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Monday, December 11, 2023

Conquergood & the Center of the Intelligible Mystery of Being ~ Lone Star Book Blog Tours Excerpt & Giveaway!

 

CONQUERGOOD & THE CENTER
OF THE INTELLIGIBLE
MYSTERY OF BEING
by
CG Fewston


Science Fiction / Dystopian / Steampunk
Date of Publication: October 17, 2023
Number of Pages: 381 pages 


Scroll down for Giveaway!


One of resilience and transformation, Conquergood’s life-changing discovery explores the depths of family, memory, love, and the mysteries that lie at the heart of the universe. 

In 2183, Jerome Conquergood is an outcast roaming the abandoned and crumbling skyscrapers of Old York City outside the Korporation’s seductive and dizzying headquarters, a post-apocalyptic security-city for the mega-rich. Despite his hatred for the techno-optimism and the Korporation, Conquergood is compelled to save his mysterious twin brother Vincent by joining the Korporation, a mega-corporate and governmental entity in a world oppressed to peace.



Excerpt from From Book Two, Chapter II, “Lesson XI”
Conquergood & the Center of
the Intelligible Mystery of Being

Note from the author: The below excerpt details how books will always be important to humanity and to the survival of civilization, even if that is on an invisible moral level with the inheritance of passing knowledge down to future generations.

The scene takes place in the basements of the Korporation’s mega-city-like headquarters. The Korporation has built its foundations upon the Korporate Library, which is located deep underground and was once the New York City Public Library. 

= = = 

“I remember,” Conquergood whispers into the limitless virtual holo-sky. “I do remember.”

He drops his gaze from off the digital ceiling and in a state of fervid alacrity Conquergood recasts the first library he had ever been in.

“Fifth Avenue,” he says to himself, spinning inward in the silent erudition of self-discovery.

In his mind’s eye, still hovering high above the compass imprinted upon the library floor, he witnesses the entrance to the Fifth Avenue Library: a staircase with a prostrate stone lion on one side and a stone vase on the other.

Mentally, Conquergood moves through four towering columns into the effulgent New York City Public Library. His vision catches sight of a similar sign which now hangs on the entrance to the Korporate Library. And it is the name — John Milton — which halts the memory.

“Yes, I do remember Paradise Lost and a great many others.” Conquergood struggles into the depths of his eternal soul. “But that can’t be. That’s impossible. That was so very long ago.” How long? He does not remember.

Uncomprehending, he struggles with the memory as his frantic mind races with meta-calculations. In his memory, he continues seeing rows of long wooden tables with entrenched readers intent on unlocking secrets away from the pages before them, before the time of the World Wide Web and the virtual environments, separating humanity from the natural world of touch and taste and smell. Chandeliers of such exorbitant sunshine reflecting its clean light upon a white floor and its brown walkway in between rows of tables. Buttresses lining the walls, windows giving ease to the artificial glow from above. And Conquergood is seeing it all — as clear as any memory from five minutes ago. 

Conquergood remains embodied in both libraries, being two places at once, propagating between both worlds, the real and the recollection. He welcomes the exotic sensations the journey carries, admiring his own awe of what libraries had been, before the Era of Digitization conquered them; the rules of being forbidden to speak above a whisper cascade back onto his memories, as well as the mustiness of age and wisdom being on free display, and he remembers how these holy sites often went un-used and became under-valued over the generations.

Conquergood can now recall how he had behaved on his first visit to the library. As a small boy he had been nervous with polite reverence, uncertain of which way to turn, of which aisle to discover, and which row to select from, of which bookshelf to choose from, of which book he should pull from its everlasting hearth, of which pages he should read from in order to breathe in its fiery passions to fill a dulled boy’s heart, igniting a mind to inspire upon ‘a life beyond life.’ The books had held lives of their own back then. But now he also knows that these books had made up a whole body, as though each book was a cell in a living organism in a state of repetitive meditation and waiting for the hand to pluck them from the tree which bears endless fruit. Feeling overwhelmed, Conquergood reluctantly leaves his memory-vision.

After selecting several more books, Conquergood glides down on the hover-slide and locates one of two old-fashioned Georgian style leather armchairs next to a small table and banker’s lamp with bronze base and an amber mica shade. Above the two chairs is an oil painting, “Still-Life of Books, 1628” by Jan Davidsz, and Conquergood sees in the painting a violin placed on a wooden desk among scattered manuscripts.

Starting from the beginning of the first book he chose, and savoring each morsel of each word on his lips — as a dehydrated man does in a desert when an oasis can be found just in time to save his life — Conquergood finishes the book in under three hours.

Each phoneme grasps and wets his tongue in unexpected new language and cognizance. He finishes the book, places it down on the side stand, and in a fit of bedlam and clarity, juxtaposed with his soul, says aloud,

“I’m the ghost that’s always around, but nowhere to be found. Why is that?”

Out of the decades of change and virtual globalization, Conquergood can hear the author’s voice echoing concrete certitude from the page:

“Without the library, you have no civilization.”


Photo credit: Thor
The American novelist CG FEWSTON has been a Visiting Scholar at the American Academy in Rome (Italy), a Visiting Fellow at Hong Kong’s CityU, & he’s been a member of the Hemingway Society, Americans for the Arts, PEN America, Club Med, & the Royal Society of Literature. He’s also been a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) based in London. He has a B.A. in English, an M.Ed. in Higher Education Leadership (honors), an M.A. in Literature (honors), and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing & Fiction. He was born in Texas in 1979.

Fewston is the author of several short stories and novels. His works include A Father’s Son, The New America: Collection, The Mystic’s Smile ~ A Play in 3 Acts, Vanity of Vanities, A Time to Love in Tehran, Little Hometown, America, A Time to Forget in East Berlin, and Conquergood & the Center of the Intelligible Mystery of Being.



--------------------------------------
GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!
SIX WINNERS:

1st: $100 Amazon card + eBook or paperback of Conquergood
2nd: $50 Amazon card + eBook or paperback
3rd: $25 Amazon card + eBook or paperback
4th: Book Lover's gift bundle + eBook or paperback
5th: Book Lover's blanket + eBook or paperback
6th: Book Lover's tote bag + eBook or paperback
(US Only; ends 12/21/23)



FOR DIRECT LINKS TO EACH POST ON THIS TOUR, UPDATED DAILY, 
OR VISIT THEM DIRECTLY, HERE:

12/11/23

The Real World According to Sam

Review

12/11/23

Hall Ways Blog

Excerpt

12/12/23

The Page Unbound

Notable Quotables

12/12/23

LSBBT Blog

BONUS Stop

12/13/23

Boys' Mom Reads

Review

12/14/23

It's Not All Gravy

Review

12/14/23

Book Fidelity

Review

12/15/23

Bibliotica

Author Interview

12/15/23

LibrAriel Book Adventures

Review

12/16/23

Forgotten Winds

Scrapbook Page

12/17/23

StoreyBook Reviews

Author Interview

12/18/23

Rox Burkey Blog

Review

12/18/23

Rebecca R. Cahill, Author

Scrapbook Page

12/19/23

Chapter Break Book Blog

Review

12/20/23

Jennie Reads

Review

12/20/23

The Plain-Spoken Pen

Review


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