Ladder to the Red Star by Jael Wye
Once upon a ruined Earth 300 years in the future...
Jacques Tallinn, biotech smuggler and thief, is after the cure for a brain disorder he's suffered since childhood--a disorder inflicted by a powerful tyrant. To get the cure, Jacques will need to climb the space elevator to the new Zenith space station hovering above Earth and go undercover in the lab where it's produced.
Martian head tech Devi Chandra is immediately intrigued by her sexy new lab assistant. Though she insists on keeping things professional, she finds herself charmed by Jacques. Until he betrays her trust, kidnapping her and spiriting her off to Earth.
All Jacques needed to do was steal the biotech and get back home. But when things go wrong, he can't bring himself to leave Devi behind. Now she's injured and a simple caper has become an intergalactic cause, endangering his life and the lives of millions of others. But the hardest part? Winning back Devi's trust.
Science Fiction Ideas and Classic Fairy Tales
by Jael Wye
Arthur C. Clarke once said that when technology becomes advanced enough, it’s no different from magic. This is certainly the case in my new science fiction romance, Ladder to the Red Star, a retelling of Jack and the beanstalk set three hundred years in the future. The hero, Jacques, must climb a space elevator to a space station floating high above planet Earth to find his fortune, and his otherworldly bride.
Space elevators have a long and illustrious history in science fiction, not least because they have a basis in science fact. A cable stretching between Earth and an orbiting space station is theoretically possible to build using technologies that exist today. A few centuries from now, such structures might actually exist. Interestingly, space elevators are often called ‘beanstalks’, even in scientific articles. Many people over the years have seen the parallels between this stunning futuristic concept of the elevator and the fable of the beanstalk inherited from the deep past.
And the space elevator is one of many symmetries of magic and science in my book, though the laws of physics that govern Jacques’ world are the same as the laws that govern our world. My characters have to deal with realistic changes of gravity between Earth and space, they can’t ‘beam’ here and there, and they don’t have light sabers. But there is a ‘golden egg’ datasphere containing the most valuable medical technology in the Solar system, and a ‘magic bean’ identification device to gain access to the elevator. Each of these artifacts is compatible with real life technology, which gives their mythic resonance a solid anchor in reality. In three hundred years, magic beans and golden eggs just might be ordinary objects, taken for granted like cars are today.
But giving magical items scientific pedigrees isn’t the primary thing that helps a reader believe in the world of the book. Readers suspend their disbelief as long as the emotions and motivations of the characters are authentic, and nothing is more authentic than a fairy tale. It reveals our fears and desires distilled down to their most elemental form. What makes my hero and heroine Jacques and Devi believable isn’t just the realistic scifi gadgets they use, but their timeless human drama of courage and love in the face of ruthless power. This is why classic fairy tales are still with us today and will be in the future—because no matter what fantastical objects may appear in the narrative, when it comes to human nature, the tales are always true.
Author Bio
Jael Wye grew up on the American Great Plains, went to school in the Midwest, and now lives in beautiful New England with her family and her enormous collection of houseplants. For more of Jael’s unique blend of futurism and fairy tale, don’t miss her ongoing series Once Upon A Red World.
Purchase Links - Carina Press | Amazon
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteIt's my pleasure!
DeleteThanks for having me today!
ReplyDeleteBest,
Jael
Thanks for the wonderful guest post.
DeleteI picked up Ladder to the Red Star yesterday. I like sci-fi, but have never read a sci-fi romance novel. I am excited!
If you could travel in a time machine, would you go back to the past or into the future?
Hope that you had a great tour.
Hi Jael! I enjoyed your guest post. I look forward to reading the story of Jacques and Devi. I'd love to ride on a space elevator.
ReplyDeleteHave you read the article below? I am curious to know your thoughts.
"The Absolute Worst Trope In Science Fiction Romance Novels"
http://io9.com/the-absolute-worst-trope-in-science-fiction-romance-nov-1573572897
Hi Tallulah,
DeleteI did read your article! I think stories with dubious consent ought to be filed in scifi erotica rather than in scifi romance as a genre. Certainly scifi has always been a home for the more, shall we say, flamboyant erotica, and judging by the Amazon rankings, such books do a brisk trade. Not my thing, but you know, read and let read.
Yikes! Dubious consent is an interesting phrase.
DeleteI wonder. Do readers find dubious consent more acceptable when it is a male alien vs. a male human? Don't think that I have read any books with dubious consent.
Flamboyant, eh? I am going to have to look into scifi erotica more.