First came THE BREACH:
Then Patrick Lee ratcheted up the tension in GHOST COUNTRY:
What Paige Campbell saw when she opened a door into seventy years from now scared the hell out of her. She and her Tangent colleagues brought their terrible discovery to the President—and were met with a hail of automatic gunfire after leaving the White House. Only Paige survived.
Fearing a terrifying personal destiny revealed to him from the other side of the Breach, Travis Chase abandoned Tangent . . . and Paige Campbell. Now he must rescue her—because Paige knows tomorrow’s world is desolate and dead, a ghost country scattered with the bones of billions. And Doomsday will dawn in just four short months . . . unless they can find the answers buried in the ruins to come.
But once they cross the nightmare border into Ghost Country, they might never find their way back . . .
Now, the thrilling conclusion, DEEP SKY
Now Travis Chase of the covert agency Tangent—caretakers of the Breach and all its grim wonders—along with partner and lover Paige Campbell and technology expert Bethany Stewart, have only twenty-four hours to unearth a decades-old mystery once spoken of in terrified whispers by the long since silenced. But their breakneck race cross-country—and back through time and malleable memory—is calling the total destructive might of a shadow government down upon them. For Travis Chase has a dark destiny he cannot be allowed to fulfill . . .
John Nardo of SF Signal is predicting DEEP SKY will be one of his "Best Reads of 2012"...in February!
(we think he's right!)

Blog: Janet Reid, Literary Agent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Revision update: Another two chapters revised in the last two days, but I’m starting to doubt that I’ll finish by the end of the week. Maybe end of next week?
For unpublished writers, facing the slush pile can seem daunting. We hear all these horror stories about manuscripts getting buried in six-foot piles of paper, never to be heard from again. We send off query letters filled with hopes and dreams and fear they’ll get lost in a sea of other queries.
The slush pile has changed a lot in the last few years. It used to be stacks and stacks of manuscripts in an editor’s office, but that has — mostly — gone now. In its article Death of the Slush Pile, the Wall Street Journal offers up some of the well-known authors who were discovered through the slush pile when it was in its heyday, such as Anne Frank. If it wasn’t for the slush pile, we wouldn’t have her classic literary work, which is a staple of English class curriculums.
But what WSJ’s Katherine Rosman doesn’t point out is that it’s not so much that the slush pile has died, it has just changed. Today, most publishing houses won’t accept unsolicited manuscripts except from agents. So the slush pile has moved from the editor’s desk to the agent’s desk, and for most agents, it has moved from paper to electronic. This newest technological change benefits both agents and writers. When I sent out my first query letter for my first novel, within minutes I had a request for the full manuscript. Not every agent was so quick, but on average, I’d say the turnaround time was around a week between query and response. (It was longer after a full was requested, but that’s a lot more reading on the part of the agent.) A week is a lot different from the three-to-six-month turnaround time — at least — when writers and agents/editors were dealing with paper copies.
Rosman does point out one agent slush pile success: Stephenie Meyer. But agents will tell you there are many others.
Here’s the latest example: Earlier this month, agent Janet Reid wrote about the launch of her client Patrick Lee’s book and how that book came to her as a query in her slush pile back in August 2007.
And on the Guide to Literary Agents blog, agent Ted Malawer told how he found his client Sydney Salter through her stellar query letter in his agency’s slush pile.
These are just two examples, but it shows that, with a brilliant query letter and an equally brilliant manuscript, slush can in fact work.
Hang in there.
Write On!

Blog: Janet Reid, Literary Agent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Patrick Lee is over at John Scalzi's house today and the BIG IDEA is a post worth reading.
I read all three in like 4 days. Amazingly paced and visual. Patrick Lee is Bad Ass!
Oh, and the fact that the main character and I share the same first name was a plus for me.
~travis
Yipes. Those sound good. I found a query you might like on AgentQuery today Ms Reid. Told the guy to send it along to you. Hope that's OK.
Love these books. I picked up The Breach when you announced the .99 ebook sale and kept reading until I finished Deep Sky. I've recommended them to all my friends. Great series!
Loved the first 2, passed them along to my teenage son, he loved 'em too. Can't wait for DEEP SKY!
Well, if the pages turn as quickly as in Ghost Country, I'm sure it will be a grand success.
Ordered it as soon as I saw this post. The first two were so good.
Who me, smirking? Heavens, no! *hides ARC under mattress* *whispers* The ending is SO FREAKING WILD.
I loved all three books immensely. He has a fan for life in me, for any books he writes.