• Seeking a place to be free

  • Mar 29 2024
  • Length: 6 mins
  • Podcast
Seeking a place to be free cover art

Seeking a place to be free

  • Summary

  • My novelette, An Illicit Mercy, is part of a new promotion in March and April, Page Turner Freebies.Check out nearly 65 books available for free.My latest novelette, “In the Country of Free Men,” appears in Boundary Shock Quarterly 25: Gulliver’s Other Travels:In this thrilling tale, Granuaile Moore, the great-granddaughter of Lemuel Gulliver, travels to the mysterious Moon. There, she gets caught up in an adventure beyond her wildest dreams.When her scout flyer is attacked and destroyed, Moore finds herself at the mercy of the cruel ruler known as the Drummer. Imprisoned in his decaying palace, she befriends Tichollo, a young servant boy, and hatches a desperate plan to escape back to Earth.Pursued by the Drummer’s soldiers, the two race across a bizarre lunar landscape in a bid for freedom. They must reunite with the island-ship Lemuel II, if it's still there!Moore’s quest to explore new worlds has led her into grave danger. But with courage and cleverness, she might live to sail the skies once more.Science Fiction Space OperaGet your FREE copy of Star Rider Emerges by Heidi SkarieWill a young woman survive when her village is destroyed by an alien space fleet?Toemeka lives with her family in an idyllic mountain village on a distant planet. The village is aware of the war that rages on their planet but the elders believe it won’t touch them. They are about to be proved wrong.The tale is the exciting backstory to Star Rider on the Razor’s Edge that reveals the events that led up to Toemeka joining the Coalition of Free Nation and becoming an undercover operative.“It was summer, and the world was as bright as a lightning flash. Blue sky. Red dirt. Everything was set alight. Vern tried to cherish it, to turn toward the sun the way bluebells did, but Vern still lusted after the dark of the woods, where she was born, where her true self had been made.”― Rivers Solomon, SorrowlandIf Ray Bradbury had been born black, non-binary, and intersex, he might have written something as beautiful as Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon.Thanks for reading The Cosmic Codex! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.Winner of the 2021 Otherwise Award for works of speculative fiction which explore and expand gender, Sorrowland examines race, sexual identity, and what it means to live as a minority in a country built in large measure by and for an oblivious, uncaring, or malicious majority.Solomon tells the story of Vern, an albino black woman who escapes the black separatist Christian compound where she has been raised and abused. Pregnant, she slips away into the surrounding woods where she gives birth and undergoes a physical and psychological transformation.Sorrowland is the best book I read last year. While no book is perfect, I left this novel deeply moved and transformed myself.Solomon’s writing is both lush, as in the opening citation, and hard hitting. She has no patience for the ways in which American society marginalizes and exploits those who, like her, look and love in ways different from the ruling cast. As she says in her Author’s Note:“This story takes place on stolen land. While Sorrowland is set in a United States with a speculative and amorphous shape, the geography and settings explored are based on areas traditionally stewarded by the Tonkawa, Caddo Nation, and Lipan Apache in what are colonially known as Central and East Texas, as well as on lands historically, inhabited by various Plains nations with shifting territories, including the Apsáalooke/Crow, Oceti Sakowin/Sioux, and Arapaho, in what settlers have designated Wyoming and Montana. No story of the so-called United States is complete without an understanding of its foundation on genocide and dislocation, nor without acknowledgment of the Indigenous people still here fighting the ongoing occupation.”Thank you for reading The Cosmic Codex. This post is public so feel free to share it.There is little doubt as to why Solomon's protagonist sacrifices so much in search of a freedom she has never known.In passages like the following, the author revels in describing motivations and relationships in ways that challenge readers, even as her words draw us in:“What turned babies, fragile and curious, into Shermans? Into Ollies? Into men who could not interact with a new thing without wanting to dominate it?What order of events did Vern need to disrupt in the lives of the millions upon millions who woke up every morning proud to be Americans? What made someone love lies?She saw that cursed flag on the hunter's T-shirt and wondered if he knew about the glut of traumas that define this nation's founding. Had he fallen so in love with the myth of belonging that he thought the corpses of his imaginary foes were worthwhile sacrifices toward barbecues, megachurches, bandannas, and hot dogs?The primary freedoms this nation protected were the ones to own and annihilate.”Solomon has a gift for describing her ...
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