Alrighty. One more read before it escapes my clutches for others to pass judgment. Time to see what I've written!
Project Hail Mary (the Movie)
A simply beautiful film. By turns hilarious, endearing and inspirational. Just go see it. Help it make a billion dollars, so we get more quality entertainment like this.
I may wax philosophical at length later, but most everyone won’t have seen it yet, and you all deserve to go into it fresh, without my idle musings priming your expectations.
The Hail Mary
Project Hail May (Lego version) is complete! It spins and shifts around as needed, and is a very cool design. The best part is, of course, Rocky; he's adorable. I’m seeing the movie on Saturday!
BMAC
It's my once a year reminder that I have a fun Buy Me A Coffee program you can subscribe to if you like (think Patreon, without all the heavy-handed rules and fees). It comes with different tiers, so you can subscribe to exactly what you want and nothing more. Perks include:
- monthly wallpaper downloads from my book covers and other art
- monthly livestream chats, where we cover space news, tech advancements, scifi media, my books and whatever else you inquire about...oh, and I read excerpts from my current WIP
- getting every new ebook 10 days early
- getting to listen to the new audiobook as Pyper is recording it
Learn more here: https://buymeacoffee.com/gsjennsen
Emerald City Comic Con After-Action Report
TL;DR: it was awesome!
First off, the venue is just lovely. The con takes place across 2 convention centers, but the Writers' Block is in Summit, which is a new building, and it shows. The floor is carpeted and the ceiling is high with tons of skylights; even when it's cloudy (hello, Seattle....), the space is bright with natural light.
I'm a big fan of the "Writers' Block" setup, where all (or most) of the author tables are together in one place, complete with a giant sign hanging overhead so people can find it. I got to hang out with a bunch of authors (my favorite people after #MrJennsen, family and readers) all weekend. And most of the people who came down the aisle were there because they love books, so it was a target-rich environment.
Book sales were fantastic - comparable to Dragon Con, and my costs were much lower. I sold out of The Thief way early (the IAP award caught people's fancy!), so I'll bring many more copies of it in the future. Medusa Falling did great as well. Starshine always sells by far the most number of copies - but the people who love cyberpunk *really* love cyberpunk, so I'll always bring Machina as well. (Note: The Universe Within has also done well when I've brought it instead of The Thief, but, inside baseball: pitching readers on 5 different titles is too overwhelming; 3 to 4 is the sweet spot.)
Mr. Jennsen and I simply love Seattle and the whole Puget Sound region. We don't live there for several good reasons, but we get tempted every time we visit, and I'm so happy to live within driving distance of it now.
Galactic Core
A stunning new image of the Milky Way galactic core just dropped!
This view was captured by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), a powerful network of radio telescopes in Chile.
What you’re seeing is the crowded, chaotic heart of our galaxy, a region packed with cold gas and dust, the raw material that forms new stars. The image maps an area called the Central Molecular Zone, stretching more than 650 light-years across.
Image credit:: ALMA(ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/S. Longmore et al. Background: ESO/D. Minniti et al.
More info: https://www.eso.org/public/news/eso2603/
Checkov's Razor
Deep Edit Is In the Books
And that's a wrap on the deep edit of The Theory of Everything! Next up, a fine-toothed-grammar/style-comb, then off for more objective editing.
When the book opens, things are in a bit of disarray. Nika and Mesme have vanished off to parts unknown, Morgan and Olivia are trapped on Mshak, and the Dzhvar are getting in the way of everything by accelerating their attacks.
Happy Valentine's Day From Space
The Rosette Nebula's blue-white speckles are among the most luminous stars in the galaxy, with some burning millions of times brighter than the Sun. Happy Valentine's Day!
Via APOD: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap260214.html
Furiosity
I invent lots of things in my writing--technology, alien species, cosmic phenomena, whole dimensions. And sometimes I invent new words.
Okay, fine, fine, this was a typo. But I think I adore the notion of 'furiosity,' and now I really want to keep it. The Facebook people think I should definitely keep it….
Final Project Hail Mary Trailer
One last epic trailer before Project Hail Mary hits theaters on March 20th. I haven’t been this excited for a movie in a long, long while; since The Force Awakens, probably. The possibility of an equally epic letdown is of course high, but I refuse to not be excited.
More TTOE Updates
Not that any of you were worried we weren't going to get there...
And a little peek behind the editing curtain....
Helix Nebula
Webb has dropped an absolutely INSANELY detailed image of a portion of the Helix Nebula. The image was taken by Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera. From NASA: “pillars that look like comets with extended tails trace the circumference of the inner region of an expanding shell of gas. Here, blistering winds of fast-moving hot gas from the dying star are crashing into slower moving colder shells of dust and gas that were shed earlier in its life, sculpting the nebula’s remarkable structure.”
You can learn more about the image and the Helix Nebula here: https://science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/intricacies-of-helix-nebula-revealed-with-nasas-webb/
For comparison, here is the Helix Nebula as imaged by Hubble and Spitzer:
And a First Draft
There. Now it's a FIRST draft. What does that mean? No brackets. A theoretically complete book that I could hand to someone to read, and not have to caveat it with "but I haven't done X yet, and I still need to Y, and there are placeholders for Z."
Now to tweak and edit and slave and agonize and generally bring it up to the standard that has kept you guys around for 23 books.
Jupiter and Ganymede
The Cassini spacecraft imaged Jupier and Ganymede together on January 6, 2001, from about 11.8 million km beyond Jupiter. What a lovely, haunting image!
Cassini was such a gift. It revealed our solar system to be as beautiful as we'd long dreamed it must be.
Via Jason Major.
Zero Draft Achieved
And that's a wrap on the Zero Draft of THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING! 117K words...good lord this book is a beast, and it has been a ton of work to wrangle it into submission.
Lol, who am I kidding? I haven't wrangled it yet - that's next. But I did commit a whole host of heart-pounding encounters, stunning revelations and emotional moments to the page.
So have a little teaser for one of them, and celebrate with me.
2025 Year In Review
It's time for a 2025 Year in Review! The immediacy of social media means important posts are quickly forgotten in favor of the Next New Thing, and I think it's important to pause every now and then and celebrate the many good things that happened as the year flew by.
I published 2 novels: THE UNIVERSE WITHIN (wrapping up the Cosmic Shores trilogy of stand-alone sci-fi adventure novels) and LIMINAL SPACE (the first book in the final trilogy of the Amaranthe universe).
THE THIEF was a rock-star of a novel this year, winning the Indie Author Project Sci-Fi Book of the Year and being named one of the best Alien Sci-Fi Novels of the Year by Discover Sci-Fi. (Yes, yes, and there was a tiny kerfuffle around the SPSFC in which The Thief was thrust into a semi-starring role. Let me tell you, going viral on X is not for the faint of heart....)
Five of my short stories landed on the moon! Thanks to the incredible Lunar Codex project and Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines' groundbreaking missions, "Apogee," "Solatium," "Venatoris," "Re/Genesis" and "Chrysalis" will reside forever in the stars.
I was a Pro at Dragon Con again this year, speaking on some fascinating panels, selling books and meeting awesome readers and authors at what is seriously the craziest geek con on the planet. I also attended Lilac City Comicon and the Local Author Celebration by the Community Library Network, fulfilling a promise to myself to put down roots in my new Inland Northwest home by getting involved in the regional author community.
Oh, and I sold my 700,000th story. Thank you, all of you, for enabling me to do what I love!
Favorite book I read this year? House of Suns by Alastair Reynolds; I deeply love that book. But it was a reread, so favorite first-time read of the year? Probably Ancilliary Justice by Ann Leckie; it deserves all the accolades it received. Favorite non-fiction? The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos by Brian Greene; the prospect of multiverses is real science, guys.
Favorite video game? Baldur's Gate 3, again. It should be Clair Obscur, but I disliked the narrative rug-pull at the end. Also, Kingdoms Reborn turned out to be a delightful city-builder of a game!
What about 2026? THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING will definitely release, and I'll start writing NAKED SINGULARITY, the final novel in the 25-book Amaranthe saga (* sobs *). More regional author events are on tap, including my first time appearing at Emerald City Comicon in Seattle. I believe there's another lunar landing or two (or...four??) on the schedule, too.
I'm genuinely happy with the year 2025 shaped up to be, and excited for the opportunities waiting to ambush me in 2026.
How about you? What were the highlights of your 2025?
TTOE Update
THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING has crossed the 100K mark! And no, I'm still not finished with the Zero Draft...which means the ZD is going to be longer than Liminal Space's was. And we all know how long Liminal Space ended up being.
I promise you: in this final trilogy, nothing will be left on the bench. It's all happening.
Earthrise
Jim Lovell: “The vast loneliness is awe-inspiring and it makes you realize just what you have back there on Earth."
Earthrise, captured on Christmas Eve 1968 during Apollo 8, remains one of the most captivating and enduring images in history.
Merry Christmas
Everyone writes on Christmas morning, right?
...Mr. Jennsen informs me that, no, everyone does in fact not. Huh.
Just a little snippet from The Theory of Everything hot off the presses, so Alex and Caleb can join you on Christmas for a spell.