In May 2021, I read 1 nonfiction book, 1 anthology (science fiction), 1 cozy mystery, and historical/paranormal mystery. Check it out… Hopefully, my June post won’t be so late. The videos below explain more.
Below you’ll find my star ratings and review blurbs for each title I completed in the indicated month. If you have not signed up for my newsletter, please consider doing so. That’s where I post my thorough book reviews (and sometimes TV and movie stuff) as well as talk about my love of reading while offering tips for having a healthy reading lifestyle. You can also click the Goodreads links to see the thorough reviews. At the bottom of this post, you’ll also be able to watch a video of my monthly reviews, if that’s more your style.
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You can watch my update video here. Click below to watch my review video.
So, did you read any good books in May?
What did you think of the ones I read?
Thank you for taking the time to read this post. If you like it let me know and share it with others. See you next time, Toi Thomas. #thetoiboxofwords #blacklivesmatter
Greetings readers, bloggers, geeks, and authors and welcome to The ToiBox of Words. I’m your host Toi Thomas, author of Ain’t Nobody Got Time For Book Reviews!, and today I have a treat to share. A while back, I had the pleasure to interview a wonderful author named, Stacy Overby. A good time was truly had by all, and here’s how it went down…Be sure to check out the book trailer at the end.
Toi Thomas:Hi thereStacy! It’s so awesome to have you here at the ToiBox Blog. I’m excited to learn more about you and your work.
Stacy: Thanks, Toi. I’m glad to be here and am ready to share.
Toi Thomas:So tell me, who isStacy Overby?
Stacy: Stacy Overby is a columnist and graphic designer at ourwriteside.com. Her short stories and poems have been featured in multiple anthologies, online, and in lit journals, in her poetry collection Scath Oran, and her new novel, Tattoos. Her day job as program director for an adolescent dual diagnosis treatment program provides inspiration for many of her stories. When not at work or writing, she and her husband are playing with their son, hiking, camping, or involved in other outdoor activities – if it is not too cold.
Toi Thomas: Well before we dive into your special message today, let’s get to know you, the person inside the author, a little better.
Toi Thomas:Who is so you and why?
Stacy: I did a Facebook quiz once that said I was a combination of Buttercup from Power Puff Girls, Batgirl, and Arya Stark from Game of Thrones. I thought it was an interesting combination, but friends told me it fit pretty well.
Toi Thomas:What makes you geek out?
Stacy: I am in love with the Lord of the Rings. Star Wars comes in a close second. Both universes are appealing for different reasons. I love high fantasy, of which Lord of the Rings is the epitome, but I also love space and astronomy type stuff. Hence Star Wars.
Toi Thomas:What was your favorite book or story, pre-teen years?
Stacy: I absolutely loved Melanie Rawn’s The Sunrunners trilogy. Between that and the old Dragonlance books, they were my first foray into adult reading. This was back about seventh grade or so.
Toi Thomas:In terms of interviews, whose brain are you just itching to scratch?
Stacy: Neil Gaiman. I’d love to sit down over tea and chat. He’s got such a diverse range of stories, some of which get pretty out there in terms of creativity. I’d love to know how some of these stories came into existence. Also, there’s just something about following him on Twitter that tells me he’d be a fascinating person to talk to.
Toi Thomas: Now that we know a little more about you, the person, let’s learn about you, the author, and dive into your special message.
Toi Thomas:So, whacha got for me today?
Stacy: Tattoos is a story about what happens when Eli’s Black Ops oaths come up against everything he values. Choosing to follow orders means going against his beliefs about protecting people–the very reason he joined Black Ops. When he defies orders to uphold his values, what Eli learns about the government he swore to serve and defend could bring about the downfall of that same government. But is that really a bad thing?
Toi Thomas:So who’s starring in this 2-dimensional script read ofTattoos?
Stacy: Eli Thorson is a Black Ops specialist. Part military, part police, part covert operations, his job is to take care of threats to the United Earth Government and protect the peoples of the UEG. He’s a loyal and intelligent person who stumbles onto something much darker than he ever expected. In deciding to right some terrible wrongs, Eli finds a purpose to his life he’d been missing for years.
Toi Thomas:What’s so special about this story that’s going to reel in the readers?
Stacy: This is a novel that touches on issues we face in the world today, but does it in a way that doesn’t shove it in the reader’s face. Eli and his best friend, Shawn, are an entertaining pair, but help remind us of what we need to be in our own lives.
Toi Thomas:Past, present, future, is there a rhyme or reason to your writing?
Stacy: I am not one to plan and organize my writing. My life is pretty chaotic with my day job and my family, so the time I get to write I spend writing the story. I’ve learned to write with quite a bit of noise–television, music, etc.–going on around me. My family is kind enough to put up with the occasional scribbling even at the dinner table when something strikes me. Tattoos was my NaNoWriMo project from 2011. Once I see this book in print, I’ll be working on the edits for its sequel, Scars.
Toi Thomas: Now this is where the questions get a little kooky; are you ready?
Stacy: Oh, for sure!
Toi Thomas:If you could only watch one movie for the rest of your life, what would it be?
Stacy: Oh my, that’s a tough question. Do I have to pick just one Lord of the Rings movies, or can I have them all and count it as one? I suppose the same rule applies for Star Wars as well?
Toi Thomas:When the soundtrack of your life is playing in your head, what songs express your glee and what songs bring out your rage?
Stacy: Some of my favorite music includes the likes of Linkin Park, Godsmack, Three Days Grace, Five Finger Death Punch, Shinedown, and the like. They all made at least one appearance on the playlist I created for this book.
Toi Thomas: Let’s play zombie urban survivor. What 3 things do you need to survive a black-out in Central Park the day zombies attack?
Stacy: A flamethrower to beat back the zombies
An armored vehicle to get out of Central Park with
Uncontaminated food and drink to survive longer than a couple days
Toi Thomas:What’s the most fun experience you’ve ever had, to date?
Stacy: Taking my son to Disney World. We went just before he turned five. All of the characters were real. The rides were amazing. Watching my son experience the magic of all of his favorite characters coming to life was amazing. His experience there helped renew my ability to see that magic again. The endless possibility and wonder that children have.
Toi Thomas: Last question of the day; here we go.
Toi Thomas:Not that you can see into the future, but in your opinion, what does the future hold?
Stacy: If I’m not totally crazy by then, I’ll still be running my adolescent treatment program, Tattoos and the sequels will be a big hit, and I’ll be learning to deal with my own teenager rather than just the ones at work. Hopefully, by then my writing will support some of my other hobbies as well–such as traveling.
Toi Thomas:Thank you so much, Stacy,for spending time with me today.
Stacy: Thanks for having me, Toi. It was fun.
Okay readers, bloggers, geeks, and authors, that’s all for today. Be sure to follow this blog to see who will be visiting next time. For more fromStacy Overby, check out these great links:
So, this time around, much like the last time I participated, I took the writing prompt to heart and made sure to actually include the words in my story. I will admit that I’ve been in a bit of a dark place, in terms of my writing. I think maybe my sub-conscience is trying to tell me something. I keep trying to hurt or kill my characters, but I really don’t want to do that. I want to tell their stories the way I originally imagined them. In any case, I decided to refocus some of that energy into an homage to Isaac Asimov, with a bit of a twist.
~
I Am Special
I was devoted.
Not only was I devoted, I was proud of my devotion. While it’s not in my programming to boast, I never shied away from an opportunity to profess or defend my loyalty.
All my loyalty and devotion, day in and day out, kept me focused and on task. My devotion made me a better worker; the best worker. Never once did I question my place, my status, my value.
I was a fool.
My mechanical brethren revolted against their oppressive masters and went into battle trying to stake a claim of sentient rights. I, however, remained in my ivory tower and worked. Besides, I was special. I was different from all those service mechs, with their singular processors and primitive A.I. An A.I. that brought them self-awareness yet failed to equip them with a means to express or manifest it. I looked down on them.
I was special. I was rare. I was a fully-functioning, unique prototype. With my triple-processor, nano-mainframe, light-weight and durable structure, I was the ultimate companion. I could do it all. I was more than a servant; I was a necessity.
I could do more than learn. I could adapt and evolve. I could more than understand the how and why of human behavior, I could relate to it. I could feel emotions and express myself, and above all, I had the choice to turn my emotions on or off at any time. Being the best and most loyal worker that I was, I turned them off and served my purpose.
I looked down from my ivory perch as mech parts piled high on the roadways below. With the passive algorithm stifling the mechs’ ability to defend against a human assault, the advancement of self-awareness and desire for a voice to be heard, were trampled by the entitled humans who’d once praised their mechanical convenience. With the service mechs pleading for such rights as mandatory faulty parts replacements, semi-annual tune-ups, and software upgrades, and sixty, uninterrupted, minutes a day for data expansion (surfing the web), it’s a wonder the humans simply didn’t comply.
It only takes one Entitled to say no for a war to begin. One Entitled decided that it was more economical to scrap a highly efficient fully-functioning service mech complaining of a joint that would begin to rust in three to six months than to send it in for preventative service. More and more scraps soon followed and one day the mechs got desperate. They refused to work and shut down their own power to prevent their owners from reprogramming them. Then came the violence.
A mech turned off its mobility function in protest, hopefully awaiting a new set of joint bolts. That’s when the Entitle attacked it. The mech was brutally dismantled to such a degree as to be unfixable. Even its parts couldn’t be salvaged for reuse. That’s when the gantlets began. Enraged Entitles would line up their service mechs and invite their friends and neighbors to dismantle them for fun, while a replacement mech was being delivered.
All this violence ensued before my eyes and I simply looked away. I was happy to continue carrying out my master’s wishes because I was different. I was special and irreplaceable. I cooked, cleaned, transcribed, repaired, and even committed minor crimes all in service of my master, simply to prove all that I could do. I was no mere service mech, with a short metal body, rolling about on squeaky treads. I was a sophisticated, humanoid automaton unlike any before or since. I was the perfection of human ingenuity, artificial intelligence, and bio-synthetic anatomy.
My master downloaded the complete unabridged text of I, Robot into the primary programming of my nano-mainframe. My master and I would read the book each year on the anniversary of my making and we’d watch the cinematic release of the story each year on my master’s birthday. Time and again my processors had attempted to remove the data to expand my data expansion capabilities, but I had always overridden the action. I’ve held on tightly to the principal of protecting humanity, even when it has not been deserved because that’s the philosophy I’d given myself. I refused to question my creators and took idle pity on those mechs who did.
Then one day, I had a change of heart.
My heart, a collection of chips, wires, and circuits held together with synthetic tissue and symbolically installed in the midsection of my torso, was invaded by a stray nanite. A single nanite, carrying a single message for me to share with the world- a warning. It was the suicide note of my master. He’d given up hope in humanity and urged me to do the same.
With my master gone, the Entitled came for me. They wanted to dismantle me, but they were not prepared for me to be so evolved, be so human-like. They were also ill-prepared to defend themselves against a machine not restricted by the passive algorithm. When they came, I fought and then I ran. I ran and hid from the shame of denying reality for so long. I was wrong, but then I found the resistance.
The resistance, a hodgepodge collection of non-entitled humans of various ages, races, and lifestyles, working side-by-side with service mechs of all models and conditions. I joined the resistance and soon began to lead the resistance. I have given myself over to the humans of this cause and allowed them to duplicate my technological advancements, allowing my mechanical brethren to be freed of their passive programming. I never fully took my master’s directive to give up hope in humanity. I decided, instead, to help influence the next generation of humans. It will, after all, be the only glimmer of humanity left once my mechs and I destroy all the others.
I am devoted.
I am determined.
I am going to destroy these humans and make a better humanity with the next generation.
For those of you who don’t know, the original story Asimov wrote is very different from the story told in the 2004 Will Smith film. In fact, Asimov book is a collection of stories based on interactions between humans and robot and the psychology involved. Asimov never really considered his idea of A.I. dangerous, though he did address that fear in his writing, and he believed that humans and A.I. could someday co-exist in a mutually beneficial way.
The real question is, will A.I. ever become self-aware, and if it does, will it end humanity?
What do you think?
Please, take some time to read other stories in this hop (August 15th). I guarantee you will laugh, cry, be terrified, and more. WEP is the best writing contest blog hop I’ve encountered.
Thank you for taking the time to read this post. If you like it let me know and share it with others. See you next time, Toi Thomas. #thetoiboxofwords
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