Return to Earth Spotlight: Ken Pelham
The Alvarium Experiment Presents Return to Earth
The stories are currently available as individual short stories in the Kindle Store. Today, I'm spotlighting author Ken Pelham.
Interview with Ken Pelham
Ken
reads and writes in multiple genres and is a member of the Alvarium Experiment,
the consortium of award-winning writers reinventing the way readers experience
short fiction. His short story, “Under the Whelming Tide” is available in Kindle. Follow link to download
while supplies last!
Q:
What was behind the Alvarium Experiment, and how did the group arrive at this
second project, Return To Earth?
KP:
All genres have their strengths and weaknesses. I’ve always loved short
stories in general and science fiction short stories in particular, because the
format lets you get quickly to the strength of science fiction. Ideas. I’d been
looking around for a couple of years for a good anthology to submit work to,
and it occurred to me that with all the explosive advances in online publishing
and marketing, heck, I could create my own anthology. I scribbled out a page or
two of concepts for how a working group could publish together yet independently
around the same concept. I pitched the idea to Charles A. Cornell, a writer I’d
met a couple of years before and whom I knew as an outside-the-box kind of guy.
I was certain he’d say, “Um, yeah, listen, I gotta go wash my cat. Or
something.” But he pounced on the idea and dubbed it “The Alvarium Experiment,”
describing a hive of busy bees producing gallons of honey. We bounced ideas
back and forth for a couple of weeks until we had the premise for the first
project, The Prometheus Saga.
We were shooting for an idea with great flexibility and unlimited possibilities,
and we had one. We pitched it to writers we respected and soon had browbeaten a
group of twelve into signing on. We launched that effort, each of us publishing
independently on the same day in January of 2015.
After
a year we started kicking around ideas for a second project. Lots of notions
were floated and we debated merits of each. Elle Andrews Patt suggested an idea
of aliens arriving at Earth, but, lo, the aliens are human. This idea sprouted
wheels and gained traction, as it had the same wide-open horizons as the first
project. We had new writers join in, and we were off and running.
Q:
What was the inspiration for your Return To Earth
story, “Under the Whelming Tide”?
KP:
I often come up with ideas by playing the “what if?” game a lot of
writers use. I had the prompt from the hive-mind group-think—a return of human
beings to Earth. It’s a loaded idea and that’s the great beauty of it. Among
the “what-if’s” I came up with was, “What if they’re physically different from us?” That one jumped off the page at me. Okay, so they’re
physically different. Why? Because of differing evolutionary paths, of course.
What makes different populations of the same species evolve differently?
Different environments, of course. So if I took a group of humans off-planet
and placed them into a radically different environment for untold generations,
they’re going to come out much differently.
Another
inspiration behind this story was undoubtedly Robert A. Heinlein’s classic
short story, “Universe,” published in 1941. I read it about thirty-five years
ago and still think about it. Heinlein presented the idea of a vast spaceship,
so long in space that its inhabitants have evolved their own culture, lore, and
mythology, oblivious even to the mere existence of anything outside their ship.
They don’t even know it’s a ship; it’s their “universe.” In my story, the
Aethir are aware of the cosmos around them but live generation after generation
in an arrested state of intellectual growth. They have highly advanced
technology at their disposal but they don’t truly understand it, as they simply
inherited it from its originators.
Q:
Could you tell us about a difficulty you overcame as you wrote this particular
story?
KP:
After noodling it awhile, I knew that the idea would require a good bit
of explanation to make it believable. And explanation is the arch-enemy of
fiction. So I had to come up with a scheme to present the explanation while
moving the story along and avoiding the dreaded “info dump.” I hit upon the
idea of a trial for heresy, in which I could dispense the info while tricking
it out with a little suspense. The old courtroom drama ploy. Perry Mason in
outer space.
Q:
What does your next year as a writer look like?
KP: Busy, busy, busy. I’m
working on a nonfiction book that kind of grew out of blog posts I wrote about
suspense fiction. The book takes a fun look at the evolution of genre fiction, the
cross-pollination between genres, and their places in society and literature
overall. I’m also working on a short horror story for an anthology. I have a
third Carson Grant thriller in the works. Soon as the nonfiction book is
complete, that one will take priority. I swear.
The audiobook edition of the
2nd Carson Grant novel, Place
of Fear, should be out a little later this year.
Q: How can readers find out more about your work?
KP: By all means, come set a
spell at www.kenpelham.com and on Twitter, @kenpelham. On Facebook, I show up on the Alvarium Experiment page, and on my own
page. Also have an author’s page at both Goodreads and Amazon.
About the Author
Ken Pelham’s debut novel, Brigands Key, won the 2009 Royal
Palm Literary Award, was published in hardcover in 2012, in softcover in 2014,
and in audiobook in 2015. The prequel, Place of Fear, a 2012 first-place
winner of the Royal Palm, was released in 2013. His nonfiction book, Out
of Sight, Out of Mind: A Writer’s Guide to Mastering Viewpoint, was
named the RPLA 2015 Published Book of the Year.
Ken grew up in the small South Florida town of Immokalee,
and lives with his wife, Laura, in Maitland, Florida. A member of the
International Thriller Writers and the Florida Writers Association, writing
keeps him off the streets and out of trouble, although he’s sometimes spotted
cycling, fishing, or scuba diving, seldom simultaneously.
About Return to Earth
Return to Earth is the second project of the Alvarium Experiment, a consortium of accomplished and award-winning authors.
The
stories do not need to be read in any particular order; each story is an entry
point into the overall story.
Return
to Earth
stories & authors are:
"AOB" by Bria Burton. Aona, an
Alien-Operated Bot (AOB), suffers a malfunction that could jeopardize her
mission on Earth and could lead to the extinction of an entire species from
another planet.
"The Paradoxical Man" by Bard Constantine. Albert Rosen is one of five explorers who vanished on a deep-sea expedition into the Bermuda Triangle. He returns to Earth centuries later, transported across space and time through a mysterious wormhole. However, Earth is not the home he remembers. Humankind has been evacuated, and the survivors lie in hibernation aboard the Locus, an orbiting space station. Rosen is forced to match wits with Deis, an artificial intelligence determined to keep humanity in stasis until he is convinced they are fit to return.
"Children Of The Stars" by Charles A. Cornell. In Japan, an American medical researcher discovers the deadly secret behind an eighty-year-old woman's ageless appearance and incredible fertility, and her connection to the bizarre disappearance of the freighter the Ourang Medan in 1948.
"Recovery"by Veronica Helen Hart. When a virus threatens the lives of everyone on board a transfer station for intergalactic travel, it's up to Dr. Candace Bertram to retrieve the only known vaccine from Earth. The risky, untested method of transport could mean catastrophic mission failure, and grave danger for Dr. Bertram.
"Coming Home" by John Hope. Finally achieving his dream of being an astronaut on the Jupiter missions, Jasper's mind is elsewhere, on the recent loss of his stepfather, Bud. But Jasper's space mission is interrupted when he is sucked into a wormhole that transports him to a different time, 30 years in the past. And now, doctors don't believe where he's from. Fortunately, his loving nurse at his side comforts him and a love builds. That is, until he realizes that his nurse's son is Jasper as a young boy.
"Someday Loyal" by Elle Andrews Patt. Alien invaders are lobbing fireballs at Peoria, but Grandmama is holding tea. When the military arrives in search of Mrs. Suniol, Alice is drawn into the mystery of Lake Snow, a missing husband, and securing the key to an entire civilization's survival.
"Social Experiment" by Tracie Roberts. For the past two years Dr. Olivia Tate had led a satisfying life with her alien spouse, Kya Dumont. As a scientist and cancer survivor, Liv is on a mission to discover a cure for the deadly disease. But something equally deadly has put Kya’s people, the Oo’mahn, in danger of extinction. With an order to evacuate Earth, Kya struggles between helping her people and remaining with the woman she loves, especially now that Liv has also fallen ill. Now Kya’s ship is approaching and the couple must not only find a cure for Liv and the Oo’mahn, but also devise a plan to remain together despite the objection of the aliens.
"Gaia Returning" by C.L. Roman. Pirates steal things. It's what they do... When Captain Irina Demyanov’s first mate disobeys orders and steals the crown jewels of a vengeful alien race, she knows she’s out of options. Desperate to escape, Irina takes her chances on a dangerous vortex leap and lands near an unnamed, yet strangely familiar planet. The gamble may have paid off, but between hostile inhabitants and inevitable discovery by their pursuers, the pirates’ chances of survival appear slim. Can the human remnant find refuge, or will their enemies put a permanent end to the human race?
For additional info about the stories and authors, visit the website: www.alvariumexperiment.wixsite.com/returntoearth
Facebook Fan Page: The Alvarium Experiment
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