/2016/06/07/why-i-write/

        Cheers!

        Kev

        like · liked by Michael and 1 other

        People who have liked this reader update

          Scott Carss followed Kevin Bragg
          Kevin Bragg
          Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
          Follow
          Matthew Poat followed Kevin Bragg
          Kevin Bragg
          Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
          Follow
          Jeremy R. Strong followed Kevin Bragg
          Kevin Bragg
          Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
          Follow
          Dann Matias followed Kevin Bragg
          Kevin Bragg
          Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
          Follow
          Terrene A. Davenport followed Kevin Bragg
          Kevin Bragg
          Reader, gamer, writer, brewer.
          Follow
          More items