Hi everyone!

So many questions! Let's start from the top...
Carolreads30 wrote: ↑01 Apr 2020, 14:37
My question to you would be- Where did the idea for this book originate? Is the plot based on an event that you took place in or just a thought that turned into a story?
It pretty much wrote itself. Part of it was that I wanted to try something new: I wanted to see if I could make the readers sympathize with the scientists at first, and hope they could regain control over Tau and Kata, or that someone would come to their rescue, and then twist things around so that by the end of the book they'd be clamoring for Dennison's blood

This is the entire reason why the beginning of the book is actually closer to the end in terms of time.
The training part was personal, though. I was in a horse-riding accident when I was 12 and mashed up the muscles in my lower back and legs pretty badly. I was never taken to hospital, so it didn't heal properly and games at school became pretty tortuous for me (it didn't help that I had the epitome of a sadist teacher). It made me wonder just what it would be like if you weren't allowed to rest when you were tired or in pain and that gave rise to the intense training that Kata undergoes.
kdhutchinson wrote: ↑01 Apr 2020, 14:42
Hey Jude!
First of all, I want to say your writing is enthralling; I'm very excited to follow your writing as you produce this series.
Thank you so much

It's going to be a pretty intense ride...I'm not sure how many books there will be in total, but there are some more planned out.
kdhutchinson wrote: ↑01 Apr 2020, 14:42
Second of all, I feel a lot of classic sci-fi mystique within your novel, though it is certainly a modernized idea and I love the way you set it up. My question is, do you find that you have a lot of influence from "classic" sci-fi authors? Where do you get your ideas from?
This is going to sound strange, but I actually don't read much sci-fi. It's hard to find a sci-fi book that doesn't feature super-AI, robots, spaceships, aliens (or the tough, grizzled captain who doesn't play by the rules leading his ship to victory against all odds) and/or space battles, yet the genre is so much wider. Basically, for a book to be legitimately classified as sci-fi, the plot has to be dependent on science that wasn't available when the book was written. So
Star Wars and
Predator are sci-fi, but so is
The Stepford Wives
Anyway, AI and robots really irritate me, which is why I deliberately wrote cultural and historical reasons to avoid them in
Project Tau. Failing that, they're all dystopian and that sub-genre irritates the shrimp outta me

(Seriously, am I the only sci-fi writer who's actually
optimistic about the future? Granted, what happens to poor Kalin isn't particularly nice, but that's a very extreme example; any normal GenTech lab would have had him arrested and he'd probably have been expelled from college. It was just his stupendously bad luck to run into the likes of Mason and Dennison

)
I always say that I write 'reality.' My characters are never superheroes or long-lost princes; they're regular people thrust into very irregular situations. I do find ideas suggest themselves to me as I write though, and very often my characters derail the plot all by themselves. At that point, I'm just along for the ride

It's like getting a group of actors together and saying, "Okay, let's improvise. I want it to be this kind of ending, one of you needs to hook up with another one and someone has to get betrayed. Other than that, the details are up to you."
B Creech wrote: ↑01 Apr 2020, 17:22
Hi Jude, I am in the process of reading this book now. I am not an avid sci-fi fan, but I am finding this one intriguing. It does give me pause, though. I think we are closer to cloning actual humans than we might think. Have you seen any of the newest robots? There is one in particular that gives me chills, and that is Sophie. Project Tau brought Sophie back to mind as he began to learn from Kata and started reasoning things out for himself. It is just my personal opinion, but sometimes science goes too far. However, I am enjoying the book! Congratulations on being BOTM!
Hi there!

Thank you

I'd heard of that robot but I didn't do a lot of research. Things like that freak me out a little, to tell you the truth. I think robots do have a place - I don't know where you are, but here in Japan there are robot pets, which offer companionship to people in nursing homes without any of the extra hassle and expenses that come with a real pet - but the thought of humanoid robots isn't one I want to dwell on.