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If John Lennon Had Lived

Titan Frey Author Interview

Imagine follows a handyman living in New York City in 1980 who witnesses the murder of John Lennon before being engulfed in an orange ball of light and time-traveling to the year 2023. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The inspiration came from two sources. First, I love Stephen King’s novel 11/22/63 and always wanted to write something similar to it. My second inspiration is my father, who is a huge Beatles/Lennon fan, so this led to my story Imagine being written.

Joe struggles with the changes in society from his time travel and the loss of everything he knew and loved. What things do you find interesting about the human condition that makes for great fiction?

I find the way people can adapt to any situation fascinating. People always think they can’t handle a situation until they have no choice. It shows the power of being human.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

I wanted to explore, of course, what the world may look like if John Lennon had lived. I always wanted to explore the bond of family, showing it both through the main character Joe and John Lennon’s family, as well.

What is the next book that you’re working on, and when can your fans expect it?

I am currently working on another time-traveling story. This time it’s a young adult novel that explores the history of the game of basketball through the main character, Braxton, who has to write a book report on basketball, and pass, or get kicked off the high school basketball team.

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Joe Miller was just a regular handyman in New York City, trying to adapt to the city life after moving to The Big Apple from his small town in Pennsylvania.

On the night of December 8, 1980, Joe’s life changed forever. He witnessed the murder of his idol, John Lennon. What happened next was even worse. A strange orange ball of light in the sky surrounded him, rendering him unconscious. When Joe awoke, he was in the year 2023.

Now, Joe is stuck in a strange and unfamiliar world where everything he knows and loves is gone. He must find a way to return to his own time, but how?

Imagine

Imagine by Titan Frey sends you on a vivid tour of the past, future, and present, all churned up with science fiction, ’80s nostalgia, and the grieving psyche. The story stars Joe Miller, a New York City handyman, whose otherwise uneventful life takes a turn on the night of December 8th, 1980, when he watches his hero, John Lennon, being gunned down. Soon after, an orange light beams down and propels Joe forward through time, precisely 44 years, to 2024. Stranded in a future where nothing is familiar and nothing is as it should be, Joe must figure out how to get home to 1980.

It’s a compelling question. How would he get back to 1980, and what other secrets did this future hold? But, his journey becomes transfixing, harrowing, and disorienting. Joe reels under the shock of the distinctions between now and then, under the loss of so much he once held dear. Frey eloquently communicates Joe’s confusion and emotional pain, and Joe’s quest to return home becomes engrossing. Frey also demonstrates accessibility and immediacy in their style. Joe’s everyman narration and the story’s construction are something apart from the usual practices of science fiction storytelling. They drop us into a 2010 that Joe – and many NYC residents who are older than he is – simply cannot imagine, and the impact of that shock, that 1970 New Yorker’s experience of a 2010 that we see as normal, keeps the science fiction element under control. By the time Joe goes back to change history, the real tragedy is that even if he did achieve his goal, he would no longer have a home for all the people who loved him, including a man named John Lennon – a murder that is referred to at the end of the story. No special effects would have worked as well because Imagine is less an equal paradox of time travel than a tale of how time inevitably ‘fixes’ everything by grinding it into dust. The story’s strength and appeal lie in how it depicts the struggle for adaptation between the past and the future. This is a story about time travel as it is a story of identity and its reflection on memory and loss.

Imagine paves a unique path between science fiction and history and between science fiction and personal drama. It is an unforgettable tale about what it’s like to lose everything one has known and to what extent one man will go to recover it. Imagine reads at times like the Back to the Future trilogy of the 1980s and ’90s but with a much greater ability to philosophically integrate different dimensions of time and personality. Imagine is the kind of time-travel story that fans of the genre will absolutely love and, at the same time, is recommended to anyone interested in exploring the complex physiology between time and identity.

Pages: 315 | ASIN : B0CW2QQJYX

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Deep Emotional Wounds

D. Hart St. Martin Author Interview

D. Hart St. Martin Author Interview

In Breaking Worlds we learn about the divide between Lisen and Korin and we witness their daughter’s determination to change the world. What were some driving ideals behind the characters relationships?

Once Rinli died in Protector of Thristas, I knew what had to happen. The death of a child can either bring the parents closer together or rip them apart. I decided to go the latter route and see if I could help them heal eventually. It was difficult to write because I love these characters, but it was necessary to show how two people so closely bound in life and love could respond so diversely to such a tragedy. Now for Rinli, resurrection was not kind. She’s 16 at the time of her death and harbors strong resentment toward the mother who bartered her life for peace. I asked myself how does the psyche of a person who dies and then lives again survive such a painful ordeal? Jon Snow in Game of Thrones remembers nothing past his murder when he’s revived. Jesus Christ reawakened in his tomb a glorified being, but of course he had godhood going for him. But what does resurrection do to a 16-year-old child with deep emotional wounds? And it became clear to me that the rift between Rinli and her mother was only going to widen despite Lisen’s previous efforts to protect her. Sad and tragic as all this was for these three characters, challenging as the work was for me, it was fun to write. Am I wicked for saying that? I doubt any author would feel differently.

This book has clearly been crafted with care and is full of emotion. What were some themes that were important for you to continue in this book, and what were some new ones you wanted to introduce?

The continuing theme of the consequences of decisions remained paramount in my storytelling. I find tales of redemption the most interesting of all, and there can be no redemption if there is no sin. I love breaking characters into pieces and watching how they reassemble themselves and the relationships they’ve broken in the process. In Breaking Worlds, I wanted to explore what it means to be the helpmate to a person with the potential for greatness. I delved into the parallels between Korin and Madlen in their roles as lovers/supporters for their beloveds, and Madlen’s unquestioning (or barely questioning) devotion to Rinli fascinated me. And beyond all of that were the variations of grief and the effect grief has on us as people. I found it both harder and easier to dig into the pain of grief as I wrote because I had just lost my best friend to cancer. Harder for the immediacy of what I’d just been through, but easier because it was so fresh. What it comes down to is what I say on my Facebook page. “I love combining characters with conflict and crisis and then watching as they suffer the consequences of their choices.”

This is the fifth book in the Lisen of Solsta series. Has the series grown beyond what you had originally imagined or are you still following a clearly defined path?

Well, the series has certainly grown. I never expected to write past Blooded, book 3 in the series. But as I’ve noted before, I grew curious about what would happen when “the bill came due.” In other words, what would happen when Lisen had to hand Rinli over to the Thristans in the desert as their “Mantar’s Child”? Then another question emerged after I finished Protector of Thristas (book 4). What would a world broken by Mantar’s Child look like? That led quite neatly into Breaking Worlds.

What can readers expect in the finale of the Lisen of Solsta series, book 6 Pushing Madness?

Breaking Worlds and Pushing Madness were written together. I didn’t know if I had enough material for two separate books, so I kept pushing forward with certain criteria set up for what length would be too much for one book and where I would split the book into two if that became necessary. In terms of the story, my intent is to clear the table, to answer all the questions–in short, to tie up all the lose threads and hopefully leave the reader satisfied while allowing the ending to be a bit messy. I’m not a fan of endings that are too neat. I prefer to be left, as a reader, with a few things to tidy up for myself, and that’s what I strive for in my endings.

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Breaking Worlds (Lisen of Solsta Book 5) by [St. Martin, D. Hart]

Left with the blood of a tragedy on their hands, Lisen and Korin can no longer face one another. Korin heads east towards the desert, while Lisen remains in Avaret with two children in need of comfort Lisen cannot provide. Never has she felt so alone. As war threatens on the horizon, two deserted people must somehow find their way back to life, to each other. Will Lisen and Korin reunite in time? Will the truth of the dead and the living be revealed?

Return to Garla and Thristas where love may not conquer all, but it can serve as an ally in the fight. Where all that seems well doesn’t necessarily end well. Where loyalty can be bought with a nudge. Where all the magic in the world may still fail you. Where, with Garla and Thristas on the edge of destruction, Book V of Lisen of Solsta’s saga drives the story closer to the inevitable conclusion to Lisen’s story.

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