a story of ruthless people desperately working to stop each other
D. A. Blankinship's Scoloderus Conspiracy is a story of ruthless people desperately working to stop each other. It is the tale of a family destroyed and a leader trusting that his daughter has not joined the enemy. It is the lesson of a lifetime for a professor who stumbles into the distressing reality of the greater conspiracy. Scoloderus is a psychological thriller of abduction, lies, treachery, and vengeance.
The Scoloderus Conspiracy is a thriller set 300 years in our future when the United Americas Trade Federation rules the known world. Chief Delegate Kara Nevin runs this formidable government and General William Leland leads the Army. Their only opposition is the Libre Voyageurs, a nomadic group of information-traders living in the harsh northern territories.
For decades, the Voyageurs have refused to submit to the UATF and the UATF has continued to persecute the Voyageurs. They have been in a constant state of war. After suffering one devastating defeat after another, the Voyageurs have a plan to defeat the UATF. They have begun building the weapon that will annihilate their enemy; however, they lack the vital information needed to complete the project. A high-level defector within the UATF is helping the Voyageurs and they know who has the information they need.
When Colonel Hammond vanishes during a battle in the Northern Territories, hours later his daughter disappears from her home and then his wife dies in a suspicious accident, Chief Delegate Nevin draws on every resource at her command. She must find the villains who are destroying her family, recover her son-in-law and granddaughter, and deliver a terrible revenge. The Chief Delegate recruits Professor Allen Taylor to join the military team that is trying to find Colonel Hammond and foil the Voyageur’s plans. Professor Taylor is a brilliant academic; but he does not know he has become part of a life or death drama—his life or death.
The Scoloderus Conspiracy is a three-day journey of uncovering plots within plots, navigating mazes with surprises around every corner, and racing through time to avert disaster.
I have only one criticism of this book, the cover is boring and doesn't convey that this paperback is a real page turner. I was held on the proverbial edge-of-my-seat from the first pages to the very end.
On one level it is the story of rebels struggling to maintain independence in the face of strong unifying political and economic forces 300 years after natural calamities nearly destroyed the planet. The book is also about the mythical battle between good and evil, but best of all, at least for me, it is a story about the struggle for rationalism in action. The book explores whether we can understand before we act, learn about our situations by making careful observations, and think through alternatives with their respective consequences? Blankinship explores whether we can rely more on our brains than on our brawn.
Since I am primarily an intellectual, I love this kind of story. My favorite character was ex-professor Taylor, who has left academia because it has limited itself to restating a limited understanding of the knowledge of the past. Blankinship shows he is interested in not just any knowledge or understanding. Taylor is recruited by the Chief Delegate to help the armed forces figure out how and why several members of her family have either been killed or gone missing. Taylor reminds me of Sherlock Holmes, an investigator who notices what no one else notices, puts clues together in novel but logical ways, and helps solve numerous mysteries by his ability to think.
The plot takes a number of unexpected but rational turns such that I could never figure out ahead of time what might happen. I value this ability in a story teller. Several times I found myself thinking, "I never would have thought of that!" The book is fun, adventurous, and at the same time, provocative. It would make a fine screenplay.
I do not usually enjoy books or movies about war. When I was reading The Scoloderus Conspiracy, I realized, the conflict described in this book is Universal. War is war, hate is hate. No matter 300 years in the future or current day.
Universal.
Dave Blankinship has written an intriguing story with poignant overtones for everyone...even those of us who don't like to think of it. You see, we screwed up the world. (again) Three hundred years after that cataclysmic event, the world is being fought over again. In what was North America, the ruling force is The United Americas Trade Federation. In direct conflict with the Federation is the Libre Voyaguers, guerilla type warriors who want to overthrow the Federation.
Colonel Anthony Hammond of the Federation, was one of the brains of a particularly nasty weapons project, code named The Spider Project (or in Latin, The Scoloderus Project). His unit is attacked by the Libre Voyaguers and although there are many casualties, the colonel is simply missing. He is part of an elaborate plan to have him tell the Libre elite the final pieces of the puzzle of this great weapon, and they have stopped at nothing to make that work.
The Federation taps a brilliant professor, a civilian, Taylor, who is a whiz at analyzing and assessing to help in the search for the colonel. The events to unravel the conspiracy and see what war and conflicts breed, is absolutely riveting. It is like Spy vs Spy vs Spy... you don't know who is in the right, who is telling the truth.
Kind of like real war.
There are frightening references to the distant past, where characters marvel at things from the old (pre-Federation era) that show how the world has lost so much because of never ending conflict.
Mr. Blankinship writes crisply and delivers a book that only encompasses the events of three days, but shows what few actions can truly change the war. An excellent read.
It’s been more than three-hundred years since a series of natural disasters destroyed the Earth we know and plunged the world into chaos, but despite the efforts of many to rebuild civilization, peace and stability are slow in coming.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the major power of the United Americas Trade Federation (UATF) has consolidated information from the time before the cataclysm and used these rediscovered pieces of Earth’s history to attempt to create order out of chaos. Their plan is unification, but they’re opposed by a group known as the Libre Voyageurs, known colloquially as the LV, and a war breaks out between the two camps over who will control North America.
The story kicks off when Colonel Hammond, leader of a team of UATF Shadow Warriors deployed in combat against the LV, is kidnapped in a surprise attack upon his camp that wounds many of his soldiers and leaves Captain Marcus as the officer in charge. Now, Marcus must handle the investigation into the reason for Hammond’s disappearance, before he can be made to reveal important military secrets to the Libre Voyageurs that could compromise the UATF’s precarious position in the war.
Although many of the primary characters in this novel are soldiers, the focus of the delicately-constructed, ever-twisting plot is upon the strategic games that the UATF and the LV are playing. Rather than being solely about the physical battlefield, the conflict operates simultaneously on the levels of traditional warfare and conspiratorial mind-games. It’s this balance that gives the book its drive.
Although the large cast of characters and number of intersecting storylines may lead the reader to some confusion at the beginning, the story that does establish itself is one that will keep you on your toes until the very end.
Ms. George is an Amazon Top-500 reviewer. She conducted this interview with Dr. Blankinship to learn more about The Scoloderus Conspiracy and to explore the craft of writing. This interview also appears on Author's Den.
I wanted to tell a story about big government and power, conflicts and conspiracies, and a very bright university professor who is swept-up in all the scheming and intrigue. It is fascinating to explore what happens when almost everyone is deceiving everyone else. The tension rises continually and no one knows what will happen next.
This story is for people of all ages. As a writer, I do not rely on cursing or graphic sex or violence to prop up a weak or dull story. A brilliant writing instructor once wrote that if you must make a word bold to make the reader notice it, then you have not expressed the thought clearly. I am an advocate of writing clearly and forcefully enough with ‘G’ level language that the dialog carries the impact. Scoloderus will entertain a junior high student, a college student, a day laborer, a physicist, or someone who speaks English as a second language. It can be done. Young adults appreciate this story and Teens Read, Too has recommended the book. Anyone who has served in the military, worked for the government, taught at a school, worked in a hospital, or has endured working in a bureaucracy will enjoy this book. Anyone who likes to discover plots within plots and turn each page wondering what is going to happen next will love this book.
Non-fiction authors owe readers truthful accounts of the subject. Authors who write fiction, particularly speculative fiction, owe the reader an “authentic experience.” Fiction is a significant challenge. It begins with something familiar and takes the reader into times, places, and circumstances that are simultaneously recognizable and strange. Every story teaches something. It is inevitable that our readers will interpret what we write as an insight into the nature of the world or the reality of the human experience. Fantasy and science fiction are the most powerful teaching tools in human culture. A good author knows the topic, understands that he or she is presenting a ‘message,’ and makes the experience believable and entertaining.
Scoloderus is the Latin name for the Orb Weaver spider. These spiders are so clever. They build specialized webs to catch the bugs other spiders can’t get. An alternate title could be, “With the Right Web You Can Trap Anything.”
No.
Three hundred years in our future, the United Americas Trade Federation controls the known world. The Libre Voyageurs are a small nomadic group of rebels who have desperately struggled against this super-government for decades. The Voyageurs have a spy working at a UATF military research facility. Their spy tells them how to get the information to assemble a weapon that will defeat the UATF. The Voyageurs are convinced that getting this weapon is worth any risk. They send in an espionage team to abduct the Army Colonel who was the leader of the project and using his own daughter, they begin a charade to trick him into revealing the secrets of Scoloderus. This Colonel is the son-in-law of the UATF’s top leader, Chief Delegate Kara Nevin. Meanwhile, a disillusioned university professor resigns his post and the Chief Delegate recruits him to join the military team that is working to find her son-in-law and get revenge against the Voyageurs. Scoloderus is a story about many very clever people trying to outsmart and out-maneuver each other and avert disaster.
No. Books are profoundly personal experiences. A well-written story invites the reader to co-construct the experience with the author. When I tell my readers about a man or a woman, I intentionally use very few details. That character becomes an image, a voice, and a personality from that reader’s life experience. The reader and I co-create the characters; we co-design the rooms, the landscapes, and even the food that will be served at a meal. If I do it right, the reader will have vivid recollections of the story that I didn’t write. A reader once told me she started to tell a story from the book as if it was something that had happened to a friend; but she stopped herself when she remembered it wasn’t real. I was so flattered. Scoloderus is a different experience for each person who reads it because the drama is also his or her drama. Another reader called my home one evening and said she couldn’t sleep until she knew if some of the characters were going to be all right. I want people to be engrossed in my stories and that can only happen with reading. Reading nurtures our imagination and opens possibilities for us to explore. Reading engages us in asking questions; movies present the answers. I would like to add quickly that Peter Jackson’s adaptation of Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings,” stands as an exception to this and if Jackson approached me on adapting Scoloderus to the screen and he had a few hundred million dollars, I might reconsider my position on this issue.
I like Professor Taylor. More than any other character, he has the reader’s perspective. Taylor meets each new person or situation and tries to make sense of it all. Taylor loves the mystery and he is so insightful, yet he is also naive about the danger. One reviewer described him as a Sherlock Holmes type of character who “who notices what no one else notices, puts clues together in novel but logical ways, and helps solve numerous mysteries by his ability to think.” That is a great description of Professor Allen Taylor.
I like authors who bring me into their world. When I carry a book with me to read at every opportunity or I settle into a recliner and emerge hours later with no sense of time, I am grateful to that author for the experience. My favorite authors include Douglas Adams, Orson Scott Card, Michael Crichton, John Grisham, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Louis L’ Amour, Jack London, James Michener, Mario Puzo, and J. R. R. Tolkien. Years back, I read Crichton’s “The Sphere” during a cross-country flight in a jumbo jet airliner. That setting was superb for reading about a pressurized research facility on the ocean’s floor. Perhaps we’ll see a day when we can go to libraries and they will have book-appropriate environments for reading (e.g., we’ll sit in desert sand while reading “Dune” or sit in a jury box while reading “The Runaway Jury”).
I have always been writing something. Most of my life, I have made my principle living by writing and public speaking. I wrote scientific papers, policy analysis papers, funding proposals, and occasionally parody pieces that circulated around and really upset those who believed they were in charge. For the past several years, I have been writing reports and plans to reduce hunger and illness in Ethiopia and sub-Sahara Africa, and I helped to write the plan for an academy to train people in natural resource management. There is more information on that side of my life at www.PraxisEthiopia.org. Extreme poverty is a very serious and often discouraging topic, so when I need a mental vacation, I write fiction. I have been immersed in writing fiction for about five years.
I suppose there are at least three tidbits of information that might be helpful. First, read a variety of great authors continuously. This is somewhat like becoming a good chef or mastering a musical instrument. If you learn what great food tastes like or listen to the most respected classical music, you will recognize it as you start to achieve it. Second, the Gestalt psychotherapist Fritz Perls said the secret to writing is to begin by writing ‘stream of consciousness.’ Start writing everything that enters your mind, if you do this a few times for a few hours you will discover the connection between thoughts and words on a page. This will help you to decide if you really do enjoy writing. The third piece of advice is from James Michener. Michener said the only difference between writing and great writing is re-writing. He estimated that completing his first novel, “Hawaii,” required more than one million key strokes on his typewriter. To re-cap, you need to read lots, write like you like it, and re-write until it is perfect.
By their own admission, traditional publishing houses are not supporting new talent, they are not taking chances with nonconforming stories, and they do not have the resources to support authors at the levels they have supported them at in the past. As Orson Scott Card points out in “How to Write Science Fiction & Fantasy,” a writer needs to write several well-received novels every year just to pay the mortgage and put food on the table. (Just take your desired income and divide by 40 cents to get your sales target—sell 2,500 copies a week to make $52,000 a year.) Authors who pursue self-publishing or minimal publisher involvement have greater creative control, timeline management, and will keep more money-per-book than any traditional publisher can offer. I believe self-publishing and e-books are the future. I remain concerned about ‘print on demand’ or POD publishing. Quality can vary significantly from book to book and that approach to publishing simply has not met the same quality levels as offset presses with perfect bindings. That makes the electronic book option a better choice. Potential customers can read the first dozen pages while sipping a latte at a coffee shop, and then decide if they want to buy the book. The author/publisher has no sunk costs in inventory, and if (heaven forbid) there is an error in the manuscript, if can be fixed easily and ‘republished.’ Kindle sales at Amazon continue to grow (by the way, in addition to the paperback version, “Scoloderus” is available on Kindle). Finally, carrying 200 books in something the size of a clipboard is so futuristic that everyone will want to do it. We are finally catching up to Star Trek.
I have two projects in progress right now. The first is a non-fiction piece with the working title, “Diary of a Pizza Fanatic.” I am very fond of pizza and I have begun recording the various recipes I use on Friday night to create memorable pizza experiences. It is everything from blue cheese white sauce garlic spinach on wheat to thinly sliced onions and apples with feta cheese and cumin. Drop by our home on a Friday evening and you will appreciate why I chose the title. My next speculative fiction novel—in progress—is “Newton’s Legacy.” It is the first installment of a series, telling the story of the people, events, and cataclysms that pre-date Scoloderus. It explains the rise of the United Americas Trade Federation and the actions that ushered in the new world order that is the setting for Scoloderus. I have posted the first few chapters at www.ScoloderusConspiracy.com.
Ellen, I would like to close by thanking you for your questions. They were great questions that let me explore my biases and share a few of my passions with the reader. Thanks.
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