#CatRambo

2024-11-09

day 08: Aye aye captain! To be honest, this book is pretty forgettable. But I remember really liking Niko- fairly certain she’s the reason I finished the book. So if I had to serve under any space captain, I’d pick Niko.

This prompt made me realize I need more space faring sci-fi in my life.

2024-09-23

In my new interview with author Cat Rambo, we discuss their new hopepunk- and military fantasy-infused sci-fi space opera novel "Rumor Has It," the third book in their ongoing "Disco Space Opera" series.
paulsemel.com/exclusive-interv
📖🚀
. . . . . . . .
#CatRambo #CatRamboInterview #CatRamboRumorHasIt #CatRamboRumorHasItInterview #CatRamboDiscoSpaceOpera #CatRamboYouSexyThing #CatRamboDevilsGun #Books #Reading #AuthorInterview #AuthorInterviews #BookTok #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SciFiBooks #SpaceOpera

2024-08-07

There's a lot mercenaries can do when they retire: sleep, eat, golf... But in Cat Rambo's "Disco Space Opera" series, they open a restaurant…and still get into trouble. In this exclusive Q&A, Rambo discusses the 2nd installment, "Devil's Gun," which is now in paperback.
paulsemel.com/exclusive-interv
📖🚀🧑‍🍳🔫
. . . . . . . . . . .
#CatRambo #CatRamboInterview #CatRamboDevilsGun #CatRamboDevilsGunInterview #CatRamboYouSexyThing #CatRamboRumorHasIt #CatRamboDiscoSpaceOpera #ScienceFiction #SciFi #SpaceOpera

2024-01-04

While we don't know where crime, its prevention, or its investigation will go in the future, it's fun to imagine. And even more fun to read short stories by those who are really good at imagining. Here's the link to my interview with Jennifer Brozek and Cat Rambo, editors of the criminally-minded sci-fi short story anthology, “The Reinvented Detective.”
paulsemel.com/exclusive-interv
📖🚀👮🪐🕵️
. . . . . . . . . .
#JenniferBrozek #JenniferBrozekInterview #CatRambo #CatRamboInterview #SciFi #ScienceFiction

2023-07-15

Just finished the first volume of Clockwork Phoenix: Tales of Beauty and Strangeness, an anthology by Mike Allen. This one came out in 2008, and is very loosely themed around fire, gears and resurrection, with an unconventional introduction about a phoenix and a magical train.

The line-up of contributing authors (or "pinions" as Allen calls them), features many of the decade's big names in SFF and horror. Catherynne Valente's "The City of Blind Delight" is most closely tied to the themes and has the rich multisensory charm for which she is known. The Cats Rambo ("The Drew Drop Coffee Lounge") and Sparks ("Palisade") both make fine appearances, and Tanith Lee provides a characteristically glamorous look at another world where all the gender and sex stuff has Gone A Bit Wrong ("The Woman"), though not without a few silver linings!

There are a lot of dystopias here, and though in most cases the promised element of beauty is certainly there, as the anthology proceeded through one awful future or parallel world after another I did struggle with the downbeat vibe. There are also a couple of high fantasy numbers that have dated badly, both as regards shallow depiction of women and/or rape and in terms of general cliched style (though I guess anyone who deliberately reads a story called "Choosers of the Slain" deserves what they get).

My favourite stories were both set in what is pessimistically referred to as the "real world": Michael J. DeLuca's "The Tarrying Messenger", about a self-righteous student on a cycling tour who comes upon a strange form of evangelism in the Arizona desert, has beautiful writing of a kind that seems to have fallen from fashion lately, and which draws a strong feeling of magic from sharp observations of places and buildings (and, of course, people). I also liked "The Occultation", an early one by Laird Barron. Like many Europeans I am a bit obsessed with American motel culture, especially when things get ghostly.

And finally Leah Bobet's "Bell, Book and Candle" also deserves a mention. None of the main characters in it are truly human but Bobet makes the reader identify with them as if they were, while still keeping their essential otherness and weirdness intact. That's difficult to achieve - so difficult, in fact, that I tend to avoid books with casts of non-human characters.

Anyway, although I'm by no means a fan of all speculative fiction - I skew towards horror and dark fantasy - the quality in most of these stories is high, there's plenty of variety, and I sense I will be reviewing more of these books in future! I also recommend ordering directly from Mythic Delirium: mine crossed the Atlantic impressively fast and with a signed dedication!

https://mythicdelirium.com/clockwork-phoenix-tales-of-beauty-and-strangeness

#MikeAllen #LairdBarron #LeahBobet #CatSparks #CatRambo #CatherynneValente #TanithLee #MichaelJDeLuca

#Horror #Fantasy #HorrorReviews

2023-07-15

Just finished the first volume of Clockwork Phoenix: Tales of Beauty and Strangeness, an anthology by Mike Allen. This one came out in 2008, and is very loosely themed around fire, gears and resurrection, with an unconventional introduction about a phoenix and a magical train.

The line-up of contributing authors (or "pinions" as Allen calls them), features many of the decade's big names in SFF and horror. Catherynne Valente's "The City of Blind Delight" is most closely tied to the themes and has the rich multisensory charm for which she is known. The Cats Rambo ("The Drew Drop Coffee Lounge") and Sparks ("Palisade") both make fine appearances, and Tanith Lee provides a characteristically glamorous look at another world where all the gender and sex stuff has Gone A Bit Wrong ("The Woman"), though not without a few silver linings!

There are a lot of dystopias here, and though in most cases the promised element of beauty is certainly there, as the anthology proceeded through one awful future or parallel world after another I did struggle with the downbeat vibe. There are also a couple of high fantasy numbers that have dated badly, both as regards shallow depiction of women and/or rape and in terms of general cliched style (though I guess anyone who deliberately reads a story called "Choosers of the Slain" deserves what they get).

My favourite stories were both set in what is pessimistically referred to as the "real world": Michael J. DeLuca's "The Tarrying Messenger", about a self-righteous student on a cycling tour who comes upon a strange form of evangelism in the Arizona desert, has beautiful writing of a kind that seems to have fallen from fashion lately, and which draws a strong feeling of magic from beautiful, sharp observations of places and buildings (and, of course, people). And I also liked "The Occultation", an early one by Laird Barron. Like many Europeans I am a bit obsessed with American motel culture, especially when things get ghostly.

And finally Leah Bobet's "Bell, Book and Candle" also deserves a mention. None of the main characters in it are truly human but Bobet makes the reader identify with them as if they were, while still keeping their essential otherness and weirdness intact. That's difficult to achieve - so difficult, in fact, that I tend to avoid books with casts of non-human characters.

Anyway, although I'm by no means a fan of all speculative fiction - I skew towards horror and dark fantasy - the quality in most of these stories is high, there's plenty of variety, and I sense I will be reviewing more of these books in future! I also recommend ordering directly from Mythic Delirium: mine crossed the Atlantic impressively fast and with a signed dedication!

https://mythicdelirium.com/clockwork-phoenix-tales-of-beauty-and-strangeness

#MikeAllen #LairdBarron #LeahBobet #CatSparks #CatRambo #CatherynneValente #TanithLee #MichaelJDeLuca

#Horror #Fantasy #HorrorReviews

Jack Iwashyna 🫁iwashyna@critcare.social
2023-03-19

So I have just discovered #CatRambo, and think their guidelines for critique writing are quite useful

kittywumpus.net/blog/2014/01/3

Overall:

Start with what works. Let the writer know what you see as the story’s strengths and how they might capitalize on them.
What keeps you from connecting with the story? What don’t you understand? Sometimes the most useful thing you can give someone is a brief synopsis of what you think is going on in the story, because it may not match their intent.
Critique big ticket items, not little nitpicks.
It’s more important to point out what’s broken than to make suggestions how to fix it, because that fix will differ radically from writer to writer.
How do the beginning and ending work together to create a satisfying story? Is the story that’s provided the one the one promised in the beginning? Is the ending set up in a satisfying way? Is it the result of character actions?
What’s missing? What don’t you understand?
What seems extraneous, unneeded or distracting?
What’s the pacing like? Where does the story drag and where does it skip too quickly through details?
Where are the info-dumps and how can that information be spread out?
2023-03-05

I just finished reading "You Sexy Thing" by #CatRambo.

A fun--and sometimes dark--romp through space with the culinary staff of the Last Chance restaurant and a sentient bioengineered space yacht.

Pairs well with the TV series and movie "#Firefly" and "#Serenity."

#ScienceFiction #SpacePirates #Cooking

Full review at:
goodreads.com/review/show/5334

2023-02-02

@janejorgenson @ewgc @bookstodon having just read the synopsis, Cat Rambo's Devil's Gun just went to the top of my TBR pile:

No one escapes their past as the crew of the You Sexy Thing attempts to navigate the hazards of opening a pop-up restaurant and the dangers of a wrathful pirate-king seeking vengeance in Cat Rambo's Devil's Gun.

Pop up restaurants and pirates? Awesome.

us.macmillan.com/books/9781250

#sff #scifi #catrambo

2022-07-29
Antología de relatos de tonos dispares pero siempre basados en la idea de la inmortalidad o de la transcendencia. A decir verdad hay relatos que me han gustado mucho; pero el estilo me ha parecido muy dispar entre unos y otros, no lo he sentido tan unitario como esperaba y eso hace que aún no me haya formado una idea clara de la autora como sí me pasó con Tim Pratt o Robert Shearman con su "Pequeños Dioses y otros cuentos blancos" y "Canciones de amor para tímidos y cínicos" respectivamente.

Aún así son unos relatos imaginativos y llenos de fantasía que dejan un poso de reflexión, algunos más evidentes y otros en los que tienes que hacer un esfuerzo extra ya que no es tan evidente o tiene una forma de acabar en la que te tienes que plantear qué te ha querido decir la autora con ese relato.

En definitiva, una buena forma de acercarse a la autora y ver cómo plasma sus inquietudes en pequeñas dosis ágiles y plagadas de imaginación.

Yo por mi parte espero leer algo más suyo más adelante y me apunto su nombre bajo el epígrafe de "Seguiremos tu carrera con gran interés", aunque por lo que veo tiene una extensísima lista de relatos y algunos premios y nominaciones a premios importantes como el Nebula o el Locus -entre otros-, pese a que, lo dicho: necesito leerla más para hacerme una idea más clara de su narrativa.

#LaMecánicaSecretaDelMundo #CatRambo
Traduce: #CarlotaVillateMoreno
Edita: #LaMáquinaQueHacePing!
#Antología #Fantasía #CienciaFicción
#LeoAutoras
#marKapaginas #KindleKeyboard #leoendigital #yotambienleolibros
#bookfluencerespañol #Leído #Kindleandcoffee #librosycafé📚☕️#bookstagramEnEspañol #bookstagramcommunity #booknerd #bookstagrammer #lectoadicta #igreads #LeoYComparto

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