Mark McClelland's Blog - Posts Tagged "science-fiction"
Upload is Number 8 in Science Fiction & Fantasy This Week on Lulu!
I published Upload on Lulu on Tuesday, and by Thursday it was number 8 on Lulu's list, "Top 10 This Week in Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy". It's so great to get strong initial support on my first published book!
Published on September 22, 2012 09:57
•
Tags:
lulu, science-fiction, self-published, top-10
First Full-Length Review of "Upload"
"Like Neil Stephenson’s Snow Crash and Richard K. Morgan’s Altered Carbon, Upload is fast paced and full of action, a story-noire set in a not too distant dystopian society; and the characters and worlds are well developed and very believable."
My first full-length review comes from fellow Lulu author, Hazen Wardle. Read the entire review here: http://smallmarkbooks.yolasite.com/bo...
Thank you so much, Hazen, for taking the time to write such a thoughtful and well-structured review!
My first full-length review comes from fellow Lulu author, Hazen Wardle. Read the entire review here: http://smallmarkbooks.yolasite.com/bo...
Thank you so much, Hazen, for taking the time to write such a thoughtful and well-structured review!
Published on November 08, 2012 10:51
•
Tags:
review, science-fiction, upload
Reading at City Lit Books, November 29
I will be reading excerpts from Upload, at City Lit Books, in Logan Square. Q&A and book-signing to follow.
Thursday, November 29
6:30 PM – 7:30 PM
City Lit Books
2523 North Kedzie Blvd.
Chicago, IL
City Lit is just south of Lula Cafe and Boulevard Bikes.
Thursday, November 29
6:30 PM – 7:30 PM
City Lit Books
2523 North Kedzie Blvd.
Chicago, IL
City Lit is just south of Lula Cafe and Boulevard Bikes.
Published on November 20, 2012 05:25
•
Tags:
author-event, chicago, reading, science-fiction
Kirkus Indie Review For Upload
“McClelland’s ambitious debut novel envisions a future in which the vanishing line between virtual reality and “organic life” causes an antisocial genius to conduct the ultimate evolutionary experiment… The author has a particular gift for describing the technological advances, brand names, pop-cultural references and unique detritus of a society dependent on machines for survival and ravaged by virtual-reality addiction… McClelland’s slick imagination remains in full gear until the novel’s unpredictable conclusion. A thoughtful tale resembling a sci-fi video game viewed in a funhouse mirror.” –Kirkus Indie
Check out the entire review.
The best part: the Kirkus reviews for Ready Player One, by Ernest Cline, and Mona Lisa Overdrive, by William Gibson, now list Upload as a suggested similar book. While I don’t feel the folks at Kirkus Indie really “got” my book, it’s great to see it listed alongside such well regarded titles.
Check out the entire review.
The best part: the Kirkus reviews for Ready Player One, by Ernest Cline, and Mona Lisa Overdrive, by William Gibson, now list Upload as a suggested similar book. While I don’t feel the folks at Kirkus Indie really “got” my book, it’s great to see it listed alongside such well regarded titles.
Published on November 21, 2012 13:13
•
Tags:
kirkus-indie, review, science-fiction, upload
Upload now available as paperback on Amazon!
I just discovered that the printed edition of Upload is now available on Amazon! Very exciting. And I'm happy to see that they correctly paired the paperback and the ebook, so reviews and other info are common for both.
And you know... I think there's still time to order it as a Christmas present for the reader in your life. :) They even offer gift wrap!
Check out Upload here on Goodreads for more info about the book.
And you know... I think there's still time to order it as a Christmas present for the reader in your life. :) They even offer gift wrap!
Check out Upload here on Goodreads for more info about the book.
Published on December 17, 2012 21:52
•
Tags:
amazon, christmas-gift, indie-author, science-fiction, self-published, self-publishing
Paperback Edition on Barnes & Noble, Too
I mentioned yesterday that Upload is available on Amazon as a paperback, in addition to ebook for Kindle. Barnes & Noble was only one day behind: you can now order Upload from B&N as paperback or Nook Book.
I'm disappointed to see that reviews for the Nook Book don't carry over to the print edition on Barnes & Noble. I can see how reviews of a Nook Book might not apply to the print edition, if the reviewer was annoyed by formatting issues particular to the ebook… but now someone who first lands on the paperback edition of Upload will think nobody has reviewed it. Once again, score one for Amazon.
I'm disappointed to see that reviews for the Nook Book don't carry over to the print edition on Barnes & Noble. I can see how reviews of a Nook Book might not apply to the print edition, if the reviewer was annoyed by formatting issues particular to the ebook… but now someone who first lands on the paperback edition of Upload will think nobody has reviewed it. Once again, score one for Amazon.
Published on December 18, 2012 16:39
•
Tags:
amazon, barnes-noble, publishing-news, science-fiction, self-publishing
"Upload" Giveaway – Only 8 Days Left
Enter to win a free signed copy of Upload here on Goodreads. Seven copies available, eight days left to enter. Giveaway ends January 13.
Can’t beat the price, right?
Can’t beat the price, right?
Published on January 04, 2013 23:27
•
Tags:
giveaway, sci-fi, science-fiction
Winter Reading Discount: "Upload" eBook Only $2.99
Download Upload now for your eReader, while winter pricing lasts! Only $2.99 for a great read -- 4.8 out of 5 stars on Amazon, and 4.5 out of 5 here on Goodreads.
This new low price is now available if you buy direct from Lulu. Pricing should catch up soon on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBookstore, Google Play, and Kobo.
This new low price is now available if you buy direct from Lulu. Pricing should catch up soon on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBookstore, Google Play, and Kobo.
Review of Ready Player One
Ready Player One by Ernest ClineMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
An escapist romp set in the near future, Ready Player One is the story of Wade Watts, a teenaged boy obsessed with winning a treasure hunt that demands deep knowledge of 80s pop-culture and video games. The winner will inherit the vast wealth and thriving business empire of the man who created the hunt, James Halliday, a recently deceased computer genius born in 1972 and freakishly nostalgic about his childhood. Halliday's empire includes OASIS, the virtual world where most of humanity spends most of its time. The value of the prize is so great that Innovative Online Industries, cold-hearted giant of the network-infrastructure industry, creates a department of expert contestants under contract to sign over their winnings should they be the first to find the coveted egg. The head of this special department, Nolan Sorrento, is the villain -- caricature of the calculating, cutthroat executive -- leading his army of corporate drones in a brutal, no-rules race to beat Wade and his friends to the egg.
I can see why this book has been so popular -- very high word-of-mouth potential. The number of 80s nerd-culture references is staggering, and it's hard not to want to mention this book to a nerd friend. But the story sometimes feels like a vehicle for movie, video-game, and anime references. For me, the thrill of nostalgia for Zork, Adventure, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Star Blazers (a personal favorite), Joust, Devo, etc. wore off pretty quickly. The core story was fun, albeit predictable, but I found the pure escapist enjoyment a little lacking. To give me escape, a book has to transport me. I too often found myself distracted by the pop-culture references, thin character development, and obvious mechanisms of storytelling. I also didn't come away feeling at all enlightened or inspired; the morals of the story -- seek satisfaction in reality-prime, true beauty lies within, and we nerds should get outside more -- all felt rather tacked on. I understand that this book wasn't meant to change my life, but I love it when a light read turns out to give me a surprisingly inspiring little push. (Neverwhere comes to mind.)
Ready Player One is a good example of the increasing overlap between sci-fi and fantasy. The use of v-worlds in sci-fi allows the writer to incorporate fantasy elements into a story that's ultimately grounded in reality-prime. I did a fair amount of this in my own novel, Upload, but I always tried to keep it relevant to the speculative heart of science fiction. In Ready Player One, I didn't find much to chew on in terms of ideas and questions about the future. It felt heavy on the fantasy, light on the sci-fi. Which is great -- just don't pick up Ready Player One expecting a lot of thought-provoking speculation on where we humans are headed. Think "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World", not I, Robot.
Kirkus recommends Upload as similar to Ready Player One. I was downright ecstatic when I saw my book placed alongside such a popular title, and I do think someone who liked Ready Player One will probably enjoy Upload, but the two books are very different in feel. Ready Player One is fun and pretty fluffy, and felt to me like it was written for a teen audience -- and for children-of-the-80s looking for a little nostalgia. Upload is a good deal more intense, more noir, more adult. In both, the hero had a difficult childhood and received much of their "parenting" in virtual reality. Both stories also have the hero on the run. But in Upload there's a lot more internal struggle, meatier relationship issues, more focus on science, and serious questions about where technology is taking us.
For me, Ready Player One gets three stars. Would I recommend it? To a trivia hound or 80s pop-culture fanatic, yes. Otherwise, no, because I think there are lots of books equally as fun but with more artistry, more charm, richer characters, or a more compelling world.
View all my reviews
Published on January 26, 2013 12:18
•
Tags:
review, sci-fi, science-fiction
The Human Brain Project
The Human Brain Project won one of two billion-Euro research grants from the European Union. Over the next ten years, it aims to create a complete computer simulation of the human brain.
As the author of Upload, a thrilling sci-fi story about the first person to upload his consciousness into a computer, I'm keenly interested in this cutting-edge research into cognitive computing. It has the potential to bring futuristic technologies like those in Upload much closer. It also makes my fiction feel all the more relevant, as thought-leaders struggle with the possibilities and ethical implications surrounding simulation of the human mind.
There's a pretty good introductory video up at the Human Brain Project's website. Exciting stuff -- check it out. And then read my book to help stir your imagination!
As the author of Upload, a thrilling sci-fi story about the first person to upload his consciousness into a computer, I'm keenly interested in this cutting-edge research into cognitive computing. It has the potential to bring futuristic technologies like those in Upload much closer. It also makes my fiction feel all the more relevant, as thought-leaders struggle with the possibilities and ethical implications surrounding simulation of the human mind.
There's a pretty good introductory video up at the Human Brain Project's website. Exciting stuff -- check it out. And then read my book to help stir your imagination!
Published on February 02, 2013 15:06
•
Tags:
sci-fi, science, science-fiction


