|
Here
comes Rica Marin!
Now available from Five Star Press: BLACKJACK--the
new near-future scifi thriller (written as Lee Singer). Available
online from Amazon
and Barnes
and Noble as well as your local bookstore--they can order it
if they don't have it now. Hardcover, $25.95. ISBN: 1-59414-597-0;
ISBN 13: 978-1-59414-597-1. 409 pages.

From the back cover--
"Rica Marin is a
mercenary who can fight, shoot--and sing torch songs. She kick-starts
the action from page one, and never lets up. Part mystery, part
noir, set in a frighteningly plausible near-future America terrorized
by roving gangs, Blackjack is a thriller I couldn't put down."
--Ellen Klages, Nebula Award-winning author of Portable Childhoods
and The Green Glass Sea.
"A chillingly logical,
beautifully worked out post-apocalyptic thriller, further distinguished
by in-depth characterization and evocative writing. Rica Marin is
a tough, pragmatic, and multi-skilled mercenary perfectly suited
to her not-so-brave new
world. Lee Singer is a powerful new voice in science fiction."
--Marcia Muller,
Vanishing Point and The Ever-Running Man
Bill Pronzini, The Crimes of Jordan Wise and Savages
"Who the heck is
Lee Singer? I can't remember the last time I picked up a book by
a new novelist that knocked me out the way Blackjack did. Singer's
vision of a near-future America is clear-eyed and absolutely convincing.
Blackjack's protagonist, Rica Marin, is made of equal parts toughness,
intelligence, and courage. You will not forget this book or this
heroine for a very long time!"--Richard A. Lupoff, Terrors,
Marblehead: A Novel of H. P. Lovecraft, and The Universal
Holmes
The earliest review to
appear, on the online site Euroreviews, gave the novel
5 stars and had this to say about it:
"In 2066, the entire
geopolitical and socioeconomic landscape of the globe has changed,
and not for the better. Terrorism by biochemical weapons, rampant
plagues and famines, and killing for its own sake have literally
decimated the population. All former nations have imploded, and
only small political territories remain. The former United States,
for example, is now a mere collection of eighteen separate territories,
a shadow of its prior glory.
"Rica Marin is a
late-thirties mercenary, actor, and accomplished torch singer. Orphaned
at four when her parents both died of a fever, her Gran raised her
in Redwood, formerly a portion of California. Gran had legal training
but is not one to be the sole stability in the family, so Rica took
over that role early, earning money for the two of them to purchase
the necessary inoculations (in the vernacular, "vax")
by performing as a freelance mercenary. A summons to the territory
of Sierra finds her in way over her head, as both the chief and
the mobster who hire her betray her, and the family organization
she is sent to infiltrate prods at her own personal loyalties.
"Blackjack
is truly one of those books that the reader simply cannot set aside
until completion. A story whose pace is akin to the speed of a rocket-launcher
missile, Blackjack will grasp any reader by the throat and hang
on until the end. What characters! What plotting! What a wealth
of historical background (especially of the Twentieth Century) and
the descriptive setting of the 'New World' from our time forward
to the plot setting of 2066! Accomplished author Lee Singer, who
has already published suspense novels as Shelley Singer, is a writer
never to be missed. Blackjack will linger in the mind for long after
the completion, with the question ringing: 'Could a near-future
like this actually occur?'"--Annie
From
Library Journal:
"In the latter half
of the 21st century, the United States has devolved into a depleted
continent of Balkanized nations: Redwood, Sierra, Olympia, Rocky
Mountain, and others, all ruled by local chiefs or warlords. Rica
Marin makes her living as a mercenary. Sent to Sierra to spy on
the powerful Coleman "casino" clan, she insinuates herself
into the heart of the family only to realize that for once, she
might have chosen the wrong side in a political situation that could
make or break the future of the no-longer-united America. Fast-paced
action and a decisive, strong-minded heroine make this a good choice
for fans of postapocalyptic thrillers."
From
EDGEBoston:
Lee
Singer's novel is less a science fiction adventure than a projection
of life on the far side of a worst-case scenario. Singer takes the
sci-fi tropes of laser pistols and floating cars and incorporates
them into an earthly, complex political landscape in which today's
legacy to the future owes less to technology than to our immediate
political and social divisions, with most of humanity having expired
in a rush of falling ecological and political dominoes.
Singer doesn't offer
neatly packaged answers; if anything, she builds the threads of
a larger story into the novel. The world Singer imagines is so complete,
with its crazies, its filthy, rapacious mercenaries, its chemical
pools, pandemics, and scarred survivors of toxic weapons, that it
doesn't need to be detailed exhaustively to take on a life of its
own; with mere inference and a smattering of futuristic slang words
("toxbag," "vax"), Singer's future, shocked
and scorched, opens up automatically in the imagination to something
vast, and carries the story in its grip rather than the other way
around. It could easily carry a trilogy, or more. --Kilian
Melloy
From
Romance
Reviews Today:
What
was once the United States of America is now a war-ravaged shadow
of its former self. There are no longer states, just small countries
like Rockymountain, Sierra, and Redwood, each with its own currency.
Roads are crumbling, technology is limited and trust is in short
supply. Here and there, pockets of civility and civilization remain.
Blackjack is one of those
pockets, and Rica has been sent to gather information about the
owners. But, she finds something that she did not expect there:
a group of mismatched survivors fighting to keep hope and freedom
alive.
The world of Blackjack
is one of terror, disease, bandits, and the tenacity of humans who
simply refuse to believe there is no reason to fight on. Lee Singer
paints a bleak picture of the future but has saved a few streaks
of color to represent rays of light that can, with care, shatter
the stranglehold darkness has on humanity's remnants. BLACKJACK
contains incendiary politics, intrigue, mystery, mayhem, and sometimes
scary individuals.
BLACKJACK is good, and I recommend it.
--Vi Janaway
From Amazon (a *****
review) and Barnes and Noble Reviews:
Lee Singer has written
a fascinating and enthralling work that focuses on the characters
to deliver a cautionary message.-- Harriet Klausner
From
the North Bay Bohemian
A sort
of Mad Maxine for the flat-accented, Marin makes a convincing antihero
for the post-U.S. age, an era seemingly closer than ever before.--G.G.
MORE
REVIEWS TO COME
On the Jake Samson series:
The first and second books --Samson's Deal and Free Draw -- are
available in audiobooks from Books in Motion at http://www.booksinmotion.com.
And number six in that
series:
Royal Flush by Shelley
Singer
Perseverance Press/John Daniel and Co.

From the Back Cover
Jake and Rosie Are Back
Laid-back private eye Jake Samson is now living in mellow Marin
County, and he's working for a new boss, former assistant Rosie
Vicente. This time, they're going undercover, infiltrating an ultra-right-wing
group to help a young warrior named Royal who wants out. The problem
is, the last time someone tried to leave the gang, he ended up dead.
The disguised investigators risk their lives as they follow a beerhall
trail of convoluted connections, bizarre secrets, and outright lunacy.
Then someone else dies, and the violent, raving, group suspects
Royal and our two detectives of treachery. Jake and Rosie must move
fast to keep one step ahead of the terminal incompetence of the
leaders and their troops, who seem more bent on offing each other
than on world domination.
From the Publisher:
Jake Samson Rides Again
Critics have described Jake Samson as "attractive, ingenious,
and fearless"(San Francisco Chronicle), "wry, skeptical,
easygoing"(Kirkus), "one of the nicer guys in the private
eye business, who operates in a relaxed, casual style without need
for macho posturing"(Washington Post). He and his assistant,
carpenter Rosie Vicente, "are entirely engaging, familiar folks,
easy to be with"(San Francisco Chronicle). Now author Shelley
Singer has brought Jake and Rosie back in her new mystery, Royal
Flush, sixth in the series and the first to be published by Perseverance
Press/John Daniel and Company.
Since their last appearance,
the San Francisco Bay Area duo has been through some changes. First
Rosie, then Jake left Oakland for Marin County, north of the Golden
Gate. Jake has never bothered to get his private eye license--but
Rosie did, and now he's working for her. Happily for readers, their
relationship is still solid. "Their respect for each other's
privacy and integrity is so deeply ingrained that they are careful
with their affection, would not quite call it love, and so their
wisecracking takes on a softened, humane edge."(San Francisco
Chronicle)
Jake and Rosie's latest
poker-titled case, Royal Flush, calls on all their strength and
commitment to one another, as they must go underground to infiltrate
a dangerous neo-Nazi group. On their skill and intelligence depend
the life of a misguided but essentially good kid and possibly the
lives of several political assassination targets. But the gang's
incompetence may be even more deadly than their megalomaniac plans.
Today's news headlines echo in Royal Flush: violent youth, pop culture
and technology, easy availability of weapons, extremist ravings,
and dissemination of hatred for outsiders.
Singer's light touch
with serious issues makes Royal Flush as enjoyable a read as all
of her previous books. New readers will join with longtime fans
in hailing the latest installment of this beloved and trend-setting
series.
|