Storytellers On Tour Presents: Bloodlines by Peter Hartog

by Justine Bergman
Bloodlines by Peter Hartog

Today I’m super excited to welcome Peter Hartog to the blog as we kickoff the Bloodlines Book Tour presented by Storytellers On Tour! A little bit of Sci-Fi, a little bit of Urban Fantasy, with a splash of Thriller, and you got yourself the first installment in the The Guardian of Empire City series, and this is one we’ve heard wonderful things about. You should definitely stay tuned throughout the week, because there will be tons of great features from our Roadies, and I can’t wait to hear what they have to say about this one.

I have the privilege of cross-posting something fantastic today (originally posted on Peter’s website), where Peter discusses all the ins and outs of the fabled Science Fantasy genre, a little examination into his novel Bloodlines, and how music plays a large role in the creative process. Keep scrolling to learn more about the book and author, to check out the awesome post, and to enter to win a signed paperback of this beautiful book of his!

The Tour

We’ve enlisted a group of wonderful and talented bloggers and Bookstagrammers to help us feature Bloodlines. This is what we have going on, so make sure to check out each and every one throughout the week for some brilliant content, including reviews and more.

Bloodlines by Peter Hartog

April 18TH – THE KICKOFF
Whispers & Wonder (@whispersandwonder)
––
APRIL 19TH
Beneath a Thousand Skies
Muse Happens
––
APRIL 20TH
Out of This World SFF Reviews
@chapter.mjthomas
––
APRIL 21ST
FanFiAddict
––
APRIL 22ND
dinipandareads
@herscribbledreviews
––
APRIL 23RD
Al-Alhambra
@theenchantedshelf
Book and Nature Professor
––
APRIL 24TH – THE ENCORE
Queen’s Book Asylum

For more about this tour visit Storytellers On Tour.

Bloodlines by Peter Hartog
SERIES: The Guardian of Empire City (#1)
PUBLISHED: August 28, 2018
GENRE: Science Fantasy, Crime/Techno Thriller, Urban Fantasy

CHECK IT OUT ON

AVAILABLE AT

The Blurb

When former hotshot homicide detective Tom “”Doc”” Holliday is recruited to join Special Crimes, he trades in his boring desk job for a second chance to do what he does best, hunt down killers. And his first case doesn’t disappoint: a murdered woman with a bogus past, her body drained of blood, and two eyewitnesses wasted on the designer drug goldjoy claiming a vampire did it.

For Holliday is no stranger to the unusual. He wields the Insight, a fickle clairvoyance that allows him to see the dark and terrible things that hide upon his world. After all, when you live in Empire City, where magic and technology co-exist, and humanity endures behind walls of stone and spell-forged steel, anything is possible.

Saddled with a team whose past is as checkered as his own, Holliday embarks upon an investigation that pits them against bio-engineered vampires, interdimensional parasites and the magical masterminds behind it all.

From nightclubs and skyscrapers, to underground drug labs and coffee shops, Holliday’s search for the truth will uncover a shadowy conspiracy that spans the ages, and forces him to confront a destiny he never wanted.

Bloodlines is Peter Hartog’s debut novel, the first in the Empire City Special Crimes series. Scroll up to order your copy, and start reading today!

The Author

Peter HartogA native son of Massachusetts, Peter has been living in the Deep South for over 25 years. By day, he’s an insurance professional, saving the world one policy at a time. But at night, well, no one really wants to see him fighting crime in his Spider-Man onesie. Instead, Peter develops new worlds of adventure, influenced by his love of science fiction, mysteries, music and fantasy. Whether it’s running role-playing games for his long-time friends, watching his beloved New England sporting teams, or just chilling with a movie, his wife, two boys, one puppy and three cats, Peter’s imagination is always on the move. It’s the reason why his stories are an eclectic blend of intrigue, excitement, humor and magic, all drawn from four decade’s worth of television, film, novels, and comic books. You can learn more about Peter and his writing projects at peterhartog.com, or send him a tweet @althazyr.

WEBSITE: www.peterhartog.com

What is Science Fantasy?
by Peter Hartog

Right now, science fiction and fantasy are everywhere. From books to television, the big screen to the Internet, there is a veritable pupu platter of media devoted to the telling of otherworldly tales. Whether set in the vastness of space, in a dragon-filled sky, or on a fast-moving train through a stygian winterscape, both genres artfully form bridges between our world and elsewhere. These tall tales engage us, showcasing not only the struggles between villains and heroes, but introspectively exploring hidden powers or realities within ourselves to help us see that identity doesn’t have to be defined by where we are now, but by who we can be. At times, these stories startle our senses, hinting at bright magic and frightening monsters, or what fantastical dreams may come. Further still, they might delve deep beyond the human condition, perhaps understanding life that isn’t carbon-based, or discovering a burgeoning consciousness that can see through dimensions and time, into even more outlandish worlds that could very well be right in your back yard.

Simply put, science fiction and fantasy helps us experience the extraordinary by asking a very simple question: What if?

But the genres themselves are not mutually exclusive. So what happens when you mix them together?

Defining science fantasy is a challenge. Is it the belief that magic follows a distinct, yet incomprehensible binary code of numbers and letters to create the brilliant, miraculous and scary? Is it a hard understanding that up is down, left is right, and magnetic north is always magnetic north, no matter what color is your sky? Perhaps it is quantum physics coupled with Einstein’s theory of relativity mixed with vodka and spritzed with butterbeer? Or maybe it’s all of those things, plus techno-wizards, time-traveling mathematicians, and friendly, talking dino-dogs.

If science makes us think, then fantasy lets us dream.

Science fantasy takes the softer side of science fiction and marries it to bits and pieces of the fantastical. It’s a sub-genre of a sub-section of a subcutaneous admixture of all the juicy goodness that fans clamor for, without all those troublesome trans-fats adding to your waistline. Its definition is varied and multi-faceted, and I bet if you ask any five writers from five different age brackets, they’d give you five fairly unique answers. It is slippery, evolving and subject to the vagaries of legitimate, present-day science innovation, the current comic cinematic plot-line, the hottest read on the NY Times best seller list, and the latest show streaming somewhere on the wide world of web-slingers, among a host of other subtle and sledgehammer-direct influences.

Science fantasy bends the genres in the same delightful way a TARDIS folds time and jelly-babies. It is bigger on the inside than the outside, both boggling and simple, and totally recognizable.

Don’t get me wrong. I didn’t make the genre up. It’s been around for a long time. According to Goodreads, there are oodles of literary examples, from C.J. Cherryh’s classic Morgaine & Vanye, to Gene Wolfe’s The Book of the New Sun series. I’m nostalgically fond of Michael Moorcock’s Eternal Champion, where he’s a master of blending fantasy with science fiction by tossing in flying cars, impossible cities and dimension hopping for good measure.

Besides, you can’t deny awesome covers like this one:

(Frank Frazetta’s art is timeless. Anyone says otherwise is just plain wrong.)

Fantasy settings, alternate Earths, places out of time and space, technology mixed with pseudo-science, demon hands, undead eyes, soul-sucking swords, and really cool names. What more do you need?

As it turns out, quite a bit.

IS SCIENCE FANTASY UN-POSSIBLE?

When researching today’s Unpublished post, I came across this insightful explanation scribed by Randy Henderson in an issue of Fantasy Magazine:

“The difference is that if the story includes a mix of possible science fiction (i.e. scientifically possible future or alternate events or technology) and something that is impossible (no matter how plausible the author makes it sound), then it is science fantasy. 

Of course, the word ‘possible’ is often the sticking point here.”

Speculative fiction authors like myself dabble in a smorgasbord of genres, never adhering to just one. Rest assured, we aren’t the folks who start our prose with “It was a dark and stormy night”. That we leave to our beagle betters. Instead, we offer to readers an incredible variance of possibilities, and relish the challenge of making something impossible become possible. By prospecting a twisting riverbed of what could be, what might have been, and why, we form bridges-between-worlds, bending genres to our creative will.

One of the primary goals of any writer is to entertain, open a reader’s eyes to the possibilities of here and elsewhere. And part of the reader’s enjoyment is to wonder at how an author strung together enough words in a series of sentences to amaze and astound them. When a reader puts a book down and takes a moment to savor the story they just read, marvel at the character arcs and development, appreciate a turn of phrase or a particularly poignant moment, that’s the precise moment when the impossible became possible.

“Bees do have a smell, you know, and if they don’t they should, for their feet are dusted with spices from a million flowers.” – Dandelion Wine, by Ray Bradbury

Possible and impossible are two of the key ingredients in your grandma’s homemade chicken noodle soup that makes science fantasy tick. Transforming the ordinary into the extraordinary or, as Ray Bradbury effortlessly wrote in so many stories, by painting a picture of the ordinary to remind everyone that extraordinary is nothing without the ordinary.

A brilliant story that mixes up necromancy with science fiction, with a murder mystery tossed in for good measure.

That’s the peanut butter mixing it up with chocolate. Why, yes, humans did colonize Optimus Nine, the twentieth planet in a far-flung galaxy which just happens to have acid-spewing dragons and tentacled wizards inhabiting it, despite the high levels of all-spice in its atmosphere. This place exists somewhere in the darkest recesses of a spotless mind. Whether typed or hand-written scribbles to make it all dance is simply a question of finding the time to get it all down. Wait, there’s a romance between the slave-prince of Agribar and the mystical enchantress of Never-Ever Land? And they ride steam-powered elephants through a mine field that surrounds a ruined New York City searching for transistor radio nirvana?

I believe there’s no reason to be bound by genre constraints. Science fantasy opens all the doors. An empty page beckons. Fill it with everything.

Don’t be afraid. Bend it all.

WHY IGNORE SCIENCE FANTASY WARNING LABELS?

Western society has been fond of labeling things for as long as I can remember. So if labels define things, then science fantasy remains righteously unlabeled, yet demands, nay, deserves continued exploration. The explosion of fresh, new ideas, fantastic plots and characters cobbled together from the crinkliest corners of fertile minds is thanks, in no small part, to the advent of Mother Amazon and other self-publishing centers. With the great proliferation of e-books, blogs and other websites, it’s fair to say the current reading landscape is happily overrun by stories, but the discerning reader has all the tools at their disposal to sift through the morass and uncover glorious literary diamonds in the rough.

Do a Google search on “Science Fantasy”. The very first result you will find are books, and there are many, many delightful options on the menu.

Space ships, laser guns, still suits and giant sand worms! Oh, and did I mention prescience?

From legendary classics to legends-in-the-making, these covers and hundreds like them are out there waiting to be explored and devoured! Alternate worlds, dark necromancy, apocalyptic love stories, and a continued call for wondrous diversity!

Let’s examine Bloodlines, my debut novel.

A hint of the police procedural. A dash of the supernatural. Sprinkle in dystopia, some not-quite-futuristic tech, toss it all in a bowl and pour several cups of magic on it and you’ve definitely tumbled down the science fantasy rabbit hole.

And let’s not forget its themes. Mothers, daughters and sons. Friendship. Difference. Strangers in strange lands. Light and dark. Addiction. Identity.

Redemption.

I took the possible—a dystopian, quasi-post-apocalyptic enclave, a new vision of New York City known as Empire City—and merged it with the impossible—magic has returned as a result of the cataclysm, along with one-way portals leading from parallel Earths.

The science itself isn’t hard. There’s an AI called Enhanced Virtual Intellect (EVI) that administrates some of Empire City’s governance. Holo-technology, vast hybrid clouds collecting information, mass transit pods traversing towering skyscrapers and the vast length of the enclave, and massive spell-forged steel walls surrounding Empire City protecting it from the horrors of the past. But underneath that is the familiar—people work, raise families, but without the totalitarian regime overseeing everything. People remain people, diverse, culturally unique and proud of their heritage. The “haves” and “have-nots” are grounded in today’s issues. The protagonist, homicide detective Tom “Doc” Holliday epitomizes these struggles. He’s not liked at work, has rent to pay, a limited social life, and a lot of angst.

He’s just a guy, standing in front of a murder mystery, asking it to, well, solve itself.

But he’s also wired into the impossible. Armed with a fickle clairvoyance he calls the Insight, Holliday sees what others cannot—an intricate, strange, and often-times frightening world fraught with monsters. Toss in a murdered woman with a bogus past, bio-engineered vampires, soul-sucking parasites, and the magical masterminds behind it all, and you’ve got yourself the makings of a mystery wrapped in a conundrum inside of a conspiracy of Churchill proportions.

The elements are all there. It’s not purely science fiction or high fantasy. Nor is it urban fantasy or a police procedural. Alternate history? Nope. Mystery, thriller, crime, noir? Not exactly.

Genre-bending appears to be what today’s publishers are looking for, but the stories have to fit in a surprisingly narrow box. Now, I won’t bore you with my own querying struggles in trying to break into the industry. Instead, I am simply thankful that the advent of self-publishing allows authors like me, and especially the more marginalized authors out there, to spin our diverse, multi-genre stories and make them available for public consumption.

Bloodlines is science fantasy. The story swims with the other fish but is neither amphibian nor mammal. The tale is black with white stripes, and equal parts white with black stripes.

“A riveting multi-genre tale with sharply drawn characters in a striking futuristic world.” – Kirkus Reviews

All creatives, our flexibility, our spark, our imagination, our vision to peer into the Elsewhere, sprinkling aspects of other genres to keep the story fluid and undecided, yet remarkably coherent and fresh, THAT, intrepid traveler, is why you ignore the warning label. Journey to places near and far, develop settings alien yet familiar, craft grounded characters whose minds soar beyond the stars, delve past the mythical and mystical, to discover the unimaginable.

WHAT ABOUT THE POWER OF MUSIC?

“We are the music makers. And we are the dreamers of dreams.” – from Ode by Arthur O’Shaughnessy

I listen to music whenever I write. Even as I type this, Ben Salisbury and Geoff Barrow’s haunting synth sounds from the film Ex-Machina permeate my office. From movie and television scores, to Broadway showtunes, to good ole fashioned rock-and-roll, music gets me into the groove and flow, and calibrates my creative mind to the task at hand.

Music sets the scene, drives or calms the action, and crystallizes the very essence of its craftmanship in as simple as two or three notes. Music is memory and time and thought and emotion. It is creative, fluid, graceful yet caustic, subtle and sublime, and permeates the deepest, darkest marrow of your bones like nothing else in this, or any, world.
Music is science fantasy in its purest form.

The music of RUSH, and, in my humble opinion, the greatest hard and progressive rock band of all time, provides some of the best examples of science fantasy.

Time is a gypsy caravan
Steals away in the night
To leave you stranded in dreamland
Distance is a long-range filter
Memory a flickering light
Left behind in the heartland

Dreamline, from Roll The Bones

Study their lyrics. Admire their album covers. Listen to their musical arc from the late 1960s to today. Reggae, new wave, classic rock, blues, synth-oriented, guitar-oriented—the list is endless. If you want to appreciate the concept of science fantasy musically, RUSH is your gateway drug. Actually, it’s the only drug, but I’m biased, too.

I stand atop a spiral stair
An oracle confronts me there
He leads me on, light years away
Through astral nights, galactic days

I see the works of gift hands
Grace this strange and wondrous land
I see the hand of man arise
With hungry mind and open eyes

They left the planet long ago
The elder race still learn and grow
Their power grows with purpose strong
To claim the home where they belong

V. Oracle: The Dream, from 2112

(Let’s now take a brief moment of silence honoring the passing of Neil Peart on January 7, 2020. On that tragic day, the world lost a creative giant of unbelievably epic proportions.)

To my mind, music is time travel in its purest form. Kick back and listen to the Rolling Stones, Ray Charles, Arlo Guthrie, Elvis Presley, Sophie Tucker, Beethoven, Mozart and Bach. Soak in their words. Be enlivened by their voice. Bask in their masterful genius and the totality of their compositions.

Music’s transportive power is both undeniable and unmistakable. By blending science and fantasy with lyrics, rhythm and sound, music might be the most identifiable example of science fantasy out there. Your emotions roil as your mind hearkens back to the halcyon days of whatever misspent youth you had doing however many interesting things that you’d probably still not mention to your parents today. The smiles. The tears. The rage. The love. The surge of rollicking good times, bad times, and THOSE times which may have defined you as YOU, or at least put you on, or knocked you off, whatever path you were headed.

WHAT DOES SCIENCE FANTASY MEAN?

The rubber meets the road whenever the possible and impossible hook up. It’s inevitable and unavoidable, yet also exhilarating and scary. Think of it this way. If you can describe anything as “timeless”, then you get it, like rolling that natural “20” in the most critical moment of whatever flavor of role-playing game you’re in to slay the latest villain-du-jour and save the virtual world.

Science fantasy simply is. It abides. It endures. It makes you wonder. It captures and illustrates in layer-cake fashion the best and brightest of what the main genres have to offer, then flips them on their heads, and does the triple lindy.

But science fantasy also flourishes because of its meaningful diversity. Difference is what gives this genre-bending story style its striking allure, form and definition. Its draw is both pervasive and familiar. The stories drive you to want to think, with the good kind of aftertaste that lasts long after you’ve finished with it.

In a time where people struggle to self-ascribe, where their quest for identity challenges and defines them in far more meaningful ways than ever before, no one should hide away and be ashamed of who they truly are, what they feel inside, how they should feel it, or be broken down by anyone else. Let these dreamers dream. Let them grow and flourish and show what their creativity is made of to the world. 

Science fantasy is a sub-genre heralding the new, the profound, the challenged, the fringe, even the downtrodden, and everything else that should be given light, love and showered with respect for being hopeful, brave and strong.

And for being true to itself, defined by its innermost parts.

The Giveaway

Enter to win a signed paperback of Bloodlines by Peter Hartog! One copy is looking to find its forever home!
INTERNATIONAL • Ends 4/25

a Rafflecopter giveaway

That’s all I got for ya! Be sure to keep an eye on the official BLOODLINES tour page over at Storytellers On Tour (https://www.storytellersontour.online/2021/03/20/tour-schedule-bloodlines-by-peter-hartog/) to see what the other bloggers and Bookstagrammers have to say!

Find out more about Storytellers On Tour or join our team:
Become a Roadie | Book a Tour | Follow us on Twitter | Follow us on Instagram

Happy Reading!
🖤

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept

%d bloggers like this: