Posted by admin | Posted in Bestsellers | Posted on 10-02-2009
Tags: best sports fiction books, blog, books, fiction, reference, top sports fiction books, writing

Black author Brings New Voice to Science fiction and Fantasy
CHESTER, VA June 2008 – With his detailed narrative, gripping plot, and compelling characters, African american author R. A. Baker is a fine newcomer to the literary playing field. However, there is one thing that sets Baker apart from most black writers: he writes science fiction. In 2008, R. A. Baker joined the ranks of black science fiction/fantasy writers like Charles Saunders, Steven Barnes, Octavia Butler, and Nalo Hopkinson, among others. They are part of a small, but growing group of writers, specializing in genres previously the exclusive domain of their white counterparts. It’s a trend poised to add a new perspective to fantasy and science fiction storytelling.
Baker, who wrote the sci-fi/fantasy novel, Rayna of Nightwind, says that he knew at an early age that he wanted to write sci-fi/fantasy. “I’ve always loved speculative fiction, which includes both sci-fi and fantasy,” he says. “It allows for so much creative freedom—it is the only kind of fiction I would ever want to write.” With the commercial success of the Harry Potter novels, and movies like The Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, there is little doubt of sci-fi and fantasy’s appeal. African American writers like Baker believe there is also a demand for a fresh approach to these popular genres. “I believe African Americans can bring a lot to the table and take speculative fiction in exciting directions it has never gone before,” he says.
Baker says he does not see himself as a pioneer, but simply as a member of a special, and often misunderstood group. “When I tell people I write sci-fi/fantasy, I sometimes get strange stares, like they are thinking to themselves, ‘black people don’t write sci-fi’,” he says. “It can be a little disheartening, but I know the best way to deal with attitudes like that, is to be as successful in my field as possible. In a way, it has made me a better writer, because I know I can never give up or stop writing. I would never want to give the naysayers that kind of satisfaction.”
Additionally, Baker points out that diversity should be sought in all areas. “If Tiger Woods had decided early in his career to abandon golf because it was uncommon for a black person to play that sport, we would have missed out on a phenomenal golf player, and a great role model,” he said. “I think it’s time we shattered some old stereotypes about black literature, and be open to explore different avenues”
To aspiring African American sci-fi/fantasy authors, Baker offers the following advice: “There is a world of possibilities to explore, so explore it your way. When I wrote Rayna of Nightwind, I stayed true to my voice and my particular writing style. Don’t let preconceived notions about your race influence how you write, or what you write about—let your imagination decide.”
R. A. Baker is the author of “Rayna of Nightwind”, the first novel in his new Taren series(published by Apollo House Press), which is available for purchase on Amazon.com.
books can also be ordered via the Apollo House Press website: http://www.apollohouse.com/order.htm
Title: Rayna of Nightwind
Format: hardcover, 328 pages
publisher: Apollo House Press
ISBN: 978-0978751876
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About the Author
R.A. Baker was born in 1971 in a small town in North Carolina. His family soon moved to Richmond Virginia, and it was there that he discovered a passion for reading and writing. He especially loved writing science fiction and grew up watching shows like Twilight Zone and Star Trek.
He went on to win several writing contests and awards throughout high school and college. R.A. Baker currently resides in southern Virginia.
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The Black Stallion [VHS] $1.98 Adapted from the beloved novel by Walter Farley, this 1979 family classic was hailed by no less than hard-to-please critic Pauline Kael, who wrote that “it may be the greatest children’s movie ever made.” A visual feast from start to finish, the timeless tale of The Black Stallion plays out on almost mythic terms. A young boy survives a shipwreck and is stranded on a deserted island with a gracefu… |
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Switching Goals [VHS] $4.55 Originally an ABC telefilm, Switching Goals comes to video. Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen play super-identical twins who are actually total opposites. OK, it’s not the freshest concept in the universe, but the teen divas (who also exec produce–as they did in their Passport to Paris) are an undeniable favorite with little girls all-over. Here, they’re Sam, the athletic one, and Emma, the fashion-… |
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Qigong: Traditional Chinese Exercises for Healing Body, Mind, and Spirit [VHS] $13.98 Qigong is Chinese meditation in motion, an ancient healing art using posture, exercise, breathing, and concentration. This video shows you how to harness the power of qi–the energy of the universe–to heal body and mind. Qigong uses dynamic, gentle movements and meditative postures. The video starts with a warm-up of whole-body breathing. Then master instructor Ken Cohen teaches a selection of ex… |
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Taking Care of Business [VHS] $1.74 Jimmy Dworski (James Belushi) is a happy-go-lucky convict who breaks out of prison and finally gets a life . . . somebody else’s! When Dworski finds the daily planner book that literally runs the life of ultra-organized executive Spencer Barnes (Charles Grodin), all hell breaks loose. With newfound cash, credit cards and the keys to a Malibu mansion, the imposter Dworski embarks on an all-expense-… |
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8 Seconds [VHS] $2.90 The title refers to the time required by all rodeo cowboys to stay on a bull if they want a judge’s score. For them, such a short time can seem like an eternity. The same is true of the beginning of this true story, a country tale of Lane Frost, a real-life, crowd-pleasing bullrider who rose to rodeo fame in the late ’80s. The characters seem so irrepressibly good, so unreal, that the film comes o… |
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The Waterboy [VHS] $5.50 Adam Sandler vaulted into the $20-million-salary stratosphere with this, his second $100-million hit in 1998–a movie that further shows just how deeply embedded he is in the Jerry Lewis tradition of idiot comedy. He plays Bobby Boucher, a backwoods Cajun and a mentally challenged individual with a fixation on water: specifically, on serving the coolest, most refreshing H2O available to the colleg… |
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Sliders – The First and Second Seasons $9.99 All 22 episodes from the first two seasons–including the two-part pilot, “Summer of Love,” “The Weaker Sex,” “Into the Mystic,” “Post Traumatic Slide Syndrome,” and “As Time Goes By”–are collected in a six-disc set. 17 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; Subtitles: French, Spanish; audio commentary; featurette; photo gallery. **22 episodes on 6 discs. 17 hrs.**… |
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The Boys from Brazil $4.67 Gregory Peck hams it up big time in this 1978 thriller based on Ira Levin’s bestselling novel. Peck plays an old German Nazi behind a mysterious series of murders, the investigation of which leads to an astonishing plot to create the Fourth Reich. Laurence Olivier is equally outrageous as a Nazi hunter who stumbles onto the scheme. Director Franklin Schaffner (Planet of the Apes) doesn’t make any … |
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Death Sport / Battle Truck (Roger Corman’s Cult Classics) $9.61 After the success of the wicked little sci-fi satire Death Race 2000, producer Roger Corman quickly recast David Carradine, this time as a rebel warrior in the year 3000 paired with B-movie vixen Claudia Jennings. The resulting mix of barbarians and bikers lacks the inspired humor and satirical twist of its inspiration, but it works just fine as a drive-in action picture about gladiators on m… |
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Race For The Galaxy $20.95 In Race for the Galaxy from Rio Grande Games, players build galactic civilizations using game cards that represent worlds or technical and social developments. Each round consists of one or more of five possible phases. In each round, each player secretly and simultaneously chooses one of seven different action cards and then reveals it. Only the selected phases occur. For these phases, every play… |
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Books, Books, Books $45 This beautiful collection of copyright-free clip art-all on the subject of books-can be used in producing flyers, posters, newsletters, bulletin boards, bookmarks, and dozens of other forms of visual communication. Chapters cover seven subject areas: Just Books, People with Books, Animals, Nursery Rhyme and Storybook Characters, Holidays, Sports and Activities, and Borders. Images include silhouettes and line drawings that range in style from cartoon to representational drawings. All are easily reproduced, even on a photocopier. Librarians, teachers, storytellers, booksellers-anyone interested in books-will love this collection! |
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The Art of Fiction $12.99 In 1958, Ayn Rand, already the world-famous author of such bestselling books as atlas shrugged and The Fountainhead, gave a private series of extemporaneous lectures in her own living room on the art of fiction. Tore Boeckmann and Leonard Peikoff for the first time now bring readers the edited transcript of these exciting personal statements. The Art of Fiction offers invaluable lessons, in which Rand analyzes the four essential elements of fiction: theme, plot, characterization, and style. She demonstrates her ideas by dissecting her best-known works, as well as those of other famous authors, such as Thomas Wolfe, Sinclair Lewis, and Victor Hugo. An historic accomplishment, this compendium will be a unique and fascinating resource for both writers and readers of fiction. |
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Fact and Fiction $29.95 Here Russell reflects on the books and writings that influenced his life, including fiction, essays on politics and education, divertissements and parables. This book provides valuable insight into the range of interests and depth of conviction of one of the world’s greatest philosophers. |
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Fiction for youth: A guide to recommended books $6.53 This book is in Good Used condition |
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The Fiction Class $11.99 A witty, honest, and hugely entertaining story for anyone who loves books, or has a difficult mother. And, let’s face it, that’s practically everybody . . . On paper, Arabella Hicks seems more than qualified to teach her fiction class on the Upper West Side: she’s a writer herself; she’s passionate about books; she’s even named after the heroine in a Georgette Heyer novel. On the other hand, she’s thirty-eight, single, and has been writing the same book for the last seven years. And she has been distracted recently: on the same day that Arabella teaches her class she also visits her mother in a nursing home outside the city. And every time they argue. Arabella wants the fighting to stop, but, as her mother puts it, “Just because we’re family, doesn’t mean we have to like each other.” When her class takes a surprising turn and her lessons start to spill over into her weekly visits, she suddenly finds she might be holding the key to her mother’s love and, dare she say it, her own inspiration. After all, as a lifelong lover of books, she knows the power of a good story. |
