Hoganthology, Alien Dimensions #19, and The Robots of Atlantis

Well, it’s been a busy few months. Quite a lot of writing and reading is involved in the creative writing degree I began this year, and that means not much time to work on anything else.

Having said that, I will get a break from the course between November and February, so I’ve set that time aside to begin work on Alien Dimensions #19 and The Robots of Atlantis.

Though, one of the things that I really want to do with Alien Dimensions is make sure that writers who contribute get something back. This is currently US$10 for a story for the rights for 2 years. It may not seem like much, but on a writer’s income, it’s no longer possible for me to pay that in advance and hope that I get it back through sales of the book.

So, instead, I’m trying something new. I’d like to raise some funds for the next issue of Alien Dimensions, so I’ve put many of my science fiction and fantasy stories into one volume called Hoganthology (the title is a homage to Piers Anthony’s ‘Anthonology’) There are over 47 pieces in Hoganthology. If printed, it would run to about 800 pages in a 5″x8″ book, but it is currently listed on Amazon as having about 600 in ebook form (depending on your device.)

In Hoganthology you’ll find the following:

Section 1 – Short Stories

A Little Matter
The Opposition
Gravity Locked
Still in Beta
Ancient Alien Dinosaurs
Japanese Martian Robot Souls
Oh My God It’s Full of Stars
Alien UFO Disclosure
Pyramids of the Moon
The Hydrofluorons of Krakon 7
Phases of the Moon Base
Interrelations
Surviving Mars
First Interdimensional Contact
Time Sheets
Mate
Robot Solitude
ExtraForestrial
Work After Death
Neko Girl
The Galaxy’s Driving Force
The Old Boys’ Club
Cosmic Joke
The Manipulator
Strange Lands
Layers
Life Choices
Moon Mine
The Secret of Bimini
Tutor Who: Heaven Cent

Section 2 – Flash Fiction

Child Safe
Evolution
Inter-View
Pocket Monsters
The Language Tutor
Controller
Gene-Reality
Rejuvenation
The Exchange
The Ugly Side of A.I.

Section 3 – Children’s Fiction

Alien Alexander – Alien Characters #55
Alien Hannah – Alien Characters #57
Alien Christopher – Alien Characters #60
Alien Alexis – Alien Characters #61
Alien Joseph – Alien Characters #62
Alien Daniel – Alien Characters #64
Alien Saya – Alien Characters #80

Section 4 – Space Opera Poetry

We’ve Been Wordsworthed, We’ve Been Poeed, and We’ve Been Quite Possibly Frosted
An Ode to Space Opera

Bonus Section – Excerpts

Alien Frequency – Chapter 3
The Andromeda Effect – Chapter 61
Temporal Incursion – Chapter 5
Tyrannosaurus Rex and the Cretaceous City – Dinory 1
Ida and the Planet Invasion – 2: Arrival
Gabriel and the Resurrection of Maldek – 3: 10:00am
Tiara and the Comet Apocalypse – Channel One

Bonus Section – The Future

The Robots of Atlantis (Preview) – Wednesday 22nd October 2053
Stellar Flash 2135 A.D.
-Plot Synopsis
-Notes on Location
-Character Biographies
-Extract 1
-Extract 2
-Some lines I’m working on

And more!

So, if you can spare some dollars, or you’re on Kindle Unlimited, it would be great if you could check it out. Find out more here: Hoganthology: Digital

The hope is that sales and page views can raise about US$200 to get started on Alien Dimensions #19. If you know of anyone who might be interested in this ebook, feel free to forward the link or this blog post to them.

Many thanks

Update. Working on the printed version now. 824 pages for US$32.95! Coming Soon!

Alien Dimensions Anthologies Series Box Set Books 1-3. Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Metaphysical Short Stories Magazine.

Celebrating 3 years of Alien Dimensions!

Alien Dimensions Books 1-3. Where it all began!

Available as a download, or free on Kindle Unlimited, the Alien Dimensions Science Fiction, Fantasy and Metaphysical Short Stories Anthology Magazine Issues 1, 2 and 3 are available again. Featuring exciting, compelling and thought-provoking stories from around the world.

Interdimensional travel, body swapping, time travel, space opera, alien invasion, military sci fi, interstellar mining colonies, dystopian futures, utopian futures, and more. There’s bound to be a story that you’ll like.

As these are the original three magazine-style books, with some minor updates for this rerelease, they also include articles on Space Travel Holidays, Finding Alien Life, and the Protocols of First Contact.

What you’ll find:

Book 1

Editorial
Short Stories:
Interrelations
Invasion of the Spermoids
The Learning Curve
For Younger Readers:
Ghost Time
Alien Alexander
Ida and the Planet Invasion: Part 1 of 3
Non Fiction:
Space Travel Holidays Top 10
Alienophobia

Book 2

Editorial
Short Stories:
The Gene Miracle
Distant Helix
ExtraForrestrial
Solid State Survivor
Tutor Who – Heaven Cent
For Younger Readers:
Alien Hannah
Ida and the Planet Invasion: Part 2 of 3
Non Fiction:
Alien Life Found!

Book 3

Editorial
Short Stories:
Good Host
The BioMosaic Skies
Dante Spark
Evolution
Cosmic Joke
A Little Matter
For Younger Readers:
Alien Christopher
Ida and the Planet Invasion Part 3 of 3
Alien Ida (Bonus ‘sequel’ story – never before released in Alien Dimensions)
Non Fiction:
Protocols of First Contact
Editorial for the Box Set

Celebrating 3 years of Alien Dimensions!

Find out more about Alien Dimensions at www.AlienDimensions.com

The latest release, Alien Dimensions Science Fiction Anthologies Series Issue #18, is here:
https://www.amazon.com/Dimensions-Science-Fiction-Stories-Anthology-ebook/dp/B07SQRTHH8/
Available in print, for Kindle, and as part of Kindle Unlimited.

Alien Dimensions #18 is now available in digital and in print

Latest: Alien Dimensions #18

Available in Digital and in Print from Amazon

Alien Dimensions is a science fiction short stories anthology series featuring amazing authors from around the world.

Previous issues have featured stories about extraterrestrials, clones, robots and androids, invasion and colonization, cyberpunk and space opera, first contact, genetic manipulation, starship exploration and more.

From seriousness to humorous, high octane to slow burn, from back-story heavy to present tense dialogue-driven adventures, Alien Dimensions explores the far future.

Enjoy a much more alien experience with Alien Dimensions.

In Alien Dimensions #18:

Titan’s Spores by Olga Werby

The Pride of Tau Ceti by Gustavo Bondoni

An Option to Live by David Castlewitz

Tin Man by Paula Keane

Impact by Adam S. Furman

Making Room by Kenneth W. Grant

Woman in the Moon by David B. Anderson

Flash Fiction: Gene-Reality / Controller by Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print from Amazon

Subscribe to be updated when the next issue is due out here

The Controller by Neil A. Hogan

I’ll return with Chapter 4 of Stellar Flash in a few days. Or, you can find the book on Amazon here: Temporal Incursion. It’ll be on Google Books and Apple iBooks in June.

In the meantime, here is a short story I wrote recently. I was challenged to write a 500 word story, and decided to make it about a character that fails at getting something. I’ll talk more about what led to that in a future post. In any case, here is the result:

The Controller by Neil A. Hogan

Juset Oliga sliced her tarsus and dripped green blood onto the rectangular lock. Detecting her mitochondria, the temple forcefield dissipated, energy sparks showering around her like cascading diamonds.

I’m in!

She scampered through the plasticrete entrance, her antennae flicking about madly. With the field now off, she had to get to the Controller before the star discharged another burst of plasma, or she would end up like the rest of this lifeless planet.

She moved around the burns on the ground of those who had come before her, her mandibles curling with distaste. She would be different. She would find the weapon, then bring more planets into the empire.

A glint of light glittered to her right, and she turned and scuttled along the dusty floor towards it.

The Controller! This must be it!

A glowing dodecahedron sat innocuously on a pedestal.

No buttons or swipe screens?

Her proboscis twisted back and forth in dismay.

This is not what I was advised.

She scrabbled two of her tarsi around the outside of it, feeling for a connection or switch, but the facets were smooth. “How do I control you?” she asked it. “How do I stop your plasma bursts?”

For all she knew, a new burst was already on its way. She probably had just moments to live. She twisted her green compound eyes around, then came to a decision. Reaching around it with four of her legs, she lifted the multifaceted shape up.

Immediately, fear filled her thorax. Not heavy? What is this? She turned it over to see if she could look inside, then screeched and dropped it.

EMPTY?

A scratching laugh echoed through the room, and an old voice followed. “I knew you would come, my child. They all come, in the end.” A hologram of a bipedal being with chitinous wings lowered itself to the stones near the fallen shape. “You were sent to get the Controller. But, it is a myth.” It waved a spiky leg, and the dodecahedron rose in the air, then returned to its previous position. “Let’s put everything back the way it was for the next one.”

“But,” implored Oliga. “We need the Controller. That kind of plasma power would make us supreme rulers. We could control…everything!”

The hologram tilted its head. “There is no Controller. It is a natural cycle of Proxima Centauri. What better way to bait and trap greedy alien beetles than allow them to think there is a star-sized weapon hidden somewhere in the galaxy?”

Oliga felt faint. How would her race take over Trappist-1 now?

“Sadly,” continued the hologram. “Your time of worrying about your empire is now over.”

Before Oliga could even send a message, a hot burst of plasma exploded through the doorway of the fortress, vaporising her instantly. Her ashes joined the other shadows on the floor.

The hologram looked down at her remains. “When will your race learn not to make greed your controller?”

It reactivated the temple forcefield, then faded away.

Alien Dimensions Science Fiction Short Stories Anthology Series #17 is now available in digital and in print formats

Issue #17Digital | Print

Alien Dimensions is a science fiction short stories anthology series featuring amazing authors from around the world.

Previous issues have featured stories about extraterrestrials, clones, robots and androids, invasion and colonization, cyberpunk and space opera, first contact, genetic manipulation, starship exploration, time travel and more.

From seriousness to humorous, high octane to slow burn, from back-story heavy to present tense dialogue-driven adventures, Alien Dimensions explores the far future.

Enjoy a much more alien experience with Alien Dimensions.

In Alien Dimensions #17:

Space Case by Tom Howard

Sky Tears by Mike Adamson

Tomorrow’s Children by James Armer

Pests by Francis W. Alexander

Mothermind by Robert Walton

Guardians of the Treasure by Gustavo Bondoni

Strange Lands by Neil A. Hogan

Issue #17 Digital | Print

Subscribe to be updated when the next issue is due out here

Splinter. Science Fiction Weekly #26. Stellar Flash Prequel II by Neil A. Hogan. Short Reads Series

Available from Amazon

When Raj Kumar investigates Pluto for possible life signs – standard procedure before adding a manned space station – he is surprised to find them. He’s even more surprised that they want to communicate with him.

What do they want? 
Why him?
And what does Doctor John Patel of Space Station X-1a have to do with all this?

Find out more in Splinter. #26 in the Science Fiction Short Reads Series, and a prequel to the introduction of a character at the end of the Stellar Flash novel The Andromeda Effect. Splinter is a short story of about 4600 words.

Gene-Reality by Neil A. Hogan

“Ji. This does not look like a bio lab.”

Ji swept his arms wide to encompass the microscope that filled the room. “Maggie, you’ve got to admit, it’s pretty impressive. Imagine what you could do with this.”

Maggie shrugged. “To see genes, I need something a bit smaller. That monstrosity will just give me atoms.”

Ji pointed at a bank of screens in front of the tube-shaped structure. “It’s not an electron microscope. Something much better. We can actually see superstrings with it!”

She looked about, not quite hearing him. “You don’t even have any centrifuges in here.” She put her hands on her hips and turned to him. “What’s going on? I thought you needed my help splicing genes!”

Ji grinned. “The genes of the universe, Maggie. I want you to splice the very substance of reality!”

Maggie gaped. “I’m a molecular biologist, not a physicist. I’m not so sure about playing with reality.” She walked around the machine. A large spherical ball was where a slide might be on a normal microscope, with a LED panel on the outside. “Faraday cage?”

“Something similar. Paradoxically holding two isolated superstrings in a vacuum.” Ji pointed at one of the screens in front of it. “The first one has an interesting vibration at this range. Multiple colours cascading from top to bottom. It looks almost like a chromosome. I guess our bodies express the fundamental shapes of the universe.”

“Fibonacci spirals, golden ratios in everything. Sounds legit.” Then she looked shrewdly at him, still not willing to get closer. “There’s nothing in the journals about this research. Is this military?”

Ji shrugged. “No idea. Contracted out to us. I don’t deal with the funding. I just get paid. My latest project is to find someone who can join them together.”

“Wait. What?”

He pointed at the screen again and she came over to have a closer look. The screen was divided into two. On the left side flickered the superstring, with four legs splayed out like a deformed insect. The right side of the screen was black. “Strings are influenced by our thoughts and observations,” said Ji. “You only need to direct your thoughts at it to influence it. My problem is I can’t influence it enough to connect with the other one. Maybe you could try…”

“Ji. You do know what gene splicing is, yes? It’s all biological. We use enzymes to snip out pieces of DNA inside genes, then mix the broken DNA with snipped DNA from other genes, then put the useful recombinant DNA into bacteria that will replicate it. There are other processes involved, but it’s completely unlike the fundamental building blocks of the universe. For a start, I’m pretty sure superstrings don’t have DNA.”

“Well, at this level, superstrings are everything. They are DNA and genes and chromosomes, if you like. Just take a bit from that superstring and add it to this one, and the energy field will replicate it. Think of it like your gene-splicing experiments but with everything purely energy. The universe will take care of the rest on the other dimensions.”

Maggie pointed at the dark side of the screen. “Well, I need to see the other one to know if this is possible.”

“I’m afraid our equipment is not compatible.”

Maggie stared at Ji for a moment, uncomprehending. “Is it faulty?”

Ji grinned. “This is the exciting part. The other string is not from our reality. It was taken from a wormhole we opened inside a micro-black hole in the Collider.”

“But, if it is not compatible with the instruments, then it can’t be compatible with our universe. What the hell have they asked you to do?”

“Look. If we splice it with a piece of our universe, we’d be able to find out what it’s like! What it can do!”

Maggie looked incredulously at him. “No. I flat out refuse. I don’t care if your project loses funding. I’m not merging the underlying foundations of two universes just for your research.”

“Come on. A simple thought, and it’s done. If you won’t do it, there are plenty of other gene doctors out there that could. Why not be the first?”

“No.” Maggie folded her arms.

Ji looked sadly down at the floor. “Well, look. Alright. I understand. But, just for me. How would you do it, if you wanted to? Like, what would your procedure be? Obviously, I can’t do it myself.”

Maggie sighed. “I don’t know the shape of the other one to know how for sure, but I’d imagine moving one on top of the other, and then allowing the vibration of ours to influence the vibration of the other one. As they synchronized I’d be able to see what the other one looked like, then work out how I could join them together. If the other universe’s superstrings had eight extensions, for example, I could take one and add it to this one and see what happens. I mean, it’s really…what is it?”

Ji was staring at the screen as the right side began flickering. “It worked. You’re a genius.”

Maggie’s hand flew to her mouth. “No, no, no. You tricked me!”

Ji was ignoring her. “Look, look. The other string has six legs. And it’s slightly larger. Wait, what’s it doing?”

Maggie pushed him away and looked at the strings. One was on top of the other and seemed to be vibrating faster. “Oh no!” She quickly reached for her mobile phone.

“What? What are you doing?”

“Calling my mum to say goodbye.”

“What? Why?” Ji’s face paled as he realized she was serious.

“They’re not merging. They’re mating,” cried Maggie.

But it was far too late.

There was a momentary flash as the combined strings quickly replicated, and a new universe exploded from the laboratory at a billion times the speed of light.

###

Hi Friends. Thank you for reading my blog. I really appreciate the 200+ daily unique visitors and hope you find something useful and/or entertaining in my writings and missives.

If you haven’t checked them out yet, the Science Fiction Weekly Series for 2018 is almost complete. The final release, #26, will be out on the 25th December. Science Fiction Weekly will hopefully then return in 2020.

Wishing you Happy Christmas, Happy Hannukah, Happy Holidays and for those of you on the Gregorian calendar, I hope you have a fantastic New Year. Here’s to another orbit around Sol.

Mate. Science Fiction Weekly #25 by Neil A. Hogan. Short Reads Series

Available in digital format from Amazon

When Dex suddenly feels one of his body segments becoming swollen and painful, he asks his egg-brother Emo for help.

Unexpectedly, he is thrust into a journey across a wasteland of acid pools and other dangers to find a female who can help him.

With the risk of death at every turn, can Dex find what he seeks before the light returns?

Find out more in Mate. #25 in the Science Fiction Short Reads Series. A short story of about 4100 words.

Cosmic Joke. Science Fiction Weekly #23 by Neil A. Hogan. Short Reads Series

Cosmic Joke. Science Fiction Weekly #23: Short Reads Series

Available in digital format

When Rosa hires Jacob to help her discover alternate realities not detectable from this universe, she hardly expects him to find a way so quickly.

But then she discovers that Jacob has been one step ahead of her the whole time. And his solution to the experiment may affect the entire human race across all of space and time.

Cosmic Joke is #23 in the Science Fiction Weekly Series. A short reads story of about 4900 words.

Time Sheets. Science Fiction Weekly #22 by Neil A. Hogan. Short Reads Series

Time Sheets. Science Fiction Weekly #22

Digital format available

When Mera leaves ProxiBee’s seventh moon in a huff, Jasper is surprised to find she has left behind a bill that had made its way to them through the nearby wormhole.

The troubling thing is, the bill is continuing to increase, and he can’t figure out a way to stop it.

If Jasper can’t find the solution to the sudden drain on resources, it could not only mean the end of his company, but also the moon itself.

Time Sheets is #22 in the Science Fiction Weekly Series. A short story of approximately 4200 words.