A new author for you to discover.
I met Erika at the recent GMRD Book Fair last Spring where she was an eager participant.
She has kindly accepted my invitation
to be our guest this week.
Her novel has received rave reviews
and she’s going to tell us about it.
Read on my friends.
Erika LeClair is a dystopian science fiction author and editor from
Fredericton, New Brunswick, where she lives with her husband and cat. When she
isn’t working on her next book, Erika often spends her time reading horror,
science fiction, and fantasy. Her debut novel, The Quarantine Drift, was
released in 2022, with a sequel on the way.
Title: The Quarantine Drift
Sixteen years ago, an alien ship crashed into Carina Linderoth’s home.
Sixteen years ago, she saw her twin sister for the last time.
Since that night, Carina has spent every waking moment searching for answers. What happened to her sister? Why did the aliens take Sonja and not her? And why do people keep telling her she never had a twin sister—that Sonja isn’t real?
Now, sixteen years later, Carina is approached by a mysterious genetic research company. They want her to work on a top-secret project, genetically engineering the human race with Eluridan—alien—DNA.
For any geneticist, it’s the opportunity of a lifetime.
For Carina, it’s something more.
This is her chance to return to Mount Desert Island, the scene of the crash, home to the stranded aliens. Back to the place where this all began. This is her chance to finally learn what happened to her sister.
If Sonja ever existed.
The
Story Behind the Story:
When I first had
the idea for The Quarantine Drift, I was studying biology at UNB and
drawing a ton of inspiration from my classes. Everything was so interesting,
and I couldn’t help thinking of ways I could use what I was learning in a
story. In my third year, I latched on to an idea I felt good about. I knew I
wanted a dystopian setting, something dark and spooky and gory and set here on
Earth, but with a more flexible, imaginative element—like aliens—that I could
have fun with. Studying environmental sciences can give you a bit of a bleak
outlook on the future, so that naturally wormed its way into the premise in the
form of a global water crisis. I’m also a sucker for characters with heaps of
emotional baggage (sorry, Carina), so that was an inevitability. That was also
the year I joined my first writing group, which changed everything. Sharing my
work and exchanging feedback with other writers finally broke my cycle of
starting projects and not knowing how to finish them. It also gave me the
perspective I needed to really study my writing and understand how I could
improve. I eventually graduated and started working in laboratories, and those
experiences gave me even more ideas I could use. Between the constant stream of
scientific inspiration and my fellow writers pushing me to improve, the story
kept transforming, and that was exciting as hell. I eventually left lab work to
pursue writing and editing full-time, but this book feels a bit like a time capsule
of those seven years of my life.
A question before you go, Erika:
Scribbler: Where is your favourite spot to write? Are you messy or neat? Your beverage of choice?
Erika: My favorite spot to write: I have an office lined with bookshelves, a big desk, and a window with a view of the trees outside. At every opportunity, I have the window wide open to let in the breeze and listen to the birds chirping. It’s a great setup, but I sometimes get restless, so when the weather is nice, my favorite spot is outside on my balcony with my laptop. The fresh air and lack of distractions from my cat (who is almost always pawing at the glass, demanding I come back inside) make for the perfect writing environment. It’s also nice to get a bit of sun and feel like I’m sort of outside, since working from home means I don’t leave the house as much as I probably should.
My beverage of choice: My fun answer is an iced chai latte with oat milk, with a little sprinkle of cinnamon on top. My honest answer is water—no ice, no flavoring (I know, I know, I’m a monster, but at least I’m a hydrated one).
An Excerpt from The Quarantine Drift
“To
start, I’d like to discuss your doctoral thesis.” Dr. Sarian leaned back in her
seat comfortably and tented her hands. “I’ve read it twice, and I have to say
that your vision for the future of genetics is exactly what we’re looking for.”
“Future?”
Carina had to laugh. “I work in a government-run medicinal genetics laboratory.
Not much hope for the future there.”
“True.
A waste of your talents and a far cry from the content of your doctorate. Your
focus was on the use of gene therapy to enhance human tolerance to changing
environmental conditions.”
“Yes,
but—”
“The
climate continues to change, Dr. Linderoth. Humanity has struggled for decades
to overcome increasingly uninhabitable conditions. In the last fifty years,
over four billion people have died globally of illnesses related to a simple
lack of water. The time for tinkering with medicinal therapies is long past.”
She’d
waited years to hear another scientist utter those words. “If the government
stopped restricting our research, we could solve the water crisis within the
decade, without making changes to the environment.”
Dr.
Sarian smiled. “I won’t dance around it. Genidex conducts genetic
research—among other fields of study—not unlike what you’ve mentioned. In fact,
we’ve already taken your idea quite a few steps further.” She smirked, her eyes
searching Carina’s expression.
“What
do you mean, further?”
“We’ve
been working on the exact avenue of research you’ve been proposing for the last
seven years. We’ve begun genetically engineering human DNA with that of other
organisms. The organism we have in
mind, however, is more advanced than anything you’ve proposed. What we aim to
recombine with human DNA…” Dr. Sarian’s eyes flashed, and she grinned. “…is Eluridan.”
Thanks for sharing an excerpt with our
readers, a real teaser.
Your story sounds intriguing and I’m
anxious to know how it goes.
Thanks for being our guest this week.
We wish you continued success with your writing.
Thank you to all our visitors and readers