Hi, lovelies! It gives me great pleasure today to host Olga &
Christopher Werby and their new book, “Becoming Animals”! For other stops on their Goddess Fish
Promotions Book Tour, please click on the banner above or any of the images in
this post.
Be sure to make it to the
end of this post to enter to win a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble Gift Card!! Also, come back daily to interact with Olga
and Christopher and to increase your chances of winning!
Thanks for stopping
by! Wishing you lots of luck in this
fabulous giveaway!
Becoming Animals
by Olga Werby
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GENRE: Science Fiction Adventure
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BLURB:
Humans
have always wanted to know what goes on inside the minds of other animals. But
what if humans could become animals? Toby’s father leads a team of
neuroscientists directly connecting the brains of humans with those of animals.
And Toby is a prodigy at throwing her mind into the animal subjects in his
lab—she’s the best there is.
But
Toby suffers from cystic fibrosis and she’s not likely to live into adulthood.
Could a radical plan to embed her consciousness into an animal allow Toby to
survive? And what does it mean to live without a human body?
Can
Toby and her father solve the problem of fully merging two beings before she
takes her last breath? Will the government succeed in stopping their efforts
before they are done? It’s a race against death and into the minds of animals.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT TWO:
“You
can’t ask me to experiment on my own child.”
Will
had been arguing with the major for hours, back in his home office, in the
apartment he shared with his wife and daughter. With each exchange, he felt
like his grasp on the situation was dissolving. The major could be very
convincing.
“Toby
was very impressive,” the major said.
Will
knew that he tended to fold under repeated questioning from the major,
eventually adopting the major’s reasoning as his own. And yet he, too, was
stunned by his daughter’s accomplishment and wondered what else she could do
with a bit of training. If only she weren’t so young. If only she wasn’t his
daughter. Will knew that he was about to agree to everything the major wanted.
Just one more push…
“What
did she tell you?” Major Watson asked again.
Will
replayed his daughter’s interaction with the rat in his mind. What Toby had
done was nothing short of amazing. A miracle, really.
“She
could even sense physical boundaries with the rat’s whiskers!” he said.
“There’s no human equivalent to that, not really. I thought with time we’d be
able to physically control the animal, but I had no idea we could ever achieve
so much integration with its perceptual system. Toby is just a natural at
brain-to-brain-interface command. Who knew?”
Will’s
excitement over Toby’s achievement in his lab was coloring his emotions, making
him more pliable to the major’s arguments. He knew it, but still he couldn’t
control his pride and enthusiasm. Everything he hoped for was happening…just
not how he had planned.
“Did
your daughter ever try the BBI before?”
“The
cap? No, never! She’s watched us do it plenty of times. With Dalla being so
sick…I mean—”
“It’s
fine, Will. You don’t mind me calling you Will?”
“Of
course not. And Major, I know the project is classified, but Toby is just a
third grader, you know? It didn’t seem…” Will trailed off. It was hard to
justify his daughter’s presence in the top-secret military-sponsored lab just
because he couldn’t find a babysitter.
“I
don’t mind you taking your daughter to the lab,” Major Watson said. “We’ll just
make it official—retroactively. We’ll give your daughter a special research
status and all the difficulties will go away.” The major stressed the word
“difficulties.” It was clearly a veiled threat.
“But
she’s only eight,” Will said.
“Clearance
isn’t dependent on the maturity of the researcher.” The major let the ambiguity
of whom he was talking about hang in the air.
A
sustained coughing fit sounded from an upstairs bedroom and both men glanced up
at the ceiling. Will’s wife, Dalla, had cystic fibrosis and her lungs were
drowning in gelatinous mucus. She was bedridden most of the time now—too weak
to walk, gasping for air. It was only a matter of time before Toby would lose
her mother.
Worse
still, Toby had inherited her mother’s genetic fault. Toby’s lungs were still
strong, but with each bout of cold or flu, the girl developed more lesions and
risked making her condition worse.
Will
felt like he was losing control. The world just seemed so…overwhelming. The
only bright spot in all of this was Toby’s remarkable abilities to control the
rat.
“Toby
Crowe will join the team of researchers in your lab officially,” the major
said. “She will be named in the grant and will help you develop your BBI
prototype further. And of course she will be bound by the same confidentiality
clause as you and your research team. Since she is a minor, the responsibility
for her compliance will naturally fall on you.”
Will
stared at the tall, dark-featured, crisply dressed man. He felt dazed by the
interaction.
“So
I expect to see you and your daughter in the lab tomorrow.” The major stood to
leave.
“But
Toby has school,” Will protested.
“I’ll
make sure her education won’t suffer. I’ll personally assign a full-time early
childhood development expert to your team.”
“What?”
“We’ll
get someone very qualified. Would a full PhD do?”
“For
Toby’s teacher?” It was amazing how easily the major swept aside all of Will’s
objections.
“Just
imagine your daughter freed from a lowest-common-denominator curriculum. The
girl is a born scientist! And if she’s not in an elementary school germ
factory, she won’t get so sick all the time.”
That
was true. Being sick was bad for Toby’s condition. It was also bad for Dalla.
When Toby got sick, Dalla couldn’t even be around her, as exposure to even the
most common cold could be disastrous. So whenever there was a sniffles outbreak
at school—which was often—they tried to keep Toby home. It was the primary
reason Toby had spent so much time at Will’s lab—they didn’t want her getting
sick at school and Dalla was too sick to take care of her at home. Toby was a
quiet, self-sufficient kid, and quite happy at the lab, but Will recognized
that her school absences were interfering with her education.
“I
guess that could work,” Will heard himself saying.
Not
only was Major Watson getting everything he wanted, but, Will realized, he had
somehow made Will want it too. Will was actually excited about the prospect of
working with his daughter and developing her surprising BBI talent.
“Wonderful!
I’ll personally oversee all the paperwork. And of course, I’ll make sure that
Toby’s teacher’s salary won’t come out of your research budget. You don’t have
to worry about a thing. Please give my best to your wife.” He shook Will’s hand
and strode from the Crowe home.
In
his mind, Will reviewed their conversation. He tried to understand what he had
just agreed to. How would he explain this to Dalla?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WANT TO READ
MORE???:
The authors are offering their readers the first few chapters of
their new book, “Becoming Animals,” for FREE!!!
Check it out here:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR
INTERVIEW:
Good morning Olga!
Welcome to Fabulous and Brunette!
We are thrilled to have you here and can’t wait to learn more about you
and your new book, “Becoming Animals.”
Thank you very much for this opportunity to connect with the Fabulous
and Brunette Blog readers. Hope they find “Becoming Animals” a good read.
Tells us a little bit about yourself.
I write in the
genres of sci-fi and magical realism. My background is in astrophysics and
psychology. Granted, it’s not a very likely combination for a career…a regular
career. But it is perfect for a writer!
Tell us about your new book, “Becoming Animals.”
Humans have always
wanted to know what goes on inside the minds of other animals. But what if
humans could become animals? Toby’s father leads a team of neuroscientists who
are developing equipment to directly connect the brains of humans with those of
animals. Toby is a prodigy at throwing her mind into the animal subjects in her
dad’s lab—she’s the best there is.
But Toby suffers
from cystic fibrosis and she’s not likely to live to adulthood. Could a radical
plan to embed her consciousness into an animal allow Toby to survive? And what
does it mean to live without a human body?
What are readers saying about your new book? Can you please provide some of the reviews
you’ve received?
"[A] must-read for every science fiction and animal
lover."
~
A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
"[A]s a concept for a novel I found the idea of melding
with an animal's mind, in Becoming Animals, to be utterly fascinating and was
excited to see how this would develop for young Toby. I became very invested in
the characters created by Olga and Christopher Werby and consequently enjoyed
this children's/young adult book even more than I thought I would. The amount
of honest research that had clearly gone on before penning this novel lent real
authenticity to the tale. I had heard much of what was discussed in broad
details in various places, but had perhaps not realized the possible implications
- this was especially true of the idea of neuroplasticity and our brain's
ability to reset and remake neural connections, at will or as required. The
book was an incredibly easy read and although the science might be above the
understanding of some of the authors' intended audience, it in no way detracted
from the understanding of the story. This story is unique, in my opinion, a
rare quality in today's book market. I commend the two authors for their
ingenuity and creativity and can highly recommend this read. A great job!"
~
A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
"[T]he characters, both human and animal, are
unforgettable, and the plot is high-tech fantasy at its finest. Becoming
Animals is most highly recommended."
~
A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
"[A] very interesting, enjoyable, and thought-provoking
read; a brilliant addition to the libraries of science fiction and fantasy
fans, as well as anyone who simply enjoys a good story."
~
A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
"[T]his is a great novel for young and older sci-fi
fans."
~
A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
"[T]his a very interesting, enjoyable, and
thought-provoking read; a brilliant addition to the libraries of science
fiction and fantasy fans, as well as anyone who simply enjoys a good
story."
~ A 5-Star Review from Readers' Favorite
What awards has your new book won?
This story won several indi book awards: 2018 Bronze Medal in the Young
Adult Science Fiction from Readers’ Favorite and The Independent Author Network
Book of the Year Finalist. “Becoming Animals” is fully-illustrated—why do only
kids get to have pictures in their books?
Tell us how you make the story believable. How do you write realistic fantasy and why should
readers read your new book?
I think lots of
people read as a form of escapism—they want to be completely enveloped into a
magical story full of wonderful people, living exciting lives. Reading is an
immersive experience. The movie that best captures that dynamic is “Romancing
the Stone” in which a young Kathleen Turner plays a romance novelist who has to
go and rescue her sister from evil people in far away lands with a help of a
handsome rogue, Michael Douglas. But in addition to escape, I think people also
read to experience something new, to learn something outside of their daily
lives, to feel something different. I embed real science into all of my stories
(sometimes more, sometimes less). I find that the easiest way to learn
something new is through reading fiction, by forming emotional connections to
fictional characters and their dilemmas. Those dilemmas don’t have to be
written at the first-grade level. Readers get complex ideas; they want to
understand the world around them. I do; I’m a reader too. I value books that
not only tell a good story but also give me something new and juicy to chew on.
I love that! I write for readers who love those kinds of books, too.
Here’s something
that blew me away. The fictional characters in the stories I write have a lot more
power over their fate than I thought they would (or should). I always knew that
stories changed when they were written down in a tangible form. That’s true for
paintings, too. What’s in my head is not necessarily going to be what’s on
paper. But it surprised me the extent to which my characters take on a life of
their own. Oh I can try to push them in the direction I thought I wanted them
to evolve, but it never works out. When I push, the characters rebel. When a
hero of the book is well-drawn, she doesn’t allow the writer to pull strings
for her. And so the story tends to change…sometimes drastically. Is that just
my writing quirk? I don’t know. Perhaps other writers fight with their
characters, too. Somehow I think it is a very common phenomenon.
Thank you so much for spending time with Fabulous and Brunette
readers and sharing your exciting new book with us! We wish you all the best on your book tour!
Thank you again for allowing me to share my story with your readers!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR BIO:
Olga Werby, Ed.D., has a Doctorate from U.C.
Berkeley with a focus on designing online learning experiences. She has a
Master's degree from U.C. Berkeley in Education of Math, Science, and
Technology. She has been creating computer-based projects since 1981 with
organizations such as NASA (where she worked on the Pioneer Venus project),
Addison-Wesley, and the Princeton Review. Olga has a B.A. degree in Mathematics
and Astrophysics from Columbia University. She became an accidental science
fiction indie writer about a decade ago, with her first book, "Suddenly
Paris," which was based on then fairly novel idea of virtual
universes. Her next story, "The FATOFF Conspiracy," was a
horror story about fat, government bureaucracy, and body image. She writes
about characters that rarely get represented in science fiction stories --
homeless kids, refugees, handicapped, autistic individuals -- the social
underdogs of our world. Her stories are based in real science, which is
admittedly stretched to the very limit of possible. She has published almost a
dozen fiction books to date and has won many awards for her writings. Her short
fiction has been featured in several issues of "Alien Dimensions
Magazine," "600 second saga," "Graveyard
Girls," "Kyanite Press' Fables and Fairy Tales,"
"The Carmen Online Theater Group's Chronicles of Terror," with
many more stories freely available on her blog, Interfaces.com.
And I
now have a site that allows students and parents to download free educational
materials for elementary and secondary school kids to download and do offline:
supermarketscience.com. It is still under development, but keep an eye out if
you have kids!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CONNECT WITH OLGA:
Website:
Website:
Company/Publisher Website:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Pinterest:
Instagram:
YouTube:
LinkedIn:
BookBub Author Page:
BookBub Book Page:
Goodreads Author Page:
Goodreads Book Page:
Amazon Author Page:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
COMIC STRIP FUN:
Check out this cool comic
strip the author created just for Fabulous and Brunette readers!!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BOOK BUY LINKS:
Amazon Kindle eBook:
Amazon Paperback:
Barnes and Noble NOOK eBook:
Barnes and Noble Paperback:
Kobo eBook:
The Book Depository Paperback:
BAM! Books-A-Million Paperback:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFO:
Olga will be awarding a $25 Amazon or B/N GC to
a randomly drawn winner via Rafflecopter during the tour.
**This post contains affiliate links and if clicked and a
purchase is made, I may receive a small commission to help support this
blog. This does not cost you anything,
it just helps pay for all those awesome giveaways on here.**
Olga & Christopher ~ Good morning! Welcome to FAB! It is so great to have you both here! Congrats on your new book and good luck on the book tour! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteAwesome post and great giveaway!
ReplyDeleteVictoria ~ Thank you!! I'm glad you stopped by and wish you good luck the giveaway!! :)
DeleteSounds like a good read.
ReplyDeleteRita ~ Good morning!! Yes, it really does!! Thanks for stopping by and good luck in the giveaway!! :)
DeleteThank you very much for sharing my stories with your readers!
ReplyDelete