Bluest Moon Cover
|

Cover Reveal! Bluest Moon Coming Soon

Cover image sample for the book Bluest Moon by Harry Meier. A shoulders-up image of a femme-presenting cybernetic person staring off into the distance through haunting blue on blue eyes. The bottom half of her face is the only skin showing through blue and orange cybernetic panels. Red circuitry drips down from her head as she looks out from a dark corner. The background is weathered stone wall of more shades of blue to teal. The line at the top of the cover reads "Take the ship. Take back their home."

The artwork is by Romain Bonnet and I can’t express how happy I am with how this turned out. I was in tears the first time I looked at her. I said, “Oh my god. That’s SIS.” Just typing that made me emotional about it again.

Bluest Moon is an epic journey to find our way back home through found family. From a daring heist to steal a warship to nurturing that ship until she becomes her own person, the crew has a desperate plan to save the oppressed workers of Luna. They’ll learn when families find each other, even in the worst places, sometimes they bring us all back where we belong.

It’s 2352, and Lync just landed his dream job on Luna, training the ship that’ll put Earth back atop the solar system and end their cold war. Close to home with his admiral father and mine boss mother nearby, life will be great if he can deliver on his parents’ ambitions—and keep the snarky ship’s AI from having any “accidents”.

When Lync meets the dark-sider Dawa and her family, he’s drawn into a moon he never knew. Caught between duty to Earth and a growing loyalty to these lunar misfits. Together, they form an unlikely family, determined to steal a warship and fight for their home.

The full cover for paperback and hardcover jacket (wishfully thinking) has even more little touches that tell so much about the story. <Happy Author Dances>

Be sure to sign up for updates here at the blog and/or download 2 sample chapters!

Similar Posts

  • To Timothy

    All Who May Read, What follows came to my attention in a most unexpected way. In a letter addressed to me from the estate of wealthy philanthropist. It came with oddly specific instructions about the method and timing of its release to the public. Below I try with due diligence to honor that request. If…

  • |

    2015 in Review

    I feel obligated to sum up the year. I mean, everybody else is doing it, right? That’s what you do at the end of the year. So let me try my hand at this… Let’s see. My new year’s resolution for 2015 was to get more aggressive with my writing aspirations. Not just to write…

  • NaNoWriMo 2015

    Like many other authors out there I’m taking part in NaNoWriMo again this year. In other words, don’t expect much from me this month. When I’m not in a caffeine induced craze of keyboard abuse I’m either sleeping (less than usual), working (less than usual), and/or (usually and) thinking about my novel. This year I…

  • Beetles and the Sun

    A few weeks back I was toying around with the idea of a brain “connectome”. This is the concept of a complete map of all the interconnections in a brain. To date computer scientists working with neuroscientists have been able to take small-scale structures, like insect or mouse brains, and map them with very good…

  • The Randonneur

    The stars greeted him. The crisp desert air gave a clear view of the night, as planes blinked by a sliver of moonlight. Four planes blinked, flying in an orderly row. First four, then five, and six. One by one, more blinking lights joined until the whole sky flickered in a wave from east to west, the stars going out and coming back ten or more times before Gary shut his eyes tight, took a deep inhale, and opened again.

    Nothing but night. No stars. No planes. Darkness.

Leave a Reply