Here’s the first chapter of my new novel

As I mentioned, the book is called Where All the Ladders Start.  Those of you who have read its predecessors, Dover Beach and The Distance Beacons, will notice that I use a standard private-eye opening in all of them.  Except, of course, life is different in this fictional universe.

The remaining 35 or so chapters are coming soon to your local ebook store . . .

***********

I got off my bike and stared at the guy in the brown robe.  The guy in the brown robe stared at me.  He was sitting at the front of a cart piled high with apples, pumpkins, squash, and other fall produce; half a dozen dead turkeys hung from hooks at the back of the cart.    He was big and broad and scary, with small black eyes, long stringy hair, and a scraggly beard that was interrupted by a deep scar on his left cheek.

“Hiya,” I said, trying to break the ice.

He stared at me for a second, and then his eyes moved to the horse, who ignored him.

“Looking for me?” I asked.  “Walter Sands?  Got a bit of a late start today.  Sorry if I kept you waiting.”

The guy didn’t respond.  I hadn’t really expected him to be looking for me.  But Lower Washington Street was an odd place to park a cart filled with food.

“The Food Market is a few blocks over,” I tried.  “They’ll love your stuff.”

Nothing.

“Well, have a nice day.”

He didn’t look like he was interested in nice days.  Fine.  The world was filled with strange people, and he was just one more of them.  I walked around the cart and entered the building that housed my spacious, well-appointed office.

Okay, those adjectives aren’t entirely accurate, but the place fits my needs, which mainly consist of a stove to keep me warm and shelves to hold the books I read to pass the time while I wait for clients to show up.  Also, a desk and a couple of chairs in case a client actually does show up.  Not that this had been happening much lately.  Or, well, ever.

I carried my bike inside and walked upstairs.

From the hallway, I noticed that the door to my office was open.  I always close the door to my office when I leave at night.  Of course, the door doesn’t lock, but that doesn’t really matter.  Nothing worth stealing in my office.

I took out my gun.  I wasn’t especially worried, but it pays to be careful.  “Please don’t do anything stupid,” I announced, and then I went inside.

And there, sitting by my desk, was the most beautiful woman in the world.  She was wearing a powder-blue robe, and she was staring at me.

“Mr. Sands,” she said calmly, ignoring the gun.  “Do you remember me?”

It was impossible to forget her.  “Of course,” I said.  “Sister Marva.  How are you?  And please, call me Walter.”  We had met during one of the many disastrous episodes in my previous case.  She was a disciple in the Church of the New Beginning up in Concord.  Long black hair, creamy white skin, deep blue eyes.  I found it hard to break my gaze away from those eyes.

I sat down behind my desk, and that’s when I noticed that she was pregnant.  Well, that was interesting.  Beautiful pregnant woman shows up in the private eye’s office, needing his help.  That’s the way it’s supposed to happen.

“So, um, what can I do for you, Sister?  The last time we met—”

“You almost killed Brother Flynn,” she reminded me.

“Yes.  I’m very sorry about that.”  Flynn Dobler was the leader of Sister Marva’s Church.  A very smart, charismatic fellow.  I snuck into the Church in the middle of the night and pointed a gun at him while he lay in bed.  I remembered Marva coming in and leaping on top of him, desperate to protect her master from the intruder.  All because of a really stupid theory I’d come up with about a kidnapping I was investigating.  This had not been my finest moment as a private eye.

“It’s all right,” she said with a sympathetic smile.  “Everyone makes mistakes.  But now we need your help.”

“We?  The Church?”

She nodded.

“Why?”

“Brother Flynn has disappeared,” she said, and the smile faded, and her beautiful blue eyes filled with tears.

“Disappeared?” I repeated.  “How?  When?”

“A week ago.  He was there one night in his room, and then—in the morning—he was gone.”  The tears started falling down her cheeks.

This was the way it always happened in the novels I’d read.  And now it was happening to me.  But this didn’t feel like a novel—this was a real human being, shedding real tears.  I wanted to comfort her, but I also needed to do my job.

“I’m sorry to hear that,” I said.  “Was there a note?  Were there witnesses?”

She shook her head.  She wiped her cheeks with the sleeve of her robe.  I wished I had a handkerchief to offer her.  In my novels, the private eye always had a handkerchief.

“You’ve checked around the farm, I suppose?  There are plenty of wild animals, especially once you get outside the city.  Wolves.  Wildcats.  Feral dogs.  Probably some crazies, too.”

“Yes, of course.  We’ve looked everywhere.”

“Well, um, any theories?  Do you suspect foul play?”

Sister Marva lowered her eyes.  “Brother Joseph does,” she murmured.

“Who’s he?”

“Well, he’s the disciple—who, who runs things.  Brother Flynn’s second-in-command, I suppose.”

“Who does he suspect?”

“You should ask Brother Joseph, I think.  He asked me to come here and talk to you.  Because I go to the Food Market every day, with Brother Reggie.  He’d like you to come up to Concord and investigate.”

Brother Reggie was presumably the giant in the cart.  “You said Brother Joseph suspected foul play,” I said.  “What do you suspect, Sister Marva?”

She blushed.  “I think that perhaps God took him from us.”

I struggled to figure out what she meant.  “You mean, like, he died of natural causes?”

She shook her head.  “I mean—God brought him up to heaven.  While he was still alive.  Because He loved Brother Flynn so much.”

“Why do you think that?”

“Because Sister Lucy saw it happen.”

“Sister Lucy saw Brother Flynn get taken up to heaven,” I said, making sure I had this straight.

“Yes.  You should talk to her too, I think.”

“I think you’re right.”  Maybe a more experienced private eye would have decided right there that this case wasn’t going to be worth the trouble.  But I’m not very experienced.  And, frankly, I had nothing better to do.  I decided to change the subject.  “By the way, congratulations on your pregnancy, Sister Marva.”

She smiled and inclined her head.  “It’s a blessing.”  Her smile made you happy to be alive.

“Do you mind my asking: is Brother Flynn the father?”

Her face clouded and she looked down at her belly.  “I don’t think—I don’t think that has anything to do with Brother Flynn’s disappearance, Walter.” she replied.  And then she fell silent.

OK, one more mystery.  I considered.  My friend and occasional employer Bobby Gallagher had a van, but it was out of commission while his driver/mechanic Mickey tried to scrounge or repair or manufacture a gasket or a flange or a defibrillator or some-such item; I don’t know much about vans.  “I’ll take the case,” I said.    “But if you want me to go up there today, I’m afraid I don’t have—”

“You can ride with us in our cart,” Marva suggested.  “We return to the Church after we finish selling our food.  We should be at the Market now, actually.  I’m sure Brother Reggie is tired of waiting.”

I considered some more.  “That means I’d have to stay the night at the Church,” I pointed out.  “I need to be back in Boston tomorrow.”

“We come to the Food Market every day.  You can come back with us in the morning.”

That was that, then.  I had a case.  “All right,” I said.  “I get two new dollars a day.  Ten dollars in advance.”

Sister Marva gave me another smile.  She looked relieved and grateful.  “That would be wonderful.  But would you prefer to be paid in food instead?”

That wasn’t a bad idea.  Inflation was getting to be a problem.  Who knew what the money would buy when I got around to spending it?  “Food would be fine,” I replied.

We went back down to the street, where Brother Reggie did not in fact seem to be tired of waiting.  It wasn’t clear that he had even moved since the last time I set eyes on him.  But his face lit up when he saw Sister Marva, like a dog greeting his master.  Marva and I agreed to meet at the Food Market later.  I filled a bag with produce from the cart and grabbed one of the turkeys.  Looked like ten dollars’ worth to me, and Marva didn’t haggle.  Then Brother Reggie helped her up onto the cart, and they headed off.

I watched them go.  The Church of the New Beginning.  Leave the past behind, it preached.  Start fresh—no technology, no government, none of the baggage that still weighed so many of us down.  Look at where all that stuff had led us.  Reasonable enough, I supposed.  The past had certainly ended up badly.

But now, strangely, the Church had a missing-person case on its hands, and it had decided to call on that useless relic of the past, a private eye.  Well, I had already seen some strange things in my brief career; no reason for this case to be any different.

I brought my bike out of the building and arranged the sack of food over the handlebars; I held onto the turkey.  Then I pedaled home to the townhouse in Louisburg Square where I lived with Gwen, the most wonderful woman in this godforsaken world, and Stretch, the most wonderful dwarf in the world.  Both of them were at work—Gwen at the Boston Globe and Stretch in the governor’s office.  I put the turkey in the icebox and the produce on the kitchen table, and I wrote them a brief note:

 

Off on a case!  Won’t be back today, but I will be back tomorrow.
Enjoy the food.

–Walter

 

There, that would intrigue them.  I left the note beside the produce, and I headed off to the Food Market, munching one of Marva’s apples.

Copywriting for dummies: tooting my own horn

One of the challenges of being an independent author is that you’re responsible for everything associated with publishing your book, including editing, cover design, and marketing.

I haven’t outsourced writing the marketing material for my recent novels.  Hey, I’m a writer!  I can do that!  But it ain’t easy.  Your job is to write a couple hundred compelling words explaining why the world should be thrilled to read your book.  Where to begin?

Anyway, here’s my first attempt at marketing copy for Where All the Ladders Start.  Does this make you want to part with three or four of your hard-earned dollars?

What I wanted to say was this:

The novel is about religion and family, not necessarily in that order.  It involves two separate cases, which causes it to be about a third longer than the first two novels in the Last P.I. series.  In the course of the novel, our protagonist reads the following books:

  • A Tale of Two Cities
  • Middlemarch
  • Great Expectations
  • An unnamed Harry Bosch novel
  • Selections from the collected poems of William Butler Yeats

His friend Doctor J, who has very different tastes in literature, reads the following books:

  • Civilization and Its Discontents
  • A Genealogy of Morals
  • The Origins of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind

And the following things happen to our hero:

  • He is whacked on the head with a rock
  • He fights off a pack of feral humans in the wilds of Somerville
  • He is arrested for murder
  • He is shot at twice
  • He skins his knee
  • He rips his new pants climbing a fence
  • He is lectured to by several people about the meaning of history and the danger of making bad career choices
  • Against his better judgment, he travels to New York City

But most of that didn’t make it into the copy.

Maybe I should at least try to say something about Middlemarch?

“Shared Notes & Highlights” for Dover Beach

How come I never noticed Amazon’s “Shared Notes & Highlights” section before? According to Amazon, these are “the thoughts and passages that Kindle readers have shared while reading this book.”

Anyway, here are the shared notes and highlights for my novel Dover BeachFeel free to use them on Christmas cards, print them on t-shirts, etc.

“Solipsistic,” I suggested. “As if he were the only person who really existed.”

And:

“I know I’m dying,” he said, “but you’re dying, too, everyone is dying. All that matters is what you do before you take that last breath.”

And:

“Rituals are what bind us together. They shelter us from the terror of loneliness and death. They give life meaning and shape.”

I know I know, these don’t seem like quotes from a private-eye novel.  But I’m pretty sure they work in context. And Dover Beach is not really a standard-issue private-eye novel.

“Replica” is now free in England and Canada!

I seem to have some readers there.

In England, it’s #7 among technothrillers on Amazon.

In Canada, it’s #8.

You still have to pay for it in Australia, alas.

Here’s a nice short review that just appeared on Barnes & Noble:

What a terrific book!  Richard Bowker is one of my new favorite authors!

 

“Replica” is now free on Kindle!

Not wanting to be left behind, Amazon has now made Replica free for the Kindle.

It is my considered opinion that people like free stuff.  Replica is currently #236 among all free ebooks on Amazon.  It is #4 among Technothrillers, which is how my publisher classifies the novel, although I’d tend to call it a science fiction thriller.  Anyway, grab your copy now before they run out, and please write a customer review when you’ve read the thing.

 

“Replica” is now free on Barnes & Noble!

For a limited time, we’re making my novel Replica available for the low low price of free. It’s currently free on Barnes & Noble, and Amazon will presumably follow suit when it gets wind of what’s afoot.

Here’s what Publishers Weekly had to say about Replica:

“While maintaining a highly readable pulp-fiction style, Bowker takes the narrative through a gripping array of turnabouts, doublecrosses and twists.  Readers will be guessing the story’s outcome until the very end.”

As usual, I would be forever grateful if you left a customer review after downloading and reading the book.  Reviews matter.

Life is stupider than fiction: robot politician edition

A friend sent me a link to this article, noting that “someone has been reading your book.”

“The election for U.S. House for Oklahoma’s 3rd District will be contested by the Candidate, Timothy Ray Murray,” Murray wrote in a press release posted on his campaign website. “I will be stating that his votes are switched with Rep. Lucas votes, because it is widely known Rep. Frank D. Lucas is no longer alive and has been displayed by a look alike.”

On the website, Murray claims that Lucas and “a few other Oklahoma and other States’ Congressional Members,” were executed “on or about” Jan. 11, 2011 in southern Ukraine.

“On television they were depicted as being executed by the hanging about the neck until death on a white stage and in front of witnesses,” the website claims. “Other now current Members of Congress have shared those facts on television also. We know that it is possible to use look alike artificial or manmade replacements, however Rep. Lucas was not eligible to serve as a Congressional Member after that time.”

The book in question is my novel Replica, whose basic plot is evident from its cover:

Replica cover

Replica was by far the most successful of my novels when it was first published. So far it hasn’t gotten much love as an e-book. Is it the cover? The price? It’s a pretty good book!  Here’s what Publisher’s Weekly said when it came out:

While maintaining a highly readable pulp-fiction style, Bowker takes the narrative through a gripping array of turnabouts, doublecrosses and twists.  Readers will be guessing the story’s outcome until the very end.

And here’s a customer review:

I’m not sure exactly what I expected when I bought this book, but I didn’t expect it to explore terroristic politics, development of artificial intelligence, and some of the challenges of AI/human relationships … all without becoming bogged down in the esoteric nature of the technologies involved.

It starts out more or less the way I thought it would, with various entities coming together to make it possible (and plausible) to substitute the President with an android. Almost everything after that, though, was a surprise … with plenty of twists and turns and misdirections and characters developing in ways you probably won’t expect.

This is a good read, and amazingly so given how long since its original publication. It’s not too often that near-future books involving technology or politics (and especially a combination of the two) are written such that they don’t become badly dated in a decade. This one is still fresh, a fun read.

The BookBub promotion for “Dover Beach”: a preliminary post-mortem

The BookBub promotion for Dover Beach expired yesterday, I think.  I just have the Amazon numbers at this point.  I’ve sold about 600 copies there, plus a bunch of copies of its very fine sequel, The Distance Beacons.  That doesn’t quite give me a profit, but the returns from Barnes & Noble and lesser markets probably will.  At Barnes & Noble, Dover Beach peaked in the 100’s in sales rank and has now dropped back to about #1100; on Kobo, it’s still in the top 100 for Science Fiction Adventure and at #188 overall for Science Fiction.

Regardless of whether I end up in the black for the investment, I’m going to consider this a success. Anyway, because this is my blog, I’m going to mention that Dover Beach is still available for $0.99, and while I’m at it, I’ll subject you to a customer reviewThis one is from B&N and is titled “Excellent story!”:

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. The writing style was easy to relate to and the characters had a realness to them that was very refreshing. I love books written about how a society survives after war and the author did a great job explaining the mood of the aftermath. I also appreciate that he didn’t have people being held as prisoners by some thrown together street gangs, that seems to be a plot that comes up way too frequently. It makes more sense that most people would go out on their own or team up with one or two other people. I will be buying more of his books.

BookBub results, one day in

I don’t have any sales figures, alas, for my BookBub promotion for Dover Beach.  But I do have some sales rankings.

Yesterday, before the promotion, Dover Beach was ranked 129,749 among books in the Kindle store.  (This isn’t actually too terrible, by my standards.  It may reflect the price reduction, which occurred a few days ago.)

Today, it’s ranked #470 in the Kindle store.  It peaked in the low 300’s, I think.  It’s currently #13 in the Science Fiction Action category, which puts it in the neighborhood of books by George R. R. Martin and Hugh Howey.  It’s even higher in a couple of Technothriller categories.  (This categorization is insane; don’t read Dover Beach if you’re lookiing for a technothriller.)

The book is ranked #135 on the Barnes & Noble site.

On Kobo, which I never visit, it’s ranked #15 in the Science Fiction category.

This seems promising!  What is also promising is that the book’s very fine sequel, The Distance Beacons, has also moved up from about #270,000 on the Kindle store to about #60,000 (on Barnes & Noble, it’s around #15,000).  The hope, obviously, is that people will gobble up Dover Beach, and then quickly move on to the sequel.  After that, they will be ready to move on to volume 3, which I’m close to finishing if I’d just quit blogging for a while.

Because this is my blog, I’ll take this opportunity to reprint one of the five-star reviews for The Distance Beacons:

The President is coming to town and Walter, the one and only private eye, isn’t given an opportunity to say, “No!, when the government requests his services after threats are made against the very distinguished official. From the beginning, nothing the government does makes sense (LOL) but Walter keeps chipping away at the case, in between repeatedly being beat up and thrown in jail. The closer he comes to solving this complicated case the worse things get for him. You will love this unusual story and get to spend more time with Walter’s menagerie of friends. You will also bellow out a few good laughs at poor Walter’s expense. I can’t wait for another book about this private eye of the future!

 

Dover Beach goes live on BookBub!

My novel Dover Beach is now featured on the BookBub website, and it’s in the email BookBub sent out to 400,000 science fiction readers.  The book is on sale for the ridiculously low price of $0.99.   Here’s where I discuss the economics of a BookBub promotion.  (If you want to buy the book, click the link on the BookBub page — they’ll get some revenue, and if they get enough click-through sales, this may help convince them to feature another one of my books.)

DOVER-BEACH-COVER1L

My publisher came up with this blurb for the book–there is presumably a word limit:

A Philip K. Dick Award finalist set in a harrowing world devastated by war: Believing himself a clone, Dr. Charles Winfield enlists the help of Wally Sands to expose a top-secret government project. But in his pursuit of answers, Wally uncovers truths about himself — and crosses paths with a killer…

This manages to get two or three things wrong, but whatever; I probably couldn’t have done any better.  Here’s a customer review, titled “A Different but Wonderful Private Eye Story”, that does a better job of capturing what the book is about:

Walter is a quirky private eye like none you’ve ever experienced! The poor fellow stumbles into one disaster after another, making you laugh, cringe, and pity the lovable, determined character. By the way, Walter is a survivor of the downfall of America so he’s familiar with overcoming challenges. As the story unfolds, tidbits are revealed toward understanding what happened. To assist Walter is an eclectic and interesting collection of friends who assist him along the way. They will become like friends to you also. This book has twists and turns, great wit and humor, and very colorful characters. I loved book so much that I ordered the next novel in the series (A Distance Beacon) right away. Great job!

This reviewer gets everything right, except the name of the sequel.  But it’s close!

By the way, there has never been a better time to get one of my books. Senator is also available for $0.99, and The Portal continues to be free.  Here’s a recent five-star review of The Portal, titled “A Lot of Heart”:

I thought at first this was going to be another YA gimmicky novel with kids complaining about their lives and using the device of dimension travel just to come up with random quirky things, but this book is much more than that. You really get to know and care about the characters, and things move along quite well and not predictably. The really surprising part is the life lessons learned by the characters – they really leave you with something more than just a fun little read. Glad I read it!