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Monday, February 14, 2022

Meet Author Ian Price and His Debut Dystopia's Edge – Interview and Book Excerpt

Today, I'm excited to feature indie author Ian Price and his debut cyberpunk novel Dystopia's Edge.

I'd heard of cyberpunk before but never really looked up what it meant. So, I took the opportunity to ask Ian what cyberpunk is along with his research process, who does he imagine his main character would look like, and more!

This post includes an exclusive interview with Ian Price along with an excerpt from Dystopia's Edge. I look forward to reading the book over the summer :) so stay tuned for the review.



First, here's a quick bio about Ian followed by the synopsis for Dystopia's Edge.

About the author:

Ian Price author picture
Ian Rollins Price was born in New York, growing up there before moving to Massachusetts in order to attend Harvard University’s prestigious weekend bartending course.

Glad to have written a novel during the COVID-19 pandemic, Ian is looking forward to his next project while raising a newborn daughter alongside his wonderful wife.

Connect with Ian Price via his Website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Amazon.

 

Synopsis:

The year is 2121. The world has changed a lot, but in ways that you’d probably expect.

Dystopia's Edge by Ian Price cover
I thought I put my hitman days behind me. Turns out that couldn’t be further from the truth.

I’m Benjamin Edge, mercenary for hire. Running guns, carrying out hits, I’ve done it all. When you grow up as a child soldier fighting for one city-state against another in the crumbling ruins of a fallen civilization, killing becomes second nature.

This newest job seems a breeze, though. Smuggling lab equipment from San Francisco to New Tijuana means running a harsh gauntlet, but it’s nothing I can’t handle. A few hired guns—even a reformed drug addict who let me down in the past—should be enough to blaze a trail through the Badlands.

Or at least I thought it was.

Until a corpse came back from the dead.

Sergeant Reaver, a bio-engineered super soldier I killed a decade ago, is somehow still breathing. Not only that, but he’s brought all the crime syndicates in Los Angeles under his banner. Now that he knows I’m on his turf, it’s me against an army all the way to New Tijuana.

Good thing I packed plenty of ammo.

 

Interview with Ian Price by Nadaness In Motion

 

1.       Can you tell us a bit about yourself and your writing?

Ian Price: I was originally born in New York City and grew up in that area before moving up to Boston for college. I was a biology major at Brandeis University, but I frequently took literature classes for fun (it was a liberal arts school with a strong science program). By the time I found myself in a creative writing class, I found that I’d taken enough courses to pick up an English minor.

My writing style tends to have a sense of humor to it while attempting to tackle serious issues. A holdover from contributing to the humor magazine on campus.

 

2.     What are your favorite reading genres? Can you name a few favorite authors?

Ian Price: I like to read a bit of everything. In terms of non-fiction, I can’t recommend the works of Candice Milard enough. She writes historical novels about pivotal points in the lives of Theodore Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and other prominent figures.

For fiction, I don’t think it’s controversial to say that Neil Gaiman is one of the best out there.

 

3.     Your novel Dystopia's Edge is in the 'cyberpunk' genre. What is cyberpunk exactly?

Ian Price: Cyberpunk is a genre pioneered in the early 1980’s by artists like William Gibson in his work ‘Neuromancer’ and Ridley Scott’s ‘Blade Runner’.

It explores the idea that advancements in technology aren’t inherently linked to advancements in how people treat one another; that the human condition could involve the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. The 1% getting flying cars while everyone else is forced to build those cars in corporation-run work camps. ‘High tech, low life’.

 

Ian Price writing and editing tip
Ian Price writing and editing tip - from his interview with Nadaness In Motion

4.     Is Dystopia's Edge your first book or have you published other books?

Ian Price: I was a hobbyist cartoonist all throughout college and published comic strips in various school-run publications during my time there. I later collected all of ‘em in a paperback published through Lulu, so I guess that’s my first book?

I’ve had other outlets for my creative side since then (a little stand-up, some extra work in a couple Boston produced movies, etc.) but I guess Dystopia's Edge is my first proper fiction novel!

 

5.     What inspired you to write Dystopia's Edge?

Ian Price: Short answer—when the pandemic hit and the world seemed to be falling apart around me, I tried to distract myself by playing video games in my free time. My April wedding got cancelled due to safety concerns, watching the news had my nerves on a razors’ edge, and eventually I just needed to do something more constructive with all that anxiety.

So, one night at 3 AM, I was physically unable to fall asleep. Not knowing what else to do, I picked up my laptop and started writing until I was able to fall asleep. That’s what I did for about a year. The result was completing the first draft of Dystopia’s Edge.

Cyberpunk just seemed like the best genre to express the anxieties I felt at the time. Eventually, after I submitted the first draft to a few beta-readers, I was told that the story also had some Western vibes to it. So that’s cool.

Some characters in the book let me explore themes like drug addiction, the value of nature, and how much I idolize the children’s’ entertainer Fred McFeely Rogers. But I won’t talk too much about them. I wouldn’t want to get into spoilers.

 

6.     If Dystopia's Edge were to be made into a movie or series, who would you like to play the main character Benjamin Edge?

Ian Price: Oh gosh, Jason Mamoa? Or maybe Bo Burnham if he went on one of those Hollywood workout regimens to get absolutely jacked? If some studio somewhere wants to adapt my novel, they’re welcome to cast whoever they please.


7.     Dystopia's Edge has a lot of military-and-gang-themed parts How did you go about researching this?  

Ian Price: In my novel, California isn’t really a unified state anymore. It takes place about 50 years after a period of tremendous global instability that subdivided that area into 3 regions.

The area around San Francisco is what we would consider the most normal. It’s where the wealthier population lives a comfortable lifestyle that’s equitable to our own. Political power is in the hands of big corporations. My day job is as an office-worked in the pharmaceutical industry, so that was easy to write.

In Dystopia's Edge, the area around Los Angeles has been taken over by a fascist dictatorship. I’m a big fan of history. I studied the rise of Stalin and the Soviet Union back in college, watched more than few documentaries on pre-WWII Italy / Germany documentaries, and even visited Argentina shortly before the pandemic happened. Military coups are no joke and I wanted to express the anxiety they give me when I think about them.

The land just outside those two cities is largely decentralized. They’re controlled by a loose collective of organized gangs. Growing up in a well-off New York suburb, I always thought the divide between rich and poor was obscene. All one needed to do was walk over a tiny bridge into an underprivileged neighborhood and find themselves in a place where the crime rate had tripled. I spent some time on that other side and based the gang stuff on my experiences there. I’ll leave it at that.

Ian Price quote about cyberpunk


8.     Dystopia's Edge is quite a big book :D – how much editing did you have to go through? Can you tell us a bit about your writing and editing process?

Ian Price: I did A LOT of editing. I spent about a year on the first draft and a second year on post-production work. After reading through the book and editing a 2nd draft myself, I then submitted it to 6 beta-readers. Three were close friends and 3 were people I hired on Fiverr. In addition to catching typos I might have missed, they also helped me fine-tune the plot. If 1 beta-reader doesn’t like a portion of your book—it might just be personal taste on their part. But if 6 beta-readers don’t like a portion of your book—it’s something that just doesn’t work and needs changing.

I also hired a professional proofreader. Always hire a professional proofreader.


9.     Have you set a Goodreads goal for 2022? If yes, how many books would you like to read this year?

Ian Price: I have not set a Goodreads goal for 2022. My wife is due for a baby in April and I’ve got a few more baby books I need to finish up, though. Shout-out to The Expectant Father by Armin Brott. It’s a baby book written by a Navy Seal who became a stay-at-home dad.


10. While we're still not sure how travelling will work in the summer of 2022, if you could travel anywhere this year or in coming years, where would you go? (This is an invitation to come visit Egypt, where I'm from ;) )

Ian Price: I would LOVE to come to Egypt. My wife and I were supposed to have a honeymoon in Italy back in 2020, so at some point I’d like to do that to. Heck, it’s a wonderful world out there and I want to see it all!


Watch Dystopia's Edge book trailer



If you're thinking Nada (me) and Ian are chatty – I must admit we are! But there's a lot to be said about Dystopia's Edge, which I'm looking forward to reading in a couple of months.

Now here's an exclusive peak at Dystopia's Edge, the cyberpunk novel that's kept Ian busy during the pandemic.

The book is written from the first person perspective of Benjamin Edge (the Jason Momoa maybe-lookalike ;) )


Excerpt from Dystopia's Edge by Ian Price

We kept heading east, veering ever slightly to the south as we went. I told Rita that we’d need to go that way to steer clear of some old, abandoned copper mines that could be found nearby. Those caves had been stripped clean of their precious metals a century ago. Now their winding, underground caverns functioned mainly as the perfect hideout for marauding raider clans.

Corvin, myself and the rest of our old mercenary company had once been hired to go there for a job. A group of about thirty or so crazed barbarians had taken up residence in those caves. This particular clan had been vigilant in their apparent goal of robbing every passing cargo truck they laid their eyes on. The lot was especially violent in their methods too.

So violent, in fact, the U.S. government itself actually took notice. They were willing to pay a flat fee to any private mercenary group that went in there, rooted them out, and brought back proof of their eradication.

When our troop got there, the first thing I remember noticing was the smell.

There was a sick, sweet aroma floating out from the underground… a stale odor wafting from the mouth of those caves like bad breath.

Once everyone got inside, we realized it was the dead bodies of all the passengers they’d robbed. We’d been briefed that they’d gone missing, abducted for some twisted purpose by the raiders. Honestly, though, I still believed we’d find them alive… forced into manual labor at gunpoint. I thought they’d be tired, a little beat up, but still capable of rescue.

Instead... the raiders had cannibalized them all for food. I was the sole member of our group who was surprised by this, so maybe I was just more naive back then.

Our shootout with those barbarians was won easily enough. There were a lot of ‘em, sure. But we had much better guns and even better training. The hostiles were only used to dealing with one or two security guards who’d been hired to protect any cargo transports they’d robbed. Against us, they didn’t stand a chance.

Most of my team spent the day behind cover, waiting patiently for the barbarians to get aggressive and charge us. They were cannibals, after all, so it didn’t take much to get them angry. A few smoke bombs, a couple well-placed taunts… that usually set them off enough to make ‘em fight sloppy. They’d rush out from cover, guns blazing. Then we’d pick ‘em off.

A few of them tried to retreat, fleeing the caves through tunnels we hadn’t known about. When they got outside though, Corvin was waiting for them. He’d found a perch from where he was able to snipe the yellow ones at a distance. Most of them couldn’t make it ten feet before they received a bullet in the head.

Their war chief had been a little more challenging to deal with. Every time his clan had raided an armed truck, he’d always pilfer their best weapons for himself. Our team eventually fought our way into his deepest lair (an underground lake located at the bottom of the mine). I remember thinking that the fella looked like a walking arsenal.

Buddy, this guy was carrying everything except the kitchen sink. Submachine guns in each hand, every inch of him covered in body armor, night-vision goggles, a shoulder-mounted rocket launcher…

He looked ridiculous. We ended up killing

   

Don't forget to connect with Ian Price via his Website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Amazon.

 

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