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= This Shoal of Space =

A Science Fiction Novel by John Argo (Orig. 'Heartbreaker')

click for List of Early HTML Novels by John T. Cullen a.k.a. John Argo This Shoal of Space. Published online in 1996, John Argo's novel tells the story of a young reporter named Zoë Calla, in a small California coastal town, who uncovers a plot to conquer the world. During the dinosaur age, an alien invasion fleet came to earth, but its ships burned up in orbit. One plunged into the sea, where its computer core is now trying to reassemble the ship and resume the invasion. Already it's got strange avatars living in Zoë's brain, and weird events happening across town. More info soon. Site under development.

Museum Notes by John Argo. I first wrote this novel in the fall of 1990. At the time, I was working with a prominent New York City literary agency, which sent me favorable outside editor review notes (I still cherish them), and unsuccessfully showed it around the city. Close, but no cigar. Praise, but no deal. But digital publishing was just around the corner, along with the First Amendment freedom to self-publish, despite all the opposition from Neanderthals in print, retail, academe, and (most sadly) myopians-at-law.

Tracy Eastgate, Under The Covers Reviews (circa 1998?)A complex, imaginative tale set in a small California coastal town where the every-day touches hauntingly on the fabric of far space. A young reporter looking for her big break investigates mysterious zoo murders and stumbles upon an intergalactic invader in a virtual netherworld. Two men hover at the periphery--sinister Det. Vic Lara and handsome curator George Chatfield, each with his own terrible mysteries. The ending is not for the literal-minded--but by today, most people have seen "The Matrix" and other VR-empowered flicks and can deal with The White Stuff, The Cold Thing, and other concepts expanded upon here. This was one of the first virtual reality SF stories, written originally in 1990 and far ahead of its genre. It's a horror novel in the broad sense, and yet it never technically departs from the strictures of SF. "Five Stars. Outstanding, A definite must read ... a powerful book"--Tracy Eastgate, Under The Covers Reviews "I want to pay you a compliment. Rarely does a book EVER get under my skin or in my subconcious enough to cause dreams of any sort, but I'll tell you what, by time this morning came, I wasn't sure I wanted to go back to sleep or not … lol … I actually had mild nightmares last night … I love it … this is an absolutely awesome book."--Tracy Eastgate, Under The Covers Reviews, in a letter to the author of This Shoal of Space.

Digital Firsts. In 1996, this novel became the world's first digital novel published online in HTML for reading online, without any portable media (CD-ROM, floppies, etc.); further qualifications: it was proprietary (not public domain, therefore Gutenberg irrelevant); and a complete novel (not samples or teasers); and a standard type (not hypertext, but the same sort of sequential novel the New York publishers were issuing for the most part); and it was of a standard length (actually a bit longer at 128,000 words).

Global Fan Base. We published it starting July 1996 at our second website (The Haunted Village in innovative weekly serial chapters. We would post the next sequential chapter every Sunday evening, to be read by eager readers around the world as they arrived at work for their morning coffee or tea. In those days, few had home computers, so most sneaked a little recreational reading at work. Publishing in San Diego, we received raves from readers across the U.S. and as far away as New Zealand, Germany, South Africa, Canada, and other far-flung locations.

Originally published in 1996 as Heartbreaker, John Argo retitled the novel This Shoal of Space in 1998. Brian Callahan, co-publisher at the time, did the first covers and all web design.

Bestseller. This novel became a bestseller at the original Rocket eBooks and Barnes-Noble websites, and later at Fictionwise, where it had nearly 500 ratings, about 90% of them Great or Good.

Virtual Reality. Among the original themes in this novel was the idea of Virtual Reality (years before films like The Matrix or Inception, although we make no claim for first place—unless you consider that the VR in this novel involves arrayed microcomputers (PCs), actually laptops in effect, which were new at the time (I owned an early Toshiba). I first encountered the concept of virtual paging as a technical writer working at a major aerospace firm in San Diego. When some mainframe programmers explained the concept to me, my agile SFnal mind immediately conjured what would become known as virtual reality. Ray Bradbury gets at least early credit for the concept with his short story The Veld in the 1950s, but I was having a lot of creative fun. That's what counts. The notion of arrayed computers also comes into play (read the novel, please).


This Shoal of Space (early: Heartbreaker) Copyright © 1990 by John Argo. All Rights Reserved.

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Read Half Free/Try-Buy at Galley City

click to visit the first ebook site AUTHOR'S NOTE: Visit Galley City's Classics Page to read half free/try-buy most of my novels. The Classics page features most of the 1990s first HTML novels I published on Neon Blue Fiction or The Haunted Village (see Clocktower Books Museum pages for more info).


Browse or Buy at Amazon

The book linked at left is an e-book edition to browse; or buy & download from Amazon for your Kindle reader.
     The middle link is for the corresponding print edition. Most of these are standard 6x9"; a few have added trim sizes available (5x8"). More info at Amazon.com.
     Most print editions are also available at Barnes & Noble online; or call/visit your local bookstore to order.

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