In the ruins of a fallen Empire, the first ever female pilot takes part in a flying boat race to free her people from the foreign oppression…
Title: The Flying Barons of Negriponte (The Aether Empire Book 1)
Author: James Calbraith
Publication Date: September 20, 2023
Pages: 134
Genre: Historical Fantasy/Candlepunk
They killed her father. They took her ship. But nothing will stop Ikaria's vengeance.
Forty years since Constantinople fell to the Venetian flying citadels, high-altitude Aether racing is the favoured pastime of bored, wealthy Latin nobles. Ikaria, proud daughter of a legendary Aether engineer and one of the best racing pilots in the Aegean, is determined to uncover the truth behind her father's mysterious disappearance at the end of the last Grande Regatta of Negriponte.
Driven by the thirst of vengeance and pursuit of engineering excellence in equal measures, Ikaria vows to win the next Regatta herself - and to find out what really happened to her father. But there's a catch: a new Imperial edict bars her, and anyone not of noble blood, from taking part in Aether races. To her rescue comes Sire Mikhael of Chiarenza - an enigmatic handsome young Greek turncoat in the service of new Latin masters. His motivations unclear, the source of his funds and supplies a secret, Ikaria nonetheless agrees to accept his help: together, they set out to challenge the supremacy of the six Hexarchs, the infamous Flying Barons of Negriponte.
Pick up your copy of The Flying Barons of Negriponte at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CJKXXQB1 .
Book Excerpt:
A black-headed gull landed on the bowsprit. It glanced around, confused as to why a small, sleek sailboat suddenly appeared in its path in the middle of a billowing cloud hundreds of feet above the surface of the sea. Its eyes met Ikaria’s; the bird squawked in indignation and spread its wings as if to protest this sin against God and nature. A sudden, violent gust pushed it off the spar. Still squawking in disgust, the gull continued on its way while the boat pushed onwards, deeper into the cloud and out the other side.
A white-washed dot of Saint Elijah’s chapel appeared among the rocky outcrops, marking the eastern end of the Chalcis Pass. Ikaria reached under her tunic and took out a small brass key, inlaid with a piece of ruby glass, hung on a silver chain at her neck. Gingerly, she inserted it into a slot in the side of the Caput Chamber and turned it a quarter to the right. A conduit linking the Inhibitor Retort with the Tribikos Manifold hissed, indicating a forming air gap. She turned the spigot in the nozzle, releasing half a dram of the Inhibitor into the Sublimation Aludel. It took another few moments for the reaction to start. She turned to the Hygroscope and observed the four liquids behind the pane of rock crystal: a mixture of quicksilver, aqua fortis, brine and fish oil, each coloured with a different hue of vitriol, indicated the proportion of gaseous Quintessence – the Naviferous Aether – in the air under the hull. The liquids bubbled behind the crystal, reacting to a sudden change in pressure, then stabilised at the new levels, layer upon layer, at their respective measuring notches carved in the crystal pane. And then – a new layer emerged where there shouldn’t be one: a fifth, ruby-coloured liquid filled out the unmarked space between the quicksilver and aqua fortis.
– Excerpted from The Flying Barons of Negriponte by James Calbraith, Flying Squid, 2023. Reprinted with permission.
How Punk
is your Candle?
From its
origin, the term ‘steampunk’ was tongue-in-cheek. A play on ‘cyberpunk’
invented only because cyberpunk was a popular genre at the time (early 1980s),
it was always more about the ‘steam’ component – the aesthetics and fashions of
Victorian industrial era, the steam engines, the top hats, the airships, the
pipes, valves and pulleys, the brass, leather and glass – than the actual
‘punk’.
The
‘punk’ of cyberpunk had a clear meaning: anarchy, evil corporations, dystopian
collapse, sex, drugs and rock’n’roll amid a cyber future. Not so much
steampunk: moral dilemmas and philosophical musings often give way to simply
looking cool and having romping adventures in a steam-powered mechas or fighting gothic monsters in a moody mansion. The importance of aesthetics over
story could be the reason why steampunk, unlike cyberpunk, is better
represented in visual media – animation, graphic novels, video and tabletop
games – than literature.
That’s
not to say there’s nothing important that steampunk can tell us as a genre. The
Victorian era was the time when our modern world was being forged; women fought
for their rights, as did the working classes; slavery was finally abolished in
the West, but exploitative colonial empires thrived; the entire world became
truly interconnected for the first time, with steamers plying the oceans from
Tokyo to San Francisco and from Cape Town to Vladivostok; revolutions were
slowly brewing that would soon bring the downfall of empires that had lasted
for centuries. These are all themes that a good steampunk story should, and
will, explore, in all its top-hatted, be-goggled glory.
And then
there are all the other ‘-punks’. Like the Watergate building giving a part of
its name to all the political scandals since, so did Steampunk help to define
all the genres that emphasised retrofuturistic aesthetics. Clockpunk for
Renaissance and Da Vinci-inspired mechanisms. Dieselpunk for
the 1940s era, with combustion engines replacing steam and black leather
trenchcoats instead of frocks. Decopunk for Art Deco. Atompunk for
the 1950s – think Fallout, Bioshock. For the age before Clockpunk, the High
Middle Ages – in which my new book, “The Flying Barons of Negriponte” is set –
no single good term has yet been invented. There’s Candlepunk, which
I prefer to use myself, but I’ve heard of Castlepunk, Monkpunk and even
Dungeonpunk. Once again, all these terms focus on the aesthetics of the
setting: the source of power is alchemy and primitive clockwork; the fighting
is done with swords, crossbows and, depending on the fictional century, early
gunpowder; the mood is dark, foggy and brooding, all hooded monks in candle-lit
rooms and armoured knights sinking in the bogs. But if you can’t find enough of
the ‘punk’ element – dystopian social commentary – in the era of crusades,
heresies, plagues, robber knights and peasant revolts, are you even trying?
James Calbraith is a Poland-born Scottish writer of history-adjacent novels, coffee drinker, Steely Dan fan and avid traveller.
Growing up in communist Poland on a diet of powdered milk, “Lord of the Rings” and soviet science-fiction, he had his first story published at the ripe age of eight. After years of bouncing around Polish universities, he moved to London in 2007 and started writing in English. Now lives in Edinburgh, hoping for an independent Scotland.
His debut historical fantasy novel, “The Shadow of Black Wings“, has reached Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award semi-finals in 2012. “The Year of the Dragon” saga sold over 30,000 copies worldwide.
His new historical fiction saga, “The Song of Ash” has been on top of Amazon’s Bestseller lists in UK for months.
Connect with James:
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