J. B. Rockwell
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News! SERENGETI Audio Book & (Eventual) Sequel

3/25/2016

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Since SERENGETI came out, I've been asked two questions over and over again:

Is there going to be a sequel?
Yes, if I have my way. :) I've written one, anyway, but it still needs some edits and my agent's stamp of approval before we start the whole publisher dance. I have faith in Little Book #2, though. It'll be out there someday. Until then, you'll just have to be patient.

​Will an audio book version be available?
Up until recently I answered that question with a shrug and an apologetic 'dunno'. But then Tantor Audio came along and snapped SERENGETI up. :) Now I can proudly say that an SERENGETI audio book is coming, with voice narration by the multi-talented Elizabeth Wiley.

The official release date is 26 April 2016, but you can pre-order it now on Amazon or the Tantor website if you're impatient or forgetful. 
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I'm Famous! Sort of...

3/15/2016

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OK, famous might be a bit of a stretch. But it's been a good week for me, and I figured I'd share some of the goings on.

First up is an interview with Author's Crossing, where you get some tidbits about me, and some tidbits about my SERENGETI:
I just finished J.B. Rockwell’s Serengeti, and a day later I am still in awe and blown away.  We planned an interview and this is the time to do it! You’ll learn a little about Serengeti and then learn more about her as an author.  Sit back and enjoy and DEFINITELY go BUY Serengeti!
Read the rest of the Author's Crossing interview

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Next, I've got a couple of book blogger reviews. I'm honestly amazed by the overwhelmingly positive response to SERENGETI and I'm sincerely grateful to these bloggers for taking the time to read my little book and help get the word out to the universe.

This one from Birds of a Feather, Flock Together really blew me away...

Since you all hang on each and every word I say, you surely remember when I said that I wanted something better than the standard six or seven, something outstanding.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Serengeti.

Because it is outstanding. The main character is not a human, or alien, but the ship itself. If that doesn't send you scrambling to buy it, I don't know what to tell you. I suppose I would say that the execution is essentially flawless, because while the main character is a spaceship is the surest way to get my money, it is not a terribly easy thing to pull off.
Read the rest of the Nerds of a Feather, Flock Together review
And then there's this one from SF Book Portal. Jim Chapman's a a great guy and military veteran and he likes his military sci-fi. When I first read his review I wasn't sure if he liked SERENGETI or not. But he gave me five stars and we had a back and further off-line where he just raved about it. I suspect he's a bit mad at me for bringing an old soldier close to tears.
A real emotional book. Too much humanity created in a spaceship or warship for it's own good. If you haven't guessed, Serengeti is a spaceship/warship. She his part of a large armada trying to find the bad guys. At first she's on her own and we get to know some of her crew of over three hundred man and women. 
Now understand, Serengeti isn't like the old Star Trek computer.  Serengeti, the AI is in control of this ship. Other AIs are in control of ships in the armada and the armada command ship is called Brutus, a big hulking warship and AI.
Read the rest of the SF Book Portal review
Of course, you can find a whole bunch of other reviews over at Amazon, and I'll be posting news here as it hits the (virtual) streets.
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FRANKENSTEIN and SERENGETI: Monster and Machine

3/8/2016

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OK, so you’re probably looking at the title of this post and scratching your head. How can a sci-fi story about a wrecked AI warship possibly have anything in common with one of the most famous horror stories of all time?

Good question. I didn’t get it at first, either. But a passing comment from a reader about the similarities between SERENGETI and Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN got me thinking. A little reading and a little research, and I started seeing the similarities, too.
​

Keep reading. I’ll step you through my thought process. There’s a comment box at the end where you can let me know what you think…

Disclaimer: I am in no way comparing myself, my writing, or the quality of my work to Mary Shelley. I’m proud of my little book, but not arrogant. Also, I’ve tried to keep this as spoiler free as possible, but if you haven’t read SERENGETI yet, proceed with caution!

The Ghost in the Machine

Serengeti drifted in darkness…Time had no meaning in that in-between space…but she never stopped being Serengeti. Never lost that sense of being Valkyrie and not just some broken down ship.
​— Excerpt from SERENGETI
So, let’s start with the obvious observation: Serengeti  and Frankenstein’s monster are both AI.

​Boom! Didn’t see that coming, now, did you?
​
Granted, Franky’s creepiness is organic—a jump-started corpse brain, stuffed into a stitched-together vessel, made of dead body parts—not crystal matrix and composite metal like Serengeti. Organic or not, it’s still artificial. A dead thing reanimated, given life through a rather…vague and ambiguous process, involving both alchemy and chemistry. 
I began the creation of a human being…for the sole purpose of infusing life into an inanimate body…but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart…I beheld the wretch--the miserable monster whom I had created…the demoniacal corpse to which I had so miserably given life…
​— ​Excerpt from FRANKENSTEIN
“Wretch.” “Monster.” “Demoniacal corpse.” Dr. Frankenstein set out to create a human being but recoils in horror at the ‘thing’ that results from his experiments. Despite its intelligence, its eloquence, its attempts to fit in, humanity never accepts Frankenstein’s reanimated offspring as anything more than a monster: an ‘it,’ a ‘thing.’
​
Fast forward several hundred years to Serengeti’s timeline and nothing’s changed. Human engineers create super-powered brains and load them into heavily armed warship chassis. And yet they still view them as inferior: creations, not living beings. 
AI—artificial intelligence, all mind, no soul. The designers insisted power, function didn’t equate to life. But Serengeti disagreed. I think. I eat. I touch and see. Tell me I’m not alive. Tell me just because I’m AI I don’t have a soul.

Not life as biology defined it maybe, but AI life was every bit as pure and true as the frozen lives sleeping inside Cryo. — ​Excerpt from SERENGETI
​Questions of sentience and being arise. Can an artificial intelligence ever truly be alive? Can it have a soul, an identity? Can AI—no matter how powerful or intelligent—ever truly think, and feel, and experience the world like their human creators? Or is it all just emulation? 
...humans still didn’t quite trust AIs. Funny, considering human engineers designed every last one of them, making them stronger, more capable with each generation. Humans built AIs and wrapped them inside armored shells they launched into the stars, but they still wanted human crews on board those space-faring ships. Human minds and human judgment as a counter—or perhaps a foil—to ship’s intelligence. — Excerpt from SERENGETI
It’s interesting, seeing readers make these types of connections; spotting symbolism and parallelism in other works that aren’t obvious influences. That’s the cool thing about books: they take on a life of their own once readers get involved.
​
This brings me to the next part of this discussion: a more…intimate analysis. This is a more compelling consideration of SERENGETI in context with FRANKENSTEIN. 

The Dreaming Mothers

…my dreams were all my own; I accounted for them to nobody; they were my refuge when annoyed—my dearest pleasure when free. — Excerpt from Mary Shelley’s Introduction to 1831 edition of FRANKENSTEIN​
Many people know that Mary Shelley wrote FRANKENSTEIN after Lord Byron threw down a challenge to write a ghost story. And that, among its many themes and motifs, FRANKENSTEIN is commonly understood as a fable of masculine reproduction. What is not as well-known, is that Mary Shelley wrote FRANKENSTEIN while pregnant herself, having already suffered a miscarriage, resulting in the death of her first child.

So, Mary Shelley wrote a ghost story about a reanimated corpse—OK, technically several corpses, since Victor Frankenstein used parts harvested from multiple dead bodies to create his creature—while pregnant and mourning the loss of a child.
​
That’s seriously creepy. So creepy, in fact, that it haunted her dreams. 
​19 March 1815 Dream that my little baby came to life again—that it had only been cold & that we rubbed it before the fire & it lived.—Excerpt from Mary Shelley’s Journal 1814-1844 vol. 2
So, right about now you’re wondering what any of this has to do with a sentient AI warship. Vessels can’t get pregnant, after all.

True. But consider Serengeti's relationship with her crew: The loyal little robots fixing her as best they can, harvesting parts from their own bodies--another ironic nod to Frankenstein's monster--to keep Serengeti alive; Henricksen, Finlay, and the other humans depending on her to protect them. Consider that this advanced artificial intelligence learns to dream, and feel, and experience emotions develops a fondness for the fragile human life forms inside her. This is a protectiveness every bit as real as that of any biological mother. 
Cryo hadn’t gone anywhere, it was right here where they’d left it, squatting inside her decimated innards like some oversized egg, waiting patiently to be born.--Excerpt from SERENGETI​
​An aborted launch, trapping an egg-like “Cryo” inside Serengeti, wrapped around her cryogenically frozen crew. The crew protected inside her, sleeping while Serengeti dreams.
She tried to grab hold of them but the dream trickled away from her, robbing her of her crew, taking the blood and smoke, the broken robots and burnt corpses with it, leaving Serengeti alone once more.
​--Excerpt from SERENGETI
​Two mothers, dreaming in reverse. Both carrying life in their bellies; both dreaming of death, before finally letting go; taking solace in the memories that remain.
And now, once again, I bid my hideous progeny go forth and prosper, I have an affection for it, for it was the offspring of happy days.--Excerpt from Mary Shelley’s Introduction to 1831 edition of FRANKENSTEIN
That’s how they came to Cryo—laughing, not crying, not trundling in silence like the sad little robots that left Engineering. And that’s how Serengeti wanted it, if this was truly to be the end. That their last memories be joyous ones before they slipped into the dark.--Excerpt from SERENGETI
So, there you have it; AI and motherhood—two themes tying SERENGETI and FRANKENSTEIN together.. I find it fascinating—amazing, actually, that a horror story about a stitched-together, human-shaped monstrosity, could have anything in common with my sleek-sided, sentient AI warship. And flattering that someone would pick up my little book and make connections to a masterpiece like FRANKENSTEIN.
​

Question is: What do you think? Drop me a comment. I’m really interested to hear what you have to say… 
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SERENGETI Audio Book Coming Soon!

3/5/2016

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Good news, everyone! Several people have asked me about the possibility of an audio book version of Serengeti. In fact, this one question has plagued me ever since the book came out a month ago. Until now, the only answer I could give was a shame-faced shrug and a mumbled, 'Dunno.'  Well, I'm happy to report that I can now say 'Yes-yes-yes!' an audio book version of Serengeti is imminent! And it's all thanks to my multi-talented agent Mark Gottlieb and the  lovely people at Tantor Media. 
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I'm really looking forward to learning more about how this side of the book business works. I've already had a chance to listen to samples of some of the audio narrators Tantor is considering--very exciting!--and I can tell you they have a lot of talented people to choose from. Check back here for a release date--I'll be posting that as soon Serengeti's audio book release is scheduled.
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Reddit Round-Up!

3/2/2016

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So, I had the opportunity to do an Author Spotlight over on Reddit (see the /r/books sub-reddit) last Sunday. If you missed it, you can see the full thread of Q&A here. In fact, I’ve been keeping tabs on it and answering additional questions as they trickle in.
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    J.B. Rockwell
    J.B. Rockwell grew up reading fairy tales, folklore and mythology, as well as anything and everything about ancient cultures and their history, and never lost her taste for any of it.  She currently lives in West Virginia with her husband and four (yes, four) cats, all of whom provide inspiration for her stories, whether they know it or not.
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