ROMANTIC SF & SPACE OPERA AUTHOR J.C. HAY |
My journey to romance was so tightly tied to my reading
science fiction that I didn't think you could separate them. Relationships
formed the core of everything I was consuming - Anne McCafferey, and CJ Cherryh
filled my bookshelves, while Star Wars and Robotech filled the big and small
screens. In every case, the story was being driven by an emotional arc –
healing through love, and recognizing the capacity to be loved. And it still
felt like I couldn't see the forest for the trees. A few years into my
publishing career, I had only had minor success selling SF&F short fiction when
a dear friend took me to coffee at World Fantasy Con. I still recall looking
out at the square when she said to me "You know you're writing romance right?"
I won't lie - I balked at the observation for the first
several minutes. Internalized genre shame can be hard to push past, especially
when you add in the complicated gender politics of writing in a genre that the
industry traditionally dismisses as 'for women.' Fortunately we kept talking
about it, and I realized that she was right. At the core of my stories it had always
been about the relationship, and while I had been actively trimming the HEA
from my writing to make it more salable in other markets, I'd maintained in my
head that a happily ever after was possible. When I returned home from the
conference that year, I submitted my first story to Samhain Publishing and the
rest is history.
This fall, I'll be releasing a new space opera novel as part of the Great Space Race shared series, which will also include stories from Teresa Noelle Roberts, Elsa Jade, Sabine Priestly, and CJ Cade. These have been great fun to write, trading my dark world for a brightly lit future and teams zipping across the galaxy in an interstellar version of the Amazing Race for a futuristic reality show. Suffice to say, wacky hijinks will ensue. And just last month, I released the third book in my cyberpunk romance series. Each book explores a near future Earth, where cybernetic mercenaries fight shadow wars for corporate giants, and find that sometimes redemption is the hardest fight of all. The first book in that series, Dubai Double-Cross, is on sale for 99 cents, and I've included an excerpt below.
This fall, I'll be releasing a new space opera novel as part of the Great Space Race shared series, which will also include stories from Teresa Noelle Roberts, Elsa Jade, Sabine Priestly, and CJ Cade. These have been great fun to write, trading my dark world for a brightly lit future and teams zipping across the galaxy in an interstellar version of the Amazing Race for a futuristic reality show. Suffice to say, wacky hijinks will ensue. And just last month, I released the third book in my cyberpunk romance series. Each book explores a near future Earth, where cybernetic mercenaries fight shadow wars for corporate giants, and find that sometimes redemption is the hardest fight of all. The first book in that series, Dubai Double-Cross, is on sale for 99 cents, and I've included an excerpt below.
Dubai
Double Cross
Blurb
Elise is
looking for an exit. Too many years as a top-talent thief in the digital
shadows have whittled away her patience and her humanity. She’s not looking for
complications, but with one more job, she’ll finally have enough money to leave
the life for good.
Na’im does what he must to survive. Whether it’s selling his body to the corporate glitterati, or going on the run when things get bad – but even a survivor can be caught off guard, and his boss’s murder has left him with no one to trust but a thief with her own agenda.
Together, they’re on the run trying to figure out who framed them both and stay one step ahead of the murderer who’s close behind. Trust is a rare commodity for accidental lovers, but in a dark future where everything can be upgraded and emotions can be programmed, sometimes all that can keep you human is your heart.
Na’im does what he must to survive. Whether it’s selling his body to the corporate glitterati, or going on the run when things get bad – but even a survivor can be caught off guard, and his boss’s murder has left him with no one to trust but a thief with her own agenda.
Together, they’re on the run trying to figure out who framed them both and stay one step ahead of the murderer who’s close behind. Trust is a rare commodity for accidental lovers, but in a dark future where everything can be upgraded and emotions can be programmed, sometimes all that can keep you human is your heart.
Excerpt
“Can do,
Elise.” The name felt odd to use. An elegant, feminine name, it felt inadequate
for describing the no-nonsense woman he’d seen take charge of the situation.
A situation
she created, and controls, Na'im reminded himself. A situation that started
with the murder of your employer. A sudden stab of pain and guilt wrenched
through him at the thought of Jalila, dead in her suite of rooms. He knew the
feelings weren’t all real. Her surgeons had implanted his love and loyalty as
easily as they had put in the memory cortex. But there had been real emotion as
well, he was certain.
She had
pulled him up from the bottom of the spire, and installed him as the bishop to
her all-powerful queen. Her death threw everything into chaos. In that, Elise’s
declared innocence made sense. Elise’s job became twice as difficult with a
murder investigation surrounding it.
Still.
Someone had killed Jalila. And that someone was at large. They could even be
watching them now. A cold tingle tightened the skin between his shoulders.
He glanced
over his shoulder at the two guards. The one without the cup had a hand to his
jaw, mouthing in the universal sign of someone using a bone-induction
communicator. The guard nodded and elbowed his partner, before stepping out
into the crowd, scanning faces.
Na’im risked
a glance at Elise, but she hadn’t noticed the guard. She continued to move
forward through the crowd, heading for a way out. He tugged her around a
corner, hopefully out of sight of the patrol. She opened her mouth to protest
and he covered it with his.
She froze,
one hand still balled into a fist on his shoulder, then relaxed and melted up
against him. She stood shorter than Jalila, and he had to bend slightly to keep
their lips matched. Not that she seemed to mind. Her hand traced his shoulder
and his skin came alive, accompanied by a familiar tightness in his core.
Despite his
body’s response, or perhaps because of it, he broke the kiss. Her gray gaze
went soft as she leaned against him, lips tantalizingly parted. His mods kicked
in, pointing out the increased swell of her lips, the capillary flush to her
cheeks, the slight dilation of her pupils. Her level of arousal was easy to
read, declaring that she’d enjoyed the kiss as much as he had.
He checked for the guards to distract himself from his body’s response. They’d moved, scanning the crowd actively, but they had started off in the opposite direction. He took a deep breath to recover his center. “Sorry. The guards were looking for someone. I figured we needed to hide, so I improvised.”
He checked for the guards to distract himself from his body’s response. They’d moved, scanning the crowd actively, but they had started off in the opposite direction. He took a deep breath to recover his center. “Sorry. The guards were looking for someone. I figured we needed to hide, so I improvised.”
She blinked
and her eyes went from clouds to iron. “Good thinking.”
Bio
JC Hay writes romantic science fiction and space opera,
because the coolest gadgets in the world are useless without someone to share
them.
In addition to Romance Writers of America, he is also a
proud member of the SFR Brigade (for Science Fiction Romance), the Fantasy,
Futuristic, and Paranormal Romance chapter, and a proud member of RWA’s PAN
(the published authors network).
Links:
Website: http://jchay.com
Newsletter Sign-Up
(get a free Corporate Services short story!): http://jchay.com/mailing-list-sign-up/
Website: http://jchay.com
Follow my Amazon
Author Page: http://amazon.com/author/jchay
Like my Facebook
Author Page https://www.facebook.com/AuthorJCHay/
Follow me on
Twitter @j_c_hay: https://twitter.com/j_c_hay
Follow me on
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15727236.JC_Hay
12 comments:
Great to meet you J.C. Hay! I really liked your blog post. I'm going to download "Dubai Double Cross" today. I've just recently started reading Sci-fi romance. Good luck on sales!
Thank you for guesting with us, J.C. Loved your excerpt!
I'm glad you found your genre! Definitely romance. I'm a big Anne McCaffrey fan myself.:-)
I think it's wonderful of your friend to help you see where your heart really was in your writing. I'm not usually a reader of sci-fi/futuristic stories, but your characters intrigued me. Congratulations and good luck with your writing.
J.C., we could be twins from different mothers in terms of writing. I too started my career in SF. When you mentioned Anne McCafferey and CJ Cherryh I immediately loved you (don't tell my husband). I fell in love with SF through Butler, Asimov, Heinlein, Simak, Simmons, Bujold, Rusch and many others. But it was the stories with relationships like those in McCafferey and Cherryh that really stayed with me. I'm pretty sure I've read every McCafferey book ever written. :)
I'm so glad that you were able to see that too. I haven't quite made the connection in my own writing, save one book, between SF and Romance, but I suspect I will be drawn there again in the future.
I'm downloading your book now. I'm not sure when I'll get to read it, but it will be at the top of my pile. Keep writing and keep sharing that combination of great SF worlds and themes with relationships that hit the heart and don't let go.
Welcome to Romancing The Genres, J.C. So glad you had someone who was a true friend and talked truth to you about your writing. Although my experience is very different (I write contemporary romance), I also had someone I'd just met who sat down with me and pointed me to RWA and my local chapter.
Thanks Diana! Welcome to Sci Fi Romance! I hope you enjoy Dubai Double Cross.
Thanks Sarah! I love Anne McCaffery Her Pern books are wonderful, but I really fell in love with The Ship Who Sang.
Thanks, Paty. I agree - her timely conversation was a real turning point for me. I appreciate the well wishes!
Hi Maggie! I've always wanted a twin! I found Butler and Bujold later than I should have, but loved their work as well. I hope you enjoy the book!
Thanks, Judith! Those conversations really are the best ones - sometimes we need someone to point out what should be glaringly obvious. I'm glad you found the RWA, too. It's a fine family.
Wow, Dubai Double Cross sounds like something I need to read ASAP. I loved the blurb.
Thanks B.A.! I'm glad you liked the Blurb, and hope you enjoy it as much as I liked writing it!
Post a Comment