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Author: Martin Sketchley | Website
Published Works & Book Reviews
The Destiny Mask
Format: Trade Size, pp364
After the death of Vourniass Lycern, child-bearer to the Seriattic royal household, her twin sons, fathered by former military intelligence officer Alexander Delgado, have grown up ignorant of their relationship. Michael has been raised on Earth as the son of General William Myson, while Cascari has been brought up within Delgado’s terrorist group. Furthermore, due to the circumstances surrounding their birth, no one knows Michael and Cascari are brothers, and both believe they are the rightful heir to the position of Monosiell—head of Seriatt’s royal household.
When the existing Monosiell dies suddenly, the long-awaited opportunity presents itself: with Cascari in power Delgado knows he could strike at Myson more effectively, while Myson seeks the strategic value of Seriatt’s proximity to the M4 wormhole.
The stakes are heightened as the Seriatts are developing time-travel capacity, using technology extrapolated from the Destiny Mask—the artefact Seriattic oracles use to predict the future. Delgado knows that with time-travel capability Myson would represent an immeasurable threat, one which he must prevent.
While strange occurrences in the vicinity of the wormhole go unnoticed, on Seriatt the oracles predict the coming of a savior; but who this will be, no one can tell.
Reviewer: SamanthaAnn
Review: May 5, 2010
Genre(s): Sci-Fi / Fantasy
Delgado continues his quest to defeat Myson this time with the help, and hindrance, of his two twin sons. Raised separately, the brothers don’t know of each other until the final tragic end, Delgado is unable to save both of his sons. Myson seems to have won, but Delgado must go on, the war is not yet over.
Don’t try to predict where this author is going to take you, just sit back and enjoy
The Affinity Trap
Format: Trade Size, 304
By the beginning of the 24th century, social breakdown and environmental decay have led Humanity to withdraw into gigantic habitat towers, insular, safe, and sterile. A new governmental system has evolved: Structure, imposing order upon Earth so that mankind may prosper among the stars. Some prosper more than others, however; beneath Structure's superficially benevolent exterior is a military dictatorship headed by General William Myson - leader, profiteer, sybarite. A man whose many political enemies would dearly love to know that his already vast personal fortune is secretly being swollen through arms deals with the mysterious, alien Sinz.
Seriatt is home to an exotic three-sex race bound by tradition and honour, and located near to the wormhole gateway used by the Sinz. The Seriatts see Myson's arms dealing as a threat, and with tensions rising, Myson realises he must link Earth and Seriatt politically to ensure that his grip on power remains firm. After many diplomatic overtures, it is agreed that he will father a child by Vourniass Lycern, the assigned child-bearer to the Seriattic Royal Household.
But when Lycern decamps to the quasi-religious Affinity Group, Myson orders Alexander Delgado to fetch her. Once a feared and respected officer in Military Intelligence, the changes that followed Myson's rise to power have seen Delgado's status plummet, his independent character and unorthodox methods unwelcome under the new regime. Resentful and bitter, Delgado sees the mission not as a chance to regain his former status, but as an opportunity to engender far greater change. When he comes into contact with Lycern, however, his carefully laid plans fall apart, and the choices he must make will change his life forever.
Martin Sketchley's first novel skilfully blurs the boundaries between good and evil, male and female, human and non-human. Sexuality, gender roles, the nature of authority - the very essence of what it is to be human - are explored within a gripping narrative that highlights the contrast between what we perceive ourselves to be, and what we really are.
Reviewer: SamanthaAnn
Review: May 5, 2010
Genre(s): Sci-Fi / Fantasy
With the good guys behaving badly and the bad guys seeming not altogether that bad, it’s hard to know who to root for as Delgado tries to find his way among all this while dealing with the discovery of where his true interests lie. Each new discovery unfolds not only a change in the path Delgado follows but a change in him as well.
Not what one would call a quick read but a nice meaty story the reader
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