Monday, July 23, 2018

PRESS RELEASE: Butterfly & Serpent

https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0692092102/ref=tmm_pap_new_olp_0?ie=UTF8&condition=new&qid=1532390101&sr=1-1

Re-formatted & edited. My thanks to my editor Val Dumond for all the advice, encouragement & hard work making this possible.
This is the first in a series. Book Two is in the process of editing and will be out soon.





PRESS RELEASE: Butterfly and Serpent

Jamai Dlamini has lived a life of isolation in her own community. She has a gift she doesn’t understand and can’t control. Other forces with sinister intentions have set their sights on her, including a disembodied spirit from another dimension who understands her situation all too well. 
            Jamai fights to discover her own background, beginning with her birth and the loss of her mother, who she feels watches over her, keeping her safe. But she soon learns of disturbing family connections and seeks answers to what is expected of her.
As events in her life spin out of control, even her best friend Youssou is drawn into the net tightening around her. Along the way she will find that she has unexpected allies among the living…and the dead.


            The first book in Michael Robbins’ new trilogy, Butterfly and Serpent, follows the life of Jamai Dlamini, a young woman born with strange powers, as she undergoes an interview that raises more questions than it answers. Robbins’ fans of his imaginative writing can now follow this latest work, the first of a brand-new trilogy. A full glossary of African language is included in this fully researched book.
            Butterfly and Serpent uses a theme of isolation, the isolation others impose on us and that we impose on ourselves, a sensation that Jamai has endured all her life. Whenever we feel worthless, often wrongly, we sometimes have an overwhelming feeling that we’re alone. We’ve always been alone and maybe it’s something we deserve. 
            But that’s not really true. We’re not alone; we don’t have to be alone.
           
The author developed this character by unlearning everything he thought he knew about Africa. He never wanted Jamai to be a bitch-in-britches like Tasha Yar, or the space marines in the Alien movies. He wanted her to be a strong capable person; He wanted readers to see their own possibilities. This novel is the first step in her journey, which begins like this:

(Excerpt from Butterfly and Serpent:)

My first memories were of water, all warm and clingy, and a steady thrum-thrum as of a drum. I also remember a song whispered by an angel. What the words were I couldn’t recall, other than one which was repeated over and over: e-ay-as. No, that wasn’t exactly what it was. Time blurs all things.                             
            I was torn from this snuggly cocoon into a world of insects and light, screeching birds and shrieking winds. But again that angel trilled a song for my ears alone, and the word would come: e-ay-as, e-ay-as.
            Mama died shortly after my delivery. I’d never seen her face. In my infant memory it’s fuzzy and shadowed, but the song she whispered in the womb and at my birth remains in my mind. On those nights when I lie in Nyoka’s embrace I call her voice to mind, and I can pretend it is Mama keeping me safe.                     
            As for that word, I could never find what it meant, not from my father Baba (who vehemently denied all knowledge of it) nor from the East African Community’s database, surely the greatest accumulation of facts in all the world. I only discovered the truth about this and many other things on that day when the spirits led me to the temple.


 Robbins fans will find this easy to-to-read story about complex beings will bring surprises of story line, but also increased understanding of Africa, where life is believed to have begun and where the characters of Jamai and Youssou show us a future of extraordinary culture.             
What heightens Butterfly and Serpent from being simply a “sci-fi” story is the relationships of family: Jamai’s sometimes father, other relatives who pop up in strange places, and the friendship of Jamai and Youssou that grows into trust and… love?             
If ever there was a sci-fi book that would attract readers of all ages with its adventurous characters and story line, you’ll instantly champion the pair who accompany you through their dangers and trials. Butterfly and Serpent is now available through Amazon and Kindle. Watch for the second volume to follow soon.


Why: I wrote it:     
I’ve had the seeds of an idea for 20+ years; some of them bad ideas, but the characters would not let go. A lot of my early, immature concepts had to be thrown out, which turned out to be a good thing, but the bedrock of the plot remained.
I spent years desperately trying to make this character work. I’ve had to take these stories back to scratch and un-learn everything I thought we knew about Africa. Which speaks to the second point, that is to take this opportunity to mock &/or explode all the stupid myths ingrained in us about Africa. What we’re doing to our home world and the divisive age that we’re enduring will also be skewered in some Asides.

AUTHOR BIO      
Michael Robbins is a lifelong resident of the Pacific Northwest and a diabetic, both likely to be permanent conditions. He continues to write novels and short stories with work that originates in his heart, and he draws extensively from history, mythology, and a very fertile imagination. In his prose he strives for unity above division, humor over prejudice, heart over heartlessness. His work has appeared in four fiction collections by Muddy Puddle Press. Butterfly & Serpent is the first novel in a trilogy.

Read more about Michael Robbins on his webpages.

Wordpress blog site: https://mike3839.com
my Blogspot account: mike3839.blogspot.com
my Butterfly & Serpent Facebook page: 


Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Butterfly & Serpent--thoughts

mike3839.com/2018/07/17/butterfly-serpent-thoughts/
[Forwarded from my Wordpress site]



We're in the final stages of proofing and I'm looking forward to putting this baby to bed.  

I never really intended this to be a trilogy at all. I hate trilogies; they're as bad as cliffhangers, or major motion pictures of books that stretch ONE book into two--or three- pictures. Thank you very much, Harry Potter, for starting that trend. I thought this series would wind up at two books, at best.               
Well, the first book, Butterfly & Serpent (above) was already clocking in at over 200 pages. Once I finished the first section of the follow-up volumes, I realized this section would be completely different from the rest of the material and would probably work best as a stand-alone.


Not to give away too much, but in Book 2, Fathers & Daughters, Youssou is forced to call on Jamai's help when a new situation rises, and he has to confront his family's pains of the past. Jamai will come forward as a stronger, more assertive personality.  

For Book 3, because of their actions in the previous adventure Jamai & Youssou find themselves thrown into the wider world. Their relationship will be tested, with the usual troubles one can expect from two very young people. 


That's all for now. I'll keep everybody up to date as things move along.