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saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
The Secrets of Sleipnir series
by Sax Brightwell
(warning: explicit content)

 

In 3218, exoplanetary surveyors from the single-clone-family-owned Samaw Corporation identified a superhabitable, Earth-sized, ringed moon orbiting a blue ice giant. To their dismay, the colonists they brought voted overwhelmingly to name the ice giant Mama Loki and the moon they would settle Sleipnir, describing the legend of Loki birthing an eight-legged horse as amusing and the names as exotic and, more importantly, not taken yet. Samaw clones visited Sleipnir only once more, centuries later in 3734, after they were styling their corporation as the Kingdom of Heaven and themselves as Celestials. The ship they arrived in never left.



1. Low Dawn

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cover of Low Dawn by Sax Brightwell
2. High Dusk

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Cover of High Dusk by Sax Brightwell
3. High Dawn

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cover of the novel High Dawn by Sax Brightwell
4. Low Dusk

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cover of Low Dusk by Sax Brightwell 
Omnibus of Volumes 1-3

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cover of Secrets of Sleipnir volumes 1-3 by Sax Brightwell
1. Low Dawn

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Google Play
cover of the audiobook for Low Dawn by Sax Brightwell
2. High Dusk

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cover of the digital audiobook for High Dusk by Sax Brightwell
3. High Dawn

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cover of the digital audiobook for High Dawn by Sax Brightwell
4. Low Dusk

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Google Play
cover of the digital audiobook for Low Dusk by Sax Brightwell

Please note: While human narration is of course the gold standard, access to audio versions of books is too important to limit to only books by publishers who can afford to pay voice actors. Improved text-to-speech technology is among the best and most legitimate uses of AI, because it fills a genuine unmet need. I have elected to use Google Play's digital narration service to provide a better-quality audio experience than that produced by simply feeding an .epub file into a reader app. When I can offer even higher quality, with the warmth and colour of a genuine human performance, these digitally-narrated audio files will be removed.
saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
Frankly, I think improved text-to-speech capability is one of the BEST uses of AI technology. There is a lot more text out there than there are voice actors to read it all, much less funds to pay them. Certainly I can't afford to pay anyone unless I sell MANY more books than I have right now.

I considered the idea of recording my own voice, but I decided against that for several reasons. The first is simply a skill and resource issue: making voice recordings like that is something I've never done, and have none of the equipment for doing - I barely know what the equipment IS. (A microphone, obviously, and then The Magnus Archives extras said something about putting a sleeping bag over your head for sound quality? But what about all the rustling, and hyperventilation from excess CO2?) The second is a privacy issue: as I've said in the past, it's important to me to maintain a total pseudonym. A voice recording of myself would out my nationality and sex at minimum, and my whole identity to anyone who listened and somehow knew me in real life. So, "read by the author" is simply not an option (unless I, say, sold so many books I could afford to quit my dayjob - you may be noticing a common refrain here).

So, since I can't pay a voice actor, and both can't and won't record myself, audio versions of my books wouldn't exist at all without digital voices. In this instance no money is being WITHHELD from anyone; the technology enables something to exist where without it there would be nothing.

All this is to say that I've taken part in the Google Play Books auto-narration free beta test, and I'm very pleased with it. My first exploration of TTS voices was the app NaturalReader, which is useable but badly flawed. However, the Google voices can have their pronunciation corrected, which is a major game-changer. I still had to change certain incoherent noises (mostly sex noises) into words, because the models don't stretch so far as to be able to say things that aren't even made-up words. But overall, I found the voices very serviceable!

The audiobook series is here

Individually, Low Dawn is here: 
audiobook cover for Low Dawn

and High Dusk is here: 


If you're someone who benefits from audiobooks, I hope you enjoy these ones! Everyone deserves access to books, including books that are just for fun like these. Please remember to give the content warnings a listen and then arrange for an appropriate level of privacy!
saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (maunat portrait)
I bet if I asked you to take a wild guess who the oldest character in Low Dawn is, you wouldn't pick Maunat, but it's true: she might be the second-youngest character on the page, but she's the cast member who's been with me the longest. She was born on a night shift in the ER in 2011, when I was taking care of a young person who was Going Through Some Shit, including but far from limited to Gender and Sexuality Shit. She (at least, she went by she at the time) found it deeply, profoundly meaningful that so many ER nurses were women with short hair. Which seems like a low GNC bar to clear, in 2011! But there it was. I found myself thinking about a 'girl prince' of sorts, someone who swam against the current regarding her gender role without necessarily wanting to do anything about her gender identity. Which, again, there are many characters like that... but this was the character who rode the wave of that interaction, knocked on my brain-door, moved in, was joined in short order by her cute femme boyfriend, and never left, so I guess it's fair to say this one is mine.

I guess if I had to sum up Maunat and Bhimmi, I would call them my love letter to kids who've been told they would "mAkE mOrE sEnSe" if they were trans or in some other way queer. Even if that turns out to be true*, what a thing to tell a young person! That the point of who they are is to be easy for other people to understand? To fit neatly into the paradigms of others? What the fuck! Telling every feminine person that they must be a woman and/or fuck men, and every masculine person that they must be a man and/or fuck women, is not the progressive take you think it is.

*I guess, technically, it did turn out to be true for Maunat and Bhimmi: based on their histories they both qualify as bisexual, so now I also get to feel fighty about the fact that even as a cis woman and cis man becoming a monogamous married babymaking couple, they are both still bisexual (and would be members of the queer community if they were real people who existed on Earth in 2023, as opposed to fictional exoplanetary settlers in the 4200s whose main connection to Old Earth is history books).

Ironically, they finally made it onto the page in a novel too explicit to ever, ever find its way to someone as young as the person who first inspired their creation. Whoops! And I feel so protective and parental towards them that they only made it onto the page under the sheltering wings of their surrogate uncle(s). (Yes, I can feel parental towards fictional characters AND write them getting their junk out early and often. All my fanfic OTPs are my sons, including the men twice or twenty times my age. I don't make the rules.) But I'm choosing to roll with the principle that written is better than unwritten. They deserve to be known and enjoyed by more people than me, even if 'more people' is (*checks sales*)... four more people XD
saxbrightwell: the name Sax in teal on a yellow background (teal)
Load-Bearing Coconut

Ilqun is a minor character who shows up only for the second chapter of Low Dawn, but he might just be the most Doylist character I've ever written: 
  1. He typifies the sexual relationships Fiyeli has had in the past: mostly casual one-night (or fifteen-minute) stands. Simple, easy, friendly - but also shallow, not quite what either party would like most to have, just what they can get considering all the other factors in their respective lives.
  2. He establishes that white people exist on Sleipnir, but they're not the majority and they're not in charge (nobody really is, beyond their immediate communities); they're just around and included.
  3. He establishes that trans folks also exist on Sleipnir and it's not a big deal, which is important because: 
  4. Hot on the heels of his chapter comes Maunat and Bhimmi's chapter, where they affirm each other's cisgender identities in the face of their respective semi-nonconforming gender roles, which I'm not unaware could potentially come off as some kind of transphobic soapbox moment. Ilqun gets his cameo first specifically to preempt that reading.
So Ilqun is really working his little butt off tying together many elements in the introductory chapters, even chapters he's not in. He's a load-bearing coconut! I came up with him for functional reasons, but like most things that work, I find myself filled with affection for him. I'll definitely be looking for ways to bring him back for additional guest appearances, or maybe even a story of his own one day if the right idea presents itself.

saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
With the Amazon link live, I'd say Low Dawn is now fully launched, to the tiniest amount of fanfare imaginable on two very private Discord servers XD but hey! I wrote and published a whole-ass book! It was actually a ton of fun and I'm hard at work on the next one! Maybe someday there will be enough of them to be worth spending a few bucks to promote them for real!
saxbrightwell: a transparent image of a saxifrage flower (Default)
 
A steamy queer romance on an alien world. A story of hidden histories, shattered destinies, and Really Big Animals.

Fiyeli has a pretty good life on the ringed moon Sleipnir. He has friends all over, and even a few casual lovers, if not the belonging and devotion his heart has never stopped seeking.

He's made a career of sorts out of crossing the treacherous Sea of Glass, carrying messages and guiding travelers through the massive impact crater separating the northern and southern forests. Escorting a girl prince and a boy princess on their betrothal caravan to the western sea should be a similar job, just bigger (a lot bigger).

But when a chance encounter with a remnant of the tyrannical Kingdom of Heaven forces him deeper beneath the surface of Sleipnir than he's ever gone before, what he discovers there will upend the life he’s built, and the secrets he built it on…

(Approximate length: 60,000 words)

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