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Sean DeLauder

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Sean DeLauder

Goodreads Author


Born
in Toledo, The United States
Twitter

Genre

Influences

Member Since
March 2010

URL


This author has held several positions in recent years, including Content Writer, Grant Writer, Obituary Clerk, and Staff Writer, and is under the false impression that these experiences have added to his character since they have not contributed much to his finances. He was awarded a BFA in Creative Writing and Journalism and a BA in Technical Communication by Bowling Green State University because they are giving and eager to make friends. He has a few scattered publications with several conveniently defunct magazines (but refuses credit for their extinction), and resides in the drab, northeastern region of Ohio because it makes everything else seem fascinating, exotic, and beautiful.

He is currently at work on a trilogy involving heroes,
...more

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Sean DeLauder C3PO and R2D2: The smug, whining worrier and the brave-but-(more or less)-mute savant. The two could not be more diametrically opposed, in form and at…moreC3PO and R2D2: The smug, whining worrier and the brave-but-(more or less)-mute savant. The two could not be more diametrically opposed, in form and attitude.

C3PO is a shuffling humanoid and extremely dependent on others, while R2D2 is essentially a trash bin stuffed full of hidden compartments, useful multipurpose gadgets, and information, capable of independent thought, which is unusual in a droid. Despite his clear inferiority, C3PO behaves as if he is the more intelligent of the two, as evident in his constant criticism and belittling of the smaller droid. One might say he has an inferiority complex, which is humanizing and makes him almost sympathetic. R2D2, whose dialogue can only be understood through inference, though nearly everyone can understand him (see: Chewbacca), almost never disparages his golden companion--he doesn't need to because he is invariably right.

It's possible the two could be separated, as they are not utterly dependent upon one another, but it's unlikely either would be as successful as characters without the interplay between the two, particularly C3PO, who lacks R2D2's broad functionality and needs R2D2 to push back against his paranoia. R2D2's brilliance is likewise sharpened by C3PO's perpetual doubt and Pantophobia. Though each is capable of operating on his/her/its own, their strength as a duo is what made them my choice for this response.

Runner up: Han Solo/Chewbacca. Second place because the former has no trouble as a standalone character. Emphasized by the fact that he'll be getting his own film in the very-near future. Still waiting on the R2D2 standalone with low expectations for fulfillment.(less)
Sean DeLauder Hi, Chance. I’m sure a lot of would-be readers are wondering the same thing. The simple answer is: no, they aren’t going to miss anything. Yes, the se…moreHi, Chance. I’m sure a lot of would-be readers are wondering the same thing. The simple answer is: no, they aren’t going to miss anything. Yes, the series is ordered chronologically with the second book written first, but I did not begin this way with the intention of driving compulsive organizers crazy.

Think of The Least Envied as the trunk of a tree and everything else as a branch growing out of it, backward, forward, and even simultaneously in time. Obviously this line of thinking does not conveniently translate to a numberline, as a series requires. If I continue expanding backward in time, for example, I’ll end up in negative territory, but I haven’t projected that far yet.

Yes, all the books are related, like wet clothes hanging from the same line, but each functions on its own while contributing to one another at the same time. You can read The Least Envied by itself, and when you read the other books you will see how the stories overlap and occasionally reference one another.(less)
Average rating: 4.33 · 188 ratings · 92 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Speaker for the Trees

4.30 avg rating — 96 ratings — published 2012 — 7 editions
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The Least Envied (Songs Uns...

4.37 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 2014 — 7 editions
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Machines and Their Humans

4.07 avg rating — 15 ratings3 editions
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The Last Case: A Joseph Tey...

4.08 avg rating — 13 ratings2 editions
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The Confessor (Millennium M...

4.55 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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A Hero (Songs Unsung, #3)

4.60 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2022 — 5 editions
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Sexsassins

4.29 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 2024 — 4 editions
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Of Gods and Men and Men Who...

4.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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Root for the Dark

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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The Goddess in the Mountain...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings2 editions
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More books by Sean DeLauder…

Kindle Vella - Sexsassins

Amazon has started a new program entitled Kindle Vella (i.e., novella) with a publishing structure that allows authors to publish stories one chapter, or "episode," at a time. This is an interesting way to do things, especially if an author is writing these episodes on the fly rather than writing an entire book then publishing one chapter at a time. It's a new brand of serialization I found intrig Read more of this blog post »
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Published on November 03, 2022 18:17 Tags: novella, vella
The Least Envied A Hero
(3 books)
by
4.43 avg rating — 37 ratings

Dungeon Crawler Carl
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by Matt Dinniman (Goodreads Author)
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Pastwatch: The Re...
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Sean DeLauder Sean DeLauder said: " After the triumph that was Ender's Game, whose beautiful premise seems undermined by Card's personal beliefs, I felt no compulsion to read any more of his books.

Now I find this book in my hands, fervently endorsed by a friend, and I am apprehensively
...more "

 
Revelations: Visi...
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Sean’s Recent Updates

Sean DeLauder is currently reading
Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman
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Monstress, Volume 10 by Marjorie M. Liu
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Continuing my annual tradition of reading the latest collection of Monstress and feeling utterly lost and suspicious great swaths of story have occurred without my knowledge since my last read.
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The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
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As always, this collection is written from the perspective of Watson, albeit after a considerable amount of time has passed since the initial resolution of the cases, now granted permission by the passage of time to release some of Holmes' cases that ...more
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ワンパンマン 32 [One Punch-Man 32] by ONE
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I felt pretty confident this series could have ended with this particular volume, despite a number of unanswered questions (e.g., who are Blast and Drive Knight?; what is the rationale behind heroes/monsters becoming more powerful when they are beate ...more
Sean DeLauder has read
ワンパンマン 31 [One Punch-Man 31] by ONE
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Sean DeLauder is currently reading
Monstress, Volume 10 by Marjorie M. Liu
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To Keep Our Honor Clean by Thomas A. Burns Jr.
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The Keep Our Honor Clean is, from the get-go, a deeply immersive story. Burns puts you in Da Nang and you can smell the fuel on the tarmac and feel beads of sweat roll down your back from the heat and humidity. He sends you to seedy bars, out in the ...more
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Antuna's Story by Terry Birdgenaw
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Any kid who loves dinosaurs or paleontology has a few triggers. One of them is a specific number: 65 million. You pair that with a few other key terms, like Yucatan, and fireworks start going off in their brains.

That’s how the Prologue to Birdgenaw’s
...more
Sean DeLauder is currently reading
Pastwatch by Orson Scott Card
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After the triumph that was Ender's Game, whose beautiful premise seems undermined by Card's personal beliefs, I felt no compulsion to read any more of his books.

Now I find this book in my hands, fervently endorsed by a friend, and I am apprehensively
...more
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The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester
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Quotes by Sean DeLauder  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“For all their simplicity, humans could be remarkably perceptive, though they didn't know it most of the time, and their ability to thrust straight through deception and see to the heart of truth was often lost with childhood. By adulthood humans had trained themselves to be coy and manipulative in response to the coy and manipulative society in which they lived, which led them to believe that everyone was trying to be as coy and manipulative as themselves and were uncertain about what was true and what was not. Beyond their few flashes of clarity, everything became a muddle of colliding doubts.”
Sean DeLauder, The Speaker for the Trees

“A name isn't important. It doesn't make you, you make it.”
Sean DeLauder, The Least Envied

“Most distinguishable about the idiot, Hedge noted, was their fear of that which was different. Those who feared difference always made a point of finding difference in others in order to feel more secure in their sameness.”
Sean DeLauder, The Speaker for the Trees

Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
Making Connections: 202. THE SPEAKER FOR THE TREES by Sean DeLauder 9 20 Apr 09, 2012 02:04AM  
Making Connections: 816. THE LEAST ENVIED (Part 1: Into the Wasteland) by Sean DeLauder 4 102 May 07, 2013 04:35PM  
Urban Fantasy: 2014 Creature Challenge 43 274 Jan 09, 2015 09:47AM  
Review Group: * Group 100B Sci-fi. Mod Emma 183 91 Jun 17, 2016 04:05PM  
Review / Write / ...: This topic has been closed to new comments. [archived] BOTQ (2023 Q2) Suggestions 10 13 Mar 13, 2023 06:23AM  
Review Group: * Group 325 General - Mod. Kat 169 71 May 08, 2023 03:44PM  
“The surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that it has never tried to contact us.”
Bill Watterson

“Wars and temper tantrums are the makeshifts of ignorance; regrets are illuminations come too late.”
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces

“Their mother is Athene, the goddess of wisdom, and, although they are often ready to play the buffoon to amuse you, such conduct is the prerogative of the truly wise.”
T.H. White, The Once and Future King

“We live for books. A sweet mission in this world dominated by disorder and decay.”
Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

“A good laugh is a mighty good thing, and rather too scarce a good thing--mores the pity.”
Herman Melville, Moby-Dick or, The Whale

78683 Review Group — 5621 members — last activity 4 hours, 30 min ago
Reviews are very important for Self-Published (SP), and Indie authors, just as they are for others. Unfortunately, though, many SP/Indie books don't g ...more
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This group is dedicated to connecting readers with Goodreads authors. It is divided by genres, and includes folders for writing resources, book websit ...more
58575 Advanced Copies for Review & Book Giveaways — 15934 members — last activity 4 hours, 0 min ago
A place to help authors and reviewers come together to get the word out about new books as well as a group for anyone to post or enter listings for bo ...more
220 Goodreads Librarians Group — 306137 members — last activity 0 minutes ago
Goodreads Librarians are volunteers who help ensure the accuracy of information about books and authors in the Goodreads' catalog. The Goodreads Libra ...more
53792 Indie Book Club — 1639 members — last activity Dec 29, 2025 12:24PM
This group was made as a place to discuss books by indie authors and allow them to pitch their books to an interested audience.
96918 Read 4 Review — 5574 members — last activity Dec 30, 2025 07:16PM
This Read 4 Review group was created to connect reviewers with available ebooks for review. We welcome all readers, writers & reviewers! My review si ...more
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Review / Write / Read Club (Indie & Self-Published) is a group for: - Readers and authors of indie/SP books - Reviewing and getting reviews for yo ...more
62450 The Nexus — 1101 members — last activity Dec 30, 2025 12:58AM
Book Group - All Genre's: Action and Adventure,Chick Lit,Fiction, Contemporary,Crime,Fantasy,Horror,Humour,Women's Fictions,Literary Fiction,Mystery,R ...more
44234 Goodreads Self Published Authors — 1399 members — last activity May 25, 2025 09:51AM
A group for authors to help fellow authors in book promotion, review pools, and other things
345771 Homer's The Odyssey, translated by Emily Wilson — 199 members — last activity Aug 15, 2025 01:06PM
In this group, we will read and discuss Emily Wilson's new translation of Homer's The Odyssey, published in November 2017 by Norton. We also welcome d ...more
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Comments (showing 1-12)    post a comment »
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message 12: by Sean

Sean DeLauder Apparently Amazon has made a series out of The Man in the High Castle. Sure, I'll watch.


message 11: by Lisa

Lisa Reads & Reviews James wrote: "Here is my review of Sean's book, "The Speaker for the Trees":

Sean Delauder's short novel, The Speaker for the Trees, is a story for those bored with spaceships
or predator and prey Hunger Game..."


Great review, James. I almost missed it here in the Sean's comment section. If you put in under the Book Review section, I would love to 'like' it.


message 10: by James

James Matteson Here is my review of Sean's book, "The Speaker for the Trees":

Sean Delauder's short novel, The Speaker for the Trees, is a story for those bored with spaceships
or predator and prey Hunger Game fantasies. Instead, with this novel, the spaceship is a toaster, the alien is a plant, and human beings are considered dangerous to the sentient plant-life that rules the galaxy.

The novel's good idea is that, since plants have been around longer than animals, they have evolved to have intelligence, society, and to rule galaxies. Of course, plants would not be so stupid as to ignore animals with nuclear technology on the brink of space travel, so in Delauder's world the plants send in spies to watch the humans and report back to the Plant of Ultimate Knowing and the Council of Plants.

The spy's name is Hedge. Inside he's a plant, outside he appears human and even has a wife -- who can cook pork chops and is attracted to one of his peculiar tentacles.

A lot of the novel has to do with Hedge's thoughts about humanity, for he is a spy sent to analyze the humans. Humanity is perplexing to Hedge, but he is fond of the few people he actually has encounter: Anna, his earth wife, who he finds "highly symmetrical", Scud Peabody, the town fool (who Hedge believes is a genius), John Elm, and a few others. And, of course, a competing spacefaring civilization the plants themselves fear, called "the Visitors".

Hedge is recalled from his spy mission when he sees a crop circle message from his home planet. He prepares to make his report on humanity to the Council of Plants so they can decide whether to destroy humanity. This is a fun story. Of course, there are problems. It is difficult to keep such a complex analogy perfect -- so DeLauder doesn't try. Plant physiognomy is a problem. Plants in this story, like plants in the real world, don't have brains. yet in the story they think. When plants speak, not having mouths, their "leaves flutter where the words passed." Delauder doesn't explain how that works, but we don't care, because the story is fun. Hedge's biggest fear is being "mulched". We get that.

The story is also part of that genre of fantasy and science fiction that has a kind of literary tentacle. In addition to the author's Swiftian tendency to have his hero think about humanity's peculiarities, like " Humanity ... is sometimes difficult to understand... because often ... they mean just the opposite of what they say"; he also spends time thinking about humanities fixation with God and religion. Caution! If you are sensitive about your religion prepare yourself for DeLauder's criticisms. While I've described DeLauder as Swiftian because he knows how to stick in
the knife of sarcasm, he seems to be to nice a guy to also give it a twist. There's a good deal of criticism, but there's also a few twists that may take the heart out of readers who need to hear the religious demeaned.

So what do we get in this 'literary' story? We get what I described in my article Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Religion (http://jematt.hubpages.com/hub/Scienc...). We get a discussion of the 'big' questions placed in the text of an entertaining fantasy. DeLauder is not C.S. Lewis, trying to create a story where theological themes outline the plot; nor is DeLauder a Philip Pullman, writing His Dark Materials to counter Lewis's God and mock the Church. My sense is DeLauder has something to say, but is too optimistic to be as heavy-handed as Pullman or as theological as Lewis. So I recommend you read this story, enjoy it, and whether you are religious or not, maybe pause for a moment to consider whether or not you are also 'right'.


message 9: by Sean

Sean DeLauder In 15 minutes, Neil deGrasse Tyson assumes the mantle of Carl Sagan and Alan Silvestri does his utmost to match Vangelis.


message 8: by Sean

Sean DeLauder ... and MY AXE!




message 7: by Sean

Sean DeLauder Looking at the Suggestions page was a mistake that has resulted in a medical condition known as To-Read Bloat.


message 6: by Sean

Sean DeLauder I am proud to be a member of this exclusive group of 47%. If you're reading this, you are, in all likelihood, part of it, too. Congratulations.


message 5: by Sean

Sean DeLauder I have already added this to my review of Cosmos, but this seemed worthy of its own post:

It has come to my attention that an updated version of [Cosmos] will be hosted in 2014 by none other than Neil deGrasse Tyson, entitled COSMOS: A SpaceTime Odyssey. The trailer shows the new version is very true to the original, with Sagan's infamous Cosmic Calendar, the spaceship of the mind, Johannes Kepler, and several other memorable moments from the 1980s series.


message 4: by Sean

Sean DeLauder Traveller wrote: "We are officially fellow nodders."

I feel I can nod to this assessment without being redundant. I hope you can distinguish the distinctness of this nod from other, avian geopolitical history related nods.


message 3: by Traveller (last edited Nov 02, 2012 09:20AM)

Traveller Dear Sean, how could one not be happy befriending someone who motivates such a friendship as follows: "Obviously, to revel in the colonization efforts of South American penguins and to nod in unison when it becomes apparent that Emperor Penguins received their nomenclature as a result of their military and administrative acheivements in the southern hemisphere." ?

*Nods and plods.* I appreciate the request.(Which i had instigated with heavy hinting :P)

We are now officially fellow nodders. :D

PS. A penguin will never appear the same again. I will henceforth always regard them as the alternative conquistadors of Meso-America and the Latin-Americas. Mind you, i think they might have made some inroads closer to the North Pole as well...


message 2: by Sean

Sean DeLauder Kris wrote: "Sean, thanks for accepting my friend request. It was good to talk to you this evening. I'm looking forward to more discussions, as well as to seeing what you are reading and writing!"

I feel silly for saying "you're welcome" (I'm flattered any time someone does me the kindness of making a request--moreso for history professors), but that's the position you put me in. Frankly, you beat me to it. There is a wealth of knowledge concentrated here on GR, and I enjoy sopping it up, even if it does evaporate again a few hours later. Thanks for contributing to what will soon be an amorphous cloud of vapor crowning my head.


message 1: by Kris

Kris Sean, thanks for accepting my friend request. It was good to talk to you this evening. I'm looking forward to more discussions, as well as to seeing what you are reading and writing!


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