Posts tagged as:

Luna-15

Red Moon – What’s My Favorite Line?

by Daniel Brenton on February 7, 2010

The new cover for Red Moon

Over the last few months, Variance Publishing has hosted on their blog a number of posts featuring their offerings and commentary by their authors, and they graciously invited me to contribute. Stanley Tremblay of Variance gave me permission to repost these here, and today’s post is the last of the [...]

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Red Moon – Author on Author

by Daniel Brenton on January 24, 2010

The new cover for Red Moon

Over the last few months, Variance Publishing has hosted on their blog a number of posts featuring their offerings and commentary by their authors, and they graciously invited me to contribute. Stanley Tremblay of Variance gave me permission to repost these here, and today’s post is the second of the [...]

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The Dustin Clark Review of Red Moon

by Daniel Brenton on December 29, 2007

Dustin Clark, otherwise known as “OddThings” over at The Book of THoTH, a blogger who focuses on the ancient historical context of UFOs and on other Fortean subjects, has given Red Moon a glowing review.
Just glowing.
Did I mention it was glowing?
Here’s what he did find wrong with it:
My only complaint is that when it was [...]

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The Mysterious Universe Red Moon Interview

by Daniel Brenton on December 15, 2007

Fellow Red Moon author David S. Michaels and I had the pleasure of being interviewed by Benjamin Grundy of Mysterious Universe yesterday evening, and only hours later — boom! — the podcast interview is available here.
Benjamin leads us through a broad spectrum of subjects — NASA secrecy, the question as to why there is this [...]

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Larry Ketchersid Reviews Red Moon

by Daniel Brenton on November 23, 2007

Larry Ketchersid, new novelist, author of Dusk before the Dawn, and fellow listee on Paul Levinson’s list of Best First SciFi Novels, opens his review of Red Moon with the following praise:
The US-USSR space race re-imagined, with historical fiction combined with a near-future earth on the brink; a great read, not just for NASA fans [...]

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